The news is alarming, but predictable. A cargo ship attack in the Strait of Hormuz has halted the UK’s evacuation plan, prompting calls for UN intervention. We have seen this script before, have we not? The decline of empires is always accompanied by a loss of control over critical chokepoints. The Strait of Hormuz is to the 21st century what the Dardanelles were to the 19th: a narrow passage where the fate of nations is decided. Yet, here we are, begging the UN to restore order, as if that moribund institution still held the keys to global stability.
One can almost hear the echoes of the late Roman Empire, where the grain fleets from Egypt were harried by barbarian pirates, and the Senate wrung its hands in impotent rage. Today, our ships are attacked not by Vandals but by proxies of a resurgent power, and our leaders seem more concerned with virtue signalling than with projecting strength. The evacuation plan, so carefully drafted in Whitehall, is now in tatters because we failed to understand that in the real world, trade routes are defended by warships, not by press releases.
Some will blame the attackers, and rightly so. But let us not ignore the deeper rot. The West has grown soft, addicted to comfort, and unwilling to make sacrifices for strategic interests. We spend billions on climate conferences and diversity workshops, yet we cannot secure a stretch of water that carries a fifth of the world's oil. This is not a failure of intelligence but a failure of will. The Victorian era understood that empire required a certain ruthlessness, a willingness to send gunboats and enforce order. Today, we send strongly worded statements and hope for UN resolutions. The result is chaos.
The Strait of Hormuz is not just a geopolitical flashpoint; it is a mirror reflecting our own decadence. Every attack, every closure, every evacuation that fails is a symptom of a civilisation that has lost its nerve. We are like the Byzantine Empire in its twilight, outsourcing our defence to Varangian mercenaries or, in this case, to international bureaucrats. The UN will deliberate, Russia will veto, Iran will smirk, and the UK will have to find another way to evacuate its citizens. But the underlying question remains: How did we get here?
The answer lies in our collective amnesia. We have forgotten that power is the ability to enforce your will. We have replaced national interest with global governance, and the result is that no one governs anything. The cargo ship attack is not an isolated incident; it is the logical outcome of a decade of withdrawal from the world stage, of cutting defence budgets, of prioritising social justice over security. The empire is crumbling, not from without but from within.
Let this be a warning. The Strait of Hormuz is a symbol, but it is also a canary in the coal mine. If we cannot act decisively here, we will soon find ourselves unable to act anywhere. The Victorians would have been appalled by our timidity. They understood that commerce and civilisation depend on a mailed fist. We, on the other hand, have substituted fist for glove, and the glove is full of air.
The UK’s call for UN intervention is a sign of weakness, not strength. It tells our adversaries that we no longer have the stomach for conflict. And they will exploit that weakness as surely as the barbarians exploited Rome’s. So, brace yourselves. The Fall of Rome took centuries, but our own decline seems to be accelerating. The only question is whether we will rouse ourselves before the Strait of Hormuz becomes the Bosporus of a new dark age.








