Karishma Vaswani, Columnist

How Asia Should Deal With the ‘Malacca Dilemma’

Vulnerable to disruption.

Photographer: Adek Berry/AFP/Getty Images

If the Iran War has taught us nothing else, it’s that weaponizing shipping routes is now the military move du jour. That’s rightly turned attention to the Taiwan Strait, but in this era of intense US-China rivalry, the Strait of Malacca is just as important.

The shipping route — which carries roughly 40% of global trade and around 80% of China’s imported oil — has long been regarded as vulnerable to disruption. Southeast Asia’s divisions will make any crisis much harder to contain.