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!
March 09, 2026
How the Iran War Could Create Africa’s Energy Winners — and Its Biggest Casualties
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.
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
We Are Always Paying the Price": Day Six of the War Reshaping the Middle East
By Ephraim Agbo
For six days, the skies over the Middle East have burned. What began as a coordinated American-Israeli campaign against Iran has spiraled into a multi-front conflagration that now engulfs Tehran, Beirut, and the strategic waters of the Persian Gulf.
As dawn broke on Thursday, columns of smoke towered over the Iranian capital following what Israeli officials described as over 100 jets dropping 250 bombs on military infrastructure. The Islamic Republic, already crippled by years of sanctions and internal dissent, is now fighting for its survival.
But six days into this war, the question being asked from Washington to Riyadh to London is no longer simply "who is winning."
It is:
How did we get here — and where is this leading?
The Two-Front War
In Jerusalem, the city remains on edge. Air raid sirens wailed between three and four in the morning as Iranian missiles rained down.
By daybreak, the Israeli military was claiming significant successes, announcing a decline in incoming rocket fire due to successful strikes on Iranian missile stores. Military officials detailed the destruction of another ballistic missile launcher in an Iranian city overnight.
Yet even as Israel signaled it might ease public restrictions—a move officials attributed to the degradation of Iranian launch capabilities—the northern front erupted.
Israeli forces have now crossed the border into Lebanon in multiple areas, according to UN peacekeepers.
The Israeli military has issued evacuation warnings to hundreds of thousands of civilians in southern Lebanon, the heartland of Hezbollah, anticipating a deeper incursion.
In Beirut, explosions echoed across the city, not just in the southern suburbs long considered a Hezbollah stronghold.
Lebanese state media reported that an Israeli strike had killed a senior official of Hamas—the first such targeted killing in Lebanon since this latest escalation began.
The Lebanese health ministry confirmed at least three dead from strikes on vehicles overnight.
The Human Tide
On the roads leading north from the border, the human cost of this strategy is becoming visible.
Rana Hammoud, a mother fleeing southern Lebanon for the second time in three years, described a desperate scene.
"It was a disaster at the traffic. We stayed 10 hours on the road. We slept in the car on the street for one night with my three children and the cat."
She said this from her temporary refuge further north.
The evacuation orders covered approximately 60 villages and towns.
But for those fleeing, arrival does not mean safety.
Hammoud spoke of a new and bitter reality: landlords in the north, suspicious of anyone from the south, are refusing to rent to displaced families, conflating their origins with support for Hezbollah.
"You need to prove that, 'No, I'm against war. I do not want this to happen.' For a house—a bedroom, a living room, and a kitchen—fifteen thousand dollars, and we need to pay one year in advance."
She continued:
"I prefer to leave the country. This is too much for us. We did not ask for this. We never want this. But it's always happening to us. We are always paying the price."
Iran's Conflicted Soul
Inside Iran, the picture is equally complex.
Over six days, Iranian officials claim more than 1,000 civilians have been killed and over 170 cities hit by US and Israeli strikes.
Tehran witnessed some of the largest explosions of the campaign overnight.
But the Iranian response to the war is not monolithic.
Many Iranians harbor deep resentment toward a regime that, according to figures cited by Western leaders, killed thousands of its own citizens during recent protest crackdowns.
Yet the experience of being bombed by foreign powers is generating its own complicated emotions.
"It is a very conflicting feeling for so many people."
"Many people are really hating the regime. But at the same time, when they are seeing civilians being killed, and every single day there is a bombing, definitely many people are worried."
The economic reality is compounding the misery.
Iran, already under severe pressure from sanctions, is watching its crippled economy buckle further.
Basic supplies are becoming scarce, and the cost of living—always a tinderbox for unrest—is soaring.
Washington's War, America's Divide
Three thousand miles away, in the corridors of Washington, the war is being fought with words and votes.
The Senate on Wednesday approved a resolution supporting President Trump's military campaign, rejecting along party lines a Democratic measure that would have required congressional authorization for further hostilities.
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham framed the conflict in stark terms.
"President Trump, after a sincere effort to bring this conflict to a peaceful conclusion, concluded that to continue to allow this regime to move forward would put America at unacceptable risk. And he was right."
The administration's framing—"laser-focused" strikes using massive air power rather than ground troops—has resonated with Republicans eager to avoid another "forever war."
Senators like Tom Cotton argue that the Iranian regime is on the verge of collapse and that overwhelming force is necessary to prevent Tehran from acquiring a nuclear weapon.
Democrats see a different reality.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Senator Tim Kaine have branded the operation an "unconstitutional war", expressing alarm that there appears to be no clear exit strategy.
Their fear is that the US is being drawn into a regional quagmire without a plan for extraction.
Some centrist voices, however, have broken ranks.
Senator John Fetterman, who voted with Republicans, argued that the killing of Iran's supreme leader represents a net positive for America and the world—a sign that even within the opposition, there is acknowledgment of the strategic shift the strikes represent.
The Borderlands
At Turkey's Kapikoy border crossing, the war is measured not in missiles but in footsteps.
The journey from Van through jagged, snow-covered mountains leads to a peephole into a nation under siege.
Where the Iranian flag once flew, a black flag of mourning now hangs, in official acknowledgement of the death of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Traffic flows both ways.
Some Iranians, suitcases in hand, are heading home—perhaps to check on families or join the defense.
Others are fleeing, desperate to escape the bombs.
One man from Mashhad described the chaos.
"The situation is very bad. We can't contact our family somewhere else in the world. And also by telephone, we couldn't reach somebody."
The fear among those crossing is palpable.
Many refuse to be named or recorded, terrified of reprisals against relatives still inside Iran.
When pressed for opinions on US and Israeli tactics, they are reluctant to speak.
But one older man, visibly angry and exhausted, turned and said simply:
"They cannot beat Iran."
He meant it.
Another young evacuee spoke of the human cost.
"Just young people dying. They just tell us from airstrikes, this idea."
The Regional Reckoning
This war is not occurring in a vacuum.
It is the latest—and most violent—expression of a Middle East that has been reshaping itself for years.
The Abraham Accords, the realignment of Gulf states, the weakening of Iran's proxy network, and the internal fractures within the Islamic Republic have all been building toward this moment.
For the Gulf states, the conflict presents an acute dilemma.
Countries like the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar have spent the last decade positioning themselves as stable hubs for global finance, tourism, and technology.
They have diversified away from oil, attracted Western expats, and built gleaming cities on the promise of safety and openness.
That promise is now being tested.
Flights have been rerouted.
Investors are reassessing risk.
The carefully cultivated image of an oasis of calm in a turbulent region is colliding with the reality of ballistic missiles flying overhead.
Yet for the ordinary people of the region—
the Lebanese mother fleeing north,
the Iranian family huddled in a Tehran basement,
the Israeli citizen dashing to a shelter at 3 a.m.—
the strategic calculations of Washington and Tehran matter less than the simple, desperate question:
When will this end?
Six days in, no one has an answer.
And as the bombs continue to fall and the refugees continue to flee, one truth becomes increasingly clear:
In the Middle East, the price of war is always paid by those who never asked for it.
March 04, 2026
The World’s Most Dangerous Waterway Just Got Hotter — And Food Prices Could Be Next
By Ephraim Agbo
In the labyrinthine calculus of global power, there are chokepoints where geography becomes destiny. The Strait of Hormuz is one such place—a slender, 21-mile-wide passage that separates the Persian Gulf from the open ocean. It is through this corridor that nearly a quarter of the world's daily oil supply must pass. And this week, as Iranian-backed militias exchange fire with U.S. forces and Israel expands its operations in Lebanon, the strait has become the epicenter of a new and potentially devastating phase of the Middle East conflict.
When President Donald Trump announced in the last 48 hours that the U.S. Navy would begin escorting commercial tankers through these contested waters, it was not merely a military statement. It was an admission that the war with Iran—its proxies, its reach, its retaliatory capacity—has now fully breached the shores of the global economy.
THE ESCORT DOCTRINE: SYMBOLISM VS. REALITY
On paper, the offer is straightforward: political risk insurance and naval escorts for energy tankers traversing the strait. In practice, as maritime security experts are quick to note, it is a pledge drowning in ambiguity.
"This is not yet actionable intelligence," says Callum McGarry, director for maritime security at Control Risks. "What the shipping industry needs is not a broad promise, but a protocol. Will tankers receive individual escorts? Will they be required to assemble into convoys? Given the volume of traffic in the strait, the latter is the only logistical possibility. But that also creates predictable patterns—patterns that are vulnerable."
The vulnerability is not theoretical. In recent days, Iranian naval assets have been degraded by U.S. strikes, but the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has long practiced asymmetric warfare in these waters. Small, fast boats. Naval mines. Anti-ship missiles. And perhaps most effectively, the threat of insurance nullification.
Indeed, the insurance dimension may prove more immediately disruptive than any physical attack. Maritime insurers have already signaled that as of March 5, standard war risk policies will lapse for vessels entering the zone. The president's offer of federal insurance guarantees is an attempt to fill that void. But as McGarry notes, until those guarantees are codified into binding contracts with clear terms, the industry will remain in a holding pattern.
THE PRICE AT THE PUMP: DOMESTIC POLITICS MEETS GLOBAL CRISIS
For the average American, the Strait of Hormuz is a distant abstraction.
The price of gasoline is not.
U.S. petrol prices have just recorded their largest single-day spike since March 2022. With midterm elections looming, the political calculus is unforgiving. Trump's move is as much about Main Street as it is about the Persian Gulf.
Jennifer Snyder, a financial advisor at Brighton Securities in Rochester, New York, frames it as a classic trade-off. "It's short-term pain for long-term gain," she says. "The president is signaling action, and that matters for market confidence. But what markets really hate is uncertainty. We don't know how long this will last, and we don't know the details of the plan. That lack of clarity is shaking traders."
Oil futures reacted tepidly to the announcement, rising to $87 a barrel before settling back. The muted response reflects a deeper skepticism: markets have seen this movie before. They know that military escorts do not eliminate risk; they concentrate it. And they know that the strategic petroleum reserve—the emergency stockpile designed to cushion such shocks—remains untouched.
BEYOND OIL: THE FERTILIZER EQUATION
But the crisis is not merely about oil. It is about what oil makes possible—and what happens when the chain breaks.
Svein Tore Holsether, CEO of Yara, the world's second-largest fertilizer company, offers a chilling downstream analysis. "Twenty percent of global ammonia trade goes through the Strait of Hormuz," he notes. "For urea, a key nitrogen fertilizer, it's 14 percent. If that flow is disrupted, it doesn't just affect energy markets. It affects food production."
Fertilizer production is also energy-intensive. Natural gas is the primary input. So even if fertilizer itself continues to move, the cost of producing it rises with gas prices. The result is a double hit: higher input costs and constrained supply, both of which ripple outward into global food prices.
This is the hidden architecture of modern economic warfare. The strait is not just an oil chokepoint; it is a nutrient artery. Block it, and the effects cascade from industrial farms in the American Midwest to subsistence plots in sub-Saharan Africa.
THE LEBANON FRONT: A SECOND CRISIS UNFOLDS
As the world watches the strait, another crisis is metastasizing along Israel's northern border.
Israeli airstrikes have intensified on Beirut's southern suburbs, a Hezbollah stronghold. Simultaneously, ground incursions are reportedly underway in southern Lebanon, where Israeli forces have ordered residents of more than 30 villages to evacuate. The displaced are flooding north, their stories a grim echo of previous conflicts.
"We've been on the road for seven hours," one fleeing resident tells reporters. "In this country, we live only for suffering."
The Lebanese government, already crippled by economic collapse, is struggling to respond. Schools have been opened as shelters, but capacity is grossly inadequate. And in a stunning political development, the government of Prime Minister Nawaf Salam has formally banned Hezbollah's military activities—a decision that would have been unthinkable just months ago.
Diana Menhem, a Lebanese economist and political reform activist, describes the move as seismic. "No state in the world would accept a militia operating outside its control," she says. "Hezbollah has been responding to Iran, not Lebanon. Yesterday's decision is one step further toward reclaiming sovereignty. But the real test is implementation."
Hours after the ban was announced, Lebanese media reported that a dozen Hezbollah members had been detained by the Lebanese Armed Forces. Whether this marks the beginning of the group's dismantling or a prelude to internal conflict remains to be seen.
THE BROADER VIEW: STAGFLATION AND SYSTEMIC FRAGILITY
If there is a through-line connecting these disparate events, it is the fragility of a globalized economy that has spent decades optimizing for efficiency at the expense of resilience.
Mohamed El-Erian, the renowned economist and Allianz advisor, sees the current moment as a stress test the world is failing. "The global economy has been incredibly robust, absorbing one shock after another," he observes. "But that resilience has come at a cost. Financial buffers are depleted. Human resilience is worn down. And what's true for the aggregate is not true for every country."
El-Erian points to the return of stagflationary pressures—rising inflation coupled with slowing growth—as the worst possible environment for policymakers. "It takes away the effectiveness of your tools," he explains. "Monetary policy becomes a blunt instrument. Fiscal space is limited. And bond yields are rising even as people seek safe havens, because the market is pricing in inflationary risk."
Even a short conflict, he warns, will add to affordability pressures that are already reshaping politics in the United States and Europe. And if the conflict persists, the migration toward "just in case" supply chains—already underway since COVID—will accelerate, embedding higher costs into the global economy for years to come.
THE AI DIMENSION: A SEPARATE BUT PARALLEL WAR
In a curious subplot, the crisis in the Gulf has intersected with another front in the battle for technological supremacy: artificial intelligence.
OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, has found itself embroiled in controversy after announcing a deal with the U.S. Department of Defense. The original agreement, which would have allowed Pentagon access to OpenAI's tools for classified operations, triggered a consumer backlash and a wave of uninstallations. CEO Sam Altman has now walked back the deal, calling it "opportunistic and sloppy."
The episode underscores a broader tension: as AI becomes integral to national security, the companies that develop it are being forced to choose between commercial viability and ethical red lines. Rival firm Anthropic recently walked away from similar Pentagon negotiations over concerns about mass surveillance and autonomous targeting. The Pentagon, for its part, is making clear it will not be denied access to cutting-edge technology.
CONCLUSION: THE FOG OF WAR, THE CERTAINTY OF COST
What remains clear amid the fog is this: the Strait of Hormuz is no longer just a maritime passage. It is a pressure point where military strategy, energy security, domestic politics, and global food systems converge.
The next 24 to 48 hours will be critical. Will Iran test the U.S. Navy's escort pledge? Will insurers accept federal guarantees? Will the flow of fertilizer and fuel resume, or will the strait become a prolonged bottleneck?
For now, the only certainty is cost.
Higher insurance premiums.
Higher energy prices.
Higher food bills.
And a world order that, once again, is learning that stability is not a given—it is something that must be defended, at a price, in waters far from home.
THE NEW MIDDLE EAST WAR: FIVE DAYS IN, NO END IN SIGHT
By Ephraim Agbo
In the first week of America’s coordinated military campaign with Israel against Iran, the Middle East has been plunged into one of its most volatile crises in decades. Reports indicate nearly 2,000 US strikes targeting Iranian infrastructure, Israeli operations in Lebanon, and retaliatory Iranian missile fire reaching Israel, US bases in Qatar, and neighboring nations. What began as a limited retaliation has quickly escalated into a multifront confrontation whose ultimate trajectory remains unclear.
The scale of the operation is staggering. US Central Command claims to have hit 2,000 targets and neutralized 17 Iranian naval vessels. Israel has carried out airstrikes on Hezbollah positions in Lebanon, including key command sites. Iranian responses, while less technologically advanced, remain resilient, reflecting Tehran’s intent to impose costs on its adversaries rather than pursue direct military victory.
Even with overwhelming firepower, the defining feature of this conflict is profound uncertainty about what comes next.
THE ISRAELI CALCULATION: A WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY
From Jerusalem’s perspective, timing is strategic. Flair Hassan, described as a special envoy for the Israeli Foreign Ministry, frames the operation as a response to escalating threats. “Hezbollah fired 50 rockets into Israeli communities recently,” he said. “Israel will no longer tolerate such attacks.”
Hassan references the October 7 Hamas attack, when northern Israel evacuated 70,000 people. “The Israel of today is fundamentally changed,” he said. “This is a very different Israel from before.”
Israeli strategists hope to dismantle long-standing threats. Hezbollah, supported financially and militarily by Tehran, has operated with relative impunity for decades. Lebanon’s recent legal actions against the group suggest shifting dynamics that Israel aims to leverage.
On Iran, Hassan speaks in sweeping terms: he frames the regime as a major threat to regional and global stability, and emphasizes priorities like neutralizing nuclear ambitions and ballistic missile capabilities. Some of his statements, such as claims about Iranian popular support for regime change, are presented as his interpretation rather than verified fact.
THE LEBANESE NIGHTMARE: CIVILIANS CAUGHT BETWEEN TWO FIRES
On the ground in Lebanon, civilians are facing renewed displacement and fear. Residential airstrikes have forced thousands into shelters, while others sleep in cars or attempt to flee without clear safety routes.
For Lebanon’s Shiite community, this is a second wave of displacement within a year, compounding unresolved devastation from the 2024 conflict. Public sentiment is divided: some call for resistance, others caution that further escalation is a suicidal choice for a fragile nation.
Lebanese authorities face limited capacity to control Hezbollah’s actions. While some arrests have been reported, decades of entrenchment make quick solutions unlikely. The humanitarian toll is acute, especially as the conflict coincides with Ramadan.
THE NUCLEAR QUESTION: PRETEXT OR REAL THREAT?
The conflict has been partly framed around Iran’s nuclear ambitions. US officials describe the campaign as necessary to prevent Tehran from developing atomic weapons. Yet experts offer more measured assessments. Arash Ahmadi, advisor to the International Atomic Energy Agency, notes that Iran’s capacity to produce nuclear weapons has been significantly degraded and may not be as imminent a threat as portrayed.
“If the nuclear threat is less immediate than suggested, the rationale for escalation becomes more complex,” Ahmadi explains. Iran’s strategy, he argues, has historically focused on imposing costs on adversaries rather than achieving outright military victory.
THE AMERICAN POLITICAL DILEMMA: PROMISES VS. REALITY
In Washington, the Trump administration confronts a political paradox. Campaigning on ending “forever wars,” the US now oversees major military escalation. Polls show roughly 60% of Americans disapprove of strikes, though Republican support remains relatively high among party loyalists.
Observers note tensions within the MAGA base, reflecting frustration at what some perceive as a break from Trump’s anti-war promises. Conflicting statements on endgame strategies—ranging from hopes of popular uprising in Iran to negotiated settlements—have further muddied public understanding.
GLOBAL FALLOUT: MARKETS, ALLIANCES, AND UNCERTAINTY
The conflict’s ripple effects extend beyond the Middle East. Asian markets have plunged amid fears of disrupted Gulf oil exports. President Trump’s announcement of US Navy escorts through the Straits of Hormuz has reassured some, but analysts warn that practical impacts remain limited.
Relations with European allies are strained. Criticism of UK, Spanish, and German positions has fueled concern that Middle East tensions could distract from European security priorities, including ongoing support for Ukraine.
REGIONAL REPERCUSSIONS: A FRAGILE FUTURE
As the conflict enters its second week, the Middle East faces multiple uncertainties. Optimists point to potential internal change in Iran and the emergence of transitional leadership figures. Skeptics warn that the region may experience widespread disruption, prolonged refugee flows, and intensified violence, particularly if insurgency efforts expand beyond Iran.
Lebanon faces continued suffering. Gulf states must navigate diplomatic dilemmas. Europe confronts potential distraction from Ukraine. And for the US, engagement without clear objectives risks repeating the challenges of past interventions.
WHAT COMES NEXT?
Military analysts expect strikes to continue for days or weeks. Past patterns suggest cycles of intense violence followed by uneasy truces, leaving civilians permanently affected. The nuclear issue persists, even if Iran’s current capabilities are reduced, while political consequences for all parties remain highly uncertain.
At this early stage, uncertainty dominates, civilian suffering continues, and questions about endgame strategy remain unanswered.
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