...e time not to back them up with any actions.The #EU is considering the possibility of refocusing the Aspides naval operation from the Red Sea (and adjacent waters) to ensure security in the Strait of Hormuz amid the war with #Iran and rising energy prices.What is Aspides now?Aspides is an EU naval mission launched in 2024 to protect commercial vessels in the Red Sea and surrounding waters from attacks by the Yemeni Houthis.The mission has an "exclusively defensive" mandate: escorting merch...
...the Gulf of Oman and partly the area associated with the monitoring strategy around Hormuz, although the actual focus has so far been on the Red Sea.What is offered in the EU?The head of EU diplomacy, Kaya #Kallas, confirmed before the meeting of the EU Council on Foreign Affairs in Brussels that the ministers would discuss sending European warships to the Strait of Hormuz.According to her, one of the options is to change the mandate of the existing naval operation in order to use it as th...
...ng limited resources and political risks.EU diplomats expect that the next Foreign Ministry meeting will not make a final decision on the physical deployment of Aspides in Hormuz, but will only discuss the political and legal framework and possible modifications to the mandate.Skepticism is associated with the risks of direct confrontation with Iran, fears of escalation, and debates about the extent to which the EU should follow U.S. initiatives in the region; some member states are willin...
...e "fastest" tool to strengthen security in Hormuz.Kallas stresses that the EU is interested in keeping the Strait of Hormuz open for oil and gas transportation, and is therefore discussing what the European Union can do from a military and diplomatic point of view.A number of countries, in particular #Germany, express skepticism: German Minister Johann Vadepuhl agrees to discuss the expansion of the Aspides mission, but excludes the participation of German forces in such an operation, citi...