Iran's Red Sea Threat Raises Stakes for Trump

Iran's Red Sea Threat Raises Stakes for Trump

Iran's IRGC has hit 7 tankers in 7 days using cruise missiles and is threatening to shut down the Red Sea while Trump publicly promises to destroy Iran's power plants and bridges.

Jul 15, 2026 18:06 Difficulty: Intermediate Played

TL;DR

Ben Meiselas breaks down the rapidly escalating US-Iran conflict, focusing on Iran's threat to shut down the Red Sea's Bab al-Mandab Strait after Trump threatened to destroy Iranian energy infrastructure, power plants, and bridges. Trump held an emergency Situation Room meeting about "devastating strikes," while Iran's deputy foreign minister flatly refused to negotiate. Oil crack spreads have hit a record $68 per barrel, signaling incoming fuel shortages. The key takeaway: Iran is climbing the escalatory ladder faster than US diplomacy can keep up.

#US-Iran war #Strait of Hormuz closure #Red Sea threat #oil crack spread #IRGC tanker strikes #Trump military threats #Iran nuclear diplomacy #Houthi activation #energy infrastructure targeting #Persian Gulf shipping #Iran #Red Sea #Strait of Hormuz #IRGC #Trump #oil prices #crack spread #tankers #US military #Houthis #Bab al-Mandab #escalation #cruise missiles #nuclear deal #energy infrastructure

Ben Meiselas reports on Donald Trump panicking as Iran threatens to shut down the Red Sea if Trump carries out threats to blow up Iranian energy infrastructure.

Chapter list
  • Before the news segment begins, listeners are treated to a brief Pepsi matchday ad and then a Kalshi prediction market promotion. Kalshi, described as America's number one prediction market platform, is running a World Cup promotion with England trading at 44% odds to beat Spain. The ad explains the peer-to-peer trading model — no house, no oddsmakers — and offers new users $10 when they trade $10 using code HOOPS. Standard financial risk disclaimers follow before the episode transitions to its main content.

  • Ben Meiselas sets the scene with a stark opening: Donald Trump is panicking. After Trump gave a Fox News interview threatening to blow up Iranian bridges, energy infrastructure, and roads, Iran responded by shifting its focus to the Red Sea — specifically the Bab al-Mandab Strait. The IRGC put out statements warning that all shipping traffic in the region, not just the Strait of Hormuz, would be shut down to make the United States 'feel real pain.' The IRGC's alliance with the Houthis in Yemen becomes critically relevant here: the Houthis previously demonstrated the ability to halt Red Sea shipping and are described as simply waiting for Iran's activation order. The strategic picture is clear — Iran is threatening to extend its chokepoint strategy from one critical waterway to two.

  • Within hours of Trump's Fox News threats, the president convened an emergency Situation Room meeting Tuesday night to discuss a dramatic expansion of military operations against Iran. Rather than remaining classified, the details were swiftly leaked to Axios journalist Barak Ravid — whom Ben Meiselas dismisses as 'the Trump regime's personal stenographer.' The leak described plans for 'devastating strikes on strategic targets' wider in scope than the current Strait of Hormuz campaign. Ben Meiselas contextualizes this within Trump's Fox News interview, in which Trump specified the targets: power plants, bridges, desalination plants, and other civilian infrastructure. The contrast between the Situation Room's supposed secrecy and the speed of the leak raises the question of whether this was a genuine military briefing or an orchestrated pressure tactic aimed at Tehran.

  • The battlefield picture Meiselas paints is one of full-scale regional conflict. US strikes have been costly for Iran — at least 10 killed and 15 wounded in a strike on the 388th Mechanized Infantry Brigade in Bambor — but Iran's counterstrikes have been equally damaging. Iranian forces have hit the US Navy's Fifth Fleet base in Bahrain, a logistics center at Kuwait's Mina Abdullah Port, the Ali Al Salem Air Base in Kuwait, a base in Jordan where Patriot interceptors visibly failed to intercept incoming missiles, and Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. Footage and satellite imagery of these strikes are shown. The IRGC then issued a formal statement: the enemy must expect closure of other oil and gas export routes that serve American and allied interests — a direct reference to the Red Sea. Iran's tanker campaign has simultaneously escalated from drones to cruise missiles, with seven vessels struck in seven days and four in the past 48 hours.

  • The visual evidence is damning. Satellite imagery and marine traffic data show virtually zero shipping movement in the Strait of Hormuz outside of Iranian routes — a real-time confirmation of the waterway's closure. Iran upgraded its anti-shipping arsenal from drones to cruise missiles, which are harder to intercept and more lethal, and has been systematically destroying any vessel the US Navy attempts to escort. Seven ships in seven days. The US has reimposed a blockade on Iranian ships, and Iran has responded by shutting down all other traffic. The dual blockades have effectively paralyzed one of the world's most critical energy chokepoints, with sinking cargo ships in the Persian Gulf providing the visual punctuation.

  • Ben Meiselas pivots to the economic consequences, explaining a concept he says he has been warning about for weeks: crack spreads. The crack spread — the difference between the price of crude oil and refined petroleum products — has hit $68 per barrel, described as near the highest ever recorded. Crude oil itself has already passed $80 and Meiselas predicts it will reach approximately $90 per barrel within 48 hours. Critically, both figures are rising at the same time, compounding the signal of incoming supply shortages. Meiselas emphasizes that this is particularly dangerous for diesel supplies, which underpin freight, agriculture, and industrial activity. The takeaway: the Strait of Hormuz shutdown is already translating into economic damage inside the United States.

  • The centerpiece of the episode arrives: Trump's Fox News interview played in full. Trump claims that just an hour before the interview, his representatives spoke with Iranian officials who 'want to make a deal' and 'don't wanna die'. He warns Iran: 'You're not gonna have anything left.' He then contradicts himself — accusing Iran of lying about everything, including denying nuclear weapons were discussed in five-hour sessions — while simultaneously asserting they desperately want a deal. Meiselas frames this as evidence of Trump's 'completely and utter lies and totally deranged' state of mind. A Fox News reporter then confronts Trump with shipping data showing the Strait is functionally closed; Trump claims it's 'open if people want to go through it' — a claim Meiselas treats as delusional given the visual evidence already presented.

  • The interview's most consequential exchange arrives when a Fox News reporter asks whether strikes will expand to energy targets. Trump's answer is unambiguous: save energy targets for last, but 'we're gonna hit them very hard tonight,' 'very hard tomorrow night,' and 'very hard the night after'. Then: 'Next week comes the power plants. Next week comes the bridges. We're gonna knock out all their power plants, we're gonna knock out all their bridges, unless they get to the table and negotiate.' The explicit public threat to destroy civilian infrastructure — power plants, bridges, desalination plants — raises serious international humanitarian law questions and marks a dramatic escalation in the stated objectives of US military operations.

  • The episode closes with its most definitive statement from the Iranian side. Iran's deputy foreign minister, Majid Takht-Ravanchi, speaks in a televised interview: Iran did not leave the negotiating table — America stalled the Islamabad memorandum. The Islamic Republic will not be the first to request negotiations 'in the face of these criminal American actions.' And if America thinks pressure will cause Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, 'they are mistaken about that too.' The statement directly dismantles every claim Trump made in the Fox News interview — no deal, no negotiations, and no reopening of the Strait. Meiselas closes the episode with a call for viewer reactions and a push to reach 7 million YouTube subscribers, with a note about ad-free membership options.

Strait of Hormuz
A narrow waterway between Iran and Oman connecting the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea; roughly 20% of the world's oil supply passes through it.
Bab al-Mandab Strait
A strategic chokepoint between Yemen and Djibouti connecting the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden; a critical route for global shipping between Asia, Europe, and East Africa.
IRGC
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps — Iran's elite paramilitary force that operates independently of the regular Iranian army and controls much of Iran's missile and naval capabilities.
Crack spread
The price difference between crude oil and the refined petroleum products (like gasoline or diesel) made from it; a high crack spread signals refinery bottlenecks and impending fuel shortages.
Houthis
A Yemeni armed movement formally known as Ansar Allah, backed by Iran, that controls much of northern Yemen and has previously attacked Red Sea shipping with drones and missiles.
Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR)
The US government's emergency crude oil stockpile stored in underground salt caverns along the Gulf Coast, used to buffer domestic fuel supply during disruptions.
Al Udeid Air Base
The largest US military air base in the Middle East, located in Qatar, and a critical hub for US Central Command air operations.
Fifth Fleet
The US Navy fleet responsible for naval forces in the Middle East, headquartered in Bahrain, overseeing operations in the Persian Gulf, Red Sea, and Arabian Sea.
Shahid drone
An Iranian-manufactured kamikaze drone (also known as Shahed) used extensively by Iran and its proxies for precision strikes on military and infrastructure targets.
Islamabad memorandum
Refers to a diplomatic framework or agreement reportedly reached between Iran and the US in Islamabad, cited by Iran's deputy FM as having been stalled by the US side.
Mechanized Infantry Brigade
A military unit equipped with armored vehicles and personnel carriers enabling rapid mechanized ground warfare; the 388th was the unit struck by the US in Bambor, Iran.
Stenographer (journalistic context)
A pejorative term for a reporter who uncritically republishes official sources' preferred narratives without independent verification; Ben Meiselas used it to describe Barak Ravid's relationship with the Trump administration.
Escalatory ladder
A strategic concept in conflict theory describing sequential steps of increasing military or political pressure, where each side responds with a more severe action than the last.
Desalination plant
A facility that removes salt from seawater to produce fresh water; Trump explicitly named these as targets, significant because many Gulf states depend on them for drinking water.

Chapter 1 · 00:00

Ad: Pepsi & Kalshi Prediction Market

Before the news segment begins, listeners are treated to a brief Pepsi matchday ad and then a Kalshi prediction market promotion. Kalshi, described as America's number one prediction market platform, is running a World Cup promotion with England trading at 44% odds to beat Spain. The ad explains the peer-to-peer trading model — no house, no oddsmakers — and offers new users $10 when they trade $10 using code HOOPS. Standard financial risk disclaimers follow before the episode transitions to its main content.

Chapter 2 · 01:00

Iran Threatens to Close the Red Sea and Bab al-Mandab

Ben Meiselas sets the scene with a stark opening: Donald Trump is panicking. After Trump gave a Fox News interview threatening to blow up Iranian bridges, energy infrastructure, and roads, Iran responded by shifting its focus to the Red Sea — specifically the Bab al-Mandab Strait. The IRGC put out statements warning that all shipping traffic in the region, not just the Strait of Hormuz, would be shut down to make the United States 'feel real pain.' The IRGC's alliance with the Houthis in Yemen becomes critically relevant here: the Houthis previously demonstrated the ability to halt Red Sea shipping and are described as simply waiting for Iran's activation order. The strategic picture is clear — Iran is threatening to extend its chokepoint strategy from one critical waterway to two.

Claims made here

Trump held a Situation Room meeting to discuss a massive offensive against Iran wider in scope than current strikes, planning 'devastating strikes on strategic targets.'

Ben Meiselas Axios / Barak Ravid, citing three sources with knowledge of the meeting

News
Iran Threatens to Shut Down the Red Sea

Iran's Red Sea Threat Raises Stakes for Trump · Jul 15, 2026 News

Iran's IRGC is signaling it will shut down the Bab al-Mandab Strait in the Red Sea, mirroring what it has already done in the Strait of Hormuz. Allied with the Houthis in Yemen, who have previously demonstrated the ability to halt Red Sea traffic, Iran is escalating pressure on all US-allied energy routes.

Government
Trump's Emergency Situation Room Meeting Leaked

Iran's Red Sea Threat Raises Stakes for Trump · Jul 15, 2026 Government

Trump held an emergency Situation Room meeting to plan a massive Iranian offensive wider in scope than current strikes, and then immediately leaked it to Axios. The plan reportedly includes 'devastating strikes on strategic targets' — raising questions about whether this is a genuine military escalation or a negotiating pressure tactic.

Chapter 3 · 03:20

Trump's Emergency Situation Room Meeting Leaked

Within hours of Trump's Fox News threats, the president convened an emergency Situation Room meeting Tuesday night to discuss a dramatic expansion of military operations against Iran. Rather than remaining classified, the details were swiftly leaked to Axios journalist Barak Ravid — whom Ben Meiselas dismisses as 'the Trump regime's personal stenographer.' The leak described plans for 'devastating strikes on strategic targets' wider in scope than the current Strait of Hormuz campaign. Ben Meiselas contextualizes this within Trump's Fox News interview, in which Trump specified the targets: power plants, bridges, desalination plants, and other civilian infrastructure. The contrast between the Situation Room's supposed secrecy and the speed of the leak raises the question of whether this was a genuine military briefing or an orchestrated pressure tactic aimed at Tehran.

Claims made here

At least 10 Iranians were killed and more than 15 wounded in a US strike on Iran's 388th Mechanized Infantry Brigade in Bambor, southeastern Iran.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Iran has been striking US interests in Bahrain, Kuwait, Jordan, the UAE, and other surrounding Arab nations.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Chapter 4 · 04:30

US Casualties, Iranian Strikes Across the Region, and the IRGC's Energy Route Warning

The battlefield picture Meiselas paints is one of full-scale regional conflict. US strikes have been costly for Iran — at least 10 killed and 15 wounded in a strike on the 388th Mechanized Infantry Brigade in Bambor — but Iran's counterstrikes have been equally damaging. Iranian forces have hit the US Navy's Fifth Fleet base in Bahrain, a logistics center at Kuwait's Mina Abdullah Port, the Ali Al Salem Air Base in Kuwait, a base in Jordan where Patriot interceptors visibly failed to intercept incoming missiles, and Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. Footage and satellite imagery of these strikes are shown. The IRGC then issued a formal statement: the enemy must expect closure of other oil and gas export routes that serve American and allied interests — a direct reference to the Red Sea. Iran's tanker campaign has simultaneously escalated from drones to cruise missiles, with seven vessels struck in seven days and four in the past 48 hours.

Claims made here

Iran's IRGC hit at least seven tankers in and around the Strait of Hormuz in the past seven days.

Ben Meiselas CENTCOM

Iran hit four tankers in the past 48 hours, some well outside the Strait of Hormuz.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Iran shifted from using drones to cruise missiles against tankers because cruise missiles are harder to avoid and more lethal.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

The IRGC destroyed a US military logistics and support center at Kuwait's Mina Abdullah Port.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Chapter 5 · 07:10

The Strait of Hormuz Is Effectively Closed

The visual evidence is damning. Satellite imagery and marine traffic data show virtually zero shipping movement in the Strait of Hormuz outside of Iranian routes — a real-time confirmation of the waterway's closure. Iran upgraded its anti-shipping arsenal from drones to cruise missiles, which are harder to intercept and more lethal, and has been systematically destroying any vessel the US Navy attempts to escort. Seven ships in seven days. The US has reimposed a blockade on Iranian ships, and Iran has responded by shutting down all other traffic. The dual blockades have effectively paralyzed one of the world's most critical energy chokepoints, with sinking cargo ships in the Persian Gulf providing the visual punctuation.

Claims made here

The oil crack spread hit $68 per barrel, described as near the highest ever recorded.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Chapter 6 · 09:20

Oil Crack Spreads Hit Historic Highs, Fuel Shortages Imminent

Ben Meiselas pivots to the economic consequences, explaining a concept he says he has been warning about for weeks: crack spreads. The crack spread — the difference between the price of crude oil and refined petroleum products — has hit $68 per barrel, described as near the highest ever recorded. Crude oil itself has already passed $80 and Meiselas predicts it will reach approximately $90 per barrel within 48 hours. Critically, both figures are rising at the same time, compounding the signal of incoming supply shortages. Meiselas emphasizes that this is particularly dangerous for diesel supplies, which underpin freight, agriculture, and industrial activity. The takeaway: the Strait of Hormuz shutdown is already translating into economic damage inside the United States.

Claims made here

Crude oil prices have already passed $80 per barrel and are expected to reach approximately $90 per barrel within 48 hours.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Chapter 7 · 10:35

Trump's Fox News Interview: Deal Claims and Ultimatums

The centerpiece of the episode arrives: Trump's Fox News interview played in full. Trump claims that just an hour before the interview, his representatives spoke with Iranian officials who 'want to make a deal' and 'don't wanna die'. He warns Iran: 'You're not gonna have anything left.' He then contradicts himself — accusing Iran of lying about everything, including denying nuclear weapons were discussed in five-hour sessions — while simultaneously asserting they desperately want a deal. Meiselas frames this as evidence of Trump's 'completely and utter lies and totally deranged' state of mind. A Fox News reporter then confronts Trump with shipping data showing the Strait is functionally closed; Trump claims it's 'open if people want to go through it' — a claim Meiselas treats as delusional given the visual evidence already presented.

Claims made here

Trump told Fox News his representatives spoke with Iranian officials approximately one hour before the interview.

Donald Trump no source cited

Only 10 vessels passed through the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, less than 10% of normal traffic.

Fox News Reporter Shipping data trackers

Chapter 8 · 12:40

Trump Threatens Iran's Power Plants and Bridges

The interview's most consequential exchange arrives when a Fox News reporter asks whether strikes will expand to energy targets. Trump's answer is unambiguous: save energy targets for last, but 'we're gonna hit them very hard tonight,' 'very hard tomorrow night,' and 'very hard the night after'. Then: 'Next week comes the power plants. Next week comes the bridges. We're gonna knock out all their power plants, we're gonna knock out all their bridges, unless they get to the table and negotiate.' The explicit public threat to destroy civilian infrastructure — power plants, bridges, desalination plants — raises serious international humanitarian law questions and marks a dramatic escalation in the stated objectives of US military operations.

Claims made here

Iran's deputy foreign minister stated that America, not Iran, left the negotiating table by stalling the Islamabad memorandum.

Majid Takht-Ravanchi no source cited

Chapter 9 · 13:55

Iran's Deputy FM: No Negotiations, Strait Stays Closed

The episode closes with its most definitive statement from the Iranian side. Iran's deputy foreign minister, Majid Takht-Ravanchi, speaks in a televised interview: Iran did not leave the negotiating table — America stalled the Islamabad memorandum. The Islamic Republic will not be the first to request negotiations 'in the face of these criminal American actions.' And if America thinks pressure will cause Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, 'they are mistaken about that too.' The statement directly dismantles every claim Trump made in the Fox News interview — no deal, no negotiations, and no reopening of the Strait. Meiselas closes the episode with a call for viewer reactions and a push to reach 7 million YouTube subscribers, with a note about ad-free membership options.

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3 / 12 cited (25%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

Iran's IRGC hit at least seven tankers in and around the Strait of Hormuz in the past seven days.

Ben Meiselas CENTCOM

Iran hit four tankers in the past 48 hours, some well outside the Strait of Hormuz.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Only 10 vessels passed through the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, less than 10% of normal traffic.

Fox News Reporter Shipping data trackers

At least 10 Iranians were killed and more than 15 wounded in a US strike on Iran's 388th Mechanized Infantry Brigade in Bambor, southeastern Iran.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

The oil crack spread hit $68 per barrel, described as near the highest ever recorded.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Crude oil prices have already passed $80 per barrel and are expected to reach approximately $90 per barrel within 48 hours.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Iran has been striking US interests in Bahrain, Kuwait, Jordan, the UAE, and other surrounding Arab nations.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

The IRGC destroyed a US military logistics and support center at Kuwait's Mina Abdullah Port.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Trump held a Situation Room meeting to discuss a massive offensive against Iran wider in scope than current strikes, planning 'devastating strikes on strategic targets.'

Ben Meiselas Axios / Barak Ravid, citing three sources with knowledge of the meeting

Iran shifted from using drones to cruise missiles against tankers because cruise missiles are harder to avoid and more lethal.

Ben Meiselas no source cited

Iran's deputy foreign minister stated that America, not Iran, left the negotiating table by stalling the Islamabad memorandum.

Majid Takht-Ravanchi no source cited

Trump told Fox News his representatives spoke with Iranian officials approximately one hour before the interview.

Donald Trump no source cited

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