US strikes 300 targets in Iran, Strait of Hormuz closed
The U.S. launched an intense bombing campaign in Iran, striking over 300 military and civilian targets in a week, raising fears of renewed war. The Strait of Hormuz was temporarily closed due to strik
The United States has launched its most intense bombing campaign in Iran in months, striking more than 300 military and civilian targets across 10 pro
Read Full Story at Al Jazeera →Why This Matters
The U.S. strikes on Iran represent a dangerous escalation in a region already strained by proxy conflicts and proxy warfare, where miscalculation could spiral into a direct confrontation. With global oil markets sensitive to disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz—a chokepoint for nearly a fifth of the world’s oil supply—the economic ripple effects could destabilize energy markets and fuel inflationary pressures worldwide.
Background Context
Iran’s military posture has evolved since the 2020 Soleimani strike, integrating asymmetric tactics through allied militias across the Middle East while maintaining a conventional deterrent. The U.S. has historically targeted Iranian proxies but avoided direct strikes on Iranian soil, a restraint now seemingly abandoned—a shift that signals a more confrontational phase in bilateral relations.
What Happens Next
Expect retaliatory strikes from Iran, either through proxies like Hezbollah or direct asymmetric attacks on U.S. assets in the region. Diplomatic channels will likely remain frozen as both sides harden their positions, while regional powers like Saudi Arabia and the UAE face pressure to mediate—or risk being drawn deeper into a widening conflict.
Bigger Picture
This escalation fits a pattern of waning U.S. strategic patience in the Middle East, where direct intervention is increasingly favored over proxy warfare. As Iran’s nuclear program advances and regional alliances fragment, the risk of a broader conflict grows—not as a deliberate choice, but as an unintended consequence of escalatory tit-for-tat strikes.


