Hormuz – Allies… or Subcontractors ?

By Régis Ollivier – Tuesday, March 17, 2026

In Washington, requests are no longer truly made.
They are conveyed.

And for far too long, some have mistaken alliance for alignment.

So when France declines an American request in the Strait of Hormuz, the reaction is immediate: irritation, criticism, and the familiar charge of a “lack of solidarity.”

Which, translated plainly, means: you are no longer complying.

Because that is, in essence, the issue.

For years, NATO has been gradually evolving from a defensive alliance into a strategic framework increasingly shaped around U.S. priorities.

Participation is expected.
Understanding is optional.
Decision-making, even less so.

This time, however, the answer is no.

Germany says Nein.
Spain says No.
And France — in a move rare enough to be noted — steps out of line and declines to play the role of the well-disciplined extra.

Let us be clear:
an ally is neither a vassal nor a subcontractor.

Still less an instrument.

If the United States chooses to act, it is free to do so.
If it seeks support, it must persuade.

But it would do well to stop confusing leadership with instruction.

Push the line too far, for too long, and even the most reliable allies will eventually let go.

The Colonel salutes you. 🫡

Former DGSE Officer | Strategic Analyst – Defense & Geopolitics | Intelligence & International Security
French Ministry of Armed Forces
EMSST – Advanced Military Studies (Paris, France)


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