1. The War That Did Not End In A Week
The starting assumption in Western commentary was simple. Israel and the United States would strike Iran decapitating its leadership and taking out its military facilities. In the midst of such chaos the Iranian people would rise up against the system and some form of government friendly to the United States would follow.
Instead the opposite appears to have happened.The regime continues to function, Iranian forces focusing on the destruction of Israeli and American bases throughout the region and are knocking out ISR facilities.
The expected rapid regime collapse did not occur and instead energy prices are on their way to doubling and in place of a short war there is now the expectation that the war could go on for many months if not years.
Historically this outcome should not surprise us. Precision strikes rarely end wars. They often trigger the opposite reaction - nationalism and resistance.
This is what some military theorists describe as the “smart bomb trap”: technological superiority encourages leaders to believe wars can be won quickly from the air.
The reality is usually escalation.
- Smart bomb trap – the belief that precision technology allows wars to be won quickly without large scale escalation or occupation.
Sources
Robert Pape – University of Chicago
https://political-science.uchicago.edu
2. The Oil Market – The Real Time War Indicator
Take and interpret official statistics to penetrate the fog of war. Financial markets often reveal what official statements conceal. In the 1991 Gulf War, oil prices collapsed when the bombing began because traders expected a rapid victory. In the 2003 Iraq invasion, oil prices also fell once the attack started.The market believed both wars would be short. But today the opposite is happening. Oil prices are rising sharply, traders are pricing in disruption rather than resolution.
The most obvious reason is the Strait of Hormuz. Around 20 percent of global oil supply passes through this narrow channel between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula. Closing it does not require a full naval blockade, it can be done by a pickup truck or two camels carrying heavy artillery on the back. Certainly, drone attacks on tankers, mines or small boat attacks, insurers withdrawing coverage, shipping companies refusing to enter the area... It is easily done and there is little that America or Israel can do to stop this and bear in mind that this would stop the flow of oil and LNG down the Persian Gulf, but equally it would stop the flow of vital imports up to the gulf states themselves.
The Nature of Gulf Kingdoms
Remember these gulf states are figments of the Western imagination, temporary, recently created, tiny "monarchies" where a local chief with Western backing called himself King and his fort became a palace.
They were created on the littoral fringe of a vast and timeless ever-churning desert. They are wholy artificial places where you can go make huge amounts of money, pay no taxes and live in complete security (you thought), but they're also places that have no real independent existence at all, they rely entirely on the outside world, oil and the dollar. They produce nothing except oil and fresh water from desalination plants, for everything else they must import.
Their purpose is to protect the extraction of oil and its delivery down the sea lanes to global markets. Neither the kingdoms nor the families running them were expected or built to last very long.
The deal was oil contracts priced in dollars in exchange for American protection. The income is invested back into American treasuries which allows America to continue its debt-based economic existence.
The kings surely cannot be surprised that if America uses its bases to attack Iran, that Iran should in return attempt to obliterate those bases.
- Strategic chokepoint – a narrow geographic passage controlling critical trade or military movement.
Sources
US Energy Information Administration
https://www.eia.gov
3. The Economic Domino Effect
Energy shocks historically trigger economic crises. Oil flows through Hormuz are disrupted, resulting in global oil prices surging, energy importers face rising inflation, central banks are likely to put interest rate cuts on hold, economies seize up.
The result is likely to be stagflation. Europe is particularly vulnerable because already Russian gas supplies have been cut off, Germany has closed nuclear power plants against the backdrop of high energy import dependency.
A prolonged oil shock therefore risks pushing the global economy toward recession and this threat is likely to be decisive in deciding how this conflict will end.
- Stagflation – a situation where inflation rises while economic growth slows and unemployment increases.
Sources
OECD – Energy price shocks
https://www.oecd.org
4. Who Is Actually Driving The War
One of the most important considerations is political control, who is calling the shots, who is in the driving seat.
The assumption in markets is that President Trump will eventually pull back, as Trump famously always chickens out (TACO).
However an objective analysis suggests something different. The war may not be driven primarily from Washington - the driving force seems to be Israel and specifically, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whose strategic ambition for the last thirty years has been to remove Iran as a regional peer competitor in West Asia and to pursue his apocalyptic vision of a greater Israel.
If that assessment is correct, then you cannot count on the usual TACO expectation that “Washington will de escalate”.
- Regional hegemony – the dominance of one state over others within a particular geographic region.
Sources
Council on Foreign Relations
https://www.cfr.org
5. Why Iran Cannot Easily Back Down
Iran faces its own strategic dilemma. Iran has faced pressure from America and Israel since the 1979 revolution and the 444-day hostage crisis and more painfully in the past year the country has experienced repeated strikes on its territory.
If it fails to respond forcefully, its credibility and deterrence threat collapses, making further attacks become more likely. It is a mystery to most as to why the Iranian religious leadership could not see that its continued in existence depended on developing a nuclear deterrence.
Resistance tactics can continue for a long time even against technologically superior opponents.
- Asymmetric warfare – a strategy where weaker actors use unconventional methods to counter stronger militaries.
Sources
RAND Corporation – Asymmetric conflict studies
https://www.rand.org
6. The Escalation Ladder
Military planners often think about conflict using the concept of an escalation ladder.
The steps typically look like this.
- sanctions and economic pressure
- proxy conflicts
- targeted air strikes
- regional war
- ground invasion
- tactical nuclear weapons
- strategic new clear exchange
Each step occurs when the previous one fails to achieve decisive results. The danger lies not in the first step but in the cumulative movement upwards. Already, this conflict has moved beyond the early stages
- Escalation ladder - a model describing how conflicts intensify through successive stages of military force.
Sources
Herman Kahn – On Escalation
https://www.rand.org
7. The risk of this conflict going new clear
It's true that most people find new clear war unimaginable, but now we see the subject entering the conversation for one reason: frustration with failed strategies.
After all, consider that if leadership decapitation fails, regime change does not occur, the war becomes prolonged, global economic damage intensifies, a global recession looms, then American leaders may concede to Israel a decisive solution.
From history we know that two actions have produced rapid regime collapse: large scale ground invasion and or an overwhelming destructive shock. We think of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
- Tail risk - a low probability event that carries extremely large consequences.
Sources
SIPRI – Nuclear weapons reports
https://sipri.org
8. The Wider Systemic Risk
The final argument in the discussion comes from economist Alastair Macleod. His focus is not just the battlefield, but the global financial system.
The West enters this crisis with several structural weaknesses - very high government debt, fragile financial markets, lingering inflation pressures and energy vulnerability.
A prolonged war combined with an oil shock could easily trigger broader instability.
Possible outcomes as we have seen include: recession, more financial market stress, currency instability and political upheaval if not regime change in Western (sic) countries.
So in this view, the conflict may produce systemic consequences far beyond the Middle East.
- Systemic crisis – a breakdown affecting the entire political or financial system rather than a single sector.
Sources
Bank for International Settlements
https://www.bis.org
9. The Possible Futures
Putting the arguments together we can see several possible paths.
Scenario one – quick de escalation
• oil prices fall
• markets rally strongly
• conflict stabilises.
Scenario two – prolonged regional war
• oil shock spreads globally
• recession emerges.
Scenario three – wider escalation
• direct confrontation between larger powers
• severe economic disruption.
Scenario four – extreme escalation
• new clear weapons used as a decisive shock.
Scenario five – systemic crisis
• financial and political instability within Western economies themselves.
None of these outcomes is certain.
But the combination of geopolitical escalation, energy disruption and financial fragility means the risks now extend far beyond the original battlefield.
- Geopolitical systemic shift – a transformation in the global balance of power triggered by major conflict or economic upheaval.
Sources
International Crisis Group
https://www.crisisgroup.org









