Friday, 3 April 2026

Strait of Hormuz: Mandating Force, Manufacturing Legitimacy

The draft resolution before the United Nations Security Council, fronted by Bahrain, is not a neutral instrument to secure maritime trade—it is an attempt to manufacture legal cover for the use of force against Iran. Cloaked in the language of “defensive necessity,” it effectively authorizes escalation while evading the question that matters most, who set this crisis in motion?

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz did not occur in isolation. It followed coordinated strikes by the United States and Israel on Iranian territory—reportedly at a time when nuclear negotiations were still underway. That decision did not just derailed diplomacy; it rendered it irrelevant. Yet, the diplomatic narrative that followed has been predictably selective - Iran’s response is branded destabilizing, while the initiating use of force is quietly normalized.

This is not inconsistency—it is doctrine. The same Council that failed to act during the devastation of Gaza, paralyzed by repeated vetoes, now finds urgency in authorizing force under elastic terminology. “All defensive means necessary” is not a stabilizing clause; it is a blank cheque. Once endorsed, it lowers the threshold for military action under the imprimatur of international legitimacy.

Crucially, the façade of consensus is already cracking. China has warned that authorizing force would legitimize indiscriminate escalation. Russia and France have disrupted procedural unanimity, exposing the geopolitical fractures beneath the resolution. This is not collective security—it is contested power politics dressed up as multilateralism.

Meanwhile, Donald Trump continues to escalate rhetorically and militarily without presenting a credible pathway to reopening the Strait or stabilizing energy flows. Oil markets have already reacted, underscoring a simple truth: escalation without strategy is not deterrence—it is risk exported to the global economy.

Iran, hardened by decades of sanctions and isolation, is not capitulating—it is recalibrating. Its threat to restrict maritime passage is not an act of adventurism; it is leverage in the face of sustained pressure. To deny that context is to strip the crisis of causality and reduce diplomacy to theatre.

What is being constructed here is not a ceasefire framework but a hierarchy of compliance. The demand is not de-escalation—it is submission. And submission, when enforced through selective legality, does not produce stability; it breeds prolonged confrontation.

If adopted, this resolution will not secure the Strait of Hormuz. It will secure a precedent—one where force is legalized after the fact, where power dictates principle, and where the language of international order is repurposed to justify its erosion.

Thursday, 2 April 2026

Why should world bear brunt of Trump’s miscalculation?

After reviewing reports of Donald Trump’s recent address to the American public, a number of observations emerge:

  1. The president of a global superpower appears detached from ground realities, almost operating in a state of strategic illusion. Either he is not adequately heeding intelligence assessments, or those assessments themselves are failing him.
  2. There is a persistent refusal to acknowledge that Iran has demonstrated considerable resilience—both as a state and as a military actor with indigenous capabilities. The stated objectives of regime change and meaningful degradation of its nuclear and missile assets remain largely unfulfilled.
  3. His European allies are visibly reluctant to associate themselves with a war widely perceived as initiated under the influence of Benjamin Netanyahu. This hesitation underscores growing transatlantic unease.
  4. While Trump may have managed to secure political loyalty at home to fend off institutional challenges, the broader sentiment within the United States is increasingly uneasy. Public discontent is no longer easy to contain.
  5. The notion of occupying Kharg Island borders on strategic fantasy. Iran is not Venezuela; any such misadventure could prove disastrously costly, with airborne troops facing overwhelming resistance within hours rather than days.
  6. Reports suggesting the withdrawal or repositioning of US naval assets reflect an uncomfortable reality: modern asymmetric warfare—particularly drone and missile capabilities—has altered the battlefield in Iran’s favor.
  7. Even if financial resources—reportedly in the range of $200 billion—are available, the sustainability of logistics and supply chains remains questionable. Wars are not won by funding alone, but by operational continuity.

Recent reporting also indicates that while Trump claimed progress and “mission success,” he offered no clear exit strategy, even as global markets reacted negatively and oil prices surged amid fears of prolonged conflict.

Therefore, the insistence on Iran’s “unconditional surrender” appears increasingly detached from strategic reality. A more pragmatic course would be to engage with some of Tehran’s terms and seek an end to what is fast becoming a protracted and costly conflict.

Why should the global economy—and indeed the wider international community—be compelled to absorb the consequences of what increasingly resembles a strategic miscalculation driven by one leader, especially when that leader faces growing skepticism at home?

Wednesday, 1 April 2026

Ceasefire or Strategic Overreach? Washington’s Iran Dilemma

The confrontation between the United States and Iran has entered a familiar but dangerous phase: both sides speak of ceasefire, yet their conditions make peace increasingly elusive.

At the center of this standoff lies the Strait of Hormuz—a vital artery for global energy flows. Washington’s primary demand is its immediate reopening, coupled with far-reaching conditions: rollback of Iran’s nuclear program, curbs on its missile capabilities, and disengagement from regional allies. In effect, the United States is seeking not merely de-escalation, but a strategic reordering of Iran’s regional posture.

Tehran, unsurprisingly, views these demands as excessive. Its counter-conditions—cessation of attacks, guarantees against future aggression, and compensation for war damages—reflect a sovereignty-driven approach. Most critically, Iran insists on recognition of its authority over Hormuz, transforming a geographic chokepoint into a symbol of national leverage.

This divergence reflects a deeper divide. The United States frames the ceasefire in terms of global security and stability; Iran frames it in terms of sovereignty and deterrence. Each side demands that the other act first—Washington insisting on compliance before relief, and Tehran demanding guarantees before concessions.

It is within this context that the strategy of President Donald Trump invites scrutiny. By advancing what appears to be a maximalist framework, Washington risks conflating ceasefire with capitulation. Such an approach may project strength, but it also narrows the diplomatic space necessary for de-escalation.

There is also a structural contradiction. While the United States seeks secure and uninterrupted maritime flows, its pressure-heavy strategy may incentivize Iran to tighten, rather than loosen, its grip over the Strait. The sequencing problem—each side waiting for the other to move first—has effectively locked diplomacy in place.

Ultimately, the trajectory of this conflict suggests that both Washington and Tehran may be overestimating what force alone can achieve. While US strategy risks prolonging a conflict it seeks to shape, Iran too faces economic strain and the long-term costs of sustained confrontation.

What is increasingly evident is that neither side is positioned for a clear or lasting victory. Instead, the burden is shifting outward. Energy markets remain unsettled, trade flows uncertain, and inflationary pressures persistent—leaving much of the global economy to absorb the consequences of a conflict it neither initiated nor controls.

If this impasse endures, the outcome may not be defined by who wins the war, but by who best avoids its costs. And on that count, the rest of the world may already be losing.

 

Tuesday, 31 March 2026

Trump’s Energy Ultimatum: Straining the Transatlantic Compact

The latest outburst by Donald Trump marks more than a passing diplomatic flare-up—it signals a troubling shift in the nature of Western alliances. By telling Britain to “go get your own oil,” Trump has introduced a coercive undertone into what has long been a relationship anchored in shared responsibility and strategic trust. In doing so, he risks diminishing not only the standing of King Charles III but also the perceived credibility of Britain’s security apparatus, including MI6.

The immediate trigger lies in British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s decision to avoid direct military involvement in strikes against Iran, opting instead for de-escalation. Washington’s response, however, frames restraint as reluctance.

Trump’s assertion that allies unwilling to participate in conflict should not expect US support in securing critical energy routes—particularly the Strait of Hormuz—effectively recasts alliance obligations as conditional.

This approach exposes a deeper inconsistency. While claiming that the United States has already “done the hard part,” Washington is simultaneously urging partners to assume the most immediate risks—reopening a volatile maritime chokepoint amid ongoing hostilities. If stability had indeed been restored, global oil flows would not remain disrupted, nor would energy prices continue their upward surge, now crossing the US$100 per barrel threshold.

Remarks by Pete Hegseth questioning the readiness of the Royal Navy reinforce a narrative of diminished British capability. Yet this overlooks the UK’s sustained security presence in the Gulf.

As Defence Secretary John Healey emphasized, Britain continues to contribute meaningfully to regional stability—its role defined by operational commitments rather than rhetorical alignment.

The broader concern is structural. By linking energy access with military participation, Washington risks normalizing a transactional model of alliance management. Such an approach may yield short-term leverage but carries long-term costs, including erosion of trust and reduced cohesion among Western partners.

At a time when geopolitical fault lines are widening, this recalibration could prove consequential. Strategic ambiguity within the transatlantic alliance not only complicates crisis response but may also create space for rival powers to exploit divisions. In seeking to pressure allies, Washington may ultimately be weakening the very framework that underpins its global influence.

US Seeks War Funding, Arabs Count Losses

 

Strategic divergence widens as Gulf economies weigh the cost of conflict over the logic of confrontation

The suggestion by Donald Trump that Arab countries should help finance the war against Iran reflects a familiar instinct in Washington: externalize the financial burden while retaining strategic command. Yet, this proposition is increasingly at odds with shifting regional priorities.

According to White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt, the idea is not merely rhetorical but rooted in the President’s thinking. This comes at a time when Washington claims that negotiations with Tehran are progressing, even as it threatens to target Iran’s energy infrastructure. Such dual signaling—diplomacy on one hand and coercion on the other—highlights a policy struggling to reconcile intent with outcome.

For decades, the United States has framed Iran as the principal destabilizing force in the region, often in strategic alignment with Israel. That narrative is no longer universally compelling across Arab capitals. The issue is not the absence of concern about Iran, but the rising cost of confrontation.

Three realities now shape the regional calculus.

First, the ongoing conflict is widely perceived as emerging from a convergence of US-Israeli strategic interests, despite visible unease among several Gulf states. This perception complicates efforts to build financial or political backing for prolonged military engagement.

Second, the credibility of US security guarantees has come under scrutiny. Strategic installations in countries hosting American bases have faced vulnerabilities, raising questions about the reliability of external protection. If security assurances appear uncertain, underwriting conflict becomes a harder sell domestically.

Third, and most decisively, the economic fallout is being borne disproportionately by Arab economies. The disruption of the Strait of Hormuz—a critical artery for global oil shipments—has directly impacted revenues, trade flows, and fiscal stability across the Gulf. For these states, the war is not an abstract geopolitical contest but an immediate economic strain.

Even within Washington, strategic clarity remains elusive. While Trump speaks in terms of near-accomplished “regime change,” Marco Rubio has cautioned that outcomes remain uncertain. This internal divergence weakens the case for burden-sharing and raises concerns about long-term policy direction.

The emerging divide is therefore subtle but significant. Arab states are not dismissing security concerns, but they are increasingly prioritizing economic stability and regional de-escalation over alignment with an open-ended conflict.

In this evolving landscape, one reality stands out: while Washington may seek partners to fund its war, Arab states—already counting the losses—are far less inclined to underwrite it.

Monday, 30 March 2026

Who should be blamed for the closure of Strait of Hormuz? Iran or United States

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has sent shockwaves across global markets, but the deeper question is unavoidable: what led to this point of no return?

The answer lies not in a single act, but in a sequence of decisions that began with the use of force at a moment when diplomacy was still in motion. Reports indicate that while negotiations were ongoing, the United States and Israel carried out strikes against Iranian targets. In geopolitical terms, such actions do not merely apply pressure—they fundamentally dismantle the diplomatic track.

When dialogue is replaced by force, retaliation becomes a predictable outcome. The response from Iran must be viewed within this context. Faced with attacks on its strategic installations and the killing of key leadership figures, Iran signaled clearly that it would respond—and that certain red lines, once crossed, would trigger consequences.

The closure of the Strait is not an impulsive decision. It is a calculated assertion of leverage. Geography is Iran’s strongest strategic asset, and in moments of existential pressure, it becomes the tool through which power is projected. By announcing conditions for maritime passage, Iran has reinforced that this is not chaos, but controlled pressure in response to external actions.

To place responsibility squarely where it belongs: this crisis did not emerge from Iran acting in isolation—it was set in motion by those who chose escalation over negotiation. The moment diplomacy was interrupted by strikes, the trajectory toward confrontation became unavoidable.

Compounding the situation is the rhetoric emanating from Washington, including calls for “unconditional surrender.” Such language is not just diplomatically unhelpful—it is strategically counterproductive. It removes space for compromise and signals an approach rooted in dominance rather than resolution.

The Strait of Hormuz, through which a significant portion of global energy flows, has now become the epicenter of a crisis that could have been avoided. The disruption we are witnessing is not the starting point—it is the consequence.

Sunday, 29 March 2026

Who Truly Dominates the Arabian Peninsula?

The idea of a “superpower” in the Arabian Peninsula is often shaped by wealth, alliances, and perception. Remove external backing—particularly that of the United States—and the equation changes dramatically. What remains is a test of self-reliance, endurance, and the ability to fight alone.

At first glance, Saudi Arabia appears dominant. With one of the world’s largest defense budgets and a formidable arsenal of advanced aircraft and missile systems, it projects overwhelming strength. Yet this power is structurally dependent. Its military ecosystem relies heavily on imported platforms, foreign maintenance, and external logistical support. Without these, its technological edge risks rapid erosion.

Qatar, though financially powerful, lacks strategic depth. Its military is modern but limited in size and sustainability. In a prolonged conflict without external guarantees, it cannot realistically compete for regional military supremacy.

Turkey presents a more complex case. Though geographically outside the Arabian Peninsula, its influence is undeniable. It combines a large standing army with a growing indigenous defense industry, particularly in drones and naval assets. Unlike Gulf states, Turkey possesses the capacity to produce and adapt independently. However, its strategic priorities are divided across multiple theaters, diluting its focus on the Gulf.

This leaves Iran—a country long constrained by sanctions, yet shaped by them. Before the recent one-month war, Iran’s strength lay in its missile arsenal, dispersed military infrastructure, and doctrine of asymmetric warfare. It was built not to dominate, but to deter through the certainty of retaliation.

One month of sustained conflict has altered—but not erased—this reality. Iran’s military infrastructure has been significantly degraded. Missile sites, production facilities, and air defenses have suffered visible damage. By conventional metrics, it is weaker today than it was at the outset.

Yet the defining outcome lies elsewhere.

Despite these losses, Iran continues to operate, retaliate, and maintain strategic coherence. Its domestically sustained and decentralized military architecture has allowed it to absorb sustained strikes without collapsing. The objective of decisively neutralizing it remains unmet.

The conclusion is therefore unavoidable. In a no-alliance scenario, power is not measured by what survives untouched, but by what continues to function under fire. Iran emerges not as the strongest because it is unscathed, but because it has proven it cannot be decisively subdued.