đ·đș Putin’s Moment Amid Iran War: Russia Becomes Go-To Energy King As Hormuz Burns, Cripples Europe?hl

With tankers dodging missile trails in the Strait of Hormuz and insurance rates exploding, Moscow is moving to seize what Kremlin insiders are calling âPutinâs momentâ â a onceâinâaâgeneration chance to reâcrown Russia as the worldâs indispensable energy superpower.
As the USâIsrael war with Iran chokes off key Gulf exports, European gas hubs are flashing red. LNG cargoes are delayed, refineries scramble for nonâGulf crude, and power traders warn of rolling blackouts if the crisis drags on. Into that panic steps Russia, quietly offering âreliableâ oil and gas flows through pipelines and northern sea routes long written off by Brussels after the Ukraine invasion.
Discounted Urals crude is suddenly back in vogue; obscure intermediaries in the Caucasus and Central Asia are brokering âlaunderedâ Russian barrels that keep European refineries running while politicians insist sanctions remain intact. At the same time, Gazprom and Rosneft negotiators are racing through capitals from Budapest to Belgrade, dangling emergency contracts and flexible payment terms â often in rubles.
EU officials publicly resist, vowing not to âswap one dependency for another.â But privately, several governments admit they have little immediate alternative if Hormuz stays a shooting gallery. Each extra Russian shipment that docks, each quiet waiver granted, chips away at years of hardâfought energy diversification.
For Putin, the optics are pure geopolitical revenge: a sanctioned, isolated Russia turned back into Europeâs reluctant lifeline. For Europe, the nightmare is clear â survive this winterâs Iranâtriggered shock, only to wake up and discover that in breaking free of Gulf turmoil, it may have walked straight back into Moscowâs energy trap.