Friday, April 10, 2026

THE GRIFT

EU rejects Trump's 'joint venture'
with Iran to charge ships through Strait of Hormuz





By Jorge Liboreiro
Published on 09/04/2026 - EURONEWS


Donald Trump has floated the idea of a "joint venture" to set up tolls in the Strait of Hormuz. The European Commission says this would be unlawful.

The European Commission has firmly rejected any attempt, by Iran or the United States, to charge vessels for crossing the Strait of Hormuz, while admitting the final decision on whether to pay a fee is entirely at the discretion of affected companies.

"International law provides for the freedom of navigation, which means what? It means no payment or toll whatsoever," a Commission spokesperson said on Thursday afternoon in response to an Euronews question.

"The Strait of Hormuz, like any other maritime lane, is a public good for all humanity, which means navigation must be free. Freedom of navigation must be restored."

The pushback comes a day after US President Donald Trump stirred concern across Europe by suggesting a "joint venture" with Tehran to impose a pay-to-pass system on the waterway, which is vital for the transit of oil, gas and fertiliser supplies.

"It's a way of securing it, also securing it from lots of other people," Trump told ABC News. "It's a beautiful thing."

Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, later said the idea would "continue to be discussed" but stressed the "immediate priority" was reopening the shipping lane "without any limitations, whether in the form of tolls or otherwise".


Hormuz has been under Iran's tight control since the start of the US-Israeli strikes on 28 February, crippling supply chains and sending energy prices soaring worldwide.

According to Trump, the ceasefire deal announced earlier this week would lead to the "safe" reopening of Hormuz. But the narrow passage was closed again on Wednesday after Israel launched massive strikes against Lebanon, which Iran considered to be a violation of its version of the 10-point plan. (The White House has fiercely contested the plan and said Lebanon was excluded from the agreed terms.)

On Thursday, confusion continued to reign over Hormuz, with traffic data showing that only a handful of ships had managed to sail through.

An estimated 2,000 ships and 20,000 seafarers remain trapped in the Persian Gulf.

Iran is reportedly operating a new system that charges each vessel $1 per oil barrel carried on board. The payment can be made either in Chinese yuan or cryptocurrency, two options that bypass Western financial oversight.

For Brussels, neither Trump's "joint venture" nor Iran's $1-per-barrel system is acceptable because they contravene the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which strictly forbids charging for simple transit. Fees are only allowed when a specific service, such as port access or maintenance, is provided.

Even though the US and Iran are among the few countries that have not ratified UNCLOS, its rules have become customary law worldwide.

Asked whether European companies should agree to pay or remain stranded in the Persian Gulf, the Commission said the decision should be made by private operators themselves, taking into account their "various interests".

"It is up to the concerned companies and ship-owners to see whether, despite this, they would still want to pay this fee," chief spokesperson Paula Pinho told reporters.

Europeans have been mulling plans to help secure Hormuz, but nothing specific has been put on the table. Tehran considers the shipping lane its greatest leverage and is loath to make any concessions unless Washington reciprocates.


Rutte Insists NATO Allies Have Met U.S. Demands


By 

By Pietro Guastamacchia

(EurActiv) — NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on Thursday sought to once more dispel doubts about the military alliance, saying European allies are delivering on US requests and stepping up their defence commitments.

Speaking at the Ronald Reagan Foundation a day after meeting with Donald Trump, Rutte said he told the US president that “the overwhelming majority of European allies have done what the US has asked” amid tensions over support for Washington’s campaign against Iran.

Trump has railed against European allies for a perceived lack of support after some banned US aircraft heading to the Middle East from either flying over their territory or using some jointly operated bases. The US president has accused the alliance of being a “paper tiger” and suggested he could pull his country out of the alliance altogether.

On Wednesday, after meeting Rutte at the White House, Trump wrote on social media: “NATO WASN’T THERE WHEN WE NEEDED THEM, AND THEY WON’T BE THERE IF WE NEED THEM AGAIN.”

Rutte acknowledged some delays. “I sensed his disappointment that he felt too many allies were not visible enough,” he said. He noted Europeans were also surprised, since “to maintain the element of surprise, President Trump opted not to inform allies about the attack” on Iran.

The NATO chief reiterated that the alliance is entering “a period of profound change,” with Europe taking “a greater and fairer share of defence responsibilities,” shifting “from unhealthy codependence to a transatlantic alliance grounded in partnership.” He pointed to concrete actions, including a UK-led effort to protect shipping routes in the Strait of Hormuz, as “evidence of a shift in mindset”.

Rutte also issued a blunt call to Europe’s defence industry, saying: “Produce now, produce faster, bring in those extra shifts, don’t talk about ten-year plans — the money is there, act now.”

On Ukraine, Rutte praised Trump’s push for a settlement, adding that US negotiators “all understand” that the key to breaking the current deadlock in peace talks is for “NATO membership not being off the table” for Ukraine and that the security guarantees provided are “so strong that they know that Russia will not try to attack again”.

Asked about his now infamous “Daddy” remark, he said it was a lost in translation case: “We had a sort of pre-summit meeting with the President in June in The Hague, and he had been very angry that day with Iran and with Israel,” Rutte recounted. “This was in June last year, and I translated from Dutch something we would say: ‘sometimes Daddy has to be angry.’ I was not calling him my Daddy.”

“But of course, Daddy also has a special connotation, and I now have to live with this forever. I own it. Trump owned it,  he even made a T-shirt out of it. He is funny, and that is why we like him. What can I say… I’m not a native speaker… sorry,” he concluded.


'NATO not obliged to reopen the Strait,' Turkey's trade minister tells Euronews


By Shona Murray
Published on 

US President Trump has issued an ultimatum to NATO countries to find a solution to reopening the Strait of Hormuz within days. Turkey – which has the second-largest army in NATO – says the alliance is not obliged to intervene.

NATO allies are not “obliged” to assist the United States and Israel in the war with Iran, Turkey’s Trade Minister, Ă–mer Bolat, told Euronews’ Europe Today.

US President Donald Trump has issued an ultimatum to NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte in Washington, DC, urging allies to find a solution to reopening the Strait of Hormuz within days.

Rutte is in Washington for a series of meetings, including a closed-door discussion with the US president, as well as Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth.

Only a limited number of vessels have been able to pass through the Strait, despite a tentative ceasefire agreed on Tuesday evening aimed at restoring traffic.

A coalition of around 40 countries — mainly NATO members, alongside Japan, South Korea and Australia — has been working on a strategy to secure the waterway once hostilities have ceased.

However, Trump is pushing for an immediate solution, including the deployment of military assets and naval forces.

“NATO’s presence is primarily as a deterrent force to maintain peace and security on the European continent, but also globally,” Bolat said.

Asked whether NATO countries were within their rights to remind Trump that the alliance is defensive in nature and was not involved in planning the conflict, Bolat replied: “Yes.”

NATO members have rejected initial US calls to support the military campaign in Iran, noting they were not consulted ahead of the strikes.

They also reaffirmed the alliance’s defensive mandate, rejecting claims from the White House that they had a duty to intervene alongside the US.


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