History will likely records this moment with a familiar tone of irony. A war framed as “security.” A campaign packaged as “deterrence.” A trillion-dollar spectacle sold as “stability.” And yet—here we are—watching the global economy fracture along the fault lines of a conflict that was never geographically global… but has become economically universal. 1. The Strait That Controls the World Let’s begin with the inconvenient geography no press conference can spin away: the Strait of Hormuz . Around 20–25% of the world’s oil supply flows through this narrow corridor Nearly 20% of global LNG (natural gas) also passes through it And roughly 80% of that oil is destined for Asia Now pause. This is not just a regional chokepoint. This is the artery of modern civilization. And today? Ship traffic has collapsed from 100+ vessels per day to barely a dozen Oil prices have surged toward $100–115 per barrel So yes—this war may be “about Iran.” But economically? It is about everyo...
By the tone and analytical spirit of Amos Harel. Two days after the ceasefire in the Israel-Iran War 2026 took hold, the outlines of the campaign are only now coming into focus. Not on the battlefield—where the dust has barely settled—but in the more elusive arena where wars are ultimately judged: interpretation. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has already moved on to the next phase. It is not a military operation. It is a narrative one. And it may prove just as consequential. The War That Changed Its Goals Wars typically begin with declarative objectives. They end with revised ones. In the early days of confrontation with Iran—under the parallel leadership of Donald Trump—the expectations, though not always formally articulated, were unmistakable: a decisive blow to Iranian capabilities, a restoration of deterrence, perhaps even a reconfiguration of the regional balance. None of that clearly materialized. Instead, what we are witnessing now is a f...