Rubio Says Trump Has Options to Reopen Strait of Hormuz
Brent crude oil, the international standard, was trading around $115 Monday, up nearly 60 percent from when the Iran War started in late February.
Secretary of
State Marco Rubio said on March 30 that the Trump administration has options to
address the possibility that Iran would block the Strait of Hormuz or impose a
toll on oil tankers.
President
Donald Trump on Monday morning warned Tehran that the U.S. military could blow up Iranian
energy infrastructure if the regime does not move to open the strait, a key
waterway that connects the oil-rich Persian Gulf nations with the broader
Indian Ocean. But he also stressed that talks between the two nations are
ongoing, and progress has been made.
“Now, they
are making threats about controlling the Hormuz Strait in perpetuity, creating
a tolling system and the like,” Rubio told ABC News on Monday morning, referring to Iran.
“That’s not
going to be allowed to happen. And the president has a number of options
available to him, if he so chooses, to prevent that from happening.”
Rubio did
not elaborate on what actions Trump could take to secure the strait, saying he
cannot speak on the matter.
“The
Iranians are threatening that they are going to set up some permanent system in
the Straits of Hormuz where they get to decide who goes through international
waterways,” Rubio said.
“That will
never be allowed to happen. By the way, the rest of the world should take note
of that.”
Since the
start of the conflict in late February, Iran has effectively kept the waterway
closed, with some commercial vessels being attacked. Oil prices have surged,
raising concerns about a global energy crisis.
Brent crude
oil, the international standard, was trading around $115 Monday, up nearly 60
percent from when the war started. As of Monday, according to the American
Automotive Association (AAA), the price for a gallon of regular gasoline stood
at $3.99 nationwide, up more than $1 since the war began.
Tankers sail
in the Gulf, near the Strait of Hormuz, as seen from northern Ras al-Khaimah,
near the border with Oman’s Musandam governance, amid the U.S.–Israeli conflict
with Iran, in United Arab Emirates, on March 11, 2026. Reuters
Rubio said
Trump prefers to handle such situations diplomatically and described how the
negotiations are unfolding. Rubio said, however, that he cannot disclose the
names of Iranian officials whom the administration has contacted.
“There is
messages being relayed back and forth, some conversations going on, including
through intermediaries,” he said. “And [Trump] always prefers that.”
Rubio told
ABC that the Trump administration is aware of competing voices within Iran’s
government on whether to negotiate a resolution to end the war. He declined to
identify the dissenting voices, saying it would endanger them.
“I’m not
going to disclose to you who those people are because it probably would get
them in trouble with some other groups of people inside of Iran. Look, there’s
some fractures going on there internally,” he said.
It comes as
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei at a recent news conference
pushed back against a 15-point cease-fire proposal put forward by the United
States, which he described as filled with “excessive” demands. The official
added that no direct negotiations between Washington and Tehran have occurred.
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