Hormuz is not just a strait, it is a test of strategic nerve

When we hear about rising tensions in the Middle East—especially around the Strait of Hormuz—the story is usually framed as military threats or economic warfare. But this framing misses the deeper structure of the crisis. What we are witnessing is a high-stakes game of communication—one in which words, actions, and expectations matter as much as ships and sanctions. Two insights from game theory—Cheap Talk and the Folk Theorem—help explain why this standoff so dangerously volatile, and why its outcome remains so uncertain.

In game theory, Cheap Talk refers to statements that are costless to make and, therefore, not inherently credible. Leaders can threaten, promise, or posture without immediately paying a price if those words turn out to be empty. In the current crisis, rhetorical escalation—public threats, declarations of resolve, and even warnings that an adversary could be sent “back to the Stone Age”—often falls into this category. These messages are designed to shape the opponent’s expectations, but because they are inexpensive, they can be dismissed as bluff.

So cheap talk sets the stage. It frames intentions, tests reactions, and signals political constraints. The problem is that when cheap talk saturates a crisis, it creates noise. Each side must then ask: which statements are real, and which are theatre?
And, that is where Costly Signals enter. Unlike cheap talk, costly signals are actions that impose real economic, political, or military costs on the sender—deploying naval forces, enforcing interdictions, sustaining a blockade despite global price shocks. These actions are harder to fake and therefore more credible. In Hormuz, the shift from rhetoric to enforcement marks a transition from signaling intent to demonstrating commitment.

The danger lies in the interaction between the two. When cheap talk escalates unchecked, it often forces leaders into a corner where they must back words with costly signals to maintain credibility. What begins as posturing can harden into policy. And once costly signals are deployed, backing down becomes more expensive, both materially and politically. The crisis then acquires momentum of its own.

This is precisely where the Folk Theorem offers a counterpoint—and a warning. The theorem, in simple terms, tells us that in repeated strategic interactions, even rivals can sustain cooperation if they believe the relationship will continue into the future. The “shadow of the future” disciplines behaviour. If you expect to face your adversary again tomorrow, restraint today becomes rational.

Punishment strategies—retaliating against defection but returning to cooperation afterward—can sustain a fragile equilibrium.
For decades, the uneasy stability in the Gulf has reflected this logic. Despite periodic flare-ups, both sides operated within an implicit repeated game. There were limits to escalation, understood—if not formally agreed upon—because both parties recognized that the relationship was ongoing. Tomorrow mattered.

What makes the present moment different is the risk that this repeated game is being recast as a one-shot confrontation. A naval blockade, by its nature, is not just pressure; it is an attempt to force a decisive outcome. It compresses time horizons. It signals that the goal is not to manage the relationship, but to resolve it—perhaps permanently. In doing so, it weakens the very conditions under which the Folk Theorem predicts cooperation.

Once the shadow of the future shortens, the logic of restraint erodes. If each side believes this is the decisive moment, then escalation becomes more attractive, not less. Why hold back today if there is no meaningful tomorrow? Why preserve a relationship that is being fundamentally rewritten?

This is what makes the recent crisis so precarious. Cheap talk has raised expectations and hardened positions. Costly signals have begun to lock those positions into place. And the underlying structure of interaction is shifting from a repeated game—where cooperation, however limited, is possible—to a one-shot game, where the incentives tilt toward confrontation.

The tools being used to demonstrate resolve may be undermining the very conditions that make peace sustainable. The more each side tries to prove its credibility, the more it risks eliminating the flexibility needed for de-escalation.

In such an environment, the challenge is not simply to deter the adversary. It is to restore the shadow of the future. That means reopening space for ongoing interaction, signaling that restraint will be reciprocated, and ensuring that today’s actions do not foreclose tomorrow’s options. In short, game theory doesn’t just explain why crises explode. It also shows the way out. Don’t believe every threat you hear. And don’t act like this is the last round. Because as long as both sides expect to meet again, even bitter rivals can find a reason to hold back today



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Disclaimer

Views expressed above are the author’s own.



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