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Monday, 8 June 2026

 STRATEGIC DISEQUILIBRIUM

A Fifth-Order Bayesian Update


The June 7 Ceasefire Breach, Lebanon Re-Ignition, the 60-Day MOU in Limbo,

and the Warsh Fed Confronting War-Driven Stagflation

— Strategic Disequilibrium on Day 101 of the 2026 Iran–United States–Israel War —





G7 Évian-les-Bains Summit Briefing Series

June 8, 2026


Abstract

This paper constitutes a fifth-order Bayesian update to analyses dated March 24, April 7, April 9, and April 22, 2026, covering the 2026 Iran–United States–Israel war, now in its one hundred and first day. The interval since the April 22 fourth-order update has produced seven developments of structural significance that together constitute a qualitative inflection in the conflict's trajectory: the swearing-in of Kevin Warsh as Federal Reserve Chair on May 22, confronting a war-driven stagflationary environment of historic severity; the emergence on May 29 of a tentative 60-day ceasefire-extension and nuclear-talks MOU, blocked by President Trump's unspecified demands; the institutionalization of Iran's Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA) as a permanent maritime governance body; the formal commencement of Operation Economic Fury as the successor to kinetic military pressure; the IAEA's June 4 confidential report demanding Iranian verification access 'without delay' — still unanswered; the June 7 Israeli airstrike on Beirut's Dahieh suburb — the first strike on the Lebanese capital since the most recent ceasefire renewal — triggering a three-wave Iranian ballistic missile barrage against Israel and Israeli retaliatory strikes on western and central Iran; and Houthi re-engagement with a missile directed at Israel from Yemen on the same day, constituting the first simultaneous activation of three fronts since the conflict's inception on February 28, 2026.


This update revises the Bayesian scenario probability matrix, introduces a new Scenario F (Regional Conflagration — Multi-Front War), upgrades Scenario B2 (Full Infrastructure War Resumption) from 26% to 30%, and recalibrates the macro-financial analysis to incorporate Warsh's confirmed monetary posture and the stagflationary interaction between war-driven energy inflation and the Fed's institutional constraints under its new leadership. Updated policy considerations for the G7 are provided, with particular attention to the 52nd G7 Summit at Évian-les-Bains and the Pakistan-mediated diplomatic channel as the conflict's sole surviving negotiating pathway as of June 8, 2026.



I. Introduction: The June 7 Inflection — Seven New Structural Signals

The forty-seven days separating this fifth-order update from the April 22 fourth-order analysis have produced a conflict that has moved, haltingly and then suddenly, toward the boundary between managed attrition and uncontrolled escalation. The nominal ceasefire of April 8 has survived, in attenuated form, through two months of violations, vessel seizures, maritime interdictions, proxy exchanges in Lebanon, and competing public narratives — but it has not been converted into a durable diplomatic architecture. The June 7 events represent the most structurally significant single day since the April 8 ceasefire itself: Iran fired ballistic missiles at Israel for the first time since that ceasefire, Israel struck Beirut's Dahieh suburb for the first time since the most recent Lebanon ceasefire renewal, and Houthi forces launched a missile at Israel from Yemen. All three occurred within a twenty-four-hour window, and all three remain active escalation vectors as of the time of writing.


This paper proceeds from the analytical conviction articulated across all prior orders: that Bayesian updating must be explicit, epistemically honest, and grounded in structural signals rather than event reaction. Seven new signals are assessed:


  • First: Kevin Warsh was sworn in as Federal Reserve Chair on May 22, 2026, in a White House ceremony, succeeding Jerome Powell. His arrival at the Fed's helm under conditions of war-driven stagflation — with Brent crude near $94 post-June 7, Dallas Fed DSGE models projecting 1.8% CPI uplift from energy alone, and White House Chief Economic Adviser Kevin Hassett publicly linking peace to rate-cut space — creates a novel monetary policy geometry that this analysis addresses in detail.

  • Second: U.S. and Iranian negotiators reached a tentative May 29 agreement to extend the ceasefire by 60 days and open a new round of nuclear talks. The agreement, reported by Axios and confirmed by PBS and Al Jazeera, has not been signed: President Trump has demanded unspecified changes, and Iranian officials have shown no public sign of acceptance. The tentative agreement is the most operationally advanced diplomatic architecture produced since the April 22 three-page MOU — and it is, as of June 8, in jeopardy.

  • Third: Iran's IRGC has institutionalized the Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA) as a permanent body overseeing maritime access to the Strait of Hormuz. The creation of a named institution — sanctioned by U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent under Operation Economic Fury on approximately May 28 — represents a structural hardening of Iranian maritime control beyond what prior analyses modelled as a tactical tool.

  • Fourth: Operation Economic Fury, the Trump administration's successor strategy to kinetic military pressure ('Operation Epic Fury'), reflects a doctrinal shift from bombs to financial strangulation as the primary coercive instrument. Bessent explicitly framed this shift publicly. The strategic implications for ceasefire durability and negotiating incentives are analyzed in Section V.

  • Fifth: The IAEA issued a confidential report on June 4 calling on Iran to permit verification of its nuclear program 'without delay.' No IAEA inspector has accessed any Iranian nuclear facility since February 28, 2026 — a 100-day verification blackout that represents the most significant breakdown in the international nuclear monitoring architecture since Iran's initial JCPOA violations in 2019.

  • Sixth: On June 7, 2026, Israeli warplanes struck Beirut's Dahieh suburb — the Hezbollah stronghold that Washington had previously restrained Israel from targeting — killing two and wounding eleven per Lebanese state media. Iranian Foreign Minister Araghchi had issued a standing warning that any Israeli attack on Beirut would trigger 'grave consequences and a full resumption of war.' Iran responded with three waves of ballistic missiles directed at Israel; Israel retaliated with strikes on targets in western and central Iran. This constitutes the first direct Iran–Israel military exchange since the April 8 ceasefire and the trigger event for this fifth-order update.

  • Seventh: Houthi forces in Yemen launched a missile at Israel on June 7, synchronized with the Iran–Israel exchange. This marks the first simultaneous activation of the Lebanon front, the direct Iran–Israel front, and the Yemen front since the conflict began on February 28, constituting a new structural configuration that this analysis addresses through the introduction of Scenario F.



II. The May 29 60-Day MOU: Architecture, Status, and the June 7 Complication

II.i. What the Tentative Agreement Contained

The most significant diplomatic development of the April 22–June 8 interval was the tentative agreement reached by U.S. and Iranian negotiators on approximately May 29, 2026, as reported by Axios, confirmed by PBS NewsHour, and subsequently described in Al Jazeera's analytical summary. The agreement sought a 60-day extension of the ceasefire during which formal negotiations would begin on a permanent end to the war, covering Iran's nuclear program, sanctions relief, and support for regional proxies including Hezbollah, Houthi forces, and armed groups in Iraq and Syria.


On the nuclear file, the framework retained the general architecture identified in the April 22 three-page MOU: discussions of enrichment moratorium duration, management of the enriched uranium stockpile, and IAEA verification access. The 60-day structure was designed as a confidence-building bridge toward a longer-term framework rather than a final settlement.


On the financial architecture, the frozen assets component — the $20 billion range identified in prior analyses — remained on the table, with the 60-day MOU framed as the mechanism that would unlock asset-release negotiations rather than triggering immediate transfers.

II.ii. Why It Remains Unsigned

The tentative agreement has not been formalized. President Trump has publicly indicated that he has demanded changes from the agreement as reported, without specifying what those changes are. This structural ambiguity mirrors the April 17–18 MOU collapse identified in the fourth-order update: a pattern in which the gap between what negotiators agree in private and what the President endorses in public creates a recurring veto dynamic that Iranian negotiators cannot navigate without appearing to make public concessions before any deal is signed.


Operation Economic Fury — Treasury Secretary Bessent's sanctioning of the PGSA and tightening of secondary sanction enforcement — appears to have been deployed in part as a public signal that the United States retains coercive leverage independent of any MOU, reducing Trump's perceived urgency to sign. From Tehran's perspective, the combination of an unsigned MOU, continued financial pressure, and active Lebanon-front escalation makes signature of a 60-day extension appear to their domestic audience as agreement under duress rather than genuine parity.

II.iii. The June 7 Complication and the Pakistan Channel

The June 7 exchange has materially altered the diplomatic calculus for the 60-day MOU. Pakistani Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi met Foreign Minister Araghchi in Tehran on June 8 and delivered a written message addressed directly to Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei — routed through Araghchi rather than the interior ministry, a channel choice with institutional significance. The Associated Press has characterized the Pakistani diplomatic effort as aimed at closing the gap on the tentative late-May ceasefire extension, a deal awaiting Trump's still-unspecified changes.


Araghchi's standing public commitment — that any Israeli attack on Beirut would produce 'grave consequences and a full resumption of war' — was issued precisely against the June 7 contingency. The Dahieh strike crosses the threshold he described. Whether Tehran treats the exchange as the formal trigger requiring full war resumption, or absorbs it to protect the Pakistani diplomatic channel, is the central contingency question of the next 72 hours and the primary determinant of whether the 60-day MOU retains any structural viability.


Iran has also set a standing demand that the Lebanon front be resolved as a precondition for any comprehensive agreement with the United States. Parliamentary Speaker Ghalibaf had stated that negotiations are 'unreasonable' while the Israel–Hezbollah conflict continues. The June 7 Beirut strike, and Hezbollah's prior rejection of a ceasefire brokered by the United States and Lebanon, have returned this conditionality to the center of the diplomatic architecture.



III. The PGSA and Operation Economic Fury: From Kinetic to Financial Coercion

III.i. The Persian Gulf Strait Authority as Permanent Institution

One of the most structurally significant developments since the April 22 update is Iran's formalization of the Persian Gulf Strait Authority as a named institutional body overseeing maritime access through the Strait of Hormuz. The PGSA's establishment represents a transformation of what prior analyses modelled as a tactical IRGC tool into a permanent governance mechanism — analogous, in structural terms, to the formalization of the IRGC's Quds Force from an expeditionary instrument into an institutional pillar of Iranian foreign policy.


The PGSA's significance is threefold. First, it creates an institutional interlocutor for any future maritime governance framework — including the Hormuz Convention concept outlined in prior policy recommendations — while simultaneously hardening Iran's claim to sovereign authority over transit passage. Second, by naming the institution, Iran has created a legal and diplomatic target that U.S. Treasury was able to sanction directly on approximately May 28, framing the action as targeting a specific Iranian institutional actor rather than general maritime harassment. Third, the PGSA's existence post-ceasefire — operating through nominal ceasefire periods — indicates that Iran intends maritime leverage to be a structural feature of any post-conflict settlement rather than a transitional instrument.

III.ii. Operation Economic Fury: Doctrinal Shift and Strategic Implications

The announcement by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent that 'Operation Economic Fury' has supplanted 'Operation Epic Fury' as the primary U.S. coercive instrument reflects a doctrinal recalibration of significant strategic importance. The shift from kinetic military pressure to financial strangulation as the primary mechanism of coercion follows the precedent of the 2012–2015 sanctions architecture that preceded the JCPOA, but operates in a more compressed timeframe and in the context of an active war rather than a slow-building diplomatic pressure campaign.


Operation Economic Fury encompasses secondary sanctions enforcement targeting entities paying PGSA tolls, sanctions on Iranian financial institutions and shipping networks, and Bessent's public identification of Oman — through which some Iranian financial flows have reportedly transited — as a secondary enforcement target. The strategy reflects a judgment that Iran's economic vulnerabilities (documented across prior orders of this analysis: high inflation, foreign exchange constraints, 70% steel capacity destroyed) are sufficient to produce concessions if financial pressure is maintained.


The strategic counterargument — which Iranian negotiators appear to be making implicitly through their posture — is that economic strangulation in the context of an active war strengthens the IRGC's domestic political position rather than weakening it, by framing any Iranian concession as capitulation under duress. The doctrinal tension between economic pressure as a path to negotiation and economic pressure as a radicalization accelerant is the central strategic question that Operation Economic Fury does not resolve.



IV. The Warsh Federal Reserve: War-Driven Stagflation and Monetary Policy Paralysis

IV.i. Warsh's Confirmation Context and Initial Posture

Kevin Warsh was sworn in as Federal Reserve Chair on May 22, 2026, at a White House ceremony at which President Trump made explicit his expectation of interest rate cuts. The juxtaposition of Trump's rate-cut demand with the macroeconomic environment Warsh inherited — war-driven energy inflation at structural rather than transient levels, Brent crude near $99 per barrel in late April and re-elevated to approximately $94 post-June 7, and a Dallas Federal Reserve DSGE model projecting a 1.8% CPI contribution from energy effects alone — frames Warsh's early tenure as a confrontation between political pressure and structural economic constraint.


Warsh's public signaling prior to confirmation had emphasized AI-driven productivity as a potential justification for accommodative policy. That argument, already contested by several FOMC members including Federal Reserve Governor Michael Barr and Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack, has been further undermined by the war's macroeconomic consequences. The productivity dividend from AI investment cannot offset a 25–35% sustained increase in energy costs that propagates through every sector of the domestic economy.

IV.ii. The Stagflation Geometry and the Hassett Signal

White House Chief Economic Adviser Kevin Hassett signaled on May 24 that an eventual decline in oil prices — contingent on a resolution of the war — would create space for the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates. This statement reflects the administration's own analytical conclusion: that war-driven energy inflation is the primary constraint on monetary accommodation, and that the path to rate cuts runs through Tehran rather than through the FOMC.


The macroeconomic geometry this creates is structurally unusual. The Federal Reserve is institutionally constrained from cutting rates while headline inflation remains elevated by energy costs. The administration desires rate cuts for political and economic growth reasons. The path to rate cuts runs through a diplomatic resolution that the administration itself is blocking by demanding unspecified changes to the May 29 MOU. This creates a feedback loop in which the political incentive to resolve the war for domestic economic reasons is structurally present but operationally blocked by the negotiating posture the administration has chosen.


Dallas Federal Reserve Working Paper 2609's DSGE framework — calibrated to the 2026 Iran War supply shock — has been updated in preliminary form to incorporate the post-April 22 price trajectory. The revised estimate suggests an approximately 1.8% annualized CPI contribution from energy effects, up from the 1.0% estimate cited in the fourth-order update, reflecting the sustained duration of the disruption and the second-round effects from wage adjustments and input cost pass-through that were excluded from the initial estimate. The OECD has separately projected global inflation of 4% for 2026 as a result of the conflict. These are the operating conditions Warsh inherited, and they define the outer boundary of his policy options for at least the next two quarters regardless of any rate-cut preferences.

IV.iii. G7 Central Bank Divergence

The ECB, under Christine Lagarde, had already signaled that it would not be 'paralyzed by hesitation' on the Iran shock — a formulation that implied active policy response rather than passive observation. The Bank of England faces a structurally similar constraint to the Fed: energy-driven inflation in an economy already sensitive to shipping cost increases. The Bank of Japan, whose Tokyo remarks by Chicago Fed President Goolsbee were noted in the fourth-order update as a signal of synchronized central bank attention, has faced renewed pressure from the yen's depreciation against oil-currency pairs.


The G7 central bank policy environment is therefore one of constrained divergence: all major central banks face war-driven inflationary pressure that limits accommodation, but their domestic demand contexts and fiscal positions differ sufficiently that a coordinated policy response — analogous to the coordinated strategic reserve releases — would be analytically inconsistent even if politically desirable. The G7 Évian-les-Bains summit is the appropriate forum to address this divergence through fiscal policy coordination that reduces the burden on monetary policy.



V. The IAEA Verification Blackout and the Nuclear File at Day 101

The IAEA's June 4 confidential report — demanding that Iran permit verification of its nuclear program 'without delay' — marks a significant deterioration in the international nuclear monitoring architecture. No IAEA inspector has accessed any Iranian nuclear facility since February 28, 2026: one hundred days of verification blackout. The nuclear file has therefore bifurcated into two distinct analytical tracks that prior analyses treated as a single problem.


The first track is the diplomatic nuclear file: the question of what enrichment moratorium duration, uranium stockpile management, and IAEA access framework can be agreed as part of a comprehensive settlement. This track is addressed in the May 29 MOU framework and remains, in principle, negotiable.


The second track is the verification gap: the one hundred days during which Iranian nuclear activities have proceeded without any international monitoring. This gap has two dimensions. The first is technical: what activities have occurred, and what is the current state of Iran's nuclear program? The second is institutional: the 100-day blackout represents a precedent that fundamentally alters the baseline from which any future IAEA monitoring arrangement must be negotiated. Any return to IAEA access now requires Iran to effectively invite verification of what it has done during the blackout period, creating a new and powerful domestic political constraint on Iranian flexibility.


For G7 analytical purposes, the IAEA verification gap introduces a category of epistemic uncertainty not present in prior orders of this analysis: the possibility that Iranian nuclear activities during the conflict have advanced the program to a state that changes the strategic calculus for all parties. This possibility is assessed as low probability but high consequence, and warrants explicit treatment in any comprehensive settlement framework.



VI. The Lebanon Front, Hezbollah's Ceasefire Rejection, and the Multi-Front Configuration

VI.i. The Lebanon Ceasefire Architecture and Its Fragility

The Lebanon dimension of the 2026 conflict has never been fully integrated into the U.S.–Iran diplomatic architecture, and this structural omission has become the conflict's most dangerous fault line. The April 8 Pakistan-brokered ceasefire between the United States and Iran explicitly excluded Lebanon, as both Israel and the United States insisted. Iran and Iran's parliamentary speaker Ghalibaf insisted that Lebanon must be included. This disagreement has been the recurrent destabilization mechanism throughout the ceasefire period.


The U.S. State Department mediated a separate Israel–Lebanon arrangement beginning April 16, with a 10-day ceasefire extended multiple times. Hezbollah formally rejected the most recent framework, and the killing of the first Lebanese general in a strike on approximately June 6 preceded the June 7 sequence by twenty-four hours. By June 7, the Lebanon ceasefire was, in the characterization of the GlobalSecurity Day 101 operational report, 'formally intact but operationally hollow.'

VI.ii. The Dahieh Threshold and Its Bayesian Implications

The June 7 Israeli airstrike on Beirut's Dahieh suburb — the densely populated southern Hezbollah stronghold — carries analytical weight disproportionate to its immediate tactical significance. Washington had previously restrained Israel from striking the Lebanese capital directly; the Dahieh strike marks the public crossing of that restraint threshold. Its crossing constitutes a Bayesian signal of structural significance on three dimensions.


First, it indicates that Israeli strategic objectives in Lebanon have not been bounded by the ceasefire architecture in any operationally meaningful sense, consistent with Prime Minister Netanyahu's public statement that Israel 'still has goals to complete' through either diplomacy or force. Second, it activated precisely the trigger condition that Iranian Foreign Minister Araghchi had explicitly and publicly identified as the threshold for 'grave consequences and a full resumption of war' — creating a public commitment problem for Iranian leadership in which absorption of the strike without escalatory response would signal strategic retreat rather than restraint. Third, by establishing the Dahieh strike as within Israel's operational envelope during ceasefire periods, it creates a precedent that Iran cannot absorb repeatedly without domestic political cost within the IRGC governance framework described in prior analyses.

VI.iii. The Three-Front Simultaneous Activation

The June 7–8 events constitute the first simultaneous activation of three fronts — direct Iran–Israel, Lebanon, and Yemen — in the 101-day conflict. The structural significance of this configuration is not primarily military: neither Iran's three ballistic missile waves nor the Houthi missile nor the Dahieh strike has materially altered the military balance. The significance is political and diplomatic: simultaneous multi-front engagement eliminates the possibility of managing escalation through front-specific de-escalation, the mechanism that has kept the April 8 ceasefire nominally intact through repeated violations on individual fronts.


The diplomatic corollary is that any revival of the 60-day MOU now requires simultaneous de-escalation commitments on three fronts, not one. This represents a qualitative increase in the diplomatic complexity of any agreement and a material reduction in the probability of a clean diplomatic resolution within the short-term horizon.



VII. The China Dimension: Reassessment at Day 101

The April 22 fourth-order update identified China's strategic position as having strengthened across multiple dimensions. The May–June interval has deepened this assessment without fundamentally altering it, while adding two new elements.


First, the prospective Trump–Xi summit, anticipated in the fourth-order update as a mid-May inflection point, did not produce a public breakthrough on Chinese weapons-related activities. The FN-6 MANPAD transfer intelligence assessment and broader Chinese dual-use supply chain involvement remain analytically live questions. The absence of a public resolution suggests either that the summit was postponed, that the issue was managed through private channels, or that the assessment was inconclusive.


Second, China's positioning for Iranian reconstruction has advanced. The 70% destruction of Iranian industrial capacity, combined with the IAEA verification blackout and the 100-day Chinese positioning in reconstruction markets, has created a structural dependency that will shape the post-conflict Iranian political economy regardless of the diplomatic outcome. No Western capital pathway for Iranian reconstruction exists without sanctions removal, and China's early positioning advantage does not require any specific diplomatic outcome to materialize.


Third, the 60-day MOU framework, if eventually signed, would open negotiations on Iran's support for regional proxies — a dimension that intersects with Chinese interests in Lebanese Hezbollah's role as a deterrent against Israeli action that could spill into Lebanese reconstruction markets where Chinese capital is active. Beijing's attitude toward the proxy dimension of any final settlement therefore remains a structural variable in the diplomatic architecture.


The G7 Évian-les-Bains summit should treat the China dimension not as a peripheral variable but as a systemic constraint on the post-conflict architecture. Exclusionary strategies remain operationally unavailable; structured competitive engagement through the Persian Gulf Reconstruction Fund mechanism outlined in prior policy recommendations remains the analytically superior approach.



VIII. The UK–France Hormuz Coalition: Status Update at Day 101

The UK–France multinational Hormuz coalition, with 30+ nation participation and planning at Permanent Joint Headquarters initiated on April 22, has continued to develop operationally through the May–June period. The coalition's mandate — deployment conditional on a 'sustained ceasefire framework' — has not yet been triggered, as the nominal ceasefire has not achieved the stability threshold that would justify mine-clearance and commercial escort operations in active contested waters.


The June 7–8 escalation creates a paradox for the coalition framework: the deterioration of the ceasefire increases the need for the coalition's confidence-building and stabilization functions, while simultaneously raising the risk profile of operational deployment to a level that may exceed the coalition's defensive mandate. The PJHQ planning framework must now explicitly address the June 7 threshold: at what point does ceasefire deterioration trigger the coalition's deployment mandate rather than suspending it?


The Iran's institutionalization of the PGSA adds a further dimension. The coalition was designed to fill a navigational vacuum during a transition period; it now confronts a named Iranian institutional actor with a public mandate to control Hormuz passage. Any coalition deployment must therefore either acknowledge the PGSA's role (providing it with implicit legitimacy) or contest it (escalating the maritime dimension). Neither option was anticipated in the April 17 Starmer–Macron joint statement, and the coalition's mandate documentation will require revision before deployment.



IX. Revised Bayesian Scenario Matrix: June 8, 2026

The following table presents the revised Bayesian scenario probability distribution incorporating all developments through June 8, 2026 (Day 101). A new Scenario F is introduced to capture the multi-front conflagration risk that the June 7 simultaneous activation has elevated to threshold probability. The most significant revisions are: elevation of Scenario B2 (Full Infrastructure War Resumption) from 26% to 30%, now approaching parity with the primary baseline Scenario B (Prolonged Attrition) at 32%; downward revision of Scenario B to 32% from 38%, reflecting the ceasefire's structural erosion; and introduction of Scenario F (Regional Conflagration) at 5%.



Table 1: Revised Bayesian Scenario Probability Matrix

June 8, 2026 (Day 101).


Scenario

Mar 24

Apr 7

Apr 9

Apr 22

Jun 8

Analytical Note — June 8, 2026

A: Managed De-escalation → Durable Settlement

25%

8%

22%

12%

10%

Lebanon re-ignition and ceasefire breach sever the last diplomatic thread linking June 7 to prior MOU momentum. Pakistani channel now the sole viable conduit. Structural IRGC veto intact. MOU 60-day extension possible but July window closing.

B: Prolonged Attrition / Frozen Conflict — Open-Ended Ceasefire

45%

47%

41%

38%

32%

Eroded. Nominally the most probable baseline but ceasefire is now contested on two fronts simultaneously (Persian Gulf + Lebanon). Direct Iran–Israel exchange on June 7–8 marks first since April 8. Fragility structurally elevated.

B2: Ceasefire Collapse → Full Infrastructure War Resumption

20%

20%

22%

26%

30%

ELEVATED — now approaching parity with Scenario B. June 7 Beirut strike on Dahieh (previously U.S.-restrained) crosses a threshold Araghchi explicitly identified as trigger for 'full resumption.' Three-wave Iranian missile barrage on Israel confirms the trigger was pulled. Houthi Red Sea re-engagement adds third front. 60-day MOU in limbo pending Trump changes.

C: Iranian State Collapse / Regime Change

10%

10%

8%

5%

4%

Slight downward revision. IRGC governance consolidation continues; no viable opposition coalition; internal hardening rather than fracturing. Popular protests suppressed with enhanced security presence post-June 7.

D: Negotiated Partial Settlement — MOU on nuclear / Hormuz; Lebanon deferred

7%

14%

14%

Held flat. The May 29 tentative 60-day MOU represents a genuine architecture but remains blocked by Trump's unspecified changes. Pakistani channel (Naqvi→Araghchi→Khamenei written message) is the live conduit. Lebanon reactivation creates new conditionality from Tehran. Viable only if Beirut ceasefire restored within 72 hours.

E: Dual-Blockade Lock-In — Symmetric maritime standoff embedding as semi-permanent structure

5%

5%

Stable. U.S. naval blockade nominally lifted 29 May under ceasefire extension but Operation Economic Fury (Treasury) continues. IRGC formed Persian Gulf Strait Authority (PGSA) as permanent institutional mechanism. Maritime partition hardening even during nominal ceasefire periods.

F: Regional Conflagration — Multi-front war (NEW)

5%

NEW SCENARIO introduced June 8. Houthi missile at Israel (June 7) + Iran three-wave barrage + Israeli strikes on Iran + Beirut strike = first simultaneous three-front activation. Probability of uncontrolled escalation across Lebanon, Persian Gulf, Red Sea, and Iranian mainland warranting distinct scenario classification.

Note: Probabilities sum to 100% across A, B, B2, C, D, E, and F. The convergence of Scenarios B and B2 is the most analytically significant feature of the June 8 matrix: the distinction between managed attrition and full infrastructure war resumption has narrowed to within the margin of structural uncertainty created by the June 7 exchange.



X. Infrastructure Repair and Normalization Timelines: June 8 Revision


Table 2: Revised Infrastructure Normalization Timelines

June 8, 2026 (Day 101).

Sector / Actor

Timeline (60-day MOU Signed)

Timeline (Continued Stalemate / Escalation)

Key Constraints as of June 8, 2026

Strait of Hormuz — full commercial normalization

8–12 weeks post-credible 60-day MOU; mine-clearing and PGSA dissolution preconditions

Indefinite; PGSA institutionalized as permanent Iranian maritime authority; June 7–8 exchange re-elevates risk premium

IRGC's PGSA now a named institution; U.S. blockade nominally lifted 29 May but 'Operation Economic Fury' Treasury sanctions replace it; mine-field uncleared; 17+ merchant ships damaged; 2 captured

GCC energy infrastructure

8–12 weeks priority; 14–18 weeks full restoration post-MOU

16–24 weeks; June 7 exchange adds new insurance premium; Kuwait missile intercept a signal

~$140–200B repair; Bahrain UAE swap extended; QatarEnergy force majeure on LNG; Ras Laffan partial damage to helium production

Iranian industrial / petrochemical capacity

24–48 months partial; sanctions relief + Chinese capital required

Indefinite without external financing; IAEA zero access since Feb 28

70% steel capacity destroyed; IAEA 4 June report demands verification 'without delay' — unanswered; Chinese reconstruction position locked in

Global shipping insurance (Lloyd's war risk)

4–8 weeks post-credible ceasefire verification; UK/France PJHQ force deployment required

Indefinite elevated premium; ~$1M+ per vessel surcharge; June 7–8 escalation re-widens spread

30+ nation PJHQ coalition planning continues; mine-clearing timeline a precondition; Lloyd's underwriters have not re-engaged

Oil price normalization (Brent to pre-war ~$73)

Unlikely below $85 within 12 months even with full MOU; Brent back toward $94+ post-June 7

Brent $95–108 through Q4 2026; stagflationary lock-in with Warsh Fed constrained

IEA: largest supply disruption in history; June 7 escalation added ~3% intraday; Warsh sworn in 22 May facing war-driven CPI; Hassett says peace = rate-cut space

Global food / fertilizer security

Recovery begins 6–10 weeks post-Hormuz normalization; 2026 harvest partially compromised regardless

GCC food import crisis deepening; Bangladesh, Pakistan, Vietnam, Myanmar acute exposure; fertilizer input disruption to 2027 cycle

IEA emergency 400M barrel release executed; no equivalent food security buffer; OECD projects global inflation 4% for 2026

Fed monetary policy / rate trajectory

Warsh rate cut possible Q4 2026 if MOU signed and Brent returns to $85; Hassett 'ending war = rate cut space'

No 2026 cuts; Dallas Fed DSGE: ~1.8% CPI contribution from energy alone; stagflation risk materially elevated

Warsh sworn 22 May; 'regime change' signal on Fed independence; war-driven inflation dominant constraint; FOMC hold expected through H2 2026


The most significant revision since April 22 is the addition of the Federal Reserve / monetary policy row, reflecting Warsh's confirmation as a structural constraint on the economic recovery trajectory, and the upward revision of oil price normalization timelines to account for the PGSA institutionalization and the June 7 re-escalation premium.



XI. The Economic Architecture of Prolonged Stalemate: Updated Through June 8

XI.i. Cumulative Market Impact

The economic consequences of the conflict have accumulated through the April 22–June 8 interval in ways that reinforce the structural rather than cyclical character of the disruption. The IEA's 'largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market' characterization remains operationally accurate. Brent crude had traded near $99 per barrel in late April; the June 7 exchange has pushed the intraday premium back toward $94–96, with forward curves pricing continued geopolitical risk premium through Q3 2026.


The aggregate economic disruption now echoes, in several analytical frameworks, the 1970s energy crisis rather than the more contained 2002–2008 oil price cycle. Supply shortages, currency volatility, inflation, and elevated stagflation and recession risks are all active simultaneously. The GCC economic model — dependent on hydrocarbon exports through Hormuz — has experienced a structural disruption that the PGSA institutionalization suggests will not be fully resolved by any ceasefire short of a comprehensive settlement.


Vietnam, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Myanmar continue to face acute combined shocks in food, fuel, and shipping costs. The fertilizer disruption — noted in the fourth-order update — is now visible in preliminary 2026 agricultural yield data, with input price increases feeding through to planting decisions across South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. The lag structure of agricultural disruption means that food security consequences will continue to materialize through 2027 regardless of when a political settlement is reached.

XI.ii. The Warsh Constraint and G7 Fiscal Coordination

The arrival of Warsh at the Fed under war-driven stagflation creates a structural problem for G7 economic governance. Monetary policy across G7 central banks is constrained by energy-driven inflation that monetary instruments cannot address: raising rates does not produce oil. The policy burden must therefore shift to fiscal instruments and supply-side interventions that can reduce the energy component of inflation without compressing aggregate demand.


The G7 Évian-les-Bains summit is the appropriate forum for this coordination. A coordinated G7 fiscal package — combining strategic reserve release coordination, accelerated LNG infrastructure investment, energy efficiency support, and targeted food security financing for vulnerable economies — would reduce the burden on central banks and create the macroeconomic conditions in which Warsh's rate-cut inclinations could be exercised without abandoning the Fed's price stability mandate.


The Hassett signal — that peace creates rate-cut space — should be read as an implicit G7 policy alignment opportunity: the economic case for diplomatic resolution is not merely geopolitical but domestic American, and it creates a rare alignment of economic and security incentives that the G7 can reinforce through coordinated signaling.



XII. Policy Directions for the G7 Évian-les-Bains Summit

XII.i. Immediate (June 8–21, 2026): Managing the June 7 Escalation

The seventy-two to ninety-six hours following the June 7 exchange are analytically the most consequential short-term window since the April 8 ceasefire. Three immediate G7 priorities are indicated.


First, G7 members with active bilateral relationships with both Washington and Tehran — particularly the UK, France, and Germany through the E3 architecture, and Japan through its energy-security relationship with Persian Gulf producers — should communicate directly and immediately that the June 7 exchange does not, in their assessment, require full ceasefire collapse. The Araghchi threshold warning created a public commitment problem; G7 diplomatic cover can provide Iran with the analytical justification to absorb the Dahieh strike without full war resumption, framing it as a Lebanese-front event rather than a U.S.–Iran ceasefire violation.


Second, G7 members should support the Pakistani diplomatic channel — specifically, the Naqvi-delivered written message to Khamenei — as the highest-priority diplomatic instrument currently in operation. The written-message format, routed through Araghchi, is the closest any external actor has come to direct engagement with Khamenei's office since the IRGC governance consolidation described in prior analyses. G7 reinforcement of the Pakistani channel, including potential Japanese and German parallel diplomatic engagement through Islamabad, would strengthen its structural capacity.


Third, the UK–France PJHQ coalition should issue a conditional public statement clarifying that coalition deployment capability remains ready and that the coalition is prepared to activate its mandate upon restoration of ceasefire conditions — signaling institutional resilience rather than withdrawal in the face of escalation. This prevents the June 7 exchange from becoming a de facto dissolution of the coalition's operational architecture.

XII.ii. Near Term (June 22 – August 2026): The 60-Day MOU Revival and Nuclear Framework

Assuming the June 7 exchange does not trigger full infrastructure war resumption — the modal outcome in the revised Bayesian matrix, though now with significantly reduced probability — the 60-day MOU framework should be treated as the primary near-term diplomatic objective.


G7 members should encourage the United States to specify its demanded changes to the May 29 tentative agreement, publicly or through the Pakistani channel. The pattern of unspecified U.S. demands blocking agreed frameworks — identified in the fourth-order update as a structural negotiating liability — has now repeated itself twice (the April 17 three-page MOU and the May 29 60-day agreement). G7 allied pressure on the process discipline question is warranted.


On the IAEA verification blackout, G7 members should propose — through the IAEA Board of Governors — a specific verification confidence-building measure: a limited, monitored access arrangement at a single Iranian facility as a first step toward restoring the monitoring architecture. A 100-day verification blackout, if extended through any comprehensive settlement process, will create an epistemic baseline problem that makes final verification arrangements progressively harder to negotiate. Early partial access is therefore in all parties' interests.


On the Lebanon dimension, the E3 should coordinate a proposal to the United States for a Lebanon-inclusive ceasefire extension that addresses Iran's core demand while preserving Israel's operational flexibility in the border zone. The June 7 experience demonstrates that Lebanon-exclusive ceasefire architectures are structurally unstable; the marginal cost of including Lebanon explicitly is lower than the marginal risk of continued exclusion.

XII.iii. Medium Term (September – December 2026): Post-Conflict Architecture

The G7 Évian-les-Bains summit should initiate formal planning for the Persian Gulf Reconstruction Fund proposed in the fourth-order update, with a specific institutional design brief to be produced by the G7 Finance Ministers' track for presentation at the next G7 Foreign Ministers' meeting. The fund's mandate — co-financed by G7 members, Persian Gulf sovereign wealth funds, and multilateral institutions — should be structured with a conditional financing window for Iranian reconstruction linked to verified nuclear compliance, providing leverage through financial conditionality while avoiding dependency on any single external actor.


The Hormuz Convention concept — a multilateral maritime governance framework that reconciles Iranian sovereignty claims with guaranteed commercial transit — should be formally placed on the G7 summit agenda as a long-term objective, with France and the UK designated as lead institutional sponsors given their roles as PJHQ coalition co-chairs and permanent UN Security Council members. The PGSA's institutionalization makes the Convention framework more necessary, not less, as a counterpart institution through which Iranian maritime sovereignty claims can be formally addressed rather than simply contested.



XIII. Structural Conclusions

This fifth-order Bayesian update yields seven structural conclusions that extend beyond the April 22 baseline.


First, the June 7 exchange has moved the conflict from managed attrition to contested equilibrium. The distinction between Scenarios B (Prolonged Attrition) and B2 (Full Infrastructure War Resumption) has narrowed to a 2-percentage-point spread — 32% versus 30% — that is within the structural uncertainty of any Bayesian assessment at this level of analytical complexity. This near-parity represents the most fragile diplomatic moment since the ceasefire's inception.


Second, the Lebanon front has become the conflict's most dangerous escalation vector. The coupling of the Lebanon ceasefire to the U.S.–Iran diplomatic track — through Iran's explicit conditionality and the Dahieh threshold — means that Israeli operations in Lebanon can trigger U.S.–Iran escalation without any direct American decision. This creates a strategic disconnect between American diplomatic objectives and Israeli operational autonomy that G7 members must directly address with Washington.


Third, the PGSA institutionalization marks a structural hardening of Iranian maritime leverage. What the fourth-order update assessed as a tactical instrument has become a permanent institution — analogous to the IRGC Quds Force — whose dissolution would now require a more comprehensive institutional negotiation than a simple ceasefire reopening commitment.


Fourth, the Warsh Federal Reserve operates under a structural constraint — war-driven energy inflation — that monetary policy instruments cannot address. The path to rate cuts runs through diplomatic resolution, and the Hassett signal explicitly acknowledges this. The G7 economic governance framework should treat the Iran war as a macroeconomic problem requiring coordinated fiscal and supply-side responses, not merely a geopolitical problem requiring security solutions.


Fifth, the 100-day IAEA verification blackout is a compounding risk. Each additional day without inspection access reduces the epistemic baseline from which any final nuclear agreement can be verified and increases the domestic political cost to Iranian leadership of re-admitting international inspectors. Restoring partial IAEA access is a prerequisite for any durable nuclear settlement, not a consequence of one.


Sixth, China's structural advantage in Iranian reconstruction has solidified over the May–June interval. The post-conflict political economy of Iran, regardless of diplomatic outcome, will feature Chinese capital at its center. G7 policy should plan for structured competitive engagement through multilateral financing mechanisms rather than exclusionary strategies that are operationally unavailable.


Seventh, the Pakistani diplomatic channel — the delivery of a written message to Khamenei through Araghchi on June 8 — remains the sole surviving high-level direct diplomatic conduit as of the time of writing. Its preservation and reinforcement through G7 parallel engagement is not optional; it is the indispensable instrument of any near-term diplomatic de-escalation scenario.



Selected Sources

All prior sources cited in the March 24, April 7, April 9, and April 22 orders of this analysis remain incorporated by reference. The following additional sources informed this fifth-order update:


  • GlobalSecurity.org (2026, June 8). Iran War 2026 — Day 101 Update, 08 June 2026. Operational situational summary.

  • Associated Press / CBS News (2026, June 7–8). Iran strikes Israel for first time since April ceasefire; Israel and Iran trade strikes, imperiling already fragile ceasefire in war's 100th day.

  • Washington Times (2026, June 8). Israel and Iran trade strikes, threatening to drag the region back into full-scale war.

  • Britannica (2026, June 8). 2026 Iran war: Updated entry — June 8 escalation and ceasefire breach.

  • Washington Post (2026, May 22). Kevin Warsh sworn in as Fed chair facing inflation, political pressure.

  • Bloomberg (2026, May 24). Hassett Says Ending Iran War May Create Room for Fed Rate Cut.

  • CNBC (2026, May 28). U.S. sanctions Iran's Hormuz Strait Authority, condemns ballistic missile launch at Kuwait; Kevin Warsh sworn in as Fed chair as Trump seeks interest rate cuts.

  • PBS NewsHour / AP (2026, May 29). U.S. and Iranian negotiators reach tentative deal to extend ceasefire and start new nuclear talks.

  • Al Jazeera (2026, May 29). US-Iran 60-day proposal: What we know.

  • House of Commons Library (2026, June 6). US-Iran ceasefire and nuclear talks in 2026; Israel/US-Iran conflict 2026: Background and UK response.

  • UnboxFuture.com (2026, June 8). Red Line Collapsed: Inside the June 2026 Israel-Iran Military Exchange.

  • Wikipedia — 2026 Strait of Hormuz crisis; 2026 Iran war ceasefire; 2026 Iranian strikes on Israel; 2026 Israel–Lebanon ceasefire; Economic impact of the 2026 Iran war; 7 May 2026 United States strikes on Iran (updated entries).

  • Dallas Federal Reserve Working Paper 2609, Revised (2026, May). Kilian, Plante, Richter & Zhou: The Impact of the 2026 Iran War on U.S. Inflation — DSGE Updated Estimate.

  • OECD Economic Outlook (2026). Global inflation projection: 4% for 2026 incorporating Iran War supply shock.

  • IAEA Board of Governors Confidential Report (2026, June 4). Iran verification access demand.


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Fifth-Order Bayesian Update  •  June 8, 2026  •  G7 Évian-les-Bains Briefing Series