Perhaps in conjunction with Malaysia and Singapore.
OK, that's not happening . . . YET.
As I'm sure everyone here knows, Indonesia is a Muslim nation and is the 4th most populous in the world (after India, China and the US).
Since the US is abandoning its Policeman of the World status, and since the Iran deal seems likely to institutionalize charging fees for passage through Hormuz, why shouldn't other well-placed nations also jump on this money-making proposition?
Then Yemen, Djibouti and maybe Eritrea could charge to enter and leave the Red Sea.
What other choke points could be good moneymakers? How about Britain, Spain and Morocco controlling access to and from the Mediterranean Sea? That sounds like a non-starter, but who knows?
OK, that's not happening . . . YET.
As I'm sure everyone here knows, Indonesia is a Muslim nation and is the 4th most populous in the world (after India, China and the US).
Since the US is abandoning its Policeman of the World status, and since the Iran deal seems likely to institutionalize charging fees for passage through Hormuz, why shouldn't other well-placed nations also jump on this money-making proposition?
Then Yemen, Djibouti and maybe Eritrea could charge to enter and leave the Red Sea.
What other choke points could be good moneymakers? How about Britain, Spain and Morocco controlling access to and from the Mediterranean Sea? That sounds like a non-starter, but who knows?
