Steelman · slot A
Allies pay for the order they rely on
A burden-sharing hawk would argue —South Korea imports the overwhelming majority of its crude through the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz. When that artery is threatened, Seoul is not a bystander — it is one of the primary beneficiaries of the freedom-of-navigation regime US ships and sailors have shouldered for decades. Asking a treaty ally with a serious blue-water navy to contribute escorts for tankers it itself depends on is not 'pleading,' it is the bare minimum of a functioning alliance. If allies want a rules-based maritime order rather than an Iranian veto over global energy flows, they have to put hulls in the water. Hegseth and Caine laying out the operation publicly on Tuesday is exactly the kind of transparency that makes coalition contributions politically possible at home.