Middle East: Risk of Imminent US Strike on Iran
In recent days, tensions between the United States and Iran have escalated, with the US increasing military presence and Iran demonstrating its strength in the Strait of Hormuz. Military options include targeted strikes, broader air campaigns, and regime destabilization scenarios
Crisis Acceleration and Converging Signals – Over the past 48 hours, the US-Iran crisis has accelerated significantly. Contributing factors include a high-level meeting at the White House with Donald Trump, the rapid deployment of US military assets in the region, and Iranian demonstrations of force in the Strait of Hormuz. The possibility of a “short-term” strike is no longer rhetorical but an operational option on the table.
Available information indicates that the White House is evaluating military options while keeping diplomatic channels open. The administration is awaiting a written proposal from Iran following talks in Geneva, noting limited progress and remaining gaps. Meanwhile, the military buildup is expected to be fully deployed in the near term to make the threat credible.
Red Lines and Military Pressure
Four main factors drive the crisis toward escalation:
- Incompatible Red Lines: Washington pursues ambitious objectives, including eliminating Iran’s nuclear program and halting ballistic missiles. Tehran publicly asserts its right to enrichment and considers its missile program essential for national deterrence.
- Military Pressure as Negotiation Tool: The US military buildup increases the credibility of the “deal or strike” alternative but also raises the risk of incidents, unplanned escalation, and proxy attacks.
- Hormuz as an Iranian Deterrent: Exercises and temporary closures in the Strait serve to show Iran can raise the systemic cost of the crisis, affecting market premiums and risk perception, even without fully blocking maritime traffic.
Israel Factor: Netanyahu supports ambitious objectives targeting missiles, infrastructure, and proxies. Strategic alignment with Washington increases pressure on Tehran.
Military Options
Limited Strike on Nuclear Infrastructure: Targeting sites such as Natanz, Fordow, and Isfahan with bunker-buster bombs aims to reduce nuclear capabilities and retaliatory potential. Operational challenges include redundancies, underground facilities, and material dispersion.
Broader Air Campaign: Targeting air defenses, missiles, and command-and-control assets to weaken Iran’s retaliatory capability. This campaign could last weeks and heightens the risk of escalation against US bases and allies.
Regime Decapitation and Destabilization: The riskiest scenario involves command fragmentation, potential closure of Hormuz, attacks on regional energy infrastructure, and a full-scale regional conflict.
Iranian Response and Regional Risks
Iran’s strategy is asymmetric, aiming to multiply fronts:
- Direct attacks with missiles and drones on regional bases, including US assets.
- Mobilization of proxies across Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, and Yemen.
- Disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, affecting global energy flows.
- Cyberattacks on critical infrastructure: energy, finance, and logistics.
Gulf monarchies remain vulnerable due to dependence on electricity and desalinated water. Any strike could affect civilian infrastructure, adding political leverage for Tehran.
Market Impact and Diplomatic Window
Markets and European public opinion are closely monitoring developments: a prolonged conflict could sharply affect oil prices. Evacuation warnings from some European capitals indicate assessments of rapid escalation.
The diplomatic window remains open, awaiting an Iranian proposal that could allow a temporary freeze or technical compromise.
Realistic Scenarios
- Tactical De-escalation: Continuation of talks and military pressure without strike.
- Limited Strike and Contained Response: Targeted strikes with calibrated retaliations; high tension but no full regional war.
- Regional Escalation: Broader attacks or perceived “regime change,” multi-domain Iranian response, Strait of Hormuz leveraged, potential involvement of multiple countries.
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(Source and photo: © AndKronos)
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