The World’s Most Expensive 18 Miles – Bab el-Mandeb Today
Asymmetric warfare meets imperial ambition: inside the reality of the strait that can spike oil prices, cripple Egypt, and force trillion-dollar navies to rethink everything The Bab el-Mandeb Strait, often called the Gate of Tears , stands as one of the world's most precarious maritime arteries in March 2026. Nestled between Yemen's rugged coastline and the Horn of Africa, this narrow 18-mile-wide passage remains the vital southern gateway to the Red Sea and, ultimately, the Suez Canal. It carries roughly 12% of global trade, 30% of container traffic, and more than 6 million barrels of oil each day, linking Asia's manufacturing hubs directly to European and North American markets. Yet in recent years, this chokepoint has become a flashpoint of asymmetric warfare, economic pain, and great-power maneuvering. Houthi attacks—using inexpensive drones and missiles—have repeatedly disrupted shipping, forcing massive reroutes around Africa's Cape of Good Hope that add 1...