Showing posts with label global oil supply risk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label global oil supply risk. Show all posts

Monday, 16 March 2026

A War Without Allies: Trump’s Iran Gamble

The escalating confrontation between the United States and Iran is exposing an uncomfortable geopolitical reality for President Donald Trump - the war he initiated is attracting few allies. Despite Washington’s overwhelming military power and close coordination with Benjamin Netanyahu’s Israel, the conflict has so far failed to generate the kind of international coalition that has historically accompanied major US military campaigns.

At the center of the crisis lies the disruption of shipping through the vital Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which nearly one-fifth of the world’s oil supply normally passes. Iran’s response to US and Israeli strikes has been calculated and asymmetric. Rather than confronting American forces directly, Tehran has leveraged geography and targeted regional oil interests, pushing global energy prices higher and unsettling markets worldwide.

This escalation has created a difficult dilemma for Washington. While the United States may possess unmatched military capabilities, restoring stability in such a sensitive maritime corridor ideally requires international cooperation. Yet when the Trump administration sought support from its traditional partners, the response from Europe ranged from cautious hesitation to outright refusal.

European capitals appear determined to avoid being drawn into a conflict they neither initiated nor fully support. In Britain, Prime Minister Keir Starmer faces the prospect of significant domestic backlash if London becomes directly involved. German leaders have been even more explicit. Defense Minister Boris Pistorius bluntly stated that the conflict “is not our war,” while Chancellor Friedrich Merz ruled out German military involvement. Similarly, European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas acknowledged that there is little appetite among EU member states to expand naval missions into the Gulf.

Part of this reluctance reflects a deeper diplomatic context. For years, Trump has openly criticized NATO allies and questioned the value of longstanding partnerships. Having spent considerable political capital challenging allied governments, Washington now finds that calls for solidarity are being met with caution.

Another factor shaping global perceptions is the widespread belief that Israel’s security calculations played a major role in pushing the United States toward confrontation with Iran. While Israeli and American strikes may inflict significant damage on Iranian capabilities, few analysts believe they can easily force Tehran into submission.

For now, the war looks less like a Western coalition and more like a strategic gamble by Washington and Tel Aviv. The hesitation of allies underscores a simple lesson of geopolitics - wars launched without consensus rarely attract coalitions afterward.