Threatening to "Blow Up" Oman Could Cost the US Its Most Strategic Gulf Ally
The Paradox of Coercion
In the high-stakes theater of Middle Eastern geopolitics, coercion is a standard tool of statecraft. But when that coercion is directed at a nation whose primary strategic value lies in its strict neutrality, the results can be disastrously counterproductive. This is the precarious position the United States now finds itself in following President Donald Trump’s unprecedented threat to militarily strike Oman.
The inciting incident was a report, initially surfaced by The Wall Street Journal, that the US had grown deeply frustrated with Muscat’s refusal to pick a side in the ongoing US-Israeli war against Iran. Washington was reportedly pressuring the Sultanate to sever diplomatic ties with Tehran. Tensions reached a boiling point following a new intelligence assessment suggesting Iran and Oman had explored a joint arrangement to impose fees on vessels navigating the critically important Strait of Hormuz.
In response, President Trump issued a stark, unvarnished ultimatum: “Oman will behave just like everybody else, or we’ll have to blow them up. They understand that. They’ll be fine.” Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent quickly followed up with threats of aggressive sanctions, even as he held a call with Oman’s ambassador to Washington, Talal Alrahbi, to extract assurances that the Sultanate had “no plans for tolling.”
While the administration likely views this maximum-pressure tactic as a necessary lever to keep the Strait of Hormuz out of Iranian hands, it fundamentally misreads the strategic calculus of Oman. By threatening to destroy a country that hosts critical American military access points, the US risks triggering a catastrophic blowback: Oman may simply close those bases, viewing the American military presence not as a shield, but as the very source of its existential vulnerability.
The Strategic Footprint and the Security Dilemma
To understand the gravity of this miscalculation, one must understand Oman’s unique military relationship with the United States. Unlike Qatar, Bahrain, or the UAE, Oman does not host massive, permanent, highly visible US military bases. Instead, it operates under decades-old defense cooperation agreements that grant American forces crucial, albeit quieter, access to its facilities.
This footprint is strategically vital. The Port of Duqm and the Port of Salalah serve as indispensable logistics and resupply hubs for the US Navy in the Arabian Sea and the western Indian Ocean. The RAFO Thumrait Air Base supports critical American air operations and serves as a key depot for transportable modular equipment. Furthermore, since 1980, the US has utilized Masirah Island for the prepositioning of military equipment.
For decades, this arrangement was a win-win. The US gained vital logistical depth outside the more volatile northern Gulf states, and Oman gained a security umbrella without sacrificing its fiercely guarded neutrality.
However, Trump’s explicit threat to "blow them up" shatters this equilibrium. It introduces a profound security dilemma for the Omani leadership. If the United States is openly threatening military action against the Sultanate, the American military assets stationed on Omani soil instantly transform from security assets into severe security liabilities.
From Muscat’s perspective, the logic becomes grim but undeniable. The US military facilities are the physical tether binding Oman to the American war effort. If Oman refuses to sever ties with Iran, those very bases could be used by the US to project power, effectively making Oman a co-belligerent and a prime target for Iranian retaliation—a reality Oman already faced in March 2026 when Iranian drones struck Duqm, Salalah, and Sohar. Conversely, if Oman complies with US demands, it destroys its own economy and diplomatic standing by alienating Tehran.
Faced with a threat from Washington to "blow them up" if they step out of line, Omani leaders may conclude that the only way to ensure the survival of the state and preserve their neutrality is to evict the US military. By closing the ports at Duqm and Salalah and denying access to Thumrait, Oman removes the physical pretext for US aggression and drastically lowers its profile as a military target.
The Loss of the "Switzerland of the Middle East"
If Oman follows through on closing these access points, the operational blowback for the US military would be immediate and severe. Losing Duqm and Salalah would force the US Navy to rely on more distant, heavily congested, and heavily targeted facilities in the northern Gulf. It would stretch logistical supply lines, increase operational costs, and severely degrade the American ability to sustain naval operations in the Indian Ocean and the Arabian Sea.
But the loss of physical access pales in comparison to the loss of Oman’s diplomatic utility. For decades, Oman has served as the "Switzerland of the Middle East." Its policy of "friends to all, enemies to none" has made it the most reliable backchannel in the region. Omani mediators facilitated the secret talks that led to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, brokered truces in Yemen, and hosted indirect talks between Washington and Tehran right up until the current conflict.
By threatening to bomb the region's most effective neutral mediator, the Trump administration is effectively burning down the diplomatic bridge it may desperately need to cross to end the war with Iran. As Omani Information Minister Abdulla al-Harrasi diplomatically but firmly reiterated, Oman stands ready to "promote stability, deter disruption, and safeguard our shared strategic interests." But diplomacy requires a baseline of trust, and a threat to annihilate a partner destroys that trust instantly.
A Chilling Message to the Gulf
Finally, the threat to "blow up" Oman sends a chilling message to the rest of the Gulf Cooperation Council. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, and Kuwait all host significant American military presences, and all have suffered devastating Iranian missile and drone strikes during the current conflict.
These nations have absorbed immense damage to maintain their alliance with Washington. If they see the United States threatening to militarily strike Oman—a country that has been far more restrained, neutral, and cooperative than any of them—the underlying bargain of the US-Gulf security architecture begins to look fatally flawed. The implicit message is that American security guarantees are conditional, and that even the most compliant Arab partners will face existential threats if they fail to perfectly align with Washington's immediate tactical demands.
This realization could accelerate a regional reassessment. Gulf leaders may quietly begin to question whether hosting American forces is worth the risk of becoming the target of both Iranian retaliation and American coercion.
The Limits of Brinkmanship
President Trump’s threat to "blow up" Oman was likely intended as a blunt instrument of leverage, a way to force Muscat into line regarding the Strait of Hormuz. But in the nuanced ecosystem of Middle Eastern geopolitics, blunt instruments often shatter the very glass houses they are swung at.
By treating a neutral intermediary as a recalcitrant adversary, the United States risks pushing Oman to revoke American access to critical military facilities, driving the Sultanate closer to the very Iranian embrace Washington fears, and signaling to the rest of the Gulf that American alliances are built on the threat of force rather than mutual interest. In its quest to control the Strait of Hormuz, the US may inadvertently hand the keys to its own strategic eviction in the Gulf.