Iran Conflict Enters Economic War as 20% of Global Oil Flows Through Hormuz
Updated
Updated · The Jerusalem Post · May 28
Iran Conflict Enters Economic War as 20% of Global Oil Flows Through Hormuz
3 articles · Updated · The Jerusalem Post · May 28
Almost no shots have been fired since the Iran ceasefire, but the confrontation has shifted into economic, psychological and strategic warfare centered on market disruption.
Roughly 20% of global oil consumption moves through the Strait of Hormuz, making even threats to Gulf exports enough to lift oil, shipping insurance and inflation risks worldwide.
Tehran appears to be pursuing deterrence through disruption rather than conventional victory, using energy leverage, proxy pressure and defiant messaging to raise costs for the US and Israel.
Washington and Jerusalem also show restraint beneath harsh rhetoric, seeking to preserve deterrence without triggering a regional war that could spill into a broader global economic crisis.
The episode underscores a wider shift in modern conflict: statements, market fear and supply-chain stress can now inflict strategic damage even when battlefield activity remains limited.
As Iran weaponizes a vital oil chokepoint, is this the permanent new reality for the global economy?
Has economic chaos replaced military might as the ultimate weapon in this new era of 21st-century conflict?
With Iran's Supreme Leader gone and hardliners rising, can the fragile ceasefire with the U.S. and Israel hold?
Strait of Hormuz Shutdown: How the 2026 Iran Conflict Triggered a Global Energy and Economic Crisis
Overview
The 2026 Iran conflict began with US-Israeli strikes and swift Iranian retaliation, leading to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and sending shockwaves through global oil and gas markets. This disruption caused a surge in energy prices, severe supply chain breakdowns, and soaring inflation worldwide, especially in vulnerable regions like Europe and Asia. The crisis quickly escalated into a global economic emergency, with fears of recession and stagflation. Efforts to restore stability, including a fragile ceasefire and diplomatic talks, face major challenges as the world grapples with disrupted trade, rising costs, and long-term shifts in energy and geopolitical strategies.