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'Hormuz isn't social media, you can't block it back': Iran's cheeky swipe at US

The Strait of Hormuz, through which a significant portion of the world’s oil supply passes, has emerged as a flashpoint in the escalating confrontation between Iran and the US–Israel alliance

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In the middle of a very real war, Iran has chosen an unexpectedly familiar battlefield — social media — and its latest salvo comes with a punchline.

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The Iranian Consulate in Hyderabad stirred up chatter online with a witty jab at the United States over tensions in the strategically crucial Strait of Hormuz, remarking: “The Strait of Hormuz isn’t social media. If someone blocks you, you can’t just block them back.”

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The quip, delivered on X, is the latest in a string of tongue-in-cheek posts by Iranian diplomatic missions worldwide, as the ongoing conflict spills from the seas into screens.

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What might have otherwise been a dry geopolitical standoff is now doubling up as a meme war, complete with Bollywood references and internet-style sarcasm.

Iranian embassies and consulates have, in recent days, leaned heavily into humour — from cinematic one-liners to pop culture callbacks — to counter US rhetoric and assert their position amid rising tensions.

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The context, however, is anything but light. The Strait of Hormuz, through which a significant portion of the world’s oil supply passes, has emerged as a flashpoint in the escalating confrontation between Iran and the US–Israel alliance. Any disruption here is less about “blocking” and more about rattling global markets.

Yet, Iran’s messaging suggests that while warships may patrol the waters, wit is patrolling timelines.

The Hyderabad post follows a series of similar jibes — including Bollywood-style warnings and meme-laced responses — that have turned diplomatic communication into something resembling a stand-up routine with strategic undertones.

If nothing else, Tehran appears keen to remind Washington that while you can mute notifications, you cannot mute geography.

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