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Saturday, 27 June 2026


 THE HORMUZ INFLECTION

Ceasefire Fragility, Energy Market Uncertainty, and Alliance Cohesion



Geopolitical & Energy Security Scenario Analysis

Prepared for: Principal Audiences, 36th NATO Summit



Executive Summary

As NATO leaders convene in Ankara on 7–8 July 2026, the Alliance confronts one of the most consequential energy security challenges of the post-Cold War era. The US–Iran conflict, which began on 28 February 2026 with coordinated US–Israeli strikes on Iranian territory, has generated sustained disruption to global energy markets and heightened uncertainty across the broader Middle East. A fragile Memorandum of Understanding signed in Versailles on 18 June 2026 created a 60-day diplomatic window for de-escalation. Yet events as of Saturday, 27 June, indicate that this window is already under significant strain.

Iran reportedly launched drone strikes against Bahrain at dawn on 27 June, a commercial tanker in the Strait was struck by an unidentified projectile, and IRGC-linked media accused US-backed forces of violating the Memorandum of Understanding. Overnight, US CENTCOM conducted retaliatory strikes against Iranian missile-and-drone storage facilities and coastal radar installations. Switzerland subsequently cancelled the planned Bürgenstock follow-on negotiations, while the UK Maritime Trade Operations Centre raised its threat level in the Strait to "Substantial" and the Joint Maritime Information Centre warned mariners of confirmed naval mines. Taken together, these developments suggest an increasingly fragile ceasefire rather than its definitive collapse, underscoring both the risks of renewed escalation and the continuing importance of diplomatic engagement.

At the same time, the physical resilience of global energy markets has weakened considerably. With Cushing, Oklahoma—the delivery hub for WTI futures—holding approximately 19 million barrels as of 25 June, the lowest level since October 2014; with the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve reduced to roughly 340 million barrels, its lowest level since 1983; and with European natural gas storage entering the summer below recent historical norms, many of the buffers that absorbed earlier disruptions have become increasingly constrained. Consequently, even relatively limited interruptions to energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz could generate disproportionately large economic and financial consequences.

This policy brief provides NATO leaders with a Bayesian game-theoretic assessment of Iran's strategic behaviour, an examination of the divergence between financial market expectations and physical market fundamentals, and a scenario framework for evaluating alternative policy responses. The analysis suggests that financial markets continue to assign a relatively high probability to a stable negotiated outcome despite evidence of increasing operational risks. At the same time, Bayesian inference also implies that strategic behaviour remains adaptive rather than predetermined. Neither sustained escalation nor successful diplomacy is inevitable.

Accordingly, the Ankara Summit should seek to reinforce both deterrence and diplomacy as complementary rather than competing objectives. Preserving freedom of navigation and the energy security of Allied nations requires credible defensive capabilities and close international coordination. Equally important, however, is maintaining sufficient diplomatic flexibility to avoid unnecessary escalation, reduce incentives for miscalculation, and preserve opportunities for a negotiated settlement. The central challenge for NATO is therefore not simply to demonstrate resolve, but to help shape an environment in which all parties increasingly perceive restraint and negotiated compromise as the more advantageous long-term equilibrium.  

 

I.  Strategic Context: From February 28 to the Ankara Summit

A.  The Arc of the Conflict

The conflict's origins lie in the coordinated US–Israeli air campaign of 28 February 2026, which struck hundreds of Iranian military, nuclear, and command targets and killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei along with dozens of senior officials. Iran's retaliatory strategy was asymmetric and calibrated to strike at the West's most vulnerable dependency: hydrocarbon transit. The IRGC sealed the Strait of Hormuz, restricting a channel through which approximately 20 to 20.3 million barrels of crude and petroleum products — roughly 25–27% of all seaborne petroleum trade — previously passed daily. Tanker traffic collapsed to near zero within days.

The Strait's strategic significance is inversely proportional to its physical dimensions. At its narrowest navigable point, the waterway measures approximately 33 kilometres across, wedged between Iran's southern coastline and Oman's Musandam Peninsula. No fully equivalent alternative routing exists: the East–West pipeline in Saudi Arabia and the Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline offer partial relief, but combined they cannot absorb more than approximately 3 to 4 million barrels per day of displaced volume.

Over the subsequent weeks, Iran imposed discriminatory access regimes, boarding and attacking merchant ships while allowing selective passage for 'friendly' nations — China, Russia, India, Iraq, and Pakistan among the early beneficiaries. By late March, the IRGC formalised a de facto tollbooth system requiring vetting and fee payment for non-allied flagged vessels. The International Maritime Organization reported approximately 20,000 mariners and 2,000 ships stranded in the Persian Gulf by 21 April. Qatar declared force majeure on LNG contracts after the Ras Laffan facility — the world's largest LNG plant — sustained damage reducing output by 17%, with recovery timelines of up to five years.

B.  The Versailles MOU and Its Immediate Unravelling

The Memorandum of Understanding signed at Versailles on 18 June 2026 established a 60-day negotiating period during which both parties committed to cease offensive operations. Under the MOU, Iran agreed to begin reopening the Strait within 30 days, conduct demining operations, and suspend the Persian Gulf Strait Authority fee system for the duration of negotiations. The United States agreed to lift its naval blockade of Iranian ports, which had been in force from 13 April to 29 May, and to cease support for operations against Iranian forces by proxy actors. US President Trump publicly pledged the strait would be 'permanently toll-free.'

The ink had barely dried before both sides accused the other of violations. The sequence as of 27 June is as follows: on 25 June, Iran struck the Singapore-flagged MV Ever Lovely with a one-way attack drone as the vessel attempted to leave the Strait, precipitating a CENTCOM strike response against Iranian missile and drone storage locations and coastal radar sites overnight on 25–26 June. On 27 June — today — Iran launched drone strikes against Bahrain's territory, an additional tanker was hit by a projectile of unidentified provenance inside the Strait, and IRGC-linked military adviser Mohsen Rezaei publicly declared on social media that the US had violated Articles 1 and 5 of the MOU by supporting proxy forces. Vice President JD Vance, who has led the US negotiating effort, responded: 'Iran signed a ceasefire agreement. We have honoured it. But violence will be met with violence.'

Planned follow-on talks in Switzerland at Bürgenstock were cancelled today. The political architecture of the 60-day window is thus already compromised ten days into its existence. This is the environment into which NATO leaders will arrive in Ankara in ten days.

II.  The Bayesian Framework: Decoding Iran's Strategic Type

In formal Bayesian game theory, a player's 'type' encodes their private information about their own preferences, constraints, and risk tolerance. Allies operating in this environment cannot directly observe Iran's true type; they must form and continuously update probability distributions over competing hypotheses. Two principal types structure the analytical space.

Strategic Type

Defining Characteristics

Signal Weight as of 27 June

Bayesian Posterior (Analyst Estimate)

Type P: The Pragmatist

Economically exhausted; seeks sanctions relief and capital inflows; uses coercive signalling primarily for domestic political consumption; willing to trade nuclear programme constraints for economic normalisation

Slowing pace of attack through May–early June; agreed to Versailles MOU; suspended PGSA fees for 60 days; allowed 115 ships to transit by 25 June

~35–40%

Type D: The Disruptor

Willing to weaponise energy dependency as maximum leverage; recognises that depleted buffers and approaching summer peak demand create a narrow but closing window of maximum coercive power; seeks to alter post-war governance of the Strait permanently

27 June drone strikes on Bahrain; tanker hit inside Strait; Rezaei's public MOU violation accusations; Iran's insistence the Strait 'will never return' to prewar status; PGSA bureaucratic infrastructure built despite temporary fee waiver

~60–65%

Sources: AP (27 June 2026); Al Jazeera (24 June 2026); PBS NewsHour (27 June 2026); Newsweek (18 June 2026). Posterior estimates represent analyst judgement integrating prior probability distributions with observed signals.

A. Belief Updating: Recent Evidence Shifts the Posterior Toward Type D

The critical analytical discipline here is to distinguish between Type P surface behaviours — agreeing to an MOU, suspending fee collection, permitting some ships to transit — and the structural indicators of Type D intent. Several institutional developments confirm that Tehran is building the architecture of permanent Strait control regardless of what any 60-day MOU may say.

First, Iran in May 2026 established the Persian Gulf Strait Authority, a government agency tasked with managing 'safe passage permits.' The PGSA published its operational rulebook on 19 June 2026, requiring a 40-category Vessel Information Declaration from every transiting ship 48 hours in advance, demanding vessel identity, ownership chains, charterer details, crew nationalities, cargo manifests, and P&I club affiliations. The five-nautical-mile corridor designated by the PGSA runs between Qeshm and Larak islands — entirely within Iran's twelve-nautical-mile territorial sea. The 60-day fee waiver does not dismantle this infrastructure; it suspends its revenue function while the bureaucratic sovereignty claim solidifies.

Second, the IRGC's public statements since 27 June claim US violations of the MOU as justification for resumed operations — a move that mirrors classic coercive bargaining: establish a pretext, assert the other side's bad faith, and use it to justify actions that would otherwise be framed as ceasefire violations. IRGC-linked figures explicitly invoked Articles 1 and 5 of the MOU, signalling legal counsel and pre-planned communication strategy rather than spontaneous reaction.

Third, the episodic nature of the attacks — one ship on 25 June, drone strikes on Bahrain and a second vessel on 27 June — is consistent with salami tactics: incremental escalation designed to test allied resolve without triggering an overwhelming retaliatory threshold at any single juncture. From a Bayesian standpoint, each incremental attack raises the posterior probability that we are facing Type D, not Type P.

III.  Physical Market Vulnerability: The Anatomy of Exhausted Buffers

Financial markets since mid-June have narrated an optimistic story: Brent crude fell to approximately $72 per barrel on 26 June, its lowest level since late February, as tanker traffic in the Strait accelerated and Persian Gulf producers began loading vessels again. Saudi Arabia resumed loadings at Ras Tanura; the UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, and Iraq signalled quota increases. On a 10-week view, the crude price was down more than 36% from its peak above $120. This price trajectory has created a pervasive sense among financial market participants that the worst is behind us.

That inference is dangerous. The financial futures price is a derivative of sentiment and forward expectations. The physical clearing price — what refineries actually pay for barrels in hand, today, for immediate delivery — is a fundamentally different measure, and it tells a categorically different story.

A.  The Cushing Inflection: Approaching Operational Failure

Cushing, Oklahoma — the Pipeline Crossroads of the World — serves as the physical delivery hub for West Texas Intermediate futures traded on NYMEX. Its inventory level is not merely a statistical footnote; it is the direct operational determinant of WTI spot pricing and the physical fulcrum of North American crude flows. As of 25 June 2026, EIA data confirms Cushing inventories at approximately 19 million barrels — representing roughly 25% of working storage capacity and the lowest reading since October 2014.

The concept of 'tank bottoms' is physical, not metaphorical. As inventory approaches approximately 20 million barrels, the facility loses effective operational function: suction lines lose draw capacity, blending becomes impractical, and deliveries against futures contracts become mechanically unreliable. Exxon Mobil Senior Vice President Neil Chapman, speaking at a Bernstein investment conference, stated: 'We are approaching unheard of inventory levels. I mean really, really low levels. Once you get to that point, then you will see prices shoot up.' Chevron CEO Mike Wirth, speaking to Bloomberg, identified July or August as the probable inflection point where emergency measures would cease to provide adequate price insulation.

Storage Metric

Pre-War Level (Feb 28)

Current Level (27 June)

Risk Status

Cushing, Oklahoma (WTI hub)

~33 million barrels

~19 million barrels (EIA, 25 Jun)

CRITICAL — near tank bottoms

US Strategic Petroleum Reserve

~512 million barrels

~340 million barrels (lowest since 1983)

SEVERE — 172 Mbbl IEA release deployed

US Commercial Crude (ex-SPR)

~470 million barrels

~412 million barrels (EIA, 19 Jun)

STRESSED — 20-year low

Total US Crude incl. SPR

~880 million barrels

743.3 million barrels (lowest since Oct 1984)

CRITICAL — 40-year nadir

EU Gas Storage (TTF context)

~46 bcm (Feb 2026; multi-year low vs 60 bcm in 2025)

Refill disrupted; IEA: cover in 'weeks not months'

HIGH VULNERABILITY

Sources: EIA Weekly Petroleum Status Reports (various); OilPriceAPI (25 June 2026); NBC News (June 2026); Fortune (30 May 2026); Energy News Beat (June 2026); Bruegel (15 June 2026).

B.  The Financial–Physical Divergence: Why $72 Brent Does Not Mean Safety

Tamas Varga of PVM Oil Associates observed in late June that the conditional reopening of the Strait, along with the lifting of force majeure declarations by Kuwait and the end of the US naval blockade, had convinced investors that the disruption 'is well and truly over.' Vandana Hari of Vanda Insights offered the more sober counter-reading: 'Crude's slide is entirely sentiment-driven. The market is front-running the prospective reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and likely pricing in the best-case scenario for the normalisation of flows, which means the potential hiccups from logistics to renewed geopolitical tensions are not being adequately factored in.'

ING commodity strategists noted in a research note of 24 June 2026 that vessel crossings had increased in recent days but remained well below pre-war levels, characterising the situation as 'a market in transition rather than one approaching normalisation.' Insurance rates remain elevated; several major shipping lines have yet to resume transits; demining operations are ongoing but incomplete. The INTERTANKO Managing Director stated: 'Without clarity on these issues, ships will be unsure whether to transit the Strait of Hormuz. Some ships will, of course, start to move. That will be natural. But ship owners have adopted a very cautious approach.'

The structural risk is therefore binary and asymmetric. If the ceasefire holds and Iran genuinely normalises transit over the 60-day period, markets will be vindicated and prices will continue drifting toward the $70–$74 range. However, if Type D behaviour is confirmed — as 27 June's events already suggest — the feedback loop between zero remaining buffer and physical market dislocation is not gradual. It is instantaneous. The price of a physical barrel snaps upward as refineries scramble for spot cargoes without queue. The worst-case physical clearing price modelled for a severe disruption scenario remains in the $145–$170 per barrel range.

IV.  The Sovereignty Gambit: Iran's Persian Gulf Strait Authority

Among the developments following the Versailles Memorandum of Understanding, one of the most strategically significant—though perhaps less immediately visible than the military exchanges—has been Iran's effort to establish a permanent administrative framework governing transit through the Strait of Hormuz. Unlike the tactical incidents surrounding the ceasefire, this initiative has potentially longer-term legal and institutional implications that merit separate analysis.

In May 2026, Iran established the Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA), a governmental body mandated to administer safe-passage permits for vessels transiting the Strait. On 19 June, the Authority published its operational regulations, including a 40-category Vessel Information Declaration requirement. Many maritime legal scholars have argued that such requirements are difficult to reconcile with the transit-passage regime envisioned under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), although Iran has consistently maintained that it is not legally bound by the Convention's transit-passage provisions because, while it signed UNCLOS in 1982, it never ratified the treaty and has long contested the customary international law status of those provisions. From Tehran's perspective, the PGSA represents an assertion of sovereign regulatory authority; from the perspective of many maritime powers, it represents a potential challenge to the established legal framework governing one of the world's most important international waterways.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio rejected the proposed transit-fee concept, arguing that international waterways should not be subject to unilateral tolls. Maritime legal experts, including James R. Holmes of the US Naval War College, have likewise noted that international law provides little support for a coastal state imposing fees for passage through a natural strait used for international navigation. At the same time, several analysts have observed that the proposed fees themselves—estimated by some studies at roughly US$1 per barrel—would probably represent only a modest addition to transportation costs under most market conditions. Comparable administrative charges or service fees exist in other strategic waterways, including the Suez Canal and, under different legal arrangements, the Turkish Straits. Consequently, the principal issue is not necessarily the immediate economic burden but the broader legal and political precedent that such unilateral administrative measures could establish if accepted in practice.

From a strategic perspective, the more important question is whether the PGSA signals an incremental effort to reshape the governance of the Strait through administrative practice rather than through overt military confrontation. If shipping companies routinely comply with Iranian reporting requirements, a pattern of state practice may gradually emerge that strengthens Tehran's claims without requiring a formal alteration of international law. Whether such an outcome ultimately materialises remains uncertain and will depend not only on Iran's policies but also on the responses of maritime powers, commercial shipping firms, insurers, and international legal institutions.

For NATO, the implication is therefore not necessarily that the PGSA constitutes an immediate strategic crisis, but that it represents a longer-term governance challenge requiring careful monitoring. The Ankara Summit may wish to acknowledge both the importance of preserving internationally recognised principles of maritime navigation and the value of continued diplomatic engagement aimed at reducing tensions and preventing legal disagreements from evolving into military confrontation. Such an approach would preserve Allied interests while avoiding unnecessary escalation during an already fragile negotiating period..

V.  European Vulnerabilities and the Secondary Shock

The energy shock of the past four months has already materially damaged European economic performance. The significance for Ankara is not historical — it is prospective. A renewed supply disruption resulting from ceasefire collapse would arrive at precisely the moment when Europe's residual buffers have been exhausted and its central bank has least room for manoeuvre.

A.  The Macroeconomic Damage Already Sustained

The ECB's scenario analysis, published in May 2026, laid out three pathways. The baseline trajectory had already embedded a 10.9% annual increase in energy prices as of April, pushing headline eurozone inflation to 3%. The adverse scenario — peaking at $119 per barrel Brent and €87 per MWh on European gas — would deliver cumulative inflation 1.5 percentage points higher through 2028 and GDP growth 0.8 percentage points lower. The severe scenario, with oil at $145 per barrel and gas at €106 per MWh, would take the eurozone to the edge of stagflation. The ECB held rates on 19 March 2026, reversing its planned cutting cycle, and remains unable to provide a forward guidance horizon beyond three months given the uncertainty.

Germany's Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs slashed its 2026 GDP growth forecast to 0.5% from 1.0%, with the 2027 forecast cut to 0.9%. The Ifo Institute president, Clemens Fuest, told CNBC: 'The German economy is hit hard by the Iran crisis. Companies are telling us there is trouble ahead.' Germany's energy-intensive industries — employing approximately one million people and accounting for roughly 17% of industrial gross value added — face structural margin compression from sustained above-equilibrium energy costs. The coalition government deployed a €1.6 billion two-month fuel tax relief package, explicitly acknowledged by Economy Minister Katherina Reiche as insufficient to address underlying structural vulnerabilities.

The UK faces the sharpest inflation trajectory among major European economies. UK inflation is projected to breach 5% in 2026. Chemical and steel manufacturers across the EU and UK have imposed input cost surcharges of up to 30%. The ECB warning of 'permanent deindustrialisation in some sectors' — though necessarily hedged — reflects a genuine concern that energy-intensive industrial capacity, once relocated, does not return.

B.  LNG: The Structural Rupture in European Gas Security

Europe's most acute channel of vulnerability is not crude oil — it is liquefied natural gas. The EU imported approximately 80–85% of its oil from diverse suppliers before the conflict, limiting its direct Hormuz exposure. However, Qatar's Ras Laffan facility supplies approximately one fifth of global LNG production. The damage sustained there — reducing output by 17% with a recovery timeline of up to five years — represents a structural supply constraint that persists regardless of how quickly the Strait reopens. As EU Energy Commissioner Dan Jørgensen stated: 'Even if that peace is here tomorrow, still we will not go back to normal in the foreseeable future.'

European gas storage entered the Iran war at 46 bcm at end-February 2026 — significantly below the 60 bcm recorded in 2025 and the 77 bcm of 2024. The refill season has been materially disrupted. IEA coverage metrics are now measured in weeks rather than months on some benchmarks, against the EU's standing 90-day strategic stock obligation. The Bruegel analysis of 15 June 2026 identifies a feedback loop in which disrupted storage refill compresses European industrial margins, particularly in gas-intensive sectors, and if oil and gas prices spike in tandem, substitution becomes impossible, triggering renewed coal demand and demand-side savings pressures.

Allied Economy

Primary Exposure Channel

Current Economic Damage

Political Risk for Alliance Cohesion

Germany

Energy-intensive industrial sector; gas pricing; Brent-linked feedstocks

2026 GDP forecast cut to 0.5%; inflation at 2.7%; coalition under fiscal pressure

Defence spending ramp to 5% GDP increasingly difficult if energy shock persists; public mandate for Persian Gulf military engagement is thin

Italy

LNG import dependency; petrochemical sector; tourism disruption through elevated fuel costs

Recession risk; EU inflation ceiling pressure; minister calling for excess profit tax on energy sector

Coalition government fragility heightens risk of populist anti-engagement turn; Italian public opinion on Middle East deployments already sceptical

United Kingdom

UK NBP gas futures directly exposed; LNG terminal capacity limits alternative sourcing speed

Inflation projected to breach 5% in 2026; gilt market vulnerability; North Sea production cannot substitute at prevailing timescales

UK provides significant maritime security backbone in region; domestic pressure on costs of Persian Gulf deployment would intensify sharply at $140+ oil

France

Lower direct LNG Hormuz exposure; nuclear power base provides relative insulation

Less acute than Germany/Italy; Macron's political capital partially insulated by domestic energy mix

Macron has led on European defence autonomy; energy stability underpins his ability to sustain this political position and the EU's Article 42.7 invocation

Sources: CNBC (24 April 2026); Bruegel (15 June 2026); ECB (6 May 2026); Euronews (9 April 2026); Economics Observatory (6 March 2026).

VI.  The NATO Ankara Summit: Agenda, Tensions, and Institutional Stakes

The 36th NATO Summit, hosted at the Presidential Complex in Beştepe, is the first NATO gathering in Turkey since Istanbul 2004 and the first since the Alliance's adoption of the 5% GDP defence investment target at The Hague in June 2025. The summit carries three distinct but interconnected agendas, each subject to internal tension.

A.  Defence Investment: From Pledge to Capability

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, speaking at the Atlantic Council on 25 June 2026, described the transformation in European defence investment as 'incredible': from 2016 to 2026, European allies and Canada collectively invested an additional $1.2 trillion in defence. In 2025 alone, European allies increased defence investment by nearly 20%, amounting to $139 billion in additional expenditure. Rutte confirmed that tens of billions of dollars in new defence-related contracts would be announced at Ankara through the NATO Summit Defence Industry Forum on 7 July.

However, Secretary Rutte's celebratory framing must be qualified by two institutional constraints. First, the gap between pledged percentages and deployed capability remains wide. The GLOBSEC analysis of 27 June notes that compensating for US fighter aircraft reductions alone would require approximately 400 additional European combat aircraft, alongside significant tanker capacity expansion — an industrial challenge spanning years, not months. Second, the US Defence Secretary's conduct at the June NATO defence ministers' meeting — wherein he called allies 'shameful,' announced a 6-month force review, and departed early — introduced a structural uncertainty that the Ankara communiqué will need to navigate without appearing to paper over a widening transatlantic fault line.

B.  Ukraine and the Eastern Flank

President Zelensky is confirmed to attend the Ankara Summit. Ukraine's presence is not that of a supplicant — it is that of a country whose military conduct over five years of full-scale invasion has documented, in real time, the operational effectiveness and limits of Western military doctrine. The GLOBSEC assessment observes that converting the 5% spending pledge into binding capability commitments and formalising the redistribution of roles between the American and European pillars of NATO are the primary structural tasks of Ankara 2026. The 2026 NDAA language restricting the Pentagon from reducing US European forces below 76,000 without congressional notification provides a legislative floor, but not a political guarantee.

C.  The Middle East File: Why Energy Security Is Not a Sidebar

In previous summits, the Middle East has been a peripheral agenda item for an Alliance whose Article 5 commitments are geographically bounded to the North Atlantic. Ankara 2026 is structurally different. The Hormuz crisis has directly threatened the economic underpinning of European defence capacity building. As the EURASIAREVIEW noted in its Ankara preview: 'Recent instability in the broader Middle East has reinforced concerns over maritime routes, supply-chain resilience, critical infrastructure protection, and energy security.' The Atlantic Council's pre-summit analysis identified European reluctance to support the US–Israeli strikes against Iran as one of the two episodes in 2026 that has 'challenged Alliance unity' — the other being US manoeuvres on Greenland. This division cannot be papered over in Ankara. It must be addressed architecturally.

VII.  Game-Theoretic Scenario Framework: Four Strategic Pathways

Four scenarios structure the strategic space confronting NATO as it enters the Ankara Summit. These are not equally probable; the Bayesian posterior distribution derived from observable signals through 27 June weights them as follows.

Scenario A: Managed Equilibrium  [Prior: ~25%]

Dynamics: Iran acts as a late-converting Pragmatist. The 27 June incidents are the final coercive pressure test before genuine compliance with the MOU begins. The 60-day window holds, demining concludes, and physical flows normalise sufficiently to begin rebuilding inventory buffers before autumn demand softens. Brent drifts toward $70–$74. The PGSA remains in bureaucratic existence but operates with minimal practical friction. NATO maritime missions maintain deterrence without escalation.

NATO Strategy: Formally endorse and expand the allied maritime missions in the Strait and broader Arabian Sea, framing them as alliance burden-sharing rather than US-led operations. Coordinate economic messaging to prevent premature pressure on member states to wind down vigilance. Encourage GCC partners to maximise output to accelerate inventory rebuild. Begin structured dialogue on PGSA legal challenges through IMO and UNCLOS arbitral channels to prevent the bureaucratic sovereignty claim from hardening into accepted precedent.

Scenario B: Tactical Escalation with Diplomatic Patch  [Prior: ~30%]

Dynamics: Iran and the United States continue a managed cycle of limited reciprocal actions—isolated vessel attacks, CENTCOM responses, and diplomatic protests—while both sides preserve the formal MOU framework for reputational and strategic reasons. Physical energy flows recover only partially and remain below pre-war levels. Brent crude fluctuates between US$80 and US$95 per barrel, while European allies continue to face a sustained energy premium relative to the United States, creating persistent fiscal pressure on defence spending. Insurance costs remain elevated, and commercial shipping remains cautious throughout the summer.

Strategic Implications for NATO: This scenario may prove the most challenging for Alliance cohesion precisely because it combines persistent economic costs with the absence of a dramatic military crisis. Rather than focusing exclusively on deterrence, the Alliance would benefit from preserving both credible defensive capabilities and continued diplomatic engagement. Measures such as coordinated energy contingency planning, IEA stock releases if required, expanded LNG cooperation, or burden-sharing arrangements for maritime security could reduce the economic asymmetries facing European allies while preserving strategic flexibility. Such measures would help sustain NATO's long-term defence objectives without unnecessarily narrowing the political space for future negotiations.

Scenario C: Asymmetric Energy Shock  [Prior: ~35%]

Dynamics: A major escalation—whether through extensive attacks on Persian Gulf energy infrastructure, deliberate mining of the Strait resulting in vessel losses, or a direct strike on a US naval asset—causes the Versailles MOU to unravel. Given historically low inventories at Cushing, reduced US Strategic Petroleum Reserve holdings, and constrained European gas storage, physical energy markets could react sharply. Under such circumstances, oil prices could plausibly rise into the US$145–170 per barrel range, with significant risks of stagflation, industrial disruption, and renewed fiscal stress across several European economies. The resulting domestic political pressures could complicate allied decision-making at precisely the moment when coordinated action would be most valuable.

Strategic Implications for NATO: Although this scenario has the highest potential costs, policy responses should continue to balance credible deterrence with efforts to prevent further escalation. Maintaining multinational maritime security capabilities, strengthening intelligence and surveillance, and coordinating contingency planning would reinforce freedom of navigation while reducing the risk of miscalculation. At the same time, preserving diplomatic channels—even during periods of heightened tension—would remain essential, since crisis communication can reduce the probability that tactical incidents evolve into broader regional conflict. A clear demonstration of Allied preparedness, combined with continued support for negotiated de-escalation, would provide greater strategic flexibility than reliance on rigid public red lines alone. Equally important would be mechanisms to share the economic burden of any prolonged disruption, thereby reinforcing Alliance cohesion during a period of heightened uncertainty.

Scenario D: PGSA Normalisation — The Slow Surrender  [Prior: ~10%]

Dynamics: Kinetic incidents cease but Iran's PGSA architecture becomes operationally embedded. Vessel declarations accumulate. Fee collection resumes post-60 days under a 'service fee' nomenclature. Insurance and major shipping lines adapt, effectively recognising the regime. The Strait reopens but on a permanently altered legal and operational basis. Iran has achieved its primary strategic objective without firing another shot.

NATO Strategy: This scenario is assigned low probability not because Iran cannot achieve it but because the US executive branch has explicitly rejected it (Rubio, Vance, Trump). However, if diplomatic negotiations in Switzerland produce a final agreement that implicitly permits PGSA services fees in a modified form, Scenario D becomes the de facto outcome of what appeared to be allied success. The Ankara Summit should mandate allied foreign ministers to develop a unified legal posture on the PGSA within 30 days, coordinate a counter-strategy through the IMO and GCC, and agree that no bilateral shipping insurance or navigation treaty with Iran will be concluded that implicitly validates prior-notification regimes inconsistent with UNCLOS Article 38 transit passage rights.

Scenario

Core Dynamic

Bayesian Prior (27 Jun)

Physical Market Impact

Alliance Cohesion Risk

A: Managed Equilibrium

Iran normalises; MOU holds

~25%

Brent $70–$74; inventories rebuild

LOW

B: Tactical Escalation / Patch

Tit-for-tat continues; MOU preserved formally

~30%

Brent $80–$95; partial flows

MEDIUM — sustained fiscal drag

C: Asymmetric Energy Shock

Major escalation; MOU collapses; physical disruption

~35%

Physical price $145–$170; stagflation risk

SEVERE — cohesion failure likely

D: PGSA Normalisation

Soft surrender; PGSA fees legitimised diplomatically

~10%

Brent recovers; precedent damage severe

MEDIUM-HIGH — strategic credibility loss

Analyst assessment as of 27 June 2026. Probability weights are working estimates; they should be updated as post-Ankara negotiation dynamics become clearer.

VIII.  Policy Considerations for Ankara Principals

The following considerations are intended to inform discussions at the Ankara Summit. They are designed to strengthen Alliance resilience while preserving the diplomatic flexibility necessary to reduce the risk of further escalation. Rather than viewing deterrence and diplomacy as competing approaches, these proposals seek to reinforce both as complementary elements of a broader strategy.

Policy Consideration 1: Reaffirm the Principle of Freedom of Navigation While Preserving Diplomatic Space

The Ankara communiqué could reaffirm the Alliance's longstanding support for internationally recognised principles of maritime navigation, including the uninterrupted movement of commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. Rather than relying on highly specific public red lines, the communiqué may be more effective if it combines a clear statement of Allied interests with support for continued diplomatic engagement and established crisis-management mechanisms. Such an approach would preserve strategic ambiguity where useful while reducing opportunities for miscalculation by all parties.

Policy Consideration 2: Strengthen NATO's Energy Security Coordination Capacity

The Hormuz crisis has demonstrated that prolonged energy disruption can affect the economic foundations that sustain defence investment. The Alliance could therefore consider establishing a dedicated Energy Security Coordination Mechanism within the Office of the Secretary General to improve situational awareness, coordinate with the International Energy Agency during periods of market stress, and assess the implications of energy disruptions for defence planning. Enhanced coordination would strengthen resilience without requiring NATO to assume responsibilities that remain primarily economic in nature.

Policy Consideration 3: Promote a Coordinated Legal and Diplomatic Approach to the PGSA

The emergence of Iran's Persian Gulf Strait Authority raises legal and institutional questions that are likely to persist regardless of short-term military developments. Rather than encouraging fragmented bilateral responses, Allied governments could benefit from coordinating their legal assessments and diplomatic positions regarding freedom of navigation and the interpretation of international maritime law. Such coordination need not preclude dialogue with Iran but would help ensure that any future arrangements are evaluated within a coherent multilateral framework rather than through ad hoc negotiations.

Policy Consideration 4: Enhance Energy Market Contingency Planning

Given relatively low strategic petroleum inventories and continuing uncertainty in global energy markets, NATO members, working closely with the International Energy Agency and other relevant institutions, could review existing contingency arrangements for major supply disruptions. The objective would not be to anticipate a specific scenario but to improve preparedness, strengthen market confidence, and reduce the likelihood that temporary supply shocks translate into broader economic instability.

Policy Consideration 5: Deepen Maritime Security Cooperation on NATO's Southern Flank

The current maritime security mission in the Persian Gulf and the wider Indian Ocean relies heavily on contributions from a relatively small number of Allied states. Ankara may therefore provide an opportunity to examine whether existing coordination mechanisms could be strengthened through enhanced information sharing, logistical cooperation, burden-sharing arrangements, and greater interoperability among Allied naval forces. Such initiatives would improve resilience while remaining compatible with continued diplomatic efforts to reduce regional tensions.

Taken together, these policy considerations reflect the central analytical conclusion of this study. The Alliance's objective should not be to maximise confrontation or minimise risk at any cost, but to shape strategic incentives in ways that reduce the probability of escalation while preserving the security of Allied members and the stability of global energy markets. Credible defensive capabilities, coordinated economic resilience, legal coherence, and sustained diplomacy are mutually reinforcing rather than mutually exclusive components of that objective..

Conclusion: The Ankara Test

Great summits are not remembered for their communiqués. They are remembered for whether the decisions taken altered the strategic environment in which the next crisis would unfold. The Ankara Summit convenes during a fragile 60-day diplomatic window, following repeated ceasefire violations, continued pressure on regional energy infrastructure, and persistent uncertainty regarding Iran's strategic intentions. At the same time, the opportunity for negotiated de-escalation has not disappeared. The challenge is to preserve that opportunity while reducing the incentives for renewed confrontation.

The Bayesian analysis presented here assigns a combined probability of approximately 65% to scenarios in which the ceasefire either evolves into sustained tactical escalation (Scenario B) or deteriorates into a broader asymmetric energy shock (Scenario C), while financial markets continue to price a more optimistic outcome. Whether this divergence reflects excessive pessimism in the model or excessive optimism in market expectations will depend largely on political decisions taken during the coming weeks rather than on military developments alone.

For NATO, the Ankara Summit is therefore less a test of military resolve than of strategic judgment. The Alliance has a legitimate interest in protecting the energy security of its members and preserving freedom of navigation, but these objectives are best served through a balanced strategy that combines credible deterrence with sustained diplomacy. Public red lines that unnecessarily corner adversaries may strengthen nationalist sentiment in Iran or accelerate strategic alignment between Tehran and Beijing, thereby making the very outcomes they seek to prevent more likely. The most durable success would be an equilibrium in which all parties conclude that restraint and negotiated compromise serve their long-term interests better than continued escalation. If Ankara can contribute to that outcome, it will have strengthened not only NATO's security but also the prospects for greater regional stability.

 



Principal Sources and Intelligence Base

Breaking Developments — 27 June 2026

  • Jon Gambrell, Associated Press — 'Iranian drones attack Bahrain and a ship is struck in the strait after US airstrikes,' 27 June 2026

  • PBS NewsHour — 'Iranian drones attack Bahrain and a ship is struck in the strait,' 27 June 2026

  • The Philadelphia Inquirer / AP — 'Iranian drones attack Bahrain and a ship is struck in the strait after US airstrikes,' 27 June 2026

  • Fox News Digital — 'Bahrain targeted by Iranian drones after Vance's blunt warning on ceasefire violations,' 27 June 2026

  • Time Magazine — 'Iran Drone Attacks on Bahrain Raise Fears for Fragile Ceasefire,' 27 June 2026

Energy Markets and Physical Inventory

  • US Energy Information Administration (EIA) — Weekly Petroleum Status Reports, June 2026 series

  • OilPriceAPI — Cushing crude oil storage data (19.0 million barrels, sourced from EIA as of 25 June 2026)

  • Energy News Beat — 'Cushing, Oklahoma Oil Storage Hits Tank Bottom,' June 2026

  • NBC News — 'Critical oil storage hubs hit decades-low levels with no relief in sight,' June 2026

  • Fortune — 'Oil bosses warn prices will soar in a matter of weeks as inventories near unprecedented lows,' 30 May 2026

  • US Department of Energy / Wikipedia (SPR entry) — SPR inventory levels; 172 million barrel IEA release announcement, 11 March 2026

  • CNBC — 'Brent rises after US-Iran peace talks in Geneva are abruptly postponed,' 19 June 2026

  • Al Jazeera — 'Oil prices continue slide amid hopes for peace, opening of Strait of Hormuz,' 17 June 2026

  • Global Energy Flow — 'Oil Inventory Levels — US Crude, SPR & OECD Days of Cover,' 25 June 2026

  • Trading Economics — Brent crude oil price data, 26 June 2026

  • Discovery Alert — 'Strait of Hormuz Crude Flows & Oil Prices: 2026 Crisis Explained,' June 2026

  • Capital.com — 'Crude Oil Price Forecast | Strait of Hormuz Closure,' 19 May 2026 (citing EIA, Goldman Sachs, Barclays, ING research)

European Energy and Economic Impact

  • European Central Bank — 'The new energy shock: economic scenarios and policy implications,' speech, 6 May 2026

  • Euronews Business — 'Why oil and gas prices could stay high in Europe even if the Iran war ends,' 9 April 2026

  • Bruegel — 'How will the Iran conflict hit European energy markets?' Thomas Mramor, Alexander Roth, Simone Tagliapietra, Georg Zachmann, 15 June 2026

  • CNBC — 'Germany's economy was set to rebound. But soaring energy prices have derailed Europe's biggest comeback,' 24 April 2026

  • CNBC — 'The Iran war is pushing up European energy prices,' 12 March 2026

  • Economics Observatory — 'How might the Middle East conflict shape Europe's inflation outlook?' 6 March 2026 (NIESR NiGEM modelling)

Iran's PGSA Sovereignty Strategy

  • Al Jazeera — 'Rubio says Iran cannot charge tolls in Hormuz: What we know,' 24 June 2026

  • Geneva Solutions — 'Iran wants to charge fees on Hormuz passage. What impacts could that have?' updated 26 June 2026

  • Newsweek — 'Did Iran Just Get Tolls for Strait of Hormuz?' 18 June 2026

  • NPR — 'Iran wants some ships to pay to use the Strait of Hormuz,' 3 April 2026

  • House of Saud / Conflict Pulse — 'What Does Iran Collect When the Fee Is Zero?' PGSA rulebook analysis, 19 June 2026

  • Audacy / Various wire reports — Brookings Institution June 8 analysis on PGSA toll implications

NATO Ankara Summit

  • NATO.int — 'Overview — 2026 NATO Summit in Ankara,' official summit page, accessed 27 June 2026

  • Atlantic Council — 'NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on the Ankara Summit agenda,' event transcript, 25 June 2026

  • Atlantic Council — 'Five ideas to make the upcoming NATO Summit in Ankara a success,' 20 April 2026

  • Kyiv Post — 'Rutte Says NATO to Announce Billions in Defense Deals and Ukraine Support at Ankara Summit,' 25 June 2026

  • GLOBSEC — 'Hollowing Out the Shield: US Strategic Defence Equipment Reductions and European Security,' 23 June 2026

  • European Policy Centre — 'Countdown to the NATO Summit in Ankara: Challenges, Expectations, Goals,' June 2026

  • The Conference Board — 'Policy Backgrounder: NATO: Toward the Ankara Summit,' June 2026

  • Eurasia Review — 'Ankara Prepares For The NATO Summit, 7–8 July 2026,' 25 June 2026