How the Hormuz Strait Crisis Impacts Asia’s Energy Security: A Comprehensive Analysis
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Securing international sea lanes serves every nation’s interests… Seoul seeks swift restoration of global maritime logistics
Seoul is carefully reviewing response options, weighing domestic law and peninsula readiness… exploring combinations of measures optimized for the national interest

Blue House[Yonhap News file photo][Yonhap News file photo]
The Blue House said Seoul has been in close contact with key allies, including the United States, and is conducting broad consultations on how it might contribute after President Donald Trump requested the deployment of naval vessels to the Strait of Hormuz.
A senior Blue House official said on the 20th the situation in the Middle East is a major international concern that could become protracted. Disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, in particular, would directly affect South Korea’s energy supplies and economy.
The official said bodies such as the U.N. Security Council and the International Maritime Organization (IMO) have expressed serious concern and called for a coordinated international response. Several countries are reviewing ways to contribute to guaranteeing free passage through the strait.
He stressed Seoul’s position that the safety of international sea lanes and freedom of navigation serve every country’s interests and are protected under international law. On that basis, Seoul hopes the global maritime logistics network will be restored quickly.
He added the government is carefully reviewing response options while taking domestic laws and procedures and its readiness on the Korean Peninsula into account, and that it is exploring combinations of measures optimized for the national interest.
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Seong Seung-hwan (ssh82@yna.co.kr)











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