A Forgotten Crisis Explains Today’s Oil Shock

A Japanese oil tanker slips through the Strait of Hormuz in the dead of night, radio silenced to conceal its position. Iran secures a market for its crude in defiance of Western sanctions. The balance of the world’s energy trade switches from incumbent hegemons toward emerging powers.

If that feels like a description of current events in the Middle East, you might need to go back to the history books. The 1953 Nissho Maru incident is largely forgotten, but prefigured the great geopolitical emergencies of the subsequent decades: the 1956 Suez Crisis, the 1960 founding of OPEC, and the 1973 Arab oil embargo.

It also offers a lesson for today’s crisis: Asian economies will stop at nothing to secure energy independence, even if it angers Western allies. Meanwhile, the quest for cheap power — oil from developing countries in 1953 and renewables in 2026 — will eclipse every other consideration.

In Japan, there’s been a resurgence of interest in the Nissho Maru. A novel, by far-right writer-turned-politician Naoki Hyakuta, became a best-seller in 2013 and was made into a popular film by the director of Godzilla Minus One. Enduring memories of the incident may well explain the kerfuffle over a report last week, since refuted by the company, that a Mitsui OSK Lines Ltd. oil tanker had managed to sneak through Hormuz.

The story resonates because it mirrors the current anti-elitist mood of an imperial order in decline. In 1953, Japan had only recently emerged from the US occupation that followed World War II. Iran had just nationalized a petroleum industry previously run by the Anglo-Iranian Oil Co., or AIOC, the predecessor of BP Plc. That prompted an embargo by the Royal Navy.

In Japan, the Nissho Maru’s owner Idemitsu Kosan Co. was an upstart trader at odds with the cozy oligopoly of foreign oil giants and domestic zaibatsu conglomerates who controlled the country’s energy supplies. Squeezed by US crude producers seeking to cut out his middleman role as an importer, founder Sazo Idemitsu turned to Iran, which was offering barrels at a 30% discount if he was prepared to flout the British blockade.