By Nana Karikari, Senior Global Affairs Correspondent
President Donald Trump stirred international conversation Friday by referring to the Strait of Hormuz as the “Strait of Trump.” Speaking at the Future Investment Initiative in Miami, the president addressed the vital oil-shipping route currently at the center of a month-long military conflict with Iran.
“Iran has to open up the Strait of Trump — I mean, Hormuz,” the president said. The remark drew laughter from the audience, prompting a tongue-in-cheek clarification from the commander-in-chief. “Excuse me. I’m so sorry. Such a terrible mistake,” he said. “The fake news will say, ‘He accidentally said’ — No, there’s no accidents with me, not too many. If there were, we’d have a major story.”
Strategic Importance of the Global Energy Bottleneck
The waterway is a primary choke point for global commerce, typically ferrying 20 million barrels of oil per day. Iran’s current ability to block the path has triggered a 50% surge in oil prices and historic disruptions to the global energy supply. While the U.S. maintains it has “obliterated” Iran’s military, the regime’s control over the strait remains a significant economic lever.
The White House views the restoration of traffic as a global necessity. “We’re actually doing this for the benefit of the world,” a senior administration official stated. Despite U.S. claims that Iran is “begging” for a deal, Tehran denies direct talks are occurring.
Current diplomatic efforts have been described by sources as merely “having talks about having talks.”
Global Necessity and the Deadline for De-escalation
The Strait of Hormuz functions as the world’s most vital artery for liquefied natural gas (LNG) and crude oil. Its closure effectively paralyzes global shipping lanes and threatens the energy security of major industrial powers in Europe and Asia. Recognizing the urgency, President Trump has offered a series of conditional extensions to Tehran to voluntarily reopen the passage. What began as a 48-hour warning has transitioned into a five-day extension, followed by a final 10-day grace period that expires on April 6. This strategic “staircase” of deadlines is designed to provide Iran a face-saving exit while maintaining the threat of overwhelming force.
Potential Rebranding of International Waters
The New York Post reports that the president is weighing a formal name change for the region. Options reportedly include naming it after himself or calling it the “Strait of America.” This follows a precedent set last year when the administration moved to redesignate the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America.
A senior official explained the logic behind the potential shift. “He does believe that if we’re going to guard it, if we’re going to take care of it, if we’re going to police it, if we’re going to ensure free safety through it that, why should we call it that [Hormuz]?” the official said. “Why don’t we call it, you know, the Strait of America?”
Historical and Cultural Context of Hormuz
The name Hormuz is steeped in centuries of history, originating from the medieval Kingdom of Hormuz. Etymologists trace the name to the Persian word Hur-Mogh, meaning “Place of Dates,” or the Zoroastrian deity Ahura Mazda. The former emirate once served as a vassal to the Portuguese empire in the 1500s.
Friday’s “Strait of Trump” quip comes from a president who has famously made his own name a central feature of his branding as a businessman and real estate mogul. It also echoes a Truth Social post from October, in which the president appeared to jokingly reference the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington using his own name. The post included photos of renovations being done on the exterior of the building, with a caption praising “the new TRUMP KENNEDY, whoops, I mean, KENNEDY CENTER, columns.” In December, the White House announced that the Kennedy Center’s board voted to change its name to the “Trump-Kennedy Center.”
Economic Aftershocks Across Africa and Ghana
The branding of the waterway comes as African economies face the sharpest oil supply disruption since the 1970s. In Ghana, where fuel imports account for nearly 29% of the national import bill, Brent crude’s surge past $120 per barrel has triggered immediate pain at the pumps. The National Petroleum Authority (NPA) has already seen petrol prices climb toward GH¢ 16 per litre, threatening to derail the country’s single-digit inflation targets.
Beyond the fuel pumps, the conflict is exerting downward pressure on the Cedi as higher import bills drain foreign reserves. While Ghana’s gold exports have provided a partial buffer due to rising global prices, the net effect remains a cost-of-living crisis felt by households and transport operators alike. Similar shocks are being reported across the continent, with Nigeria and South Africa bracing for heightened inflation and potential fuel rationing if the “Strait of Trump” remains closed.
Military Contingencies and Internal Friction
The U.S. has deployed thousands of Marines and sailors to the region as a contingency. Possible military actions include landing on islands within the strait or targeting Kharg Island, which handles 90% of Iran’s oil exports. President Trump has warned that failure to meet the aforementioned timeline will result in the bombing of Iranian power plants.
Though the president initially predicted the war would last “four weeks or so,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio suggested to G7 leaders that the conflict could continue for another month. One administration official noted the lack of “good options” and pointed to internal friction, stating, “People are pointing fingers at [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu, but I think increasingly they’re going to point it at people at the Pentagon.” The official suggested the Pentagon was unprepared to immediately deter the closure.
Geopolitical Stakes and Post-War Influence
For Iran, maintaining a presence in the strait is a matter of survival and leverage. Retired colonel and former diplomat Joel Rayburn described the waterway as “the last arrow in the Iran regime’s quiver.” Tehran’s peace conditions include an end to hostilities, reparations, and formal recognition of their ownership of the strait.
The naming strategy has faced internal pushback. “This whole naming thing is getting as tiresome and tacky as the gold in the Oval Office,” said a former Trump administration official, warning that “it’s only tarnishing his legacy and hurting the party
before the midterms.” Analysts suggest that if Iran retains control, it will be viewed as a strategic victory. Rayburn noted that the president “can’t leave them with the means to disrupt the global economy — they’ve shown they will use it.”
The Intersection of Sovereignty and Symbolism
Ultimately, the debate over the waterway’s name serves as a proxy for the broader struggle over regional sovereignty. Whether the world continues to recognize the historic Strait of Hormuz or adopts the president’s proposed American branding will likely depend on the outcome of the April 6 deadline and the efficacy of U.S. naval pressure. For now, the global economy remains caught between a president’s signature branding style and a defiant Iranian regime holding the world’s most critical energy artery.









