Oh come on! I really wanted the Brits to win this inefficiency contest!

It's okay, they might take back the crown if Hinkley Point C ever gets completed. I'm about as pro-nuclear power as it gets, but this is definitely an area the west has completely lost its marbles. Vogtle 3 and 4 in Georgia were outrageously priced at nearly $20 billion each, but Hinkley C looks to completely obliterate those numbers at $25 billion plus each when complete.
Frankly, I don't see SMRs moving the needle that much in regards to cost in the US. Any nuclear power plant over $10/w in generation capex is going to have a hard time being competitive and I have yet to see numbers that suggest SMRs that achieve that. I'm all renewables at my off-grid home and think anyone living in a single detached home in the US should do a solar plus battery system not for environmental reasons, but
purely to save money. The crazy thing is, if you consider the average 1 GW nuclear power plant in the west will end up being easily over $15B, you can build out a 5 GW solar development with 120 GWh of battery capacity for about the same initial CapEx costs. When the guys who are against renewlabes come out with their arguments, they're always using data from years past when it comes down to carbon emissions or lifecycle costs, what people fail to realize is these following graphs:
Price of solar modules went from over $100 per watt in 1975 to just 7 cents per watt in 2025, lithium batteries went from over $5000 per kwh to about $30 per kwh today. And both of these are on track for continued priced reductions, less than 5 cents per watt and $20 per kwh before the end of the decade. No other energy generation method had cost reductions like that. LCoE of solar is already amongst the cheapest in the developed world, definitely lower than CC NG and coal. And just for context on scale, the top solar module manufacturer shipped 100 GW of solar modules this year. 100 GW! Maybe the equivalent total output of 20 to 25 nuclear power plants, for one
single company. Top 10 module manufacturers shipped 500 GW or equivalent to
over 100 nuclear power plants. As of this year, PV solar generated
more energy than all nuclear power plants combined in the world. The lower hanging fruit of offsetting peak consumption is being addressed in the mos developed markets so the biggest factor is storage, but with storage costs dropping year by year, it's just a matter of time. DOE's SunShot 2030 goals have already been reached and I think the cost trajectory can beat the most optimistic SunShot 2050 LSC (low storage cost) goals by the end of the decade.
Would the US have jumped into the Gulf War the way we did id if it did not involve 3 of the biggest oil exporters (Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Iraq) ? The re-formation of the 5th Fleet was basically driven by the aftermath strategy to the Gulf War.
The military investment admittedly isn’t a direct subsidy toward keeping energy prices low, but the 5th Fleet and its precursor deployments into protecting Anglo-American oil interests in Iran and Saudi Arabia had that intended effect. And for the exactly the reason you claim - higher gasoline prices at the national level are a “third rail” in US politics.
Today the 5th Fleet S. secures sea‑lanes used by all importers, Washington effectively socializes the cost of “energy security” while all consumers, foreign and domestic, benefit in the form of lower world prices. From a U.S. domestic perspective, this can be seen as an off‑budget energy subsidy: taxpayers fund the Fifth Fleet and related posture so that energy‑price risk is suppressed, a benefit that accrues to motorists, airlines, industry, and the politically sensitive pump prices.
To put it differently - the 5th Fleet and associated expenditures wouldn’t likely exist if cheap energy came from other sources.
Hard to say, a lot of people make that assertion but in terms of actual gains the US has directly received from the involvement in the Gulf Wars, it's not much, or certainly not proportional to the size of the US economy. Go look up all the concessions obtained from Iraq, US companies make up a smaller share than companies from the UK, China or even Malaysia or Italy or Russia on the upstream side. US isn't even a top 5 purchaser of crude oil from Iraq, Kuwait or Saudi Arabia today though it was 20 years back, and if anything, their respective governments receives a royalty from each barrel produced, so the biggest beneficiaries should be the gulf countries for having stability in the region.
Lower crude prices, that's a really difficult thing to define. WTI and Brent are right around $60 a barrel right now, which makes it essentially impossible for new wells to be profitable in the US. Considering over 2/3 of all production in the US is from unconventional plays, and considering almost all new wells are unconventional plays, essentially if price per barrel drops any further, it won't be profitable for US producers to continue production. This chart below shows break even price for US producers from various basins for new and existing wells, and keep in mind, productivity for these formations drop on average more than 80% after 5 years so you can't rely on the existing wells figures for long term projections. This is essentially why we have the Intangible Drilling Cost deduction, fracking tight oil involves so much costs to drill for much shorter returns vs conventional plays in the past. If it wasn't for that, it's a gamble spending $5+ million for drilling on a site with returns that might look great the first year but quickly drop the next few years.
So it's a delicate balance to keep crude oil in a range where we can have cheap gas while preserving profitability of domestic oil producers. And reducing conflict and by extension, price volatility in the middle east region is why the Fifth Fleet's presence is important...not
just for the United States, but the Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Indians, Europeans and the rest of the world that imports
more crude oil than we do here in the US today.