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Saturday, 25 April 2026

 

Clausewitz, Sun Tzu, and Ferdowsi: Cultural Strategy, Moral Force, and the Persistence of War in Iran

Prevailing interpretations of the 2026 Iran war have largely been framed through the strategic paradigms of Carl von Clausewitz and Sun Tzu. These frameworks remain indispensable: Clausewitz illuminates escalation, political purpose, and the role of moral forces, while Sun Tzu emphasizes strategy, deception, and the avoidance of costly conflict.

Yet the empirical trajectory of the war—particularly Iran’s refusal to capitulate despite sustained and technologically overwhelming bombardment—reveals the limits of these traditions when applied in isolation.

To fully understand the persistence of Iranian resistance, one must incorporate a third intellectual axis: the civilizational war philosophy embedded in the Shahnameh of Ferdowsi. This tradition integrates force (Zour), wisdom (Kherad/Chareh), and legitimacy (Farr) into a unified strategic ontology—one that continues to resonate, implicitly and explicitly, in modern Iranian political discourse.


I. The Strategic Puzzle: Why Coercion Has Failed

The initial logic of the 2026 campaign reflected a familiar model of coercion: overwhelming force would produce rapid political concession. This assumption rests on a Clausewitzian premise—that war remains subordinate to rational political objectives and that sufficient pressure will compel recalibration.

However, this expectation has not materialized. Iran has absorbed sustained strikes, maintained operational continuity, and refused negotiations framed as capitulation. Statements from Iranian officials repeatedly emphasize dignity (ezzat)resistance (moqavemat), and the rejection of imposed outcomes—framing the conflict not as a bargaining process but as a test of sovereignty.

This disconnect reveals a critical analytical gap:
the adversary is not operating within the same conceptual boundaries of war.


II. Strategy Over Violence: The Primacy of Kherad

Despite the existential intensity that permeates the Shahnameh, Ferdowsi consistently privileges strategy, foresight, and intellectual mastery (Kherad) over brute force (Zour). In this respect, his philosophy parallels—and in some respects anticipates—Sun Tzu.

“Where counsel and stratagem bear fruit,
It is better to use wisdom than to draw the sword.”

Original Persian:

چو با چاره و رای کاری رود
به از تیغ بردن به کاری رود

“Be wise and of an enlightened soul;
Make knowledge your heavy armor in battle.”

Original Persian:

خردمند باشید و روشن‌روان
به دانش بپوشید جوشن گران

These lines establish a foundational principle:
war is not the ideal instrument of policy—it is the failure of superior alternatives.

This resonates strongly with Sun Tzu’s dictum that the highest form of victory is achieved without battle. Yet Ferdowsi extends this logic beyond instrumental rationality. Strategy is not merely efficient—it is ethically superior.

At the same time, this restraint is paired with a decisive corollary:
when war becomes unavoidable, it must be pursued with total commitment.

This duality—restraint before conflict, absolutism within it—helps explain a defining feature of Iranian strategic behavior:

  • A long-standing preference for indirect, asymmetric engagement

  • Coupled with endurance and escalation once direct conflict is imposed

This pattern is visible in official rhetoric, where Iranian leaders frequently stress that war is not sought, yet once imposed, it becomes a domain of unwavering resistance.


III. Moral Force (Farr) and the Center of Gravity

The second pillar of Ferdowsian strategy lies in Farr—a form of moral and metaphysical legitimacy that determines victory more decisively than material strength. This bears strong resemblance to Clausewitz’s emphasis on moral forces, but with a deeper normative grounding.

“By the power of that great King,
I shall protect Iran from the claws of the wolf.”

Original Persian:

به نیروی آن پادشاه بزرگ
که ایران نگه دارم از چنگ گرگ

“The blackness of a sprawling host will prove to be in vain;
One man of war is mightier than a hundred thousand men.”

Original Persian:

سیاهی لشکر نیاید به کار
یکی مرد جنگی به از صد هزار

Here, Ferdowsi advances a critical proposition:
the true center of gravity in war is legitimacy, not mass.

An army—or a state—collapses not when it is physically destroyed, but when it loses its moral claim to fight.

This insight is directly relevant to the 2026 conflict. Iranian official discourse consistently frames the war as defensivejust, and imposed, thereby reinforcing internal legitimacy. External pressure framed as coercion or surrender may therefore have the unintended effect of strengthening the very عنصر that sustains resistance.


IV. Friction, Fate, and the Tragedy of War

Ferdowsi’s worldview also anticipates Clausewitz’s concept of friction and the fog of war, emphasizing uncertainty, reversal, and the limits of control.

“Such is the decree of the turning sky;
In battle, one day you are the rider, the next day you are the dust.”

Original Persian:

چنین است رسم سرای درشت
گهی پشت بر زین، گهی زین به پشت

“They charge at one another, this one at that;
The earth turns red with the blood of the brave.”

Original Persian:

همی تازند این بر آن، آن بر این
ز خون یلان سرخ گردد زمین

War is thus inherently volatile and tragic. Even the most carefully constructed strategies are vulnerable to reversal.

This perspective aligns with Clausewitz’s rejection of deterministic war models, yet extends it further:
war is not only uncertain—it is morally consequential and existentially destabilizing.


V. Existential War and the Rejection of Surrender

The most critical contribution of the Shahnameh lies in its articulation of existential resistance—a doctrine that directly illuminates modern Iranian behavior.

“It is a tragedy should Iran be laid to waste,
And transformed into a lair for leopards and lions.
If Iran is no more, let my own body perish;
Let not a single soul remain alive in this land.
Let us all, as one, turn our faces toward battle,
And tighten the world around the malicious foe.
Better that we all, man by man, give our bodies to death,
Than surrender our nation to the enemy.”

Original Persian:

دریغ است ایران که ویران شود
کنام پلنگان و شیران شود
چو ایران نباشد تن من مباد
در این بوم و بر زنده یک تن مباد
همه روی یکسر به جنگ آوریم
جهان بر بداندیش تنگ آوریم
همه سر به سر تن به کشتن دهیم
از آن به که کشور به دشمن دهیم

This passage encodes a doctrine in which:

  • The state is a civilizational entity (Iranshahr)

  • Sovereignty is inseparable from identity

  • Surrender is equivalent to collective annihilation

This logic is echoed—often implicitly—in modern Iranian rhetoric, where terms such as esteqlal (independence), ezzat (dignity), and moqavemat (resistance) are repeatedly invoked.

Thus, what external observers interpret as strategic inflexibility may instead reflect a deeply embedded moral framework in which surrender is not a viable option.


VI. Implications for the 2026 Iran War

Integrating Clausewitz, Sun Tzu, and Ferdowsi yields several critical insights:

VI.i. Coercion Without Cultural Understanding Fails

Material superiority cannot compel submission when the adversary defines the conflict as existential.

VI.ii. Strategic Rationality Is Culturally Conditioned

Iran’s persistence is not irrational—it is rational within a framework that prioritizes legitimacy and identity over cost minimization.

VI.iii. “Surrender” Is a Counterproductive Objective

Framing negotiations as capitulation eliminates political off-ramps and reinforces resistance narratives.

VI.iv. Endurance Becomes Strategy

Iran’s approach is not necessarily to win decisively, but to outlast, out-legitimize, and reshape the political meaning of the conflict.

VI.v. Moral Force Is Operational

Legitimacy is not abstract—it directly affects cohesion, resilience, and the willingness to endure losses.

Conclusion: A Three-Dimensional Theory of War

Clausewitz explains escalation and the role of politics.
Sun Tzu explains strategy and the avoidance of unnecessary conflict.
Ferdowsi explains endurance, legitimacy, and the refusal to surrender.

Together, they reveal that the 2026 Iran war is not merely a contest of capabilities, but a clash of strategic cultures and ontologies of war.

Where one side views war as a coercive instrument to achieve negotiation, the other may interpret it as a civilizational test in which survival without dignity is meaningless.

Under such conditions, the expectation of rapid capitulation is not merely optimistic—it is conceptually flawed.

War persists not because it cannot be ended, but because, for one side, its meaning forbids surrender.




The Wages of Incoherence

What Clausewitz and Sun Tzu Reveal About the 2026 War With Iran




INTRODUCTION

On February 28, 2026, the strategic landscape of the Middle East was permanently altered. Under the code name Operation Epic Fury, the United States and Israel launched a coordinated campaign of airstrikes against Iran targeting military and government sites, nuclear facilities, and senior leadership—culminating in the assassination of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Iran responded with Operation True Promise IV: salvos of hundreds of ballistic missiles and thousands of drones directed at Israel, American military bases across the Persian Gulf, and dual-use civilian infrastructure throughout the region. The Strait of Hormuz was closed, global oil markets convulsed, and a fragile two-week ceasefire—brokered by Pakistan on April 7–8—has held only fitfully, with both sides continuing to violate its terms as of this writing.

What began as a shadow war of proxies, sanctions, and calibrated strikes has erupted into the most consequential direct military confrontation between Western-aligned powers and the Islamic Republic since the 1979 Revolution. As the ceasefire remains fragile and negotiations proceed haltingly in Islamabad, this essay evaluates the strategic conduct of all parties—principally the United States, Israel, and Iran—through the enduring lenses of Carl von Clausewitz and Sun Tzu. The goal is not moral adjudication. It is analytical clarity: to understand why a conflict so long anticipated was so poorly managed, and what classical strategic theory reveals about the choices that brought us here.

I. THE PRIMACY OF POLITICAL PURPOSE

Clausewitz's foundational dictum—that war is the continuation of politics by other means—demands a prior question: what politics? Before the first B-2 stealth bomber crossed into Iranian airspace, Washington's stated objectives had never achieved coherence. Regime change, nuclear rollback, behavioral modification, and deterrence containment circulated simultaneously in policy discourse, each implying a different instrument, a different adversary, and a different definition of success.

President Trump's February 24 State of the Union address claimed Iran had restarted its nuclear program and was developing missiles capable of striking the United States—a framing that prioritized military logic over diplomatic architecture. Yet as the House of Commons Library noted in its authoritative April briefing, indirect negotiations in Oman had been showing significant progress, with Iran willing to make concessions on enrichment, when Washington abruptly abandoned diplomacy for kinetic action. The Omani foreign minister's quiet satisfaction at the negotiating table gave way to open disappointment when the bombs fell.

"No one starts a war," Clausewitz wrote, "without first being clear what he intends to achieve by that war and how he intends to conduct it." By this standard, Operation Epic Fury began with a foundational deficit.

The assassination of Khamenei illustrates the confusion. Trump simultaneously called for the overthrow of the governing regime and subsequently claimed regime change had occurred—while announcing he distrusted Iran's new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, whom he called his appointment "unacceptable." If the objective was regime change, why distrust the new regime? If it was nuclear rollback, why target the Assembly of Experts' meeting hall? The fragmentation of aims—nuclear, political, and civilizational—violated Clausewitz's insistence on a single decisive political objective.

Sun Tzu is equally unsparing: without a clearly defined end-state, military instruments risk becoming self-perpetuating rather than purposive. The ceasefire framework brokered by Pakistan—a fifteen-point American plan rejected by Tehran, countered by an Iranian ten-point proposal, renegotiated under deadline pressure—reflects exactly this disorder. As of April 22, U.S. officials were giving Iran three to five days to resolve alleged internal governmental "infighting" before resuming attacks. This is improvisation dressed as strategy.

Strategic incoherence at the political level is not a secondary flaw. Clausewitz would regard it as the foundational error from which all subsequent failures flow.

II. THE COLLAPSE OF PERFECT PLANS

"No campaign plan survives first contact with the enemy," Clausewitz warned. "The enemy of a good plan is the dream of a perfect plan." The architects of Operation Epic Fury appear to have dreamed grandly. According to IDF Brigadier General Effie Defrin, months of joint U.S.-Israeli "strategic and operational deception"—including the manipulation of satellite imagery to conceal force readiness—preceded the strikes. Three gatherings of Iranian regime officials were hit within half a minute of each other in the opening salvo. The operational planning, by any measure, was sophisticated.

Yet strategic expectations quickly collapsed against Iranian resilience. Iran's government moved with remarkable swiftness to prevent a leadership vacuum. Ali Larijani, serving as Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, effectively governed in the immediate aftermath of Khamenei's death. Mojtaba Khamenei—described by Britannica as more hawkish and repressive than his father—was appointed supreme leader within days, despite Trump's objections. When Larijani was subsequently killed on March 17 in a precision strike, he was replaced by Mohammad Bagher Zolghadr, an appointment that confirmed the paramountcy of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in Iran's wartime command structure.

The regime did not collapse. It adapted. Iran's missile and drone production capacity was degraded—assessments suggest roughly two-thirds of original capacity destroyed—but Iran continued launching salvos at Israel and Persian Gulf states into April. The Strait of Hormuz closure disrupted twenty percent of global oil trade, spiking prices and creating fuel shortages across parts of Asia. Shipping lines rerouted around the Cape of Good Hope. Dubai International Airport, one of the world's busiest, was damaged and temporarily shuttered. The costs of Iranian adaptation were borne globally.

Sun Tzu emphasized deception and adaptability as force multipliers for the weaker party. Iran demonstrated both. The Islamic Republic's ability to reconstitute leadership, maintain proxy pressure through Hezbollah and the Houthis, and leverage the Strait as an economic weapon illustrated exactly the gap between Western assumptions of linear cause-and-effect—strike infrastructure, compel surrender—and the nonlinear reality of adversarial adaptation.

III. FOG, FRICTION, AND THE INTELLIGENCE PARADOX

Clausewitz's "fog of war"—the radical uncertainty that pervades armed conflict—manifested acutely in the opening phase of this conflict. Intelligence prior to Operation Epic Fury was in certain respects remarkably precise: the location of Khamenei's compound, the coordinates of nuclear facilities, the scheduling of regime meetings. In other respects it was conspicuously shallow. U.S. airstrikes struck a girls' school in Minab, killing an estimated 170 people, most of them children—an incident that Italian Prime Minister Meloni publicly called "a massacre" and that complicated Western diplomatic positioning for weeks.

In February 2026, Iran had informed the IAEA that normal safeguards were "legally untenable and materially impracticable" given ongoing threats, leaving the agency unable to verify the status of enrichment or stockpiles. Analysts in Britain and the United States characterized Iran's strategy as "nuclear hedging"—developing the technical infrastructure to assemble a weapon on short notice while stopping short of actual production, using enrichment as leverage. The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists noted that Iran was willing to dilute or export higher-enriched uranium in exchange for sanctions relief. This was not the profile of a state racing for a bomb. It was the profile of a state seeking negotiating advantage.

If that assessment was available to policymakers before February 28—and available evidence suggests it was—then the decision to strike during active negotiations reflects not an intelligence failure but a political judgment that diplomacy had been exhausted. Sun Tzu's imperative—"know the enemy and know yourself"—was partially fulfilled. Technical intelligence about targets was formidable. Political and strategic intelligence about Iranian intentions, about the regime's resilience, about the tolerance of regional partners for horizontal escalation, was evidently incomplete.

"Many intelligence reports," Clausewitz observed, "are contradictory; even more are false, and most are uncertain." The Minab school strike and the subsequent management of Iranian leadership succession suggest that the uncertainty extended well beyond target coordinates.

IV. DEFENSE AS DISTRIBUTED OFFENSE

Clausewitz's paradoxical observation that defense is the stronger form of war—and that the best defense is often attack—was operationalized by Iran through a doctrine of horizontal escalation that international security scholar Robert A. Pape, writing in Faoreign Affairs, characterized precisely: Iran widened the arena of conflict to extend it beyond military might and into the political and economic realms, betting it could outlast American political will.

Rather than absorbing strikes and accepting defeat, Iran externalized conflict across the entire regional theater. Iranian missiles and drones struck U.S. embassies and military installations in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Iraq, Oman, and Jordan. A drone struck Britain's Akrotiri military base in Cyprus. An Iranian ballistic missile entering Turkish airspace was intercepted by NATO integrated air defense systems, prompting Ankara to assert its right to self-defense and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte to invoke the alliance's commitment to Turkey's defense. An Iranian Navy frigate, the IRIS Dena, was sunk in the Indian Ocean by the USS Charlotte—a vessel returning from a multilateral exercise in India, sunk far from the Persian Gulf, illustrating how wide the war's geometry had become.

The CSIS assessment published on April 21 captured the Iranian strategic logic with precision: this is a war of endurance, not firepower. Iran leverages the Strait of Hormuz to raise global costs while betting it can outlast U.S. political will. Iran's war strategy is not simply reactive. It is an application of Clausewitz's dynamic conception of defense—transforming military inferiority into strategic cost-imposition—fused with Sun Tzu's emphasis on indirect pressure.

The adversaries' response has been reactive rather than directive. The U.S. Navy enforced a blockade of Iranian ports; the seizure of the Iranian-flagged cargo ship Touska on April 20—which Tehran's Red Crescent said was carrying dialysis medical supplies—generated fresh condemnation. Military superiority is not in question. Its translation into strategic outcomes very much is.

V. DECISIVENESS AND THE ABSENT CENTER OF GRAVITY

"Pursue one great decisive aim," Clausewitz insisted. "Produce relative superiority at the decisive point." The opening phase of Operation Epic Fury achieved a kind of tactical decisiveness—the killing of a supreme leader is historically unprecedented in modern great-power conflict. Yet decisive tactical action has not produced decisive strategic outcomes.

Over five weeks, U.S. and Israeli forces struck more than three thousand targets across Iran. Missile and drone production capacity was substantially degraded. The Natanz, Fordow, Isfahan, and Bushehr nuclear sites sustained damage. Naval assets were destroyed. South Pars gas field infrastructure was struck. And yet Iran continued to launch missile barrages into April, the new supreme leader issued statements vowing revenge, and parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf declared that bilateral ceasefire or negotiations was "unreasonable."

Trump claimed on March 9 that "the war is very complete, pretty much," and falsely asserted the Strait of Hormuz had been reopened. He claimed on March 24 that the U.S. and Israel had "won" the war—while Iran continued its missile strikes. The distance between declaration and reality illustrates the deepest Clausewitzian critique: victory is not proclaimed, it is achieved through the subordination of the enemy's political will. That subordination has not occurred.

Sun Tzu might interpret prolonged stalemate as a form of success—mutual deterrence, neither side achieving annihilation of the other. Clausewitz would see it differently: without resolution, war persists as a condition rather than an instrument. The ceasefire announced April 7–8, mediated by Pakistan with Iran committing to open the Strait in exchange for a suspension of strikes, has been violated by both sides since its declaration. As of April 22, American officials acknowledged the ceasefire remained fragile and internal Iranian decision-making opaque.

Decisive tactical action—including the assassination of a supreme leader—has not produced decisive strategic outcomes. This is the central paradox of the 2026 campaign.

VI. BOLDNESS, HESITATION, AND STRATEGIC TEMPO

Clausewitz observed that boldness becomes rarer the higher the rank, and that it is sometimes better to act quickly and err than to hesitate. The architects of Operation Epic Fury were not hesitant in the operational sense—the strike was large, sudden, and lethal. But the strategic-political frame around the operation revealed deep indecision.

Trump postponed strikes against Iranian power plants for five days in mid-March while announcing he was negotiating with Iran to end the war—Iran denied any talks were occurring and called the president "deceitful." He demanded NATO and China help reopen the Strait of Hormuz on March 15. He extended the Iran truce on April 21 to allow time for an Iranian proposal to be submitted. Each extension reset the diplomatic clock and eroded the coercive credibility that military action had briefly generated.

Iran, by contrast, acted with calibrated boldness throughout. It closed the Strait on day one—triggering global economic consequences that immediately constrained American decision-making. It appointed a more hardline supreme leader despite explicit American objection. Its parliamentary speaker threatened the irreversible destruction of Persian Gulf energy infrastructure if coalition strikes hit Iranian power plants. On April 6, an adviser to Mojtaba Khamenei threatened to close the Bab al-Mandab Strait as well, potentially creating a dual chokepoint strangling a substantial portion of global seaborne trade. These moves were not suicidal. They were calibrated tests of American resolve—consistent with both Clausewitzian initiative and Sun Tzu's conception of creating situations in which the enemy's choices all carry costs.

VII. STRENGTH MISAPPLIED IS STRATEGIC INERTIA

"The best strategy is always to be very strong," Clausewitz argued. American and Israeli conventional military superiority in this conflict is absolute. B-2 stealth bombers, B-1 Lancers, B-52 Stratofortresses, Tomahawk missiles, HIMARS launchers, two carrier strike groups, more than 120 aircraft—these constitute the most concentrated American military force deployed in the region since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Yet CSIS analysts noted as of April 21 that the United States has depleted significant missile inventories while still possessing enough to continue fighting under any plausible scenario. The cost asymmetry that FDD analysts flagged in their Operation Epic Fury battle damage assessment remains strategically salient: cheap Iranian missiles and drones impose expensive intercept costs on American and allied defense systems. The arithmetic of attrition, over time, does not favor the defender.

Meanwhile, China and Russia have carefully positioned themselves to exploit American exhaustion. As Jon B. Alterman and Ali Vaez argued in Faoreign Affairs on April 23, Beijing and Moscow can let the United States bear the costs of the Iran confrontation while gaining regional influence and advancing their own strategic aims. Russia condemned the U.S.-Israeli strikes as destabilizing while showing little interest in intervening on Tehran's behalf. China expressed concern while preserving its economic relationships across the Persian Gulf. Sun Tzu's principle is vindicated: strength misapplied is weakness. Superiority that cannot be converted into durable political outcomes becomes strategically inert.

VIII. WAR AS A PRODUCT OF ITS AGE

"Every age has its own kind of war," Clausewitz observed. The 2026 war with Iran is emphatically a product of its age—a hybrid conflict in which kinetic strikes, cyber operations, economic warfare, proxy escalation, and information campaigns are woven together into a single strategic fabric.

Flashpoint's analysis of the cyber dimension of Operation Epic Fury documented simultaneous system-level disruptions: flight suspensions at Dubai airports following nearby strikes, Iran's blockade of the Strait elevating global energy risk, Poland's reported foiling of a cyberattack on its national nuclear center with possible Iranian links, and hacktivist groups from both sides claiming defacements and DDoS operations. Grand Ayatollah Sistani issued a fatwa declaring a "collective religious obligation" for communal defense—an information-domain operation as consequential as any kinetic strike.

Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz disrupted global shipping lanes and prompted rerouting to avoid the Red Sea as well—where the Houthi movement, already degraded by prior operations, nonetheless maintained a threatening posture. Traditional decisive battle has been replaced by what CSIS calls "persistent competition," a state of armed standoff in which the threshold between war and not-war is deliberately blurred. Sun Tzu's emphasis on indirect victory, on winning without fighting where possible, resonates powerfully in this environment. The question is whether indirect pressure alone can produce the political resolution Clausewitz demands.

IX. THE FINAL VICTORY PROBLEM

"There is only one decisive victory: the last." Clausewitz's stark reminder has rarely been more apposite than in the current moment. As of April 25, 2026, no actor has achieved regime collapse, strategic submission, or a durable regional order. Iran's new supreme leader has vowed revenge while simultaneously negotiating through Pakistani mediators in Islamabad. Trump has pronounced the war "very close to being over" and confirmed Iran has agreed to major nuclear concessions, including the return of enriched uranium stockpiles to American custody. Iran's foreign minister has declared the Strait "completely open" to commercial vessels for the ceasefire period, while the U.S. naval blockade of Iranian ports and Iranian-flagged ships remains in force.

The landscape is not resolution. It is managed instability at a higher level of violence. The Lebanese ceasefire, extended three weeks after Israeli and Lebanese representatives met at the White House, remains intertwined with the Iran negotiations. Hezbollah has been significantly degraded but not destroyed. The Houthis continue to threaten. Iraqi Shia militias maintain their posture. Iran's proxy network—the central instrument of its forward defense for two decades—has been battered but not dismantled.

What Iran has achieved through its horizontal escalation strategy is precisely what Sun Tzu would recognize as a strategic success of the indirect school: extending the conflict beyond military might into the political and economic realms, raising global costs to the point where the continuation of the campaign becomes politically expensive for Washington. What it has not achieved is security, prosperity, or legitimacy—the January 2026 massacre of thousands of its own citizens during the largest domestic protests since 1979 illustrated the regime's fundamental fragility as acutely as any foreign strike.

CONCLUSION: THE WAGES OF INCOHERENCE

Evaluated through the twin lenses of Clausewitz and Sun Tzu, the 2026 war with Iran reveals a painful paradox. The United States and Israel entered the conflict with overwhelming material superiority, sophisticated operational planning, and genuine tactical achievements—including the unprecedented assassination of a sitting supreme leader. And yet, eight weeks after the opening strikes, the political objectives that justified Operation Epic Fury remain unresolved, contested, or mutually contradictory.

Iran, despite catastrophic losses—thousands of civilians killed, nuclear infrastructure damaged, missile capacity reduced by roughly two-thirds, its supreme leader dead—has demonstrated greater strategic consistency than its adversaries. It adapted its leadership structure within days. It imposed global economic costs through the Strait. It maintained proxy pressure across multiple theaters. It negotiated from a position of defiance rather than defeat. These achievements do not reflect a successful strategy in the full Clausewitzian sense—Iran has not achieved its political objectives either. But they demonstrate the enduring power of strategic patience, asymmetric adaptation, and the integration of military and political instruments that both classical theorists prize.

The American failure is not one of military capability. It is one of Clausewitzian coherence: the failure to define a clear political objective, align means to that objective, and sustain the will to pursue it without improvisation. From the abandonment of Omani-mediated talks just as they showed promise, to the premature declarations of victory, to the oscillation between "unconditional surrender" and ceasefire extensions, the conduct of the campaign has illustrated what happens when political clarity is subordinated to operational momentum.

Sun Tzu's counsel—win before fighting, know the enemy, exploit deception, avoid protracted war—was honored more in the breach than the observance. A conflict that could perhaps have been resolved at the negotiating table in February 2026 is now being resolved, if at all, on terms far more costly to all parties, including innocent civilians on every side.

War, Clausewitz reminds us, is not simply about power. It is about the coherent, disciplined application of power in service of a clearly defined political purpose. Until that coherence is achieved—and there is little evidence it has been achieved by any party to this conflict—the Iran war will remain what it has become: not a path to resolution, but a condition of managed and expensive instability.


Friday, 24 April 2026

 

The  Terminal Failure of Jawboning as Energy Market Policy and the Chokepoint Doctrine : The 2026 Hormuz Crisis and the Illusion of Rhetorical Market Control 


A Structural Analysis of the Q1–Q2 2026 Global Oil Shock


 

Executive Summary

The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz since late February 2026—the direct consequence of the US/Israel-Iran conflict initiated by Operation Epic Fury on February 28—has removed approximately 20% of global daily seaborne oil transit and triggered what the International Energy Agency has formally characterised as the "largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market." The IEA's head described the broader situation as "the greatest global energy security challenge in history."

Throughout March and into early April, energy markets experienced a striking psychological decoupling from physical supply realities. This was primarily driven by aggressive "jawboning"—the systematic use of rhetorical intervention by US officials, particularly President Trump, projecting a swift military resolution and issuing a series of social media posts that repeatedly sent oil prices sharply lower. As of April 23, 2026, this rhetorical buffer has functionally collapsed.

The physical reality of a compounding supply deficit has overwhelmed market psychology. The April 8 ceasefire, initially celebrated as a breakthrough, produced neither a genuine reopening nor a diplomatic pathway: Iran used the pause to impose per-vessel transit tolls, the first round of Islamabad peace talks (April 11–12) concluded without agreement, and the US responded on April 13 by imposing a formal naval blockade of Iranian ports—adding an estimated additional 1.3 million barrels per day (bpd) of supply outages on top of the roughly 10 million bpd already lost. Iran has formally declared the renewed blockade an act of war, and a second round of peace talks—to be led by Vice President Vance in Islamabad—remains in limbo as of the time of writing, with Iran publicly stating its decision not to send a delegation is "definitive," even as Trump has extended the ceasefire indefinitely. Global cumulative supply losses are approaching 650 million barrels, strategic reserve buffers are nearing exhaustion, and the world faces an imminent structural energy crisis with cascading consequences for food, industrial supply chains, and financial stability.


I. From Operation Epic Fury to the Naval Blockade: A Revised Timeline

The following timeline, substantially extended from earlier analyses, traces the full arc from the conflict's opening strikes to the diplomatic impasse now crystallising around the second ceasefire.

DateGeopolitical EventMarket Reaction & Rhetoric
Feb 28US and Israel launch Operation Epic Fury — surprise airstrikes on Iranian military, nuclear infrastructure, and senior officials, including Supreme Leader Khamenei.Brent crude surges 32%—the largest single jump since Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait. Iran immediately moves to close the Strait of Hormuz. Tanker traffic drops ~70% within days.
Early MarUS administration launches aggressive "jawboning." Trump falsely claims on March 9 that "the war is very complete, pretty much" and that Iran's military has been destroyed and the strait has reopened.Brent remains artificially bounded ($90–$120) on assurances of a swift 10-day resolution and IEA-coordinated releases of 400 million barrels from emergency petroleum reserves.
Mar 15Trump demands NATO and China help reopen the strait; both decline.Markets begin pricing a more protracted scenario; rhetorical credibility begins its first measurable erosion.
Mar 18Attack damages Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG facility, taking offline ~17% of Qatar's gas export capacity. Gulf producers shut in an estimated 7.5 million bpd of production.LNG spot prices spike; European natural gas futures rise more than 70% from pre-war levels.
Mar 19US military launches active campaign to reopen the strait. Results are minimal. Trump threatens to "obliterate" Iranian power plants.Oil futures stabilise temporarily on military optimism before fading.
Mar 26Iran's Foreign Minister announces selective access: ships from China, Russia, India, Iraq, and Pakistan may transit; Western vessels remain barred. Toll per vessel reported at over $1 million.Asymmetric transit reality sets in. Algorithmic traders re-price geopolitical risk premium.
Mar 31Reports suggest "full normalisation" in 6–8 weeks.Market absorbs the rhetoric; physical supply continues to bleed as alternatives max out at a fraction of Hormuz capacity.
Apr 2Iran extends passage to Philippine-flagged vessels. UN granted permission for humanitarian and fertiliser shipments.Selective humanitarianism eases optics but does not meaningfully relieve commercial energy flows.
Apr 8US-Iran temporary two-week ceasefire agreed. Strait to reopen. Markets celebrate—oil drops 10–12%, stocks surge; Trump posts "Thank you!" on Truth Social.Within hours, Iranian gunboats fire on tankers attempting transit. Iran cites unresolved Lebanon attacks and continued US naval presence as ceasefire violations.
Apr 11–12First Islamabad talks. US team led by VP Vance, with Witkoff and Kushner. Talks end without agreement.JD Vance announces failure on April 12. Trump declares he "no longer cares about negotiations."
Apr 13Trump announces full US naval blockade of Iranian ports. The largest such operation since the Korean War, under Admiral Brad Cooper. USS Abraham Lincoln, 11 destroyers, and USS Tripoli amphibious group deployed.Oil prices surge above $100/barrel for the first time. Analysts add 1.3 million bpd of additional outages to supply models.
Apr 17Iran's Foreign Minister declares the strait "completely open" for commercial vessels during the Lebanon truce. Markets surge again—oil drops, stocks rally.By Saturday morning, Iranian gunboats are firing on tankers. Trump confirms the US naval blockade of Iranian ports remains in place regardless of any ceasefire gesture. Iran reverses course within hours. Strait closes again.
Apr 18Iran formally closes the strait again, explicitly citing the US refusal to lift the naval blockade. US intercepts 23 vessels.Quantitative models downgrade probability of May 1 normalisation to 24%.
Apr 19USS Spruance fires on and seizes the Iranian-flagged cargo vessel Touska after it attempts to breach the blockade. 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit boards the vessel. Iran launches retaliatory attack drones.Iran's joint military command calls the seizure "an act of piracy." Market confidence in near-term resolution craters.
Apr 21–22Ceasefire set to expire. Iran states it will not send a delegation to Islamabad—"definitive." VP Vance's travel to Pakistan placed in a "holding pattern." Pakistan's FM urges extension and meets Chinese ambassador.Brent surges above $101 in late afternoon trading. Trump extends ceasefire indefinitely but confirms naval blockade continues. Iran calls the blockade "an act of war."
Apr 23Trump orders the US Navy to destroy any Iranian boats laying mines in the strait. No second-round talks confirmed.Geopolitical risk premium hardens across all commodity classes.


II. The Scale of Physical Disruption: Exceeding Every Historical Precedent

It is difficult to overstate the magnitude of this supply disruption. The IEA's April 2026 Oil Market Report confirmed that global oil supply plummeted by 10.1 million barrels per day in March to 97 mb/d—the single largest disruption in the recorded history of the oil market. For comparison, the 1973 OPEC oil embargo removed approximately 4–5 mb/d, or roughly 7% of global production. Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait removed approximately 4 mb/d. The current crisis has removed an estimated 13% of global supply as a minimum, with cumulative losses approaching 650 million barrels through end-April, according to Kpler estimates. Daily production outages now exceed 13 mb/d when the effects of the US naval blockade—adding approximately 1.3 mb/d of Iranian crude that can no longer reach markets—are included.

OPEC+ production fell 9.4 mb/d month-on-month in March to 42.4 mb/d. Non-OPEC+ supply declined a further 770,000 bpd, partially offset by production gains in the United States, Brazil, and Canada. In April, Middle Eastern and feedstock-constrained refineries in Asia have cut refinery runs by approximately 6 mb/d, to 77.2 mb/d. Global crude demand is projected to decline by 80,000 bpd on average across 2026 as a whole—a dramatic reversal from the 730,000 bpd growth forecast only one month ago.

What makes this disruption categorically more severe than the 1973 analogy is not merely its scale but its physical rather than political character. The 1973 embargo was a political act, reversible by diplomatic agreement between sovereign oil ministers. The present disruption involves physical damage to infrastructure, mines of uncertain location strewn across navigable waters—Iran has reportedly lost track of some of the mines it laid—destroyed or damaged port facilities, tankers stranded in the wrong locations, cancelled insurance policies, and fractured supply contracts. Even in an optimistic scenario of immediate diplomatic resolution, the IEA itself has cautioned that its base-case forecast assuming a resumption of deliveries by mid-year "could prove too optimistic."

More than 200 loaded tankers are currently stranded in the Persian Gulf, unable to pass through the strait. Roughly 2,000 ships and 20,000 sailors were initially caught in the conflict zone. The Joint War Committee of the London insurance market has included Omani waters—theoretically a bypass route for the strait via Duqm, Salalah, and Sohar—in its list of high-risk maritime areas after drone strikes damaged fuel storage at Duqm and Salalah in March.


III. The Anatomy of Failed Jawboning


III.i. The Mechanism and Its Limits

Jawboning in commodity markets works by exploiting the asymmetry between psychological state and physical reality. When traders price in a probability-weighted expectation of near-term normalisation, they accept present discomfort (higher prices) in exchange for confidence that the fundamental dislocation is temporary. The mechanism has a credible ceiling: it functions only as long as the promised resolution remains within a plausible forward window, and only as long as each failed deadline does not permanently consume a portion of market credibility.

In the early weeks of the crisis, the Trump administration weaponised this mechanism with considerable effect. The combination of SPR releases, Trump's repeated social media posts projecting imminent resolution, and the shock-absorbing effect of Gulf pipeline alternatives held Brent crude within a $90–$120 range for much of March. Brent's year-to-date range—from $56 in January to a peak above $119—tells the story of the full arc.

What broke the mechanism was the compounding of failed deadlines. Each Trump post that sent oil 10% lower—only to be invalidated within hours by Iranian gunboats or a collapsed ceasefire—consumed credibility that cannot be rebuilt. After the April 17 euphoria (oil drops double digits, Trump celebrates on Truth Social) collapsed by the following morning (Iranian gunboats firing on tankers), traders had direct empirical evidence that rhetorical signals were being algorithmically exploited by Iran itself. The cycle of announcement and reversal had effectively become an arbitrage instrument for the adversary: Iran could credibly threaten to open the strait, extract a US concession, and immediately withdraw the gesture when the concession did not materialise.

III.ii. The Toll System and Asymmetric Market Access

Iran's decision from late March onward to operate the strait as a selective transit tollway—granting passage to vessels from China, Russia, India, Iraq, Pakistan, Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines while barring Western shipping—represents a geopolitically sophisticated escalation. At its peak, transit tolls reached $2 million per passage, effectively creating a discriminatory tax on Western energy access. This asymmetric access architecture has fractured the principle of universal freedom of navigation and inserted a state actor directly into the pricing of global maritime trade.

China's position as the principal beneficiary deserves particular analytical attention. China receives approximately one-third of its oil through the strait, and Beijing maintains approximately one billion barrels in strategic petroleum reserves—several months of supply. By accepting Iran's toll system and using the passage to continue energy imports while Western vessels were barred, China effectively subsidised the Iranian blockade economically while maintaining plausible diplomatic neutrality. Leavitt confirmed Chinese involvement in the ceasefire negotiations, but Beijing has resisted US calls to exert pressure on Tehran. Pakistan's role as diplomatic intermediary—escorting Iranian delegations with Air Force assets, hosting negotiations, and now pressing Washington to lift the blockade—underscores how the geopolitical architecture of the crisis has aligned the Global South in ways that complicate a purely US-led resolution.

III.iii. The Naval Blockade: A Qualitative Escalation

The April 13 US naval blockade of Iranian ports marked a qualitative shift in the crisis from a contested maritime zone to a direct act of coercive economic warfare. The blockade—focused on ships entering or departing Iranian ports rather than a full strait closure—has been explicitly characterised by Iran's Foreign Minister as "an act of war" and a ceasefire violation. The seizure of the Touska on April 19, including warning shots from USS Spruance's 5-inch gun and a Marine Expeditionary Unit boarding, represents the first direct kinetic enforcement action of the blockade. Iran's retaliatory drone strikes followed within hours.

The blockade imposes an additional estimated 1.3 mb/d of supply outage on global markets, on top of the approximately 10–12 mb/d already removed by the strait closure and infrastructure damage. Trump has claimed the blockade costs Iran $400–$500 million in revenue daily. Paradoxically, by tightening the supply disruption it was ostensibly designed to pressure-resolve, the blockade has created a perverse dynamic: it simultaneously increases Iran's leverage by demonstrating US resolve, and deepens the global supply deficit that now threatens to outlast any diplomatic timetable.

The Russian government's Kremlin spokesman warned that the blockade "will most likely continue to negatively impact international markets." Iran's parliamentary spokesman warned of unspecified additional "cards" not yet played.


IV. The Exhaustion of Strategic Buffers


IV.i. SPR Releases and Alternative Routes

The initial response from G7 and IEA member nations was textbook emergency management: on March 11, IEA member countries agreed to release 400 million barrels from emergency petroleum reserves, the largest coordinated SPR release in history. Saudi Arabia and the UAE moved rapidly to reroute oil through the East-West Crude Oil Pipeline to Yanbu and via the Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline to Fujairah respectively. The ITP pipeline from Iraq to Ceyhan in Turkey provided an additional avenue. Combined, these alternative routes increased exports to approximately 7.2 mb/d from less than 4 mb/d pre-war. But these mechanisms face hard physical ceilings. The Strait of Hormuz, in normal operation, transits over 20 mb/d; no combination of pipeline alternatives can substitute for more than a fraction of that volume.

The Atlantic Council's April 21 analysis—drawing on Kpler data—concluded that oil inventory buffers from sanctions waivers and floating storage would be "largely exhausted by late April." US oil stocks have been rising for eight consecutive weeks, but even the largest national reserve cannot indefinitely substitute for 13% of global daily production. The IEA's April report projects that global crude runs will decline by 1 mb/d on average across 2026, reflecting permanent demand destruction as consumers and industries adjust to a structurally tighter market.

IV.ii. The LNG Dimension

Unlike crude oil, liquefied natural gas has no meaningful strategic reserve infrastructure. The Strait of Hormuz normally accounts for approximately 20% of global LNG supply, with Qatar—whose Ras Laffan facility was damaged in a March 18 attack that removed roughly 17% of its export capacity—as the dominant exporter. Europe receives 12–14% of its LNG from Qatar through the strait. Unlike oil, there are no alternative pipeline routes to get gas to market, and stockpiles are structurally limited by LNG's physical storage requirements.

European natural gas prices have risen more than 70% since the start of the conflict. Shell's CEO warned in early April that Europe could face fuel shortages within weeks. The IATA has formally warned that even in the event of a strait reopening, recovery in jet fuel supply "could take months due to persistent constraints in refining capacity and logistics."

V. The Multi-Commodity Cascade: Beyond Oil

One of the most underappreciated dimensions of this crisis is the breadth of commodity markets now affected beyond crude oil.

Fertilisers and Food Security: The Persian Gulf region accounts for roughly 30–35% of global urea exports and 20–30% of global ammonia exports. Up to 30% of internationally traded fertilisers normally transit the strait. Urea prices rose 50% in the six weeks to late March 2026. The LNG disruption compounds this: natural gas is the primary feedstock for nitrogen fertiliser production, so supply constraints on gas translate directly into higher fertiliser production costs globally. The spring 2026 Northern Hemisphere planting season is being directly affected. Corn planting in the United States—the primary feedstock for US beef, poultry, and dairy—faces input cost shocks that analysts warn could elevate global food prices well into 2027. Unlike crude oil, there are no internationally coordinated strategic fertiliser reserves. Iran itself agreed on March 27 to allow humanitarian and fertiliser shipments through the strait on UN request, acknowledging the food security dimension, but commercial fertiliser flows remain disrupted.

Helium: Roughly one-third of global helium production is affected by the crisis, owing to disruptions to Qatari natural gas production. Helium distributors were rationing deliveries as of early April. Given helium's role in medical imaging (MRI machines), semiconductor manufacturing, and scientific research, supply rationing carries consequences well beyond the energy sector.

Aluminium: Gulf producers—including UAE's Emirates Global Aluminium and Bahrain's Alba—have been disrupted, contributing to price increases in a metal with pervasive industrial applications.

Plastics and Packaging: Petroleum is the primary feedstock for plastics. Analysts cited by Al Jazeera noted in mid-April that "packaging is already a challenge for firms. Many can't get blister packs for pills or lids for consumer goods." The industrial cascade from petrochemical disruption into consumer goods supply chains is accelerating.

Aviation: Jet fuel prices have in some markets more than doubled relative to the previous month. European airports have been specifically flagged as facing potential capacity constraints and flight cancellations if conditions do not stabilise.


VI. Market Pricing: The Credibility Gap Between Equities and Energy

Perhaps the most analytically striking feature of Q2 2026 markets is the divergence between equity and energy markets. After entering correction territory in April, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100 have staged some of their best 10–15 day return periods in history. The S&P 500 is up approximately 4.3% year-to-date. Crude oil prices have risen only approximately 50% from start-of-2026 levels, significantly less than the multiples seen during the 1970s oil shocks.

Three structural factors appear to explain this divergence. First, the US economy and its leading companies are substantially less exposed to oil as an input cost than they were in the 1970s, when America was a manufacturing economy. Second, the US is the world's largest LNG exporter, and its domestic gas market is relatively insulated from the crisis. Third—and most critically—equity markets continue to price in a Trump social-media-driven resolution, trading on the assumption that political pain will force a quick settlement.

This is precisely the analytical error that jawboning is designed to produce, and the one most likely to generate the "COVID analogy" outcome identified by several strategists: markets bouncing in spring 2020 while supply chains fractured quietly, with the hangover arriving 12–18 months later as inflation the Federal Reserve was forced to combat with the sharpest rate-hiking cycle in four decades. The parallel here is that even when the strait reopens, normalisation will not be instantaneous. Mine clearing, insurance premium normalisation, infrastructure damage assessment, rebuilt shipping routes, and restored tanker positioning will take months—possibly years in a worst-case infrastructure damage scenario. As one detailed market analysis noted, the market appears to be "pricing Trump's social media feed, and trading algorithms are doing the rest."

Brent crude's range since January—$56 to $119 and back to approximately $95 as of late April—captures the full volatility of this environment. The Atlantic Council notes that even at $95, "the worst of the crisis might still lie ahead," given that inventory buffers are exhausted and cumulative supply losses continue to compound.


VII. The Islamabad Impasse and the Diplomatic Landscape

The first Islamabad talks (April 11–12) were the first direct US-Iran diplomatic engagement since the conflict began. The US team—led by Vice President Vance, with special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner—brought a position centred on no Iranian uranium enrichment, strait reopening, sanctions relief in exchange for nuclear constraints, and limits on Iranian missile programs and proxy support networks. Iran's negotiating position, as communicated through mediators before the talks, demanded an end to US-Israeli attacks, security guarantees, and unfreezing of Iranian assets.

The talks collapsed without agreement. Vance announced failure on April 12. Trump declared he "no longer cared about negotiations" and imposed the naval blockade the following day. Iran subsequently launched attack drones following the seizure of the Touska. The ceasefire, which expired on approximately April 22, has been extended by Trump "until such time as their leaders can come up with a unified proposal"—but Iran has stated its decision not to attend a second round is "definitive," and Iranian state television confirmed no delegation had visited Islamabad. Trump, when asked about extending the ceasefire, told CNBC: "I don't want to do that. We don't have that much time." He has nonetheless done so, while maintaining the naval blockade, creating a structurally contradictory posture that Iran has predictably characterised as a continuation of hostilities.

Pakistan's role as mediator has become increasingly fraught. Islamabad has pressed Washington to lift the blockade—Pakistan's Foreign Minister met the US Chargé d'Affaires and the Chinese ambassador on the same day—and has urged both parties to "give dialogue and diplomacy a chance." China's ambassador's presence at that meeting is significant: it signals that Beijing is using Pakistan as a channel to apply indirect pressure, while retaining the ability to claim neutrality in any eventual settlement.

As of April 23, Trump has ordered the US Navy to destroy any Iranian boats laying mines in the strait, a direct military escalation that further reduces the diplomatic space for Iranian concession-making without loss of face.


VIII. Scenario Analysis: Brent Price Trajectories

Drawing on historical precedent and current market structure, three principal scenarios can be modelled:

Scenario A — Negotiated Settlement (probability: ~20–25%): A second Islamabad round produces a framework agreement within two to three weeks. The strait begins phased reopening. Mine clearance operations proceed. Brent retreats to approximately $75–$80/barrel over several months as supply gradually normalises, though it does not return to pre-war levels until infrastructure damage is assessed and repaired—likely into late 2026 or 2027. Stagflationary pressure eases but does not vanish.

Scenario B — Protracted Impasse with Selective Transit (probability: ~50–55%): Talks stall through May. The blockade continues with selective enforcement. Iran maintains asymmetric toll-based transit for non-Western vessels. Brent breaks above $105–$115 as cumulative supply losses compound beyond 700–800 million barrels. G7 economies are forced into demand management. Stagflation becomes entrenched across most major economies. Food price shock materialises in Q3 2026.

Scenario C — Renewed Escalation (probability: ~20–25%): Iran plays additional "cards"—potentially including attacks on the Bab al-Mandeb, Caspian Sea chokepoints, or GCC infrastructure—or the US expands military operations. Brent approaches or exceeds $150, with tail-risk scenarios reaching the $200 range that US officials and Goldman Sachs analysts have begun explicitly war-gaming. Global recession becomes probable under this scenario.

Even Scenario A does not produce a rapid return to normalcy. The IEA has cautioned that re-establishing full, insurable maritime passage and clearing the logistics backlog could take several months to two years. The infrastructure damage from the conflict—including the Ras Laffan attack—requires physical reconstruction, not merely diplomatic permission.


IX. Strategic Implications for G7 Policymakers


IX.i. Demand Management Is No Longer Optional

With strategic reserve releases approaching their practical ceiling and alternative routes operating at maximum technical capacity, the Atlantic Council's April 21 recommendation is stark and unambiguous: "Instead of subsidizing demand or releasing scarce reserves too quickly, policymakers should emphasize the rationing of scarce supplies." Germany's April 13 announcement of temporary petrol and diesel tax cuts—generating criticism from economists as a pro-demand measure precisely when demand reduction is needed—illustrates the political difficulty of this pivot. The German approach may ease short-term political pain but extends and deepens the underlying supply imbalance.

G7 governments should urgently model and implement tiered demand management frameworks: voluntary conservation campaigns, industrial prioritisation protocols, efficiency mandates for transport and heating, and emergency rationing architecture that can be activated rapidly if Scenario C materialises.

IX.ii. The Chinese Toll Loophole Requires Diplomatic Resolution

The de facto two-tier maritime access regime—in which Chinese, Russian, Indian, and Pakistani vessels transit freely while paying Iranian tolls, and Western shipping is barred—is not merely a tactical irritant. It is a structural fracture in the rules-based international order governing maritime commerce. Allowing it to persist normalises state-imposed discriminatory access to international waterways. G7 diplomacy must address this directly, including in bilateral conversations with Beijing and New Delhi, neither of which has an interest in a permanent reordering of maritime law that could, in other circumstances, be turned against their own shipping.

IX.iii. The Fertiliser and Food Security Dimension Demands Immediate Action

Unlike oil, there is no internationally coordinated strategic reserve for fertilisers. The spring 2026 planting season is already compromised. G7 agricultural ministries should urgently coordinate emergency fertiliser allocation, explore accelerated production from non-Gulf suppliers, and begin communicating realistic food price trajectories to the public to prevent panic buying and hoarding. Failure to act now risks food price shock feeding into the broader stagflationary dynamic in Q3 2026.

IX.iv. Pivot from Rhetoric to Physical Resilience

The era of effective jawboning has ended. Each failed cycle of diplomatic announcement and reversal has permanently consumed market credibility, and the algorithmic trading infrastructure that amplifies these signals now works against the credibility of future assurances. G7 communication strategies must transition from projecting imminent resolution to preparing markets and domestic populations for a sustained period of energy frugality—paired with credible long-term commitments to accelerated alternative energy deployment. The crisis has materially accelerated the economic case for renewable energy: solar and wind, which require no maritime transit, have seen a sharp improvement in cost-competitiveness relative to oil in a world where a single chokepoint can remove 13% of global supply overnight.

IX.v. Infrastructure Resilience and the Post-War Architecture

Even when this crisis resolves, its legacy will require a fundamental reassessment of global energy infrastructure dependencies. The concentration of approximately 20% of global oil trade, 20% of LNG supply, and 30% of fertiliser exports through a single 34-kilometre chokepoint represents a systemic vulnerability that no amount of SPR coordination can adequately hedge. The G7, in partnership with major Asian importers including Japan (which routes approximately 70% of its Middle Eastern oil imports through the strait), South Korea, and India, should fund and accelerate the development of alternative pipeline infrastructure, expanded port capacity outside the Persian Gulf, and floating LNG regasification terminals in European and Asian markets.


Conclusion

The Strait of Hormuz crisis of 2026 is not a large version of previous Middle East oil shocks. It is a qualitatively different event: the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market, characterised by physical infrastructure damage that cannot be resolved by diplomatic agreement alone; a fractured multipolar response in which major Global South consumers have effectively aligned with the blockading party; and a communications environment in which the primary instrument of market management—presidential jawboning—has been so thoroughly discredited by repeated failed cycles that it now functions as a contrarian indicator.

The market is not yet fully pricing this reality. Equity markets continue to treat a swift resolution as the base case. Oil futures, at approximately $95–$101/barrel, are not yet reflecting the $150+ scenario that the IEA, Atlantic Council, Goldman Sachs, and Barclays have all explicitly identified as plausible under protracted impasse. The COVID analogy is uncomfortable but structurally accurate: supply chains are fracturing quietly while financial markets project optimism, and the full economic hangover—stagflation, elevated food prices, industrial demand destruction—has not yet arrived in its full force.

The next two to four weeks are probably decisive. If the second Islamabad round fails to materialise or produces another collapsed framework, the probability of Scenario B or C becomes dominant. At that point, the question for G7 policymakers is no longer how to manage a temporary shock, but how to govern a structural energy transition under duress—one that no polity was fully prepared to undertake on this timeline, in these circumstances.