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From Boston Harbor to Hormuz: The Unblinking Eye of Executive Power

President Trump's 'Project Freedom' initiative, deploying a substantial naval and air presence to the Strait of Hormuz, is presented by the administration as a purely humanitarian effort to safeguard commercial shipping.

May 5, 2026 - World

From Boston Harbor to Hormuz: The Unblinking Eye of Executive Power

Author By Vivian Holloway

President Trump's 'Project Freedom' initiative, deploying a substantial naval and air presence to the Strait of Hormuz, is presented by the administration as a purely humanitarian effort to safeguard commercial shipping.

Why it matters: The 'Project Freedom' deployment, while ostensibly a response to immediate maritime threats, signals a worrying normalization of executive unilateralism. The President's personal frustration driving such substantial military maneuvers, framed as a humanitarian mission, blurs the lines between national security and the assertion of individual executive prerogative. Historically, the expansion of royal authority over trade and military without explicit representative consent was a cornerstone grievance leading to revolution. As the Federalist Papers warned against, "Executive powers had been usurped." When a president cites personal impatience as a catalyst for deploying armed forces to dictate terms in international waters, it evokes the historical specter of unchecked authority, a power dynamic the American system was designed specifically to guard against. This moment, cloaked in the language of freedom, may well prove to be another incremental step towards an executive branch unmoored from traditional checks.

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