Guarding the Strait of Malacca: Lessons from Red Sea Tensions
The evolving conflict dynamics in the Red Sea offer more than a distant geopolitical spectacle; they provide a cautionary lesson for maritime states whose prosperity depends on open sea lanes. According to Michael Horton, co-founder of Red Sea Analytics International, the Houthis’ strategy of “conditional deterrence,” marked by calibrated escalation and restraint, underscores how non-state actors can weaponize geography without necessarily closing critical chokepoints. For Malaysia, this has direct relevance. The Strait of Malacca as one of the busiest and most strategically vital waterways in the world faces similar latent vulnerabilities, even if the actors and context differ. The Houthis have demonstrated that control over even part of a maritime chokepoint, like the Bab el-Mandeb, can generate disproportionate strategic leverage. By threatening disruption rather than executing it fully, they preserve both deterrence value and operational sustainability. Their restraint is n...