Kharg Island sits in the northwestern Persian Gulf, roughly 25 kilometres off the Iranian coast. Small in area — barely 18 square kilometres — it is disproportionate in strategic consequence. As Middle East Eye reports, Iran exports around 90 percent of its crude oil through the island's terminals, making it the single most important node in Iranian export infrastructure and, by extension, one of the most consequential pieces of real estate in global energy markets. It is equipped with deepwater jetties capable of handling supertankers, a dedicated pipeline network feeding directly from onshore Iranian fields, and significant storage capacity. Its destruction or capture would not merely inconvenience Tehran — it would effectively sever the Islamic Republic's economic lifeline. The island's modern significance was forged under the Pahlavi dynasty. Under Mohammad Reza Shah, Iran developed Kharg into a world-class export terminal during the 1950s and 1960s, transforming what h...
Trump seeks exit from Iran conflict as Netanyahu pushes to continue; Turkey's quiet diplomatic efforts already credited with neutralizing Kurdish militant dimension A deepening fracture between Washington and Tel Aviv over the course of the ongoing war in Iran is becoming impossible to conceal, with U.S. President Donald Trump actively seeking an off-ramp from the conflict while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insists on pressing forward toward regime change. Amid the widening rift, Turkey's behind-the-scenes diplomatic maneuvering has already scored a notable success — and Ankara may be positioning itself as a key broker if negotiations materialize. Trump Begins Distancing Himself The first public sign of Trump's discomfort came during a rambling address on March 9, in which the president appeared to distribute responsibility for the decision to strike Iran among his closest advisers — a remarkable departure for a leader who has long cultivated the image of a dec...