And crude oil—dark, heavy, and geopolitically priceless—continued to flow into the world.… At 02:14 a.m., the radar screen in the Persian Gulf command center flickered with dozens of faint signals. Colonel Samir Haddad, an energy-security analyst seconded to a multinational maritime task force, stared at the map. Every officer in the room knew the same thing: the dot in the middle of the screen—small, beige, and almost featureless—was one of the most economically powerful pieces of land on Earth. Kharg Island. A speck in the Persian Gulf, yet responsible for roughly 90% of Iran’s oil exports. Tankers lined up around it like aircraft at a crowded airport. Pipelines fed storage tanks that could hold tens of millions of barrels. The island was not merely a port; it was the beating heart of Iran’s state revenue. And tonight, it had just been bombed. ⸻ The First Blunder: Striking the Heart News alerts spread across the world w...