Ephraim Agbo's Blog
Ephraim Agbo's Blog explores diverse cultures, ideologies, and perspectives, offering fresh insights on complex topics. Join us for a thought-provoking journey!
April 04, 2026
Faith or Power? How a 1,400-Year-Old Dispute Became the Middle East’s Most Explosive Fault Line
April 02, 2026
The Erosion of the Predictable
March 29, 2026
Grabbed by the Throat: How the Houthis Are Choking the Red Sea While Iran Tightens Its Grip on the Strait of Hormuz
By Ephraim Agbo
If the wider war involving Iran has a geography, it does not stop at the Strait of Hormuz. It stretches south, toward Yemen, where the Houthis are now turning the Red Sea into a pressure point of their own. On March 28, 2026, Iranian-backed Houthi forces launched missiles at Israel in what is described as the first direct strike from Yemen since the latest escalation began, underscoring how quickly the conflict can widen beyond its main battlefield. A 2024 UN-linked assessment said Iran and Hezbollah helped build the Houthis into a far more capable military actor than they once were.
That matters because the Houthis are not merely acting out of solidarity. They are operating inside a broader strategic system shaped by Iran. Their value lies less in their ability to defeat Israel militarily than in their ability to create friction in places where global commerce is most vulnerable. That is why the Red Sea matters. That is why Bab al-Mandab matters. And that is why the Houthis’ actions should be read not as a side story, but as a proxy front in a wider conflict that is already reverberating through markets, shipping insurance, and naval deployments.
Bab al-Mandab is one of the world’s most important maritime chokepoints. It connects the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden, and most petroleum and natural gas exports from the Persian Gulf that move through the Suez Canal or SUMED pipeline pass through both Bab al-Mandab and the Strait of Hormuz. The World Bank has said the Red Sea crisis slashed vessel traffic through the Suez Canal and Bab al-Mandab by roughly three-quarters by the end of 2024, after the route had accounted for about 30 percent of global container traffic. That is not a symbolic disruption. It is a direct hit on the plumbing of global trade.
This is where the Houthis’ real leverage begins. They do not need a navy to matter. They only need the ability to make ships hesitate. In January 2024, container ships were already avoiding the Suez route as attacks lifted freight costs and lengthened voyages, forcing vessels to sail around Africa instead. Once shipping firms begin to price in uncertainty, the disruption spreads far beyond the battlefield: insurance rises, delivery times stretch, inventories tighten, and inflation pressures reappear in places far from Yemen. In other words, a non-state actor can wound the world economy without sinking a single major vessel.
The Iran dimension makes this more dangerous. The Strait of Hormuz remains the other great pressure point in the system. The EIA says oil flow through Hormuz averaged 20 million barrels per day in 2024, about 20 percent of global petroleum liquids consumption. Last week, Barclays warned a prolonged closure could cut 13 to 14 million barrels per day from supply, an energy shock large enough to rattle every major market. Seen together, Hormuz and Bab al-Mandab form a dual-chokepoint problem: one controlled by Iranian leverage, the other vulnerable to Iran-backed disruption. That is the strategic nightmare now hanging over the region.
The Houthis’ missile fire at Israel on Saturday should not be read only as a gesture of solidarity. It is also a signal that the Iran war can be exported sideways, through proxies and chokepoints, into the arteries of global trade. The battlefield is no longer only Gaza, Tehran, or the Gulf. It is also the narrow sea lanes where shipping routes, energy flows, and economic confidence can be held hostage by the threat of escalation. That is the deeper meaning of the Houthi move: not just a strike on Israel, but a reminder that the war with Iran may be fought as much through maritime pressure as through missiles.
March 27, 2026
The New Disorder: Energy Insecurity and the Return of Great Power Volatility
By Ephraim Agbo
There is a specific kind of geopolitical vertigo that sets in when you realize the world is no longer moving in a straight line. For the past three decades, the post-Cold War order operated on a relatively predictable axis: the United States was the sole superpower, energy flowed from the Gulf to the West, and conflicts were contained within borders. But as we move through the spring of 2026, that order has not just frayed—it has shattered.
The war between the US-Israel alliance and Iran is no longer a regional conflict. It has become a global pressure cooker, exposing the structural vulnerabilities of nations thousands of miles from the front lines. From the jeepney drivers in to the gas stations in , and from the collapsing infrastructure of to the fractured halls of , the consequences of this war are being felt in the most intimate and destabilizing ways. This is a story not just of bombs and negotiations, but of how a single conflict is rewriting the rules of survival for nations caught in the crossfire.
Part I: The Suffering at the Periphery (The Philippines)
In Manila, the war feels abstract, but the cost is tangible. The , a nation of over 100 million people, imports the vast majority of its oil from the Middle East. It has no strategic petroleum reserves comparable to Japan or South Korea. It does not have the storage capacity to stockpile fuel, nor does it have the diplomatic leverage to secure alternative supply chains overnight.
This is why, thousands of kilometers from the , transport workers are striking. They drive the jeepneys—the iconic, battered minibuses that serve as the lifeblood of Filipino cities. They are the canary in the coal mine for a global energy shock.
The demonstrators aren’t just asking for fuel subsidies; they are demanding a fundamental restructuring of how the country manages its energy economy. The government has resorted to emergency powers and four-day work weeks to conserve electricity, but the protesters point to a deeper truth: in a globalized economy, when the Strait of Hormuz chokes, the developing world bleeds first.
The Philippines is a case study in the fragility of nations that rely on just-in-time energy imports. Without the capacity to store oil or the capital to compete in a bidding war against wealthier nations, Manila is left with a simple, brutal choice: austerity or unrest. The jeepney drivers’ strike is a warning that the inflationary shockwaves from the Middle East are destabilizing governments far beyond the immediate theater of war.
Part II: The Whiplash Diplomacy of a Superpower (Washington)
The uncertainty in Manila is mirrored by the confusion in Washington. The administration of is conducting what can only be described as "whiplash diplomacy." In the span of a single day, the President oscillates between threatening to destroy Iran’s power infrastructure and claiming that peace talks are going swimmingly. Deadlines for military action are extended, then extended again, while 2,500 Marines are deployed from Japan to the Persian Gulf.
This is not traditional statecraft. It is a style of governance that treats foreign policy as a high-stakes negotiation reality show. But the consequences are deadly serious. By claiming that Iran is "desperate to make a deal" while simultaneously deploying an armada, the administration is creating a credibility vacuum. Allies are no longer sure what the United States wants, and adversaries are no longer sure what the United States will do.
The confusion is compounded by the administration’s erratic handling of sanctions. In a move that stunned international observers, the US lifted sanctions on Iranian oil that was already at sea, effectively handing a cash windfall at a moment of peak tension. The signal this sends to the world is dangerous: American sanctions are no longer a reliable tool of coercion. If the United States can unilaterally lift punitive measures on a state it is actively bombing, why would any other nation abide by them? The architecture of economic warfare that Washington has built over the past two decades is collapsing under the weight of its own contradictions.
Part III: The Energy Siege (The Gulf and Europe)
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz—even a partial one—is the single most disruptive event in the global energy market since the 1970s oil crisis. Twenty percent of the world’s petroleum passes through that narrow channel. For liquefied natural gas (LNG), the dependency is even starker; , one of the world’s largest producers, has seen its export capacity slashed due to attacks on its facilities.
Europe is watching with growing dread. Having cut itself off from Russian gas after the invasion of Ukraine, the continent bet heavily on Gulf LNG to fill the gap. That bet has now come due at the worst possible moment. European natural gas prices have spiked dramatically since the conflict began, and storage facilities, depleted by winter, need to be refilled.
The situation exposes a harsh reality: Europe’s energy security is still contingent on the stability of the Middle East. With no alternative pipeline routes and the Strait of Hormuz effectively a war zone, European governments are scrambling. has announced a multibillion-dollar subsidy package. Germany is considering windfall taxes on energy companies. But these are palliative measures. The fundamental problem—a continent reliant on a single, contested maritime chokepoint for its energy—remains unsolved. The war has forced European leaders to confront the fact that their "green transition" has not yet liberated them from the geopolitics of fossil fuels.
Part IV: The Fracturing of NATO (Brussels)
Perhaps the most alarming development is the strain this war is placing on the Western alliance. has publicly endorsed the war, dismissing concerns from European members who view the conflict as a violation of international law. But behind the scenes, the alliance is fracturing.
Donald Trump’s rhetoric—calling allies "cowards" and threatening the future of NATO—has eroded trust. European diplomats are emerging from classified briefings complaining of "shifting explanations" and "unclear military objectives." One Republican congresswoman, , warned that the longer the war continues, the faster it will lose the support of Congress and the American people.
The deeper issue is one of strategic autonomy. For decades, Europe relied on the United States for security. Now, with Washington fully invested in a war in the Middle East and threatening to withdraw from European defense commitments, the continent is facing a moment of reckoning. Military analysts estimate that Europe needs years to achieve meaningful military independence. In the meantime, it is caught in an impossible position: supporting a war it did not start, against a power it has no direct quarrel with, all while its own energy supplies are being choked off.
Part V: The Ghost of the Cold War (Cuba)
And then there is Cuba. The island nation, just 90 miles off the coast of Florida, represents the historical echo of this conflict. For decades, Cuba survived the US embargo through a strategic alliance with , which supplied it with subsidized oil. In return, Cuba provided intelligence, security, and doctors.
That arrangement ended when the US removed Venezuelan leader and demanded an end to the oil transfers. Now, Cuba is facing one of its most severe humanitarian crises in decades. Fuel shortages have led to rolling blackouts, food prices have spiked, and a significant portion of the population has emigrated in recent years.
The Trump administration sees an opportunity. By imposing a de facto naval blockade on fuel shipments to Cuba, it is attempting to strangle the communist regime into submission. The strategy is to replicate what it views as success in Venezuela—regime change through economic asphyxiation.
But Cuba is not Venezuela. The state is more cohesive, and the population has endured hardship before. The question is whether the US strategy is one of liberation or destruction. Choking off fuel supplies to a civilian population is a morally ambiguous and strategically risky approach. It risks creating chaos and violence, not democracy.
Moreover, the spectacle of the United States blockading a small, impoverished island while simultaneously negotiating with its adversaries in the Middle East exposes the selective application of American power. For the Global South, the message is clear: the US is willing to use its military and economic might to enforce its will, but it is no longer predictable, and it is no longer trusted.
Conclusion: A World Without Rules
We are living through the collapse of the post-Cold War consensus. The rules-based international order—flawed as it was—has given way to a world of raw power, brinkmanship, and unintended consequences. The war in the Middle East is not just a conflict between the US, Israel, and Iran; it is a catalyst accelerating pre-existing fractures in the global system.
For the Philippines, it is a fuel crisis. For Europe, it is an energy emergency. For NATO, it is an existential crisis. For Cuba, it is a siege. And for the United States, it is a test of whether a superpower can survive its own volatility.
The streets of Manila, the blackouts in Havana, the closed schools in Germany, and the fractured briefings in Washington are all connected by a single thread: the Strait of Hormuz. Until that chokepoint is opened—and until the wider conflict is resolved—the world will remain in a state of suspended instability, waiting to see whether the old order can be repaired or whether something far more dangerous is taking shape.
One thing is certain: the era of cheap energy and predictable geopolitics is over. What comes next will be defined by how nations adapt to a world where supply chains are weapons, alliances are transactional, and survival is no longer guaranteed.
March 26, 2026
“Negotiating or Escalating? Inside the Dangerous Illusion Driving the U.S.–Iran War”
By Ephraim Agbo
For the past week, a strange dissonance has hung over the Middle East. From Washington and Tel Aviv to Tehran and the Gulf capitals, the war between the United States and Iran has entered a phase where the loudest noises are not missiles but words—and yet those words seem to describe entirely different realities. President Trump insists peace talks are “already underway” and “starting to bear fruit.” Iran’s military command counters that the Americans are “negotiating with themselves.” Israeli officials call a reported 15-point American peace plan “beautiful on paper” but immediately add that it will never work. And behind the curtain of public statements, the United States is quietly reinforcing its military presence in the region, sending thousands of additional ground troops while denying it is seeking a wider war.
What is unfolding is not merely a war of narratives. It is a fundamental clash of strategic worldviews, each side convinced that time is on its side, each maneuvering to shape the conditions under which this conflict—the most direct American-Iranian confrontation in decades—might eventually end. To understand the depth of the impasse, one must look beyond the headlines and examine the forces that have brought both nations to this moment, and the reasons neither seems willing to blink.
The Battle Over Who Is Negotiating
The most immediate puzzle is the contradictory claim about talks. President Trump, speaking at a Republican fundraising event in Washington, insisted that Iran was at the table: “They are negotiating, by the way—and they want to make a deal so badly. But they’re afraid to say it, because if they say it, they’d be killed by their own people.” Hours later, Iran’s foreign ministry issued a flat denial, stating that no direct negotiations had taken place and that the war would end only on “Iran’s terms.”
This is not simply a matter of he-said, she-said. The disagreement points to a deeper reality: if talks are happening, they are almost certainly indirect, conducted through third parties such as Pakistan or Oman, and kept deliberately opaque. For Iran, acknowledging direct negotiations would be a political liability at home, where the supreme leader’s office has long framed resistance to the United States as a matter of revolutionary principle. For the Trump administration, claiming progress on talks serves multiple purposes: it signals to domestic audiences that a diplomatic exit is possible, pressures Tehran by suggesting it is already engaged, and—perhaps most importantly—provides cover for a military buildup that might otherwise appear purely escalatory.
But the gap between the two narratives is more than tactical spin. It reflects a fundamental difference in how each side views the other’s leverage.
Iran’s Calculus: Geography as the Ultimate Weapon
When the war began on February 28, 2026, the conventional wisdom in Washington and Jerusalem was that Iran would quickly collapse under the weight of coordinated strikes. The first day of hostilities seemed to confirm that expectation: Israel reportedly eliminated key Iranian leaders including the supreme leader, and the country’s air defense network appeared to crumble. Yet nearly a month later, the Islamic Republic is still standing—and in some ways, it is in a stronger negotiating position than it was before the fighting started.
The reason lies not in advanced weaponry but in geography. Iran sits astride the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which roughly 20 percent of the world’s oil passes. For decades, Tehran threatened to close the strait in times of crisis, but it never fully exercised that option. Now, with the war underway, Iran has demonstrated a new capability: using asymmetrical tactics, it has effectively asserted control over the strait, forcing oil tankers to navigate with Iranian permission or risk attack.
“Iran feels it’s in a pretty strong position,” a regional security expert noted this week. “They’ve lost a lot of hardware and a lot of people, but they’ve got their fingers around the throat of the global economy.” That leverage is particularly acute in an American election year, when spikes in fuel prices can shape political outcomes. For the Trump administration, the Strait of Hormuz has become a strategic vulnerability that Tehran is exploiting with precision.
It is this leverage that explains the defiant tone coming from Tehran. A senior Iranian military officer, speaking on state television, declared: “What you used to call strategic power has now turned into a strategic failure. The one claiming to be a global superpower will only be gotten out of business if it can dress up your defeat as an agreement.” The message was unmistakable: Iran believes it can withstand American pressure indefinitely, and it is in no mood to make concessions.
The 15-Point Plan: A Deal Iran Cannot Accept?
Into this volatile mix has come the reported 15-point peace plan, allegedly drafted by the United States and transmitted to Tehran through Pakistani intermediaries. According to leaked details, the plan demands the complete dismantling of Iran’s nuclear program, the elimination of its ballistic missile arsenal, and the removal of all enriched uranium from the country. In return, the United States would lift economic sanctions and provide some form of security guarantee.
For Iran, these terms are almost certainly unacceptable. They amount to the unilateral disarmament of the country’s primary deterrent capabilities, leaving it vulnerable to future attacks. Iran’s counter-demands, according to regional diplomats, are equally sweeping: they include reparations for wartime damage, binding guarantees against future US or Israeli strikes, and—most controversially—a formal role for Iran in managing the Strait of Hormuz. That last demand would effectively codify Iran’s newfound control over global energy flows, a shift that Gulf Arab states and their American allies have long resisted.
Israel’s Economy Minister, Nir Barkat, offered a blunt assessment in an interview this week. Calling the plan “beautiful on paper,” he immediately added: “It’s an ideology—it is an Islamic ideology. It’s not going to change. The motivation is not changing.” Barkat’s comments reflected a deep skepticism within the Israeli government that any deal with the current Iranian regime could be trusted. “They want to destroy the state of Israel first, and then next in line are maybe the Americans,” he said. “Unfortunately, I don’t believe it’s going to change.”
Yet even as he dismissed the prospect of a deal, Barkat acknowledged the dilemma facing Washington: “So how do you decide between taking the deal—with the outline that we’re describing—or pressuring off? Because we’re not going to stop until we accomplish the goals.” The implicit admission was that the Trump administration is pursuing diplomacy not because it believes Iran will agree, but because it needs to be seen as exhausting all options before turning more decisively to military force.
The Military Calculus: Options, Risks, and Political Constraints
That military force is already being assembled. The Pentagon has reportedly deployed thousands of additional ground troops to the region, joining naval assets that have been operating in and around the Gulf for months. The official explanation is that the troops are there for “force protection,” but the scale of the deployment suggests preparations for a more offensive posture.
Military analysts have outlined several possible scenarios for further American action. One would involve striking Iran’s main oil-export terminal in the northern Gulf, effectively strangling Tehran’s revenue and crippling its economy. Another would target islands near the Strait of Hormuz—Qeshm or Kish—to establish a permanent American presence at the waterway’s mouth, enabling Washington to control shipping directly. A third, more indirect approach would focus on the Bab el-Mandeb Strait at the southern end of the Red Sea, where Iranian-backed Houthi forces have been threatening commercial vessels. By deploying assets there, the United States could cut off one of Iran’s key asymmetric levers.
But each of these options carries significant political costs. Following classified briefings on Capitol Hill this week, several lawmakers expressed frustration with what they described as shifting explanations and unclear military objectives. “The longer this war continues, the faster it will lose the support of Congress and the American people,” one Republican congresswoman wrote on social media—a striking admission from a member of the president’s own party. The war’s cost, both in treasure and in political capital, is beginning to weigh on the administration.
For the Pentagon, the central challenge is that Iran has proven far more resilient than anticipated. Despite losing substantial military hardware and suffering heavy casualties, the regime has not cracked. Instead, it has absorbed the blows and adapted its tactics, relying on the strategic depth provided by its geography and the diffuse nature of its proxy network. A military solution—if one exists at all—would likely require a protracted campaign that could draw the United States into a wider regional war.
Regional Repercussions: The Gulf on Edge
Nowhere are the tensions more palpable than in the Gulf states themselves. The United Arab Emirates has been on the front line of Iran’s retaliation, receiving more than 2,100 missiles and drones since the war began. This week, falling debris from an intercepted missile in Abu Dhabi killed two people and injured three. The UAE’s air defense systems have performed remarkably well, intercepting the vast majority of incoming projectiles, but the constant threat has strained the country’s security posture and tested its residents’ nerves.
The UAE has imposed strict information controls, making it illegal to photograph or film any damage or interceptions—a measure designed to prevent panic and deny Iran propaganda victories. But the reality is that the Gulf is now a war zone, and no amount of censorship can change that. Across the region, governments are bracing for what comes next, unsure whether the coming weeks will bring a diplomatic breakthrough or a further escalation.
The Global Ripple Effect: Oil, Inflation, and Protests
The war’s effects are not confined to the Middle East. In the Philippines, a country thousands of miles from the Strait of Hormuz, transport workers launched a nationwide two-day strike this week, protesting surging fuel prices. The Philippines imports the vast majority of its oil from the Gulf and lacks the strategic reserves to cushion supply disruptions. For drivers of jeepneys—the iconic minibuses that serve as the backbone of public transport—the war has made their livelihoods unsustainable.
“They’re really suffering from the higher cost of fuel, and they say they’re not getting enough government support,” a journalist covering the protests explained. The government has introduced fuel subsidies and free bus rides, but demonstrators are demanding deeper intervention, including fuel tax cuts and price regulation in a market they say is dangerously unregulated. The protests are a reminder that the war in the Gulf is, at its core, an energy war—and that its consequences reach into the daily lives of people who have no stake in the conflict except the price they pay at the pump.
What Comes Next: The Limits of Leverage
As the week draws to a close, the picture remains one of profound ambiguity. President Trump continues to project optimism, telling supporters that Iran is “desperate” for a deal. Iran’s leaders, by contrast, have signaled that they will end the war only “at a time of their own choosing, only if their own conditions are met.” In the Gulf, residents brace for the next barrage of missiles—or the next round of diplomacy, whichever comes first.
What is clear is that the window for a negotiated settlement, however narrow, is still open. The 15-point plan represents the most concrete proposal to emerge since the war began, and its existence—even if unconfirmed—suggests that behind the public bluster, channels of communication remain active. But the gap between what Washington demands and what Tehran is willing to concede remains vast, perhaps unbridgeable given the current dynamics.
For Iran, the central challenge is how to translate its geographic leverage into a sustainable diplomatic victory without provoking an American military response that could overwhelm its defenses. For the United States, the challenge is how to reconcile its stated goal of eliminating Iran’s nuclear and missile programs with the political and military costs of pursuing that goal by force. And for Israel, the challenge is how to ensure that any deal—if one is reached—does not simply defer the confrontation to a later date, leaving its existential vulnerabilities intact.
In the meantime, the war grinds on, its end nowhere in sight. And in the capitals of Washington, Tehran, and Jerusalem, the ghosts of past failed negotiations hover over every new initiative. The JCPOA, the nuclear deal that once seemed to hold such promise, collapsed under the weight of mutual mistrust. The lessons of that failure are etched into the minds of leaders on all sides: that a deal on paper is not the same as peace on the ground, and that without a fundamental shift in how each side perceives the other, even the most beautiful plan will remain just that—a plan, never realized.
March 22, 2026
⏰ DEADLINE: MONDAY, 7:44 PM ET — WILL TRUMP BLINK?
March 21, 2026
Why Trump Is Talking Exit While Expanding War: The Contradictions Driving a Dangerous Middle East Endgame
Faith or Power? How a 1,400-Year-Old Dispute Became the Middle East’s Most Explosive Fault Line
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