March 10, 2026

Lessons From The Oil Crisis of The 1970s

By Ephraim Agbo 

When the markets woke to crude flirting with triple-digit prices, many traders didn’t reach for newsfeeds so much as for memory: the dog-eared chapters about 1973 and 1979, when oil became both weapon and weather vane. Those decades taught a simple, brutal lesson—energy is not just an input to the economy; it is a lever of power, a social accelerator and a political thermometer. To understand what the Iran crisis means now, you have to read today’s price action as a sequel to that old playbook while also understanding how much the stage has been rewired.

This is not nostalgia. It is a forensic exercise: what happened in the 1970s, why it mattered, and how those mechanisms are mutating in the age of financialized oil, LNG, and a more diversified—but still fragile—energy map.


1. The 1970s Playbook: Embargo, Revolution, and the Grammar of Leverage

In 1973, the Yom Kippur War offered producing states a political tool. The Arab oil embargo weaponized supply: a coordinated reduction of exports that sent the price of crude soaring and global inflation tumbling into unaccustomed territory. The effect was immediate and indiscriminate—fuel queues, rationing, and a shock to consumer confidence. A few years later, Iran’s internal convulsions collapsed production and compounded the pain. The twin shocks—one externally wielded, one internally generated—morphed into a political-economic trauma: stagflation, diminished growth, surging unemployment, and a crisis of policy frameworks designed for a lower-price world.

The 1970s taught governments three operational lessons:

  1. Energy vulnerability can be weaponized—exporters can slow or stop flows to gain leverage.
  2. Domestic politics magnify external shocks—rising pump prices become electoral poison.
  3. Strategic stocks and diversification are essential policy instruments—hence the birth of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and efficiency drives.

Those lessons are the lens through which policymakers and markets still read the Gulf.


2. Anatomy of a Shock: Supply, Fear, and the Speed of Markets

The 1970s shocks moved at the speed of physical logistics and political coordination. Today the mechanism is more complex and faster. Three forces now animate the price spike:

  • Actual supply risk: physical bottlenecks like Kharg Island or the Strait of Hormuz still matter. A disabled terminal or a closed shipping lane removes barrels from the sea.
  • Risk premium: modern oil markets price not just current barrels but the probability of future disruption. Traders add a premium for uncertainty; that premium can double market moves when news is noisy.
  • Financialization: futures, swaps, ETFs, and algorithmic trading turn news into capital flows in milliseconds. Where 1973 required days for sentiment to ripple, 2026 prices can spike on a single headline, and the spikes feed on themselves.

The result is that the same geography—one terminal, one strait—now interacts with a global financial reflex that amplifies and accelerates the shock.


3. Geography as Strategy: Kharg Island and the Strait of Hormuz

If the 1970s taught us that oil can be a political weapon, the geography of the Gulf shows how it is wielded. Kharg Island—assuming it remains the hub it historically has been—embodies the structural vulnerability of concentrated export infrastructure. Destroy that node and you don’t just delay a shipment; you take months of capacity offline.

The Strait of Hormuz is a different instrument: a narrow, controllable chokepoint. You do not need to sink tankers to disrupt trade; you need only raise insurance costs, threaten crews, or interdict a handful of vessels. Insurers and charterers respond rationally—avoid the risk—and supply tightens without a single state formally announcing a cutoff. That’s leverage in its purest form: the power to raise the cost of mobility rather than the direct ability to confiscate barrels.


4. Domestic Politics: Why Leaders Fear Pump Prices More Than Missiles

One reason oil carries such political weight is domestic economics. The 1970s showed how a spike in energy costs can morph into collapsed consumer confidence and electoral punishment. Politicians fear gasoline prices the way generals fear attrition. When petrol doubles, household budgets shrink, inflation expectations rise, unions press for wages, and central banks face the dilemma of taming inflation without choking growth.

That calculus shapes strategic choices. Leaders may abstain from targeting infrastructure like Kharg not because they lack the capability but because the blowback—domestic economic pain—would be global and immediate. The 1970s taught that political endurance is finite; long-lasting supply shocks can topple governments even when the battlefield is thousands of miles away.


5. The Limits of the ``Oil Weapon’’ Today

It’s tempting to assume that a state like Iran could replicate the success of the 1970s embargo. In practice, the geopolitical arithmetic has changed.

  • Market share: Iran’s share of global crude is smaller than the collective cartel power OPEC wielded in the 1970s. Isolated disruption hurts, but it is less likely to dictate global policy single-handedly.
  • Diversified supplies: The global supply base is broader. U.S. shale, African projects, and floating storage add elasticity.
  • Buyer adaptation: Strategic buying, stock releases, and diplomatic rerouting blunt unilateral pressure.

That said, the asymmetry lies in geography and perception. Iran need not control a majority of barrels; threatening the Strait or key terminals can inject a premium large enough to bend policy conversations—and to create political crises in import-dependent societies.


6. The Cold Lessons Re-calibrated: Strategic Reserves, Efficiency, and Substitutes

The 1970s prompted concrete policy responses: strategic reserves, conservation, and a push for alternatives. Those instruments remain relevant. Strategic releases can blunt immediate scarcity and calm markets—if coordinated and credible. Efficiency measures (fuel economy, reduced demand) reduce exposure over time. Renewables and electrification decouple some demand from crude markets altogether.

But the new wrinkle is liquefied natural gas (LNG) and global gas markets. While oil is a globally fungible commodity, gas has been more regional—until LNG created tradeable gas. Disruptions in the Gulf now pressure both oil and gas, and the knock-on effects for electricity and industry can be severe in places reliant on Gulf gas exports.


7. Financialization and the Speed of Panic

The 1970s were characterized by physical shortages and rationing; today’s financial architecture multiplies sentiment. Index funds, commodity ETFs, and algorithmic funds translate geopolitical fear into immediate flows. The psychological recoil—Keynes’s “animal spirits”—is faster and more monetized. A rumor on a trading desk in Singapore can be amplified by a cascade of automated selling and buying, with the result that prices may overshoot fundamentals in both directions.

That introduces a paradox: modern markets are simultaneously more liquid and more fragile. Liquidity allows rapid reallocation; fragility means rapid re-pricing when confidence falters.


8. Allies, Sanctions, and the New Geopolitics of Energy

The 1970s were also an era of geopolitical cartelization and back-room deals—U.S.–Saudi understandings, Cold War alignments. Today, the map is multipolar. China is a principal buyer in the Gulf, Russia is a major producer whose fortunes rise with high prices, and regional actors pursue hedged policies.

This multipolarity changes the calculus of containment and retaliation. If the West moves to release reserves or impose naval pressure, China and others weigh costs and options differently than they did in the Bipolar 1970s. Sanctions and countervailing moves now ripple through a broader set of economic relationships.


9. What the 1970s Don’t Teach Us (And What They Do)

They teach us: the political potency of energy; the domestic consequences of imported price shocks; the imperative of strategic stockpiles; and the reality that geography can amplify influence.

They don’t fully teach us: how a world of shale, renewables, LNG, and instantaneous finance responds to the same stimuli. These elements both blunt and complexify the shock:

  • Shale adds supply flexibility (but at environmental and investment cost).
  • Renewables lower long-run demand elasticity.
  • LNG markets and long-term gas contracts reshape regional vulnerabilities.
  • Financial instruments create faster, sometimes over-reactive, feedback loops.

So the 1970s are a template, not a map. They show the grammar of oil geopolitics. They do not prescriptively model every modern outcome.


10. Policy Implications: What Governments Should Remember

If 1973 taught anything, it is that preparation matters.

  • Coordination works: Coordinated releases of reserves and diplomatic signaling can calm markets more effectively than unilateral gestures.
  • Transparency matters: Clear, credible statements from central banks and energy agencies can dampen speculative premia.
  • Domestic cushions: Targeted subsidies or compensation for vulnerable households reduce the political potency of price shocks (but create fiscal trade-offs).
  • Diversification is structural: Accelerating diversification—demand reduction, electrification, renewables—reduces long-term exposure.

But political will is finite. The temptation to “ride out” short spikes is high; the incentive to invest in long-term resilience is lower. The 1970s show how costly that trade-off can be.


11. Conclusion: A Contested Inheritance

The Iran crisis feels, in every market tremor and diplomatic utterance, like a return of a history no one wanted to revisit. The 1970s taught a generation that energy shocks can rewrite politics; today’s generation is learning a modified lesson: the instruments remain—chokepoints, embargo psychology, strategic reserves—but the theatre is faster, more financialized, and more geographically fragmented.

Reading the present through the ’70s gives both warning and clarity. It warns that a prolonged Gulf disruption can still swamp economies and politics. It clarifies which levers matter: physical chokepoints, the risk premium in futures markets, insurance and shipping decisions, and domestic political thresholds.

If there is hope in that inheritance, it is the very fact that the world learned once and acted—creating reserves, efficiency standards, and alternate supplies. The question now is whether policymakers will treat today’s alarm as a temporary scare or as a call to finally finish the hard work of energy resilience. The cost of complacency, as the 1970s taught, can be measured in years of stagflation and in political realignments that last a generation.

Trump Says the U.S. Hasn’t Won Enough — Iran Rejects Negotiations and Declares It Will Decide When the War Ends

By Ephraim Agbo 

"They tell you we've won. But let me tell you something very plainly: we have not won enough yet."

When the most powerful voice in American foreign policy declares that a war is both nearing its end and yet fundamentally incomplete, the contradiction isn't a slip of the tongue—it's a strategic reveal. Donald Trump's remarks from Florida, part public reassurance and part warning shot, capture the uncomfortable truth of the current confrontation with Iran. It is a conflict that has achieved military objectives but remains strategically unfulfilled, a condition made infinitely more volatile by Tehran's categorical rejection of diplomacy.

Tehran's Defiant Counter: "We Will Determine the End of the War"

The arithmetic of escalation has just been rewritten—and Iran is making certain the world understands it holds a pen. In a blistering response to Trump's claims that the conflict is "very complete," Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) issued a statement that leaves no room for ambiguity about who controls the battlefield timeline.

"It is we who will determine the end of the war," the IRGC declared. "The equations and future status of the region are now in the hands of our armed forces; American forces will not end the war." 

The statement went further, accusing Trump of using "cunning and deceit" to manipulate public opinion following what Tehran described as "shameful defeats." An IRGC spokesperson alleged that American naval vessels and aircraft have "fled the region more than 1,000 kilometres away" to escape Iranian strikes, specifically mocking the movement of the US Navy after missiles targeted the USS Abraham Lincoln. 

Tehran also dismissed reports of a weakened missile inventory, asserting that Iranian munitions are now "more powerful than in the early days of the war," with some warheads weighing over one ton. 

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi sharpened the diplomatic edge of this defiance, warning directly: "If Mr. Trump seeks escalation, it is precisely what our Powerful Armed forces have long prepared for, and what he will get." Araghchi pinned responsibility for any intensification of the conflict squarely on the U.S. administration, framing Iran's actions as legitimate self-defense. 

This is not rhetorical theatre. By explicitly ruling out a return to negotiations—dismissing the very prospect of talks as a "very bitter experience"—Iran has collapsed the most accessible off-ramp. What was a military campaign is now a test of strategic endurance. With the diplomatic circuit breaker flipped to "off," the United States and its partners are left with a grim triad of options: apply enough military pressure to force a political reversal, settle into a costly and indefinite posture of containment, or accept a simmering stalemate that keeps the entire region's risk premiums locked at emergency levels. None of these paths lead to a quick resolution.

The Limits of Kinetic Power

The military campaign, a coordinated effort publicly dubbed "Epic Fury" and building on last year's "Midnight Hammer" operations, has been anything but subtle. U.S. and Israeli forces have systematically degraded key nodes of Iran's missile program, nuclear sites, and proxy command structures. Satellite imagery and official briefings tell a story of significant tactical success.

But tactical success is not the same as strategic victory. "Hitting targets is the easy part," as Trump might put it. "The hard part is making sure the capability does not come back online while everyone else goes back to brunch."

Missile factories, as the history of modern warfare shows, are patient. They can be buried deeper, rebuilt faster, and their supply lines can be dispersed across a resilient, state-backed network. "If you let the factories reconstitute, if you let a black market work its magic, if you let proxy networks keep their logistics and rudimentary missiles rolling out, you haven't solved the problem—you've postponed it."

Iran's asymmetric response has already demonstrated this resilience. The waves of drones and missiles targeting Gulf shipping lanes aren't just acts of retaliation; they are a demonstration of logistical stamina. When Gulf defense forces report intercepting barrages numbering in the thousands, the conflict ceases to be a series of skirmishes and becomes an industrial-scale, grinding war of attrition. "When hundreds or thousands of drones are launched, the scale is not a parade; it's industrial—an asymmetric war machine meant to grind down defenses and morale. We ignore that at our peril."

And when those barrages deliberately threaten desalination plants and energy grids, they cross a threshold from military confrontation to an assault on the very fabric of civilian life. "You take out a water plant in that region and you don't just inconvenience people; you create real hardship, panic and a political crisis. There are thousands of those plants, and the Gulf is a global hub of desalination capacity. That's not something you shrug off."

The Strait of Hormuz: A Chokepoint Under Iranian Command

The battlefield extends far beyond the sand and rock of the Middle East. It is anchored in the shipping lanes of the Strait of Hormuz—and here, Iran claims a dominance that directly challenges Washington's pledge to maintain freedom of navigation.

"Currently, the Strait of Hormuz is under the complete control of the Islamic Republic's Navy," IRGC Navy official Mohammad Akbarzadeh announced, revealing that Iranian forces have already targeted more than 10 oil tankers within the strait for allegedly failing to comply with IRGC warnings. "It is now impossible for any oil or commercial vessel to transit the Strait following our declaration of its closure." 

This is not empty posturing. Shipping data tells the story: Clarksons Research estimates that about 3,200 ships—roughly 4 percent of global ship tonnage—are idle in the Gulf, with another 500 vessels waiting outside in ports off the coast of the UAE and Oman.  About a fifth of the world's seaborne oil funnels through this narrow passageway . The mere threat of disruption is enough to spike Brent Crude futures. The reality of attacks forces shipping companies to choose between crippling insurance premiums, lengthy and costly detours, or the gamble of running the gauntlet.

"Look at the leverage they're using. This is not just about bombs; it's economics by other means. The Strait of Hormuz is not an abstraction—it funnels a huge share of the world's seaborne oil. When they threaten to stop 'a single litre' of oil leaving the Gulf, they're not bluffing about pain. The world feels it in its wallets and in its factories."

The IRGC has made that threat explicit: it will not permit "the export of a single litre of oil" from the region to hostile nations until further notice . Yet in a tactical nuance that preserves some diplomatic flexibility, Iranian officials have simultaneously clarified that they have no immediate plan to permanently close the strait—they simply assert the right to control navigation during wartime and treat vessels belonging to the United States, Israel, and European countries as military targets. 

Tehran understands with surgical precision that by refusing to negotiate while asserting physical control over the world's most vital energy artery, they are forcing the market to price in a permanent state of siege. This isn't just about the price at the pump. It cascades instantly. Airlines, operating on razor-thin margins for fuel, are already adjusting capacity and ticket prices. "Qantas and other airlines are already passing those costs to passengers. You don't want airlines and manufacturers paying the price for an unfinished strategic objective. That's economic pain headed straight for ordinary people."

The cost of everything from food to electronics, all of which traverse these waters, becomes susceptible to inflationary pressure. The refusal to talk is, in itself, an economic weapon.

The Human Ledger: Stuck at Sea

Amidst the geopolitical chess game, the human ledger tells a story often left in the footnotes. The United Nations shipping regulator's estimate is stark: roughly 20,000 seafarers and 15,000 cruise passengers are effectively marooned. For the global maritime workforce—disproportionately drawn from nations like the Philippines and India—this is not an abstraction.

These are men and women unable to rotate off duty, their contracts extended indefinitely, their families waiting at home without income or news. Cruise passengers, expecting leisure, find themselves trapped in floating hotels, their return journeys hostage to a conflict they never signed up for.

"Shipping's the bloodline of the global economy. We hear about 'supply chains' like abstract charts—but on the water, this is real people living in tight quarters, working long tours. You want to say we're already 'done' while crews are stranded, while families are waiting to hear if a husband, a father, a son will return? We can't. Not if we mean to finish the job."

When civilian infrastructure like power grids and water plants are in the crosshairs, and when commercial ships become targets, the ethical calculus for shipping companies is no longer just about profit. It becomes a question of their duty of care. The decisions made in boardrooms and on captains' bridges are now life-and-death judgments, forced by a geopolitical deadlock.

What "Finishing the Job" Actually Means

If the objective is truly to create durable peace rather than a temporary pause, the definition of victory requires recalibration. In clear terms, it rests on three pillars, none of which are easily achieved:

First, denial of capability—not just cratered factories on a satellite photo, but disrupted production chains, key technologies blocked, and the ability to import critical components strangled. "Victory is not a set of targets on a map; victory is denying them the ability to threaten our allies, our commerce, and our friends for years."

Second, reassurance of commerce—secure shipping lanes that do not force rerouting from Hormuz every single week and that allow tankers and bulk carriers to operate without excruciating insurance premiums. This means breaking Iran's claimed "complete control" over the strait.

Third, stability in civilian services—water plants, ports and power that are demonstrably protected so populations don't break and pressure governments into raising the white flag.

"That's a big ask. It requires a mixed toolbox: kinetic pressure to degrade hardware, surgical actions to cripple reconstitution, intelligence and sanctions to choke off finance and parts, and a credible security architecture so partners have confidence to reopen routes and markets. It requires persistence. We can't be episodic. We can't do one big raid and then go home and clap ourselves on the back."

Why "Not Won Enough" Matters Now

Trump's insistence that the campaign remains incomplete—"I'll say it again plainly, without spin: we have not won enough. We have made enormous progress—tremendous progress—but the task isn't measured in headlines"—carries three distinct and consequential effects:

Operational horizon. It signals a willingness to sustain operations until Washington's definition of victory is met, which tends to extend a conflict rather than compress it. "If you declare victory prematurely, you create incentives for your adversary to adapt and for your allies to lose confidence."

Diplomatic posture. Tehran's categorical rejection of negotiations—its assertion that "American forces will not end the war"—removes an obvious exit ramp, obliging the United States and partners either to ratchet up pressure or accept a longer-term equilibrium of containment where Iran claims battlefield control.

Market psychology. Words matter. Markets and insurers price outcomes; decisive-sounding rhetoric that promises more action raises risk premia until there is credible, observable stability—secure shipping, repaired infrastructure, resumed trade. Iran's simultaneous claim of "complete control" over Hormuz only hardens those risk calculations.

The Three Scenarios and What to Watch For

Paired with Tehran's diplomatic veto and its assertions of military dominance, the "not won enough" doctrine steers the region away from a quick resolution and towards one of three distinct pathways:

The Prolonged Stalemate (Rising Probability): This is the new default. Periodic strikes, intermittent shipping disruptions, and a permanently elevated energy-price baseline. Iran continues to assert control over Hormuz while the US and partners attempt to degrade that control through sustained pressure. It is a war of competing national wills, fought through proxies, economic pressure, and the slow bleed of attrition.

The Miscalculation (Low Probability, High Impact): The friction of a stalemate makes accidents deadly. A strike that destroys a major desalination plant, causing a humanitarian catastrophe, or an attack that kills hundreds of civilians could shatter the unspoken rules of engagement, triggering a full-scale, uncontrolled conflagration. Trump has already warned that any blockage of oil flow will be met with force "twenty times harder" than Iran has experienced thus far .

The Mediated Pause (Lower Probability): A return to diplomacy remains the only genuine off-ramp. For now, Iran's refusal has rendered this path nearly impassable. Its resurfacing would be the single clearest signal that the risk of war is receding. Notably, Russian President Vladimir Putin has reportedly held a call with Trump to discuss a "quick political and diplomatic settlement," while French President Emmanuel Macron has announced allies are preparing a "purely defensive" mission to reopen the strait. 

What You Should Monitor Next

For those trying to navigate this uncertainty, the headlines will be deceptive. The true signals are in the data:

• Official signals that Iran has softened its negotiating posture—any change there would be the clearest lowering of risk. Watch for any crack in the IRGC's declaration that "American forces will not end the war."

• Shipping-lane metrics and insurer notices; when insurers stop pricing Gulf transits as "war-risk," that's a market signal the corridor is back. Currently, with Iran claiming "complete control" of Hormuz, those premiums will remain elevated.

• Energy inventories and refinery outages—these will determine how long high prices filter into consumer inflation and airline fare policy. Brent crude has already risen above $82, up more than 13 percent since the conflict began. 

• Human-cost indicators: IMO and NGOs reporting crew rotations, missing seafarers and displaced families. Those are the humane metrics that track the conflict's social toll.

"This is not muscle flexing for the cameras. This is leverage. You hold that leverage until you can lock in terms that reduce the threat for years, not months. You don't let them rebuild the very capacity that put missiles in the air and drones over cities in the first place."

The "finish the job" promise now looks less like a final assault and more like a long-term commitment to a conflict without end. Tehran's explicit refusal to negotiate—its insistence that "we will determine the end of the war"—removes the simple diplomatic exit many hoped for. U.S. officials can promise completion, but completion now resembles a multi-year project of denial, deterrence and economic management, conducted against an adversary that claims it, not Washington, holds the battlefield initiative.

"This isn't bravado. It's realism. Finish the job the right way, and you keep the peace on terms that protect America's interests and the world's economy. Cut corners, and the crisis returns—stronger, nastier, and more costly."

For the civilians on the shore, the crews on the water, and the families waiting for both, the new reality has set in: this is no longer a crisis. It is the new condition. And it will be measured not in headlines, but in the ability of children in the Gulf to turn on a tap and get water, in whether a ship's captain will risk the shortest route or take the long way round, in whether families waiting for seafarers can sleep at night—and in whether Iran's claim of control over the world's most vital waterway proves to be bluff or enduring reality.

March 09, 2026

How the Iran War Could Create Africa’s Energy Winners — and Its Biggest Casualties

By Ephraim  Agbo 

As the Strait of Hormuz remains closed and global oil prices surge past $100 per barrel, a complex and deeply uneven picture is emerging across the African continent. Africa presents a fundamental paradox in this crisis: it is simultaneously a net importer of refined petroleum products and home to some of the world's most significant crude oil exporters. This dual identity means the Iran war is not simply benefiting or harming the continent—it is doing both at once, often within the same country.

For Nigeria, Angola, Algeria, and Libya, the price surge represents a potential fiscal windfall that could transform struggling economies. For Kenya, South Africa, Senegal, and a dozen other import-dependent nations, the same price spike threatens to reignite inflation, deplete foreign reserves, and deepen the cost-of-living crisis that has already sparked protests across the region. And for ordinary households from Lagos to Nairobi to Dakar, the war being fought 5,000 kilometers away is arriving in the form of higher transport costs, more expensive food, and shrinking purchasing power.

This is the Africa paradox: a continent that produces 8 million barrels of oil daily, holds 125 billion barrels of proven reserves—7.5 percent of the global total—yet remains profoundly vulnerable to energy shocks because it exports crude and imports the refined products its people actually use . The Iran war is exposing this structural weakness with brutal clarity.

The Windfall States: Africa's Oil Exporters

Nigeria: The Dual Economy

Nigeria presents the most striking illustration of Africa's contradictory position. As Africa's largest oil exporter, Nigeria ships approximately 1.5 million barrels of crude daily to international markets . Its 2026 budget was constructed around a conservative benchmark of $64.85 per barrel . With Brent crude now trading above $100, the arithmetic of Nigerian public finance has transformed overnight.

The revenue implications are substantial. Every dollar above the budget benchmark flows disproportionately to government coffers through Nigeria's production-sharing contracts and tax regime. The Federation Account Allocation Committee, which distributes oil revenue among federal, state, and local governments, faces the welcome challenge of allocating unexpected billions . Foreign exchange reserves, depleted by years of central bank intervention to defend the naira, stand to benefit from increased dollar inflows.

Yet the windfall tells only half the story. Nigeria imports the vast majority of its refined petroleum products, having spent decades failing to maintain or modernize its four state-owned refineries. The new Dangote Refinery, a 650,000-barrel-per-day private facility that began operations in 2024, has reduced but not eliminated this dependency. Within the past week, the Dangote Refinery and filling stations across the country have adjusted petrol prices upward twice. Petrol that sold at N870 per liter before the war now sells at approximately N1,100—a 26 percent increase in days .

The result is a nation experiencing simultaneous fiscal expansion and household contraction. Government revenue rises while citizens' purchasing power falls. Transport costs increase, food prices follow, and the inflationary pressure compounds an already difficult cost-of-living environment. As Dr. Muda Yusuf, CEO of the Centre for Promotion of Private Enterprises, notes, "The net exchange rate impact will depend on the balance between stronger oil inflows and potential capital reversals" as geopolitical instability drives investors toward safe-haven assets .

Timing, however, has favored Nigeria in one respect. The state oil company NNPC is weeks away from launching exports of Cawthorne, a new light, sweet crude grade comparable to the country's flagship Bonny Light. First loadings are scheduled for late March from a floating storage vessel holding up to 2.2 million barrels. Analysts at energy intelligence firm Kpler estimate the new stream could lift Nigeria's combined crude and condensate output from roughly 1.65 million barrels daily to approximately 1.7 million barrels through year-end .

As one Lagos-based oil markets analyst put it: "Cawthorne arriving in this market, with Brent flirting with triple digits, could not be better scripted" .

Angola, Algeria, and Libya: The Other Beneficiaries

Nigeria is not alone among African producers poised to gain. Angola, sub-Saharan Africa's second-largest oil exporter, operates with similar budget assumptions that higher prices will now supersede. Algeria, a member of the OPEC+ group of eight countries receiving expanded production quotas, has based its 2026 finance law on an assumed price of $60 per barrel. With Brent at $100, the difference of $40 per barrel generates significant additional revenue for the Algerian state .

Libya presents a more complicated case. Possessing Africa's largest proven oil reserves, the country's production has been chronically disrupted by the security fragmentation that followed the 2011 NATO intervention. Current output fluctuates unpredictably as rival militias and governments contest control of fields and export terminals. Higher prices provide incentive for all parties to keep oil flowing—and for each to seek control of the revenue it generates.

Collectively, African OPEC members—Nigeria, Angola, Algeria, Libya, Congo, Gabon, and Equatorial Guinea—produce more than 8 million barrels daily . The recent OPEC decision to increase production quotas by 206,000 barrels per day in April explicitly opens the door to expanded African volumes .

The Vulnerability Belt: Import-Dependent Economies

Southern Africa: South Africa's Precarious Balance

For South Africa, the continent's most industrialized economy, the Iran war presents a complex and ambiguous threat. Unlike its northern neighbors, South Africa possesses no significant crude production but has developed sophisticated refining capacity that processes imported crude into finished products.

The rand, always sensitive to emerging-market sentiment, faces what BMI analysts describe as "neutral to weaker" risks from the conflict . Higher oil prices increase the country's import bill, putting pressure on the current account and, by extension, the currency. Simultaneously, geopolitical instability typically drives investors toward safe-haven assets like the US dollar and gold—and South Africa is a major gold producer.

This creates an unusual dynamic. South African gold producers such as Pan African Gold, Harmony Gold, and Sibanye-Stillwater are raking in increased revenues as bullion prices rise alongside oil. Yet this positive impact is "offset by rising imported energy costs" for the broader economy . Higher transport fuel costs feed through to inflation, potentially forcing the Reserve Bank to maintain or increase interest rates just as households face mounting living expenses.

South Africa's historically close ties with Iran add another layer of complication. BMI analysts warn that Pretoria's relationship with Tehran could "further strain relations with the US, pushing up political risks and weighing on foreign demand for South African assets" . For a country dependent on portfolio inflows to finance its current account deficit, this is not a trivial concern.

Peter Attard Montalto, managing director at South African advisory firm Krutham, offers a cautiously optimistic assessment: "So far the impact has really been muted, for countries like South Africa," noting that recent economic reforms have helped stabilize the currency and bond markets. "Still, higher oil and gas prices are expected to filter into inflation in the coming months" .

East Africa: Kenya and Uganda's Supply Anxiety

In East Africa, countries like Kenya and Uganda report that fuel supplies remain stable even as they work to ensure continuity . But stability should not be confused with immunity. Both nations import virtually all their refined petroleum requirements, paying in US dollars earned through exports of tea, coffee, tourism, and remittances.

When global oil supplies tighten, prices rise while African currencies often weaken as investors move funds into safe havens . This combination—more expensive oil paid for with depreciating currency—amplifies the impact of price spikes in import-dependent markets. Kenya, which has experienced significant currency pressure in recent years, faces particular vulnerability.

West Africa: Senegal's Frustrating Transition

Senegal illustrates a different kind of frustration. The country is in the process of becoming an oil and gas producer, with the Sangomar field having commenced production in 2024. Yet this transition offers no immediate protection from the current crisis.

Senegal imports nearly all of the refined petroleum it consumes. Fishing, agriculture, transport, electricity—all depend on imported fuel. A sharp increase in pump prices translates immediately into higher living costs, intensified electricity load-shedding, and rapid impoverishment of large segments of the population .

The country cannot yet refine its own crude or redirect its gas production toward domestic consumption. As Dakar-based economist Mor Gassama explains, "If the price of oil soars, it will impact the prices of food and all derivative products for Senegal as for the entire world. The longer the conflict lasts, the greater the threat of generalized inflation" .

The solution, Gassama argues, lies in enabling the Société Africaine de Raffinage to process Senegalese crude at scale, creating a buffer against global price shocks. Until then, Senegal remains what Dakar Actu calls "a silent hostage of a war that is not its own" .

North Africa: Egypt and Morocco's Import Burden

North Africa's non-oil economies face similar pressures. Egypt, which transitioned from energy exporter to importer over the past decade despite recent gas discoveries, confronts the prospect of higher import bills at a moment of acute foreign currency shortage. The country's currency has already lost more than half its value since 2022; additional pressure on the external accounts could force further devaluation.

Morocco, which imports over 90 percent of its energy requirements, faces the same dynamic. The country has invested heavily in renewable energy to reduce fossil fuel dependence, but the transition remains incomplete. Higher oil prices mean higher costs for transport, industry, and electricity generation—costs that will ultimately reach consumers.

The Most Vulnerable: IMF Program Countries and Fragile States

Analysts warn that countries already operating under International Monetary Fund programs face particular strain as higher energy import bills drain scarce foreign exchange reserves. Among the most vulnerable are Sudan, The Gambia, Central African Republic, Lesotho, and Zimbabwe .

Zimbabwe has already acted. The Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority confirmed fuel price increases effective March 5 . For a country where hyperinflation is a living memory and dollarization has provided only partial stability, energy-driven price pressures threaten to unravel hard-won gains.

The Democratic Republic of Congo and Mauritius face vulnerabilities linked to potential energy shortages rather than merely price increases . The DRC's mining sector, critical to global battery supply chains, depends on reliable fuel supplies for operations. Disruptions could ripple through copper and cobalt production just as global demand for both accelerates.

Zambia presents another at-risk case. The kwacha is expected to weaken in an escalatory scenario, with higher energy prices inflating the import bill and reigniting domestic foreign exchange liquidity pressures. Moreover, Zambia has benefited from a surge in foreign demand for its assets, particularly domestic government debt. Renewed risk aversion would prompt capital outflows, exerting depreciatory pressure on the currency. Positively, elevated copper prices—another commodity benefiting from geopolitical uncertainty—could provide some support, limiting downside risks .

The Structural Problem: Refining Dependency

Beneath the country-by-country analysis lies a structural reality that explains Africa's paradoxical position. The continent produces millions of barrels of crude daily but lacks sufficient refining capacity to meet its own needs. It exports raw material and imports finished product, capturing only a fraction of the value chain and exposing itself to exactly the kind of price shock now underway.

The numbers tell the story. Africa holds 125 billion barrels of proven oil reserves—7.5 percent of the global total . Its producers include seven OPEC members. Yet according to the African Refiners and Distributors Association, the continent imports approximately 80 percent of its refined petroleum products, spending billions in foreign currency that could otherwise support domestic development.

This is not an accident of geology but a legacy of policy choices and infrastructure neglect. For decades, African governments and international oil companies focused on extraction rather than processing. Refineries, where they existed, suffered from poor maintenance, inadequate investment, and corruption. The result is a continent rich in crude but perpetually vulnerable to price shocks in global refined product markets.

The Iran war is exposing this vulnerability with unprecedented clarity. Every dollar increase in global oil prices translates directly into higher costs for African importers—and, through them, for African households. The continent's oil exporters, meanwhile, capture only the crude value, not the much larger refining margin.

The Household Impact: Where the War Really Arrives

For most African households, the Iran war will not be experienced as a geopolitical event but as a cost-of-living crisis. The transmission mechanism is brutally direct: most food and goods across Africa are transported by road. Rising fuel costs therefore feed quickly into broader inflation and reduce household purchasing power .

In Nigeria, petrol price increases from N870 to N1,100 per liter means higher costs for transport, for food distribution, for essential goods. In Senegal, higher import costs for refined products mean more expensive electricity, more expensive transport, more expensive everything. In Kenya, currency pressure combines with oil prices to squeeze households already struggling with the aftermath of COVID-19 and the 2022-2023 drought.

As one analysis puts it: "There is something profoundly unjust in what is unfolding. Africa is in no way responsible for the conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran. And yet its populations could pay an exorbitant price" .

The Strategic Response: Diversification as Imperative

Over the longer term, analysts say the crisis may reinforce calls for African nations to diversify their energy systems and reduce dependence on imported fuels. "It makes strategic sense for African countries to ensure long-term energy security and sovereignty," says Kennedy Mbeva, a research associate at the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk at the University of Cambridge. Achieving that, Mbeva notes, will require balancing short-term fiscal pressures with long-term investments in clean energy and green industrialization .

The irony is that higher oil revenues for producing countries could fund precisely such diversification. Nigeria's unexpected windfall could finance investments in refining capacity, renewable energy, and the non-oil economy that would reduce future vulnerability. Angola's additional revenue could support economic transformation away from resource dependence. Algeria's gains could accelerate the transition to a more diversified economic model.

Whether these opportunities will be seized is another question. Past oil booms have produced consumption booms, corruption booms, and debt booms—but rarely structural transformation. The 1970s price surge, the 2000s commodity super-cycle, each promised to lift African economies and each left them fundamentally unchanged.

The Geopolitical Dimension: Africa's Choice

The Iran war also introduces geopolitical complications for African states. Nigeria, Angola, and other oil exporters find themselves in a position similar to Russia and Venezuela: benefiting from higher prices while navigating the politics of a conflict they did not choose. Western powers, desperate to secure alternative supplies to trapped Gulf barrels, are suddenly more attentive to African producers.

The European Union, which replaced Iranian crude with Nigerian imports during the 2012 embargo, may follow the same path. South Africa, which turned to Nigeria, Angola, and Saudi Arabia during previous disruptions, faces similar choices . Asian buyers, cut off from Gulf supplies, are looking to West Africa with renewed interest.

This attention brings opportunities—and risks. African producers could secure long-term supply contracts, investment in production capacity, and enhanced geopolitical standing. They could also find themselves drawn into great-power competition, forced to choose between Western and Eastern blocs, between the United States and China, between competing visions of global order.

For now, most African states are attempting to navigate a middle course. They welcome higher revenues and increased demand while avoiding entanglement in the conflict itself. Whether this posture remains sustainable as the war intensifies is uncertain.

Conclusion: The Uneven Continent

Ten days into the Iran war, one conclusion is inescapable: Africa is experiencing the conflict not as a single story but as a thousand different ones. Nigerian officials count windfall revenues while Nigerian families count rising costs. South African miners benefit from higher gold prices while South African motorists pay more for fuel. Senegalese fishermen face higher expenses while Senegalese politicians explain that their country's own oil cannot yet help them.

The continent that produces 8 million barrels daily remains a net importer of the refined products its people actually use. The continent with 125 billion barrels of reserves remains vulnerable to price shocks in markets it cannot control. The continent with seven OPEC members remains a price-taker rather than a price-maker in global energy markets.

This is the Africa paradox, and the Iran war is exposing it with brutal clarity. Whether the crisis becomes a catalyst for change or another missed opportunity depends on choices African governments make in the coming weeks and months. The revenue is flowing. The attention is focused. The need for transformation has rarely been clearer.

Whether this time will be different—whether African nations can finally break the cycle of extraction without transformation, of resource wealth without economic development—remains the continent's most urgent and unanswered question.

Meet Mojtaba Khamenei — Iran’s new Supreme Leader

By Ephraim Agbo 

Mojtaba Khamenei, long viewed inside Tehran as the single most likely successor to his father, has been named Iran’s Supreme Leader by the clerical Assembly that chooses the officeholder. This marks a dramatic moment: an unusually dynastic transition inside a system that officially rejects hereditary rule — and it instantly reshapes Tehran’s internal power balance and regional posture.


1) How he got there — the immediate facts

The Assembly of Experts, Iran’s clerical body responsible for selecting the supreme leader, announced a decisive vote naming Mojtaba Khamenei as the successor after the death of Ali Khamenei. State media and major international agencies reported the appointment within hours. This move follows weeks (and years) of behind-the-scenes positioning by hardline clerics and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).


2) Who he is — background and profile

Mojtaba Khamenei is a mid-ranking cleric who spent much of his life inside religious seminaries and the shadow networks of Iran’s clerical and security elite rather than holding long public elected office. He was educated in the seminaries of Qom after attending the Alavi School in Tehran and has been described in reporting as a figure who cultivated ties with conservative clerics, cultural institutions, and the IRGC establishment over decades. Biographical sketches note his low public profile until he emerged repeatedly in succession discussions.


3) His power base — why he won

Two structural advantages helped propel him ahead of other candidates:

  • Family and patronage: Being the eldest son of a long-time supreme leader gave him unparalleled proximity to the networks that control appointments, intelligence, and patronage across the republic.
  • Security establishment backing: Reporting across outlets points to significant support from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and allied conservative clerics — a decisive factor inside the closed politics of Tehran. Those ties mattered especially in a crisis environment when swift, unified succession was prioritized over a prolonged intra-elite contest.

4) What this likely means for Iran’s politics and policy

Expect continuity with a harder edge rather than liberalizing reform:

  • Domestic repression and ideological consolidation: Observers expect a tightening of ideological supervision over the universities, media, and civil society to prevent dissent from coalescing into a sustained challenge to the new leadership.
  • Security-first governance: Given his IRGC connections, policy is likely to privilege security solutions (intelligence, paramilitary influence, and external deterrence) over technocratic or economic reforms.
  • Symbolic dynastic turn: The explicit elevation of a leader’s son weakens the republic’s formal rejection of dynastic succession and could provoke legitimacy debates inside Iran — especially among younger generations who have repeatedly protested theocratic rule.

Those are projections grounded in current reporting and the documented networks that supported his selection.


5) Regional and international implications (short, sharp)

  • Immediate escalation risk: His appointment occurred amid active hostilities between Iran and Israel (and allied actions by the United States), and analysts warn that leadership transitions in wartime raise the chances of symbolic retaliation and miscalculation.
  • Hardline posture vs. negotiation: A leader with deeper IRGC ties is less likely to pursue quick diplomatic compromises with Washington or Tel Aviv, increasing the possibility that Iran will double down on proxy networks and asymmetric retaliation.

6) Domestic reactions and potential fault lines

  • Clerical and elite acceptance: The Assembly of Experts’ vote was presented as decisive; many top clerics and officials publicly pledged allegiance to stabilize the transition.
  • Public sentiment: Street-level reaction is uncertain and likely to vary: hardline constituencies may welcome continuity and revenge narratives, while reformist and younger urban groups may see the shift as a further entrenchment of a closed elite. Past protests in Iran show that legitimacy gaps can become persistent sources of stability. 

"He Won’t Last Long": The Trump Warning

If Mojtaba’s power base lies in Tehran’s security bunkers, his most immediate and existential threat is emanating from Israel, Mar-a-Lago and the White House war room.

Donald Trump, who has resumed the maximalist pressure campaign of his previous term, has issued a stark, personal warning to the new leader. In an interview with ABC News on Sunday, Trump declared that Mojtaba Khamenei "is going to have to get approval from us," adding, "If he doesn't get approval from us he's not going to last long" .

This is a remarkable escalation in rhetoric. Trump has previously dismissed Mojtaba as a "lightweight" and an "unacceptable" choice . But by framing the succession as subject to American veto, he has directly challenged the sovereignty of Iran’s core political process. It is a warning that conflates personal survival with political legitimacy.

Trump’s perspective appears rooted in the belief that the current US-Israeli military campaign has broken the back of Iranian power. He recently described Iran as a "paper tiger" and suggested that its economy could be rebuilt only if a leader "acceptable" to Washington is installed . For a man like Mojtaba Khamenei—whose family has just been decimated by American bombs—"approval" from Washington is not just unlikely; it is an unthinkable capitulation.

The International Chessboard: US Caution vs. Israeli Aggression

The international reaction to Mojtaba’s appointment reveals a critical strategic rift between the United States and Israel.

While Trump and Israel have issued threats, the US president's qadministration’s official response has been notably measured. The focus has been on energy market stability and reassuring Gulf allies, reflecting a desire to contain the conflict without being dragged into a full-scale ground war .

Israel, however, has shown no such restraint. Defense Minister Israel Katz warned that any leader linked to Iran’s ruling elite would be "an unequivocal target for elimination" . The Israeli military has echoed this, stating it would hold successors personally accountable. This puts Mojtaba Khamenei in a unique position: he is a head of state whom the neighboring power has openly marked for death before his tenure has even begun.

This divergence forces the new Supreme Leader into a corner. If he seeks to project strength, he must retaliate against Israeli aggression. Yet any major retaliation risks provoking the full weight of the US military, a gamble that could mean the end of the regime.

A Dynastic Turn and Domestic Fault Lines

Beyond the battlefield, Mojtaba’s appointment creates a profound legitimacy problem at home. The Islamic Republic has long justified its rule through religious piety and revolutionary anti-imperialism. The explicit elevation of a leader’s son—a man who looks and acts like a prince—erodes that foundation.

For the millions of Iranians who have protested in recent years—chanting "Death to the Dictator" and calling for the overthrow of the "regime"—this transition feels like the final entrenchment of a corrupt, hereditary elite . The public sentiment, particularly among the young and in urban centers, is likely to view Mojtaba not as a holy jurist, but as the beneficiary of a family monopoly on power.

For now, the regime’s response to any dissent will be swift and brutal. Given Mojtaba’s history of coordinating with the Basij, his leadership will likely see a tightening of ideological supervision over universities and media to prevent dissent from coalescing into a sustained challenge .

What Comes Next?

The Mojtaba era is only hours old, but its trajectory is already being set by the interplay of three forces: the IRGC’s iron grip, the Israeli vow of vengeance, and Trump’s ultimatum.

The key indicators to watch will be the immediate personnel changes. If Mojtaba swiftly promotes IRGC commanders to top security and intelligence posts, it will confirm that the "security wing" has fully consumed the clerical state. His first public address—if he dares to give one—will be scrutinized for any hint of diplomatic flexibility, though the odds currently favor a doubling down on the axis of resistance.

As one analyst noted, this succession was designed for regime survival, but it has resulted in a leader who is hated by the enemy and perhaps feared by his own people . In the brutal logic of Tehran’s power corridors, that may be precisely the point. But in the volatile arithmetic of war, it is a calculation that could easily misfire, plunging the entire region into an even deeper abyss

March 08, 2026

Iran Has Chosen a New Supreme Leader — The World’s Most Dangerous Office Just Got More Dangerous.


By Ephraim Agbo 

Tehran — Iran has chosen a new Supreme Leader. The name has not yet been publicly revealed, but the decision has already been made inside the country’s most powerful clerical body.

The Assembly of Experts — the 88-member institution constitutionally responsible for selecting Iran’s supreme authority — confirmed that it has reached a consensus on a successor to Ali Khamenei following his death in a U.S.–Israeli strike on February 28.

Yet before the new leader’s name is even announced, two powerful forces are already shaping the future of his rule: expectations inside Iran’s power structure and open threats from Israel.

The man who takes the position will inherit not only the most powerful office in Iran, but also one of the most dangerous political roles in the world today.


What Iran’s New Supreme Leader Is Expected to Do

In the Iranian political system, the Supreme Leader is not merely a symbolic religious authority. The office controls the country’s military, intelligence services, judiciary, and strategic direction.

The next leader will therefore face immediate expectations in three critical areas.

1. Preserve the Islamic Republic

The first and most urgent expectation is regime survival.

The Islamic Republic is under extraordinary pressure — from sanctions, domestic unrest, and escalating confrontation with Israel and the United States.

For Iran’s ruling establishment, the primary responsibility of the new leader will be to ensure continuity of the system created by Ruhollah Khomeini after the 1979 revolution.

This means maintaining the delicate balance between:

  • the clerical establishment
  • elected political institutions
  • and the powerful security apparatus.

In practice, that balance increasingly revolves around the influence of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

2. Control the Security State

The Supreme Leader serves as commander-in-chief of Iran’s armed forces, including the Revolutionary Guard and its elite Quds Force.

This gives the office direct authority over:

  • Iran’s missile program
  • its regional proxy networks
  • and its broader military doctrine.

Any new leader will therefore be expected to maintain Iran’s strategic deterrence posture across the Middle East, particularly through alliances with armed groups in Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, and Yemen.

For Iran’s security elite, continuity in this strategy is non-negotiable.

3. Manage a Wartime Economy

The next Supreme Leader will also inherit a country operating under severe economic pressure.

Sanctions, disrupted oil infrastructure, and wartime instability have strained Iran’s economy. The leader will need to oversee economic management while ensuring that the state can continue funding its security apparatus and regional alliances.

In other words, the position requires both religious legitimacy and geopolitical pragmatism.


Israel’s Unprecedented Threat

Even before the successor has been officially named, Israel has issued one of the most direct threats ever made against the leadership of the Islamic Republic.

The Israeli military announced that it intends to target any successor to Khamenei, as well as individuals involved in appointing the new leader.

In a statement posted in Persian, the Israeli military warned:

Israel will continue to pursue “every successor” and “every person who seeks to appoint a successor.”

The warning was directed not only at the future Supreme Leader but also at members of the Assembly of Experts responsible for choosing him.

This threat marks a dramatic escalation in Israel’s strategy toward Iran’s leadership.


A Leader Already Under the Crosshairs

For decades, Iran’s Supreme Leaders operated largely beyond the reach of direct military targeting.

That assumption has now collapsed.

The death of Khamenei in the recent strikes has demonstrated that Israel — with U.S. backing — is willing to target the highest levels of Iran’s leadership structure.

Israel has made clear that the strategy will continue.

The Israeli military’s message suggests a doctrine of leadership decapitation, aimed at preventing Iran from stabilizing politically after the loss of its long-time leader.

For the incoming Supreme Leader, the implication is stark:

The position may now carry not only immense authority, but also an unprecedented personal risk.


The Psychological War

The threat serves another purpose beyond military strategy.

It is also a form of psychological pressure.

By warning that even those who appoint the new leader could be targeted, Israel is attempting to inject fear and uncertainty into Iran’s succession process.

The message is clear: any attempt to restore the regime’s leadership will come under direct threat.

But such threats can also produce the opposite effect inside Iran.

Historically, external pressure tends to strengthen hardline factions, reinforcing narratives of national resistance and encouraging the political establishment to rally around the most uncompromising candidates.


A Leadership Role Unlike Any Before

The next Supreme Leader will therefore assume office under extraordinary circumstances.

He will inherit:

  • a country at war
  • a political system undergoing internal transformation
  • and a regional confrontation that is rapidly escalating.

Unlike his predecessors, he will also begin his leadership under explicit military threats from Israel.

In Tehran, the announcement of his name is still pending.

But whoever emerges from the Assembly of Experts’ deliberations will immediately become one of the most consequential — and most scrutinized — political figures in the world.

And from the moment he takes office, he may also become one of its most hunted.


March 05, 2026

The Anglican Church Is Splitting. A Woman Takes the Throne of Canterbury… But Half the Anglican World Is Refusing to Follow

By  Ephraim Agbo 

On a crisp morning in March 2026, Sarah Mullally will process through the ancient gates of Canterbury Cathedral to become the 105th Archbishop of Canterbury—the first woman in history to hold the most senior office in the Church of England. The service will be magnificent: centuries-old liturgy, soaring hymns, the gathered leadership of a global communion that spans 165 countries and claims 85 million members.

But thousands of miles away, in Abuja, Nigeria, another gathering has already taken place. There, conservative Anglican leaders have announced the creation of a Global Anglican Council—an alternative power structure designed explicitly to rival the authority of Canterbury. They have elected Archbishop Laurent Mbanda of Rwanda as their chair. They have declared that the Church of England has "departed from biblical teaching." And they have made clear that they do not recognize the woman preparing for her installation as their spiritual leader.

The timing is not coincidental. The battle lines have been drawn for decades. But in the early months of 2026, they have become unmistakable.

This is the story of a communion fracturing along multiple fault lines—gender, sexuality, theology, geography, and history—and of the woman who must somehow hold it together.


Part One: The Abuja Challenge

A Council to Rival Canterbury

The announcement in Nigeria represented the latest escalation in a struggle that has defined Anglicanism for a generation. For months, the conservative grouping known as GAFCON (the Global Anglican Future Conference) had signalled their intention to elect their own "first among equals"—a position mirroring that held by the Archbishop of Canterbury as spiritual leader of the global communion.

In the end, they stopped short of creating an identical title. The new body would be a council, not a competing primacy. But the substance was clear enough: an alternative source of authority for Anglicans who believe the mother church has lost its way.

At a press conference following the announcement, GAFCON representatives insisted their actions were motivated by doctrine rather than personal animus. Justin Murff, the conference press secretary, told reporters that the group does not "entirely dey against di idea of woman being di Archbishop of Canterbury." Rather, they accuse "di Church hierarchy of England say dem introduce strange teachings wey no dey in line wit di Bible into di Anglican faith. Chief of dis teachings na di blessing of same sex couples and ordaining pesins of same sex relationships as priests and even bishops."

The language is significant. By framing the issue as doctrinal rather than personal, GAFCON positions itself as defending timeless truth rather than engaging in a power struggle. Murff emphasized that GAFCON is "no be breakaway faction from di global Anglican Communion" but rather insists that "na di Church in England don break away from di Communion." The door remains open for the Church of England to "repent" and be "reunited" with the orthodox body.

The Primate's Condemnation

The response from Nigeria's spiritual leadership had been even more pointed. When Mullally's appointment was announced in October 2025, the Primate of the Church of Nigeria, Most Rev'd Henry Ndukuba, issued a blistering statement that linked her gender directly to her stance on sexuality.

He described her election as "double jeopardy"—first for violating the conviction of "the majority of Anglicans who are unable to embrace female headship in the episcopate," and second, "more disturbing," because Mullally is "a strong supporter of same-sex marriage as evidenced in her speech in 2023, after a vote to approve the blessings of homosexuals when she described the result as a moment of hope for the Church."

Ndukuba warned that Mullally's appointment confirmed that "the global Anglican world could no longer accept the leadership of the Church of England and that of the Archbishop of Canterbury." The Church of Nigeria, he affirmed, stood with GAFCON in "upholding the authority of the Scriptures" and rejecting "the aberration called same-sex marriage and other ungodly teachings."

This Nigerian response illuminates what GAFCON spokespersons in Abuja attempted to obscure: the sexuality issue and the women's ordination issue, while distinct, are inseparable in the conservative imagination. Both represent departures from what traditionalists regard as biblical teaching; both symbolize a Western church that has, in their view, surrendered to cultural pressure rather than maintaining faithfulness to Scripture.


Part Two: The February Watershed

The Synod That Satisfied No One

Just weeks before conservative leaders converged on Abuja, the Church of England's General Synod had delivered a decision that satisfied neither side of the sexuality debate while providing fresh ammunition to traditionalists.

Meeting in London from February 9-13, 2026, synod members voted 252 to 132, with 21 abstentions, to abandon a three-year effort to establish stand-alone blessing ceremonies for same-sex couples. The vote formally concluded the Living in Love and Faith (LLF) process—a nine-year, £1.7 million initiative exploring identity, sexuality, relationships, and marriage that had begun in 2017.

Instead of advancing toward blessing ceremonies, synod approved a House of Bishops proposal to establish two new bodies: a Relationships, Sexuality and Gender Working Group to explore the approval process for ceremonial blessings under canon law, and a Pastoral Consultative Group to advise bishops on specific cases. The motion also included an apology for "the distress and pain many have suffered during the LLF process, especially LGBTQI+ people."

For progressives, the decision represented devastating retreat. Gay priest Charlie Baczyk-Bell called the process a "facetious charade" that had broken his heart. "I cannot believe that we are here again, after all this time, with only this to offer," he told fellow members.

For traditionalists, however, even this modest outcome went too far—while simultaneously failing to address their concerns. Busola Sodeinde, a synod lay member from London, objected to what she characterized as the marginalization of those holding to historic teaching. "To refer to such members as 'homophobic' as some have, when they believe that they are seeking to remain faithful to God's word is not only unhelpful, it is gravely unjust," she said. Simon Clift added, "Those like me, who hold to the historic teaching, also feel that pain, and all groups need to be recognized."

The Theological Irreconcilability

What makes the sexuality debate more intractable than previous Anglican controversies is its apparent theological irreconcilability. Both sides read the same Scriptures; both appeal to tradition; both claim the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Yet they arrive at conclusions that cannot coexist within a single communion.

For traditionalists, the biblical witness is clear and unchanging. The GAFCON position, reaffirmed in the 2023 Kigali Commitment, holds that the Archbishop of Canterbury can no longer be recognized as an "Instrument of Communion" because Canterbury has departed from biblical teaching. The issue is not merely disagreement but apostasy—a departure from the faith once delivered to the saints.

For progressives, the church's understanding of human sexuality, like its understanding of slavery or women's roles, can develop as human knowledge and experience deepen. Archbishop of York Stephen Cottrell, opening the February synod debate, acknowledged that "this is not where I want us to be, nor where I hoped we would be three years ago." He recognized "a lot of pain" that "cuts across so called 'party lines' or theological convictions held."

Mullally herself, in her first major test as Archbishop-designate, struck a note of wounded hope. The debate, she told synod, "touched some of our deepest theological views, but also the core part of our identity. I recognise that LLF has been hard. It has left us wounded as individuals and also as a church, and therefore I am grateful that you are still here."


Part Three: The Woman at the Center

From Hospital Wards to Canterbury's Throne

To understand Sarah Mullally is to understand a path unprecedented in modern church history. She began her career as a nurse, working on hospital wards before rising to become England's Chief Nursing Officer—the government's most senior advisor on nursing. The commonalities between nursing and priesthood, she observes, are profound.

"People often sitting in those places where maybe there is no cure, but there is healing," she reflects. "That opportunity about how you build partnerships with people and work collaboratively together."

Her clinical background shaped a leadership style focused on enabling others. "I've always been somebody that wants to work with people, to enable them and encourage them to be the best that they can be. It's always helpful to have people who are better than you around you."

When asked how a nurse rose to become the Church of England's operational head, she offers a characteristically modest response: "I've had one vocation and that's to follow Jesus Christ. The question is always: what does God need to do with my gifts and my skills?"

That question now has global implications.

The Feminist Archbishop

Mullally identifies as a "self-described feminist" and speaks candidly about encountering sexism throughout her career, both in secular roles and within the church.

"I have experienced misogyny at times," she acknowledges. "I think that I've learned that the first thing you have to do is talk about it, so that you bring it out into the open."

She distinguishes between public advocacy and private conversation. "Some people may not have experienced it. In a sense, I will continue to do that—I will talk to people individually if I experience it—but also to speak publicly about it." The visibility of her office carries responsibility. "Being in this role, it's important for me to speak of it because there are some that don't necessarily have the status or the power of this role and feel more hesitant to do so."

Despite the opposition to her appointment, she finds encouragement in unexpected places. "People in the writing or emails or passing in the streets—actually I feel really encouraged. And I remember that I feel hopeful. I know that our churches are places where wonderful things happen."


Part Four: Africa's Complex Anglican Landscape

The Demographic Shift

The sexuality and gender debates cannot be understood apart from the demographic transformation of global Anglicanism over the past half-century. The majority of Anglicans now reside in Africa, with Nigeria possessing the largest contingent. These churches are growing while Western churches decline, giving African leaders a powerful argument: they represent the future of Anglicanism.

As Ryan Burge, a political science professor at Eastern Illinois University and specialist in religious demographics, observes: "African bishops have this ammunition. They say to the West, 'We're the ones growing. You have the money, we have the numbers.'"

This demographic reality shapes both debates in profound ways. In many African nations, same-sex relationships remain criminalized and socially taboo. The idea of blessing such unions or ordaining partnered LGBTQ clergy is not merely theologically problematic for conservative African Anglicans—it is culturally incomprehensible.

Yet even here, the picture is more complex than a simple North-South binary suggests. The Anglican Church of Southern Africa is considered relatively progressive, with six female bishops across its provinces. Kenya presents a more complex picture: while its archbishop holds conservative views, the country also counts female bishops among its clergy, including Bishop Rose Okeno of the Butere Diocese. Rwanda and Uganda lean decidedly conservative, as does the influential Church of Nigeria.

Two Views of Scripture, Two Views of Women's Roles

The debate over women's ordination cuts to the heart of how different believers interpret scripture and understand the nature of church authority. Within Africa itself, faithful Anglicans stand on both sides.

Uju Ifeanyi Nwogu, a Nigerian Anglican laywoman, articulates the traditionalist position with clarity. For her, women's roles in the church should flow naturally from their domestic responsibilities as mothers and wives. "The role of women in the Anglican Communion is to, first of all, be modest and be good mothers in their home," she explains. "That should be their role: supporting their husbands, supporting the church."

When asked about the most senior position a woman could legitimately hold, Nwogu points to the role of a bishop's wife—a position of influence and coordination, but not of sacramental authority. She grounds her view in scriptural interpretation, noting that Christ chose only men as apostles and that the pastoral epistles specify qualifications for bishops that appear to assume male candidates.

"The issue of a woman taking the leadership role in the church," she argues, misunderstands the nature of Christian service. Women can and do function powerfully in children's ministry, youth work, and numerous other church programmes without requiring ordination.

Bishop Rose Okeno represents the face of change within African Anglicanism. As the first female bishop ordained in Kenya, she has navigated opposition that continues to this day.

"Many, many of them said that," Okeno recalls of the voices that told her ordained ministry was not for women. "But I knew that God calls those whom He wills, equips them, and sends them."

Okeno acknowledges the validity of women's domestic and supportive roles while insisting that God's calling extends beyond these boundaries. "Women have a special role, by the grace of God, in the Anglican Communion. They have a role in leadership."

The bishop points to the grassroots reality of many Kenyan congregations, where women already provide the majority of pastoral care and leadership, even when formal recognition has been slow to follow. For Okeno, barring women from ordained leadership represents not fidelity to scripture but a failure to recognise the full implications of human equality before God.

The Hermeneutical Challenge

The exchange between Nwogu and Okeno illuminates the hermeneutical challenge at the heart of the Anglican debate. Both women appeal to scripture; both consider themselves faithful Anglicans. Yet they arrive at diametrically opposed conclusions.

Nwogu reads the biblical texts as prescribing permanent structures of male headship in both family and church. The absence of women from the apostolic circle, the pastoral epistles' qualifications for bishops, and the household codes all point toward a divinely ordained differentiation of roles.

Okeno, by contrast, reads these same texts through the lens of context and trajectory. She notes that the way people interpret scripture is shaped by their context, and that the Bible must be understood as a whole that points toward increasing inclusion. "Our Lord Jesus Christ prayed for the unity of his church," she reminds, citing John 17:21. "He prayed that they may all be one."

For Okeno, division weakens the church's witness to the world. While she holds in respect and love those who disagree, she maintains that excluding women from leadership is itself "unscriptural."

Part Five: The Inheritance of Scandal

The Shadow of Safeguarding Failures

Mullally inherits an institution still reeling from abuse scandals that led to her predecessor's effective resignation. Archbishop Justin Welby stepped down following accusations that he failed to act sufficiently on information about prolific abuser John Smyth.

For Mullally, the scrutiny is personal. As Bishop of London, she was involved in safeguarding decisions that critics say merit examination. "I said on the day of my announcement that all of us should be open to having the light shone on what we do," she states. "Coming in as the Archbishop of Canterbury, I recognise rightly so that there is greater scrutiny on me and the actions that I have undertaken."

She points to her record: increasing resources for safeguarding, improving procedures, enhancing pastoral support for victims and survivors. "I commit to ensuring that we have independence in safeguarding, both in scrutiny and in operations."

The challenge is institutional as well as personal. The Clergy Discipline Measure, the church's internal legal framework, has faced criticism for lack of transparency. Mullally acknowledges that proposals will come to February's synod "to work on that."

When pressed about a specific case where the Archbishop of York determined she had no case to answer—a decision critics argue undermines perceptions of independence—Mullally notes that "there is always the right to appeal, and that right of appeal is to a president of tribunal who is independent."

The response reflects a leader navigating between acknowledging failures and defending processes—a tension that will define her safeguarding legacy.

The Slavery Reparations Question

The Church of England's complicity in the transatlantic slave trade represents another unresolved inheritance. Mullally has spoken about reparative justice for the church's past involvement in slavery, though specifics remain undeveloped.

The issue carries particular weight given the Anglican Communion's demographics. With the majority of Anglicans now residing in Africa—many in nations whose ancestors were enslaved and transported by Europeans—the church's response to its slave-trading history is watched closely in the Global South.

Mullally's approach to reparative justice will signal whether the Church of England can confront uncomfortable history while maintaining relationships with African provinces who oppose her on gender and sexuality grounds.


Part Six: The Impossible Task

What Unity Requires

The GAFCON position, articulated in the 2023 Kigali Commitment, holds that Canterbury can no longer be recognized as an "Instrument of Communion" because it has departed from biblical teaching. The new Global Anglican Council formalizes what had been developing for years: parallel structures, mutual recognition withheld, alternative sources of authority.

Mullally's response emphasizes continuity and relationship-building. "I have met with the five regional primates," she notes. "My conversation with them is that I want to share ministry with them." She has scheduled additional meetings before her installation. "Whenever you go into a new role, you have to know and be known. That first and foremost is what I'm doing over these months—how do people know me? How do I know them? How can we build that collaboration partnership together?"

But partnership requires two parties willing to partner. When GAFCON leaders insist the Church of England must "repent" to be "reunited" with the orthodox body, they frame the relationship not as partnership but as conditional reconciliation.

"I do hear their concerns and the place from which they are coming from," Mullally says of traditionalist critics. "I want to find somewhere in which we can at least share hospitality."

Whether hospitality suffices when fundamental understandings of Christian faithfulness diverge remains unclear. The history of Christian division suggests that once a group concludes another has departed from the faith, hospitality becomes either an intermediate step toward reconciliation or a polite prelude to permanent separation.

The Same-Sex Blessings Impasse

Perhaps no issue tests Mullally's leadership more immediately than the church's tortured process around same-sex relationships.

Mullally supported the 2023 decision enabling prayers of thanksgiving and blessing for same-sex couples within existing services. "I'm very grateful that same-sex couples can have those blessings within existing services," she says. "Having spoken to couples who have already experienced those prayers as part of an existing service, I know how much that means to them."

But the question of stand-alone services remains unresolved. The February synod will "outline the steps that would need to take place if there were stand-alone services." Her role, she insists, is procedural: "to ensure that that process goes through, that we listen to synod, and then we respond to the decisions of synod."

When asked directly whether she personally supports stand-alone services of blessing for same-sex couples, Mullally becomes circumspect. "As the Archbishop of Canterbury, I see my role at the moment to listen to what synod has to say about that and to continue to hold that space within the Church of England where there are a range of different views on this issue."

Pressed on whether she can articulate her personal view while holding that space, she responds: "The issue of same-sex blessings—that space where people have different views—can operate. And so therefore I feel that that's my role, is to hold that space."

The answer reveals the impossible position of a leader who must simultaneously represent a church divided against itself and maintain relationships with provinces that regard any affirmation of same-sex relationships as heresy.

The King's Governor

As the monarch's governor of the Church of England, Mullally has already met with King Charles III. "I was keen to hear from him about my vision for the church, in the same way as a lot of people have," she says of their conversation. "I shared with the king that I hope to be the shepherd to care for people in their parishes, for our clergy, to support them to enable them to do what they can do."

Her vision extends beyond institutional management. "To speak of the Christian hope not just within the church and the Anglican Communion but also into the world, and providing hospitality at a time where there are a lot of challenges for people—places where people of different views can come together."

That vision of hospitality faces its sternest test from those who have already decided that the Archbishop of Canterbury no longer speaks for them.


Part Seven: What Happens Now

The Instruments of Communion and Their Failure

The Anglican Communion has historically maintained unity through four "instruments of communion": the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Lambeth Conference of bishops, the Anglican Consultative Council, and the Primates' Meeting. All four have failed to contain the controversies over gender and sexuality.

The 1998 Lambeth Conference famously passed Resolution I.10, affirming "faithfulness in marriage between a man and a woman in lifelong union" and rejecting "homosexual practice as incompatible with Scripture." Yet this resolution, rather than settling the matter, became a battleground. Western provinces increasingly ignored it; African provinces cited it as binding.

Subsequent attempts at mediation—the Windsor Report, the Anglican Covenant, countless meetings and consultations—have all foundered on the same rock: these questions will not be resolved by process because they are not procedural disputes. They are disputes about the nature of revelation, the authority of Scripture, and the meaning of faithfulness.

The February 2026 synod vote represents the latest failure of process. Despite nine years and millions of pounds, the Living in Love and Faith initiative produced no consensus—only the acknowledgment that the church remains "deeply divided." The new working groups will continue the conversation, but few expect them to succeed where every previous effort has failed.

The Broader Christian Context

The Anglican struggle over sexuality mirrors similar battles across global Christianity. The United Methodist Church is experiencing a slow-motion breakup, with a quarter of its U.S. congregations having received permission to leave over LGBTQ-related policies. The Roman Catholic Church, despite Pope Francis's 2023 formal approval of blessings for same-sex couples, remains sharply divided, with conservative bishops assailing the policy as betrayal.

The Eastern Orthodox Church, the world's second-largest Christian communion, has largely maintained traditional teaching, with the Russian Orthodox Church supporting tough anti-LGBTQ legislation. In the Muslim world, same-sex relationships remain widely criminalized.

What makes the Anglican situation distinct is the combination of geographic spread, historical identity, and institutional structure. No other major denomination has maintained for four centuries a global fellowship held together by shared liturgy and the symbolic primacy of a single see. No other communion faces quite the same tension between growing Southern churches and declining Northern ones.

As Kim Haines-Eitzen, a professor of religious studies at Cornell University, observes: "Christianity is incredibly diverse—globally, theologically, linguistically, culturally. There are bound to be these incredibly divisive issues, especially when bound up in scriptural interpretation. That's what keeps world religions alive—that kind of push and pull."

What's at Stake

The immediate issue before the Anglican Communion concerns institutional unity and authority. But beneath that lies something more profound: the question of how a global religious body navigates change when its members hold incompatible visions of faithfulness.

For traditionalists like Nwogu and the GAFCON leadership, faithfulness means preserving what they understand to be biblical teaching transmitted through centuries of Christian tradition. For progressives like Okeno, faithfulness requires recognising the movement of the Spirit in new contexts and extending full participation to all whom God calls.

The demographic weight of African Anglicanism ensures that this debate will not be resolved by any simple appeal to majority opinion. Within Africa itself, the conversation continues, with faithful Anglicans on both sides of the divide.


Epilogue: The Weight of History

Sitting in Lambeth Palace, surrounded by portraits of her predecessors—all men, all white, all products of a very different England—Mullally contemplates an impossible task: holding together a communion that may no longer wish to be held.

Her toolkit includes relationship-building, listening, hospitality, and procedural patience. These are not small things in an institution shaped by centuries of relational bonds. But they may prove insufficient against forces that have already decided separation is faithfulness.

When asked about the qualities that brought her to this point, she returns to her foundation. "My Christian faith has always been my foundation. There is something about understanding that my value, my worth is in God, and therefore stepping away from the expectation of other people."

That detachment from expectation may prove essential. No human leader can satisfy all parties when the parties define faithfulness in mutually exclusive terms. The best any archbishop can do is to hold the space, maintain relationships where possible, and trust that the Spirit moves in ways not visible from any single vantage point.

The Anglican Communion has survived many controversies over its four-century history—the Gorham Judgment, the Colenso affair, debates over prayer book revision, the ordination of women. Each time, the bonds of affection have held, however tenuously. Each time, the communion has found a way to contain difference without formal schism.

The controversies over gender and sexuality feel different. They touch questions of human identity at their most intimate. They divide provinces not merely by geography but by fundamental understandings of revelation and authority. They have already produced parallel structures, mutual recognition withheld, and now a rival council claiming to represent authentic Anglicanism.

Whether the Anglican Communion can survive this controversy intact remains an open question. What seems increasingly clear is that even if formal schism is avoided, the unity the communion has known is already gone. The question now is what will replace it—and whether the replacement can claim the name Anglican with any more legitimacy than the structures it challenges.

For Sarah Mullally, installed at Canterbury as conservative leaders depart Abuja, the weight of that question rests heavily on untested shoulders. For LGBTQ Anglicans who hoped the February synod would bring affirmation, the disappointment cuts deep. For traditionalists who have long warned that the church was abandoning Scripture, the events of early 2026 represent vindication.

And for the millions of Anglicans in the middle—those who love their parishes, pray their prayers, and wish the church would stop fighting—the spectacle of division continues, with no resolution in sight.

"I feel hopeful," Mullally says. "I know that our churches are places where wonderful things happen."

The question is whether those wonderful things will continue to happen within a single communion—or whether the future of Anglicanism lies in multiple communions, each claiming faithfulness to the tradition, each shaped by different cultural and theological imperatives.

For Sarah Mullally, that question is no longer theoretical. It is the daily work of her primacy.

And there is no cure, only healing—or the attempt at healing—in places where division may have gone too deep for any human remedy.

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