The Foreign Office has issued an urgent call for de-escalation as President Trump intensifies military action against Iran, threatening the stability of the Gulf's oil arteries. Sources close to the Prime Minister confirm that Whitehall is bracing for a supply shock that could send petrol prices soaring past £2 a litre before summer.
Trump's latest wave of strikes targeted Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) infrastructure in Khuzestan, the heart of Iran's oil industry. Satellite imagery suggests at least three refineries have been disabled. The Pentagon quietly acknowledged the operation but denied targeting civilian sites. Tehran claims otherwise, vowing retaliation against 'any party aiding the aggressor'.
Britain's position is precarious. We rely on Gulf oil for roughly 12% of our crude imports. But our largest single source is the US, whose shale fields are now being tapped to replace disrupted Iranian flows. This makes London's diplomatic tightrope all the more treacherous: publicly rebuke Washington and risk economic retaliation, or stay silent and watch the Gulf burn.
Internal memos seen by this desk reveal the Foreign Office's 'worst-case scenario' planning. A full blockade of the Strait of Hormuz would strand a fifth of global oil supply. Britain's strategic petroleum reserve holds 60 days of cover. That sounds comfortable until you factor in panic buying and refinery bottlenecks. Petrol rationing, last seen in 1973, is being quietly discussed in cabinet sub-committees.
But the human cost is already mounting. Charity workers in southern Iran report civilian casualties from the strikes. Hospitals in Ahvaz are overwhelmed. The IRGC has arrested at least 100 oil workers accused of 'collaboration'. This is not a clean war. These are industrial strikes with a body count.
Meanwhile, the Prime Minister is caught between Scylla and Charybdis. President Trump demands solidarity. The EU, led by France and Germany, urges restraint. Iran's proxies in Lebanon and Yemen are already rattling their sabres. Hezbollah's leader warned that 'the Mediterranean will burn if the Gulf does'.
Oil markets are reacting predictably. Brent crude spiked to $89 a barrel this morning, up 7% in two days. The pound is weakening against the dollar. BP and Shell shares have dipped. The real terror is in the derivatives market. Energy traders whisper that a major hedge fund is on the verge of collapsing under margin calls on Iranian crude contracts.
What the suits in Whitehall won't say is that this crisis was foreseeable. Trump's 'maximum pressure' campaign was always going to meet resistance. Iran's nuclear progress is a direct result of that pressure, not a reason for it. But the cascading effects are now beyond anyone's control.
Unaccountable power has brought us to this point. A president with nothing to lose in his final term. A regime in Tehran that sees no off-ramp. And a British government that sold off its oil reserves in 2014 and now prays that the US keeps the straits open.
The quietest voice in the room currently belongs to the Treasury. They know the numbers don't add up. Recession warnings are being dusted off. The Chancellor is preparing a emergency budget that will levy windfall taxes on energy producers. But that's treating the symptom, not the disease.
The disease is a foreign policy that outsources our security to erratic allies. Until we diversify our energy sources and rebuild our diplomatic heft, we are hostages to every missile fired across the Gulf.
As I write this, IRGC speedboats are conducting exercises near the Strait of Hormuz. A single miscalculation, a single shot, and the oil stops flowing. The only question is whether London has the spine to call for restraint before it's too late.







