American News
How the Iran War Supercharged U.S. Oil and Gas Exports
Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : The Iran war of April 2026 did not merely disrupt global energy markets—it reengineered them to the strategic and economic advantage of the United States, delivering an unprecedented windfall. Within weeks, U.S. oil and gas exports doubled and, in key regions, even tripled, transforming America into the world’s dominant emergency supplier. This surge was not accidental. As tensions escalated around the Strait of Hormuz, the United States ensured that instability persisted at this critical chokepoint—effectively keeping Middle Eastern oil locked or uncertain while positioning itself as the safest and most reliable alternative. When signals briefly emerged that the waterway might reopen, renewed pressure and military posturing quickly reversed that possibility. The result was a dramatic rerouting of global energy flows: empty tankers originally destined for the Gulf began arriving in U.S. ports, where they were filled with American crude and LNG. What could have been a temporary supply disruption was thus converted into a systemic shift in global energy dependence—firmly anchored in favor of the United States.
As the war intensified, the world’s energy architecture—already fragile from years of geopolitical tension—was shaken to its core. At the center of this upheaval stood the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow maritime corridor through which nearly one-fifth of global oil supply flows. Any disruption here has immediate global consequences, and this time was no different. However, what made this crisis unique was not just the disruption—but who capitalized on it most effectively.
The disruption of Middle Eastern energy supplies was the first decisive factor. Iran’s exports, estimated between 1.5 and 2 million barrels per day, were effectively choked off due to blockades, sanctions, and war-related damage. Simultaneously, Gulf producers such as Saudi Arabia and the UAE faced severe logistical constraints. Tankers hesitated to enter high-risk waters, insurance costs surged, and shipping routes became unpredictable. Even where production remained intact, transportation became the real bottleneck. The outcome was a sudden and massive energy vacuum across Asia and Europe.
Into this vacuum stepped the United States—not merely as a participant but as the primary beneficiary of a strategically engineered supply shift. U.S. crude exports surged to nearly 5.4 million barrels per day, while total petroleum exports exceeded 12 million barrels daily. American Gulf Coast ports witnessed unprecedented activity, with waves of empty supertankers arriving from Europe and Asia, ready to be loaded. This was not organic market adjustment alone—it was a direct consequence of disrupted Middle Eastern routes and redirected global demand.
The most dramatic transformation occurred in Asia. Historically dependent on Gulf oil, Asian economies suddenly found their supply chains broken. With Hormuz effectively neutralized or unstable, they turned to the United States as the only viable alternative. Shipments to Asia surged sharply—in some cases tripling within weeks—signaling not just a temporary shift but a long-term reorientation of global energy flows toward North America.
Parallel to crude exports, U.S. liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments experienced a historic boom. Disruptions in Qatar’s LNG supply further intensified global shortages. Once again, American terminals in Texas and Louisiana filled the gap, operating at full capacity and dispatching record volumes worldwide. In several markets, U.S. LNG exports more than doubled, reinforcing its dominance in both oil and gas sectors simultaneously.
Rising global prices amplified this transformation. As supply tightened, oil prices surged, making U.S. exports highly profitable. American producers, incentivized by higher international prices, redirected output toward export markets. This created a powerful cycle: global disruption increased demand, demand increased prices, and prices fueled further U.S. export expansion.
Government policy played a decisive enabling role. The administration of President Donald J. Trump moved swiftly to remove regulatory barriers, accelerate drilling, and expand export logistics. Emergency measures ensured that infrastructure bottlenecks were minimized and production scaled rapidly. The message was clear: American energy would not only fill the global gap—but dominate it.
Another critical dimension was refining. U.S. Gulf Coast refineries, among the most advanced globally, ramped up production of diesel, jet fuel, and gasoline. As crude exports surged, refined product exports also hit record highs, further strengthening America’s position as a fully integrated energy powerhouse—from extraction to final consumption.
Yet, despite this remarkable surge, limitations persisted. The United States could not fully replace the total lost supply from the Middle East, and global markets remained volatile. Price instability continued, and long-term dependence on a single supplier raised concerns among importing nations. Nevertheless, the strategic advantage gained by the U.S. during this period was undeniable.
In geopolitical terms, the Iran war marked a turning point. It demonstrated that control over chokepoints like Hormuz is no longer just about geography—but about influence and timing. By ensuring prolonged instability in the region and stepping in as the alternative supplier, the United States effectively reshaped global energy dependency.
In conclusion, the Iran war did far more than disrupt energy flows—it redirected them decisively toward the United States. Through a combination of strategic timing, geopolitical leverage, and market readiness, American oil and gas exports surged to unprecedented levels—doubling and even tripling across key markets. The war, while destructive, became a catalyst for consolidating U.S. energy dominance. Whether this dominance endures beyond the conflict remains uncertain, but one reality is clear: in the crucible of war, the United States transformed crisis into unmatched economic and strategic gain.
American News
Trump’s Failed Epic Fury and Triumph of Iran’s Resilience
Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : What began as “Epic Fury,” a forceful and ambitious operation aimed at reshaping Iran’s strategic capabilities, has now transitioned into “Project Freedom,” a mission focused on safeguarding maritime routes and restoring the flow of energy through the Strait of Hormuz. Yet this shift reveals a striking contradiction at the heart of the entire conflict. The very waterway now being secured at enormous cost was open and functioning before the war began, exposing a troubling paradox in both purpose and execution.
What emerges is not strategic brilliance but an anomaly—first creating a crisis, then deploying vast resources to resolve it. In that sense, “Project Freedom” appears less like a victory and more like a costly correction of an avoidable mistake, raising profound questions about judgment, foresight, and accountability.
The official admission of the defeat has been delivered with confidence. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio insisted that the objectives of the operation were achieved and that the United States will now rely on economic and diplomatic pressure to influence Iran’s nuclear trajectory.
Faced with these realities, the narrative has shifted. What was initially framed as a mission to dismantle Iran’s nuclear program is now being reinterpreted as an effort to weaken its “conventional shield.” This evolving justification reflects not strategic clarity, but the difficulty of reconciling ambitious promises with limited outcomes. In modern warfare, such redefinitions of success often reveal the admission of defeat rather than its victory.
Yet the true consequences of this conflict extend far beyond strategy and rhetoric. They are economic, immediate, and global in scope. The war has triggered a chain reaction across energy markets, supply chains, and financial systems, transforming a regional conflict into a worldwide economic shock.
Before the war, many American consumers, including drivers in Michigan, were paying around $2.40 per gallon for gasoline. Today, the same drivers are paying nearly $4.60 per gallon. That is an increase of $2.20 per gallon, or almost 92 percent—a near doubling of the fuel burden on ordinary families. This is not a minor fluctuation or a routine market adjustment.For a 15-gallon tank, the cost has jumped from about $36 to $69, meaning one fill-up now costs roughly $33 more than before.
For millions of families, this is not an abstract economic indicator—it is a daily reality. Every gallon of fuel purchased carries the weight of geopolitical decisions. Transportation costs rise, and with them the price of food, healthcare, clothing, and essential services. Inflation spreads across the economy, eroding purchasing power and increasing the cost of living. Analysts estimate that households are paying thousands of dollars more annually, not just in fuel but through the cascading effects of inflation that ripple through every sector.
But the cost is not confined to the United States; it is global, systemic, and staggering in scale. Current estimates suggest that the 2026 U.S.–The Iran war has already inflicted a direct loss of around $3.5 trillion, wiping out over 3 percent of global economic output. Financial markets have reacted even more sharply, with nearly $12 trillion in global market capitalization erased, reflecting deep uncertainty and loss of investor confidence. At the same time, the International Monetary Fund has downgraded global growth by 0.3 to 1.4 percentage points, warning that the world is approaching the threshold of a synchronized recession, with worst-case scenarios pushing growth down to nearly 2 percent. The regional toll is equally severe: Arab economies alone have lost between $120 billion and $194 billion within a single month, while Asian economies face losses ranging from $97 billion to $300 billion as they struggle to absorb energy shocks.
The aviation industry alone has suffered unprecedented losses, with over $53 billion wiped out in airline market value within weeks, while jet fuel prices have more than doubled from roughly $830 to over $1,800 per tonne, adding nearly $11 billion in additional global operating costs. This has forced massive operational cutbacks, including over 60,000 flight cancellations, and even led to the collapse of major carriers, marking the industry’s worst crisis since the pandemic.
At the same time, the global tourism sector—valued at over $11.7 trillion—is bleeding heavily, with losses of up to $600 million per day in visitor spending and projected annual declines of $34 to $56 billion in the Middle East alone. These disruptions extend far beyond travel, affecting logistics, trade, and essential supply chains worldwide. What began as a regional conflict has thus evolved into a systemic global economic shock, shaking industries, markets, and livelihoods far removed from the battlefield.
The United States and its allies, particularly Israel, initiated a conflict whose consequences have been borne not only by the adversary but by the entire world.
Ideally, the total cost of such a war should be calculated by an independent international body—quantifying the damage to global GDP, supply chains, and living standards. Those responsible for initiating the conflict should, in principle, be held accountable for the economic consequences imposed on others. Such accountability may never be enforced in practical terms, particularly when it involves global powers, but its acknowledgment remains essential for the credibility of international norms.
The United States, as the world’s dominant economic and military power, is unlikely to compensate for these losses. The scale of the damage itself is so vast that even the largest economy could not fully absorb it. Yet acknowledging responsibility is not merely about financial repayment—it is about recognizing the consequences of decisions that affect billions of lives.
The transition from “Epic Fury” to “Project Freedom” marks the transformation of a conflict from an ambitious attempt at strategic dominance into a complex struggle to manage its own unintended consequences.
Yet this war has revealed something even more profound. It has demonstrated that power in the 21st century is no longer defined solely by the scale of conventional military strength. A country like Iran—subjected for decades to sanctions, technological isolation, and sustained economic pressure—has shown that resilience, adaptability, and strategic innovation can offset overwhelming conventional disadvantages. By shifting the nature of warfare toward asymmetric, technology-driven, and decentralized systems, it has challenged long-held assumptions about what it means to be powerful.
This is not merely a regional lesson; it is a global inflection point. It signals to middle and emerging powers that sovereignty and strategic independence no longer require matching superpowers in aircraft carriers, fighter jets, or traditional defense systems. Instead, the balance of power is increasingly shaped by resilience, ingenuity, and the ability to adapt to a new model of warfare—one that is less visible, less predictable, and far more difficult to dominate.
Perhaps this moment will stand as a turning point—the last time a superpower enters a war driven by the assumption that overwhelming military strength alone guarantees decisive outcomes. The failure of “Epic Fury” suggests otherwise. It compels a fundamental recalculation of power, strategy, and consequence, reminding the world that in the 21st century, wars are not won by force alone—and that even the mightiest nations must reckon with the limits of their power.
American News
US Power Projection at Arab Expense
Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : When the United States entered into direct military confrontation with Iran in late February 2026, it did so with full knowledge that the battlefield would not be North America, nor would the economic shock primarily devastate the American mainland. The war theater would be the Gulf itself — the territory, airspace, ports, oil routes, and infrastructure of America’s Arab allies. More importantly, much of the financial burden associated with maintaining this military architecture would ultimately be absorbed by the Gulf states hosting the very bases used to project American power.
From the outset, Washington mobilized an enormous military machine across the region. Carrier Strike Groups 3 and 12 were moved into operational positions, advanced missile-defense batteries were activated, and approximately 50,000 U.S. troops spread across at least 19 military locations in the Gulf were placed on heightened readiness. Major operational hubs such as Al Udeid Air Base, Camp Arifjan, and the U.S. Fifth Fleet headquarters in Naval Support Activity Bahrain became the nerve centers of military coordination.
But while the Pentagon projected military strength, the financial mathematics of the conflict revealed a very different reality. Reports emerging during the first phase of the conflict estimated that U.S. military operations were costing between $890 million and $1 billion per day. In just the first 100 hours, expenditures reportedly reached approximately $3.7 billion. By early May 2026, cumulative operational costs were estimated to have crossed $60–70 billion. These costs included naval deployments, fuel consumption, aerial sorties, missile interceptions, intelligence operations, logistics, and rapid replenishment of depleted weapons stockpiles.
The most alarming aspect for American military planners was not merely the money being spent, but the speed at which strategic inventories were being consumed. Reports indicated that the United States had used nearly half of some of its most expensive missile stockpiles during the confrontation. Replenishment timelines for advanced interceptors and precision-guided systems were estimated at up to four years due to production bottlenecks and industrial limitations. Modern warfare had exposed an uncomfortable truth: even the world’s largest military-industrial complex struggles to sustain prolonged high-intensity conflict against a technologically capable adversary.
Yet the deeper irony of the war was this: despite these staggering numbers, the Gulf states themselves were still expected to absorb a substantial portion of the broader operational and infrastructural burden.
For decades, Washington’s military footprint in the Gulf has operated through an interconnected system of host-nation financing, infrastructure sharing, arms purchases, and sovereign investment recycling. Gulf governments provide land, utilities, strategic access, construction financing, logistics corridors, and maintenance support for American installations. Qatar alone historically covered roughly 60 percent of the costs associated with Al Udeid Air Base, amounting to approximately $650 million in infrastructure support. Saudi Arabia previously paid nearly $500 million to offset the deployment costs of American troops stationed inside the kingdom.
The 2026 conflict intensified this financial dynamic dramatically. Iranian retaliatory strikes reportedly caused approximately $800 million in damage to U.S.-operated facilities during the first two weeks of escalation alone. Reports also suggested that U.S. aerial equipment losses reached as high as $2.8 billion. Yet much of the reconstruction, repair, and operational continuity costs were expected to be negotiated with Gulf host states rather than borne exclusively by Washington.
In practical terms, the Gulf states found themselves paying for the consequences of a war unfolding on their own soil while the United States retained strategic command and global leverage. This is where the geopolitical equation becomes extraordinarily advantageous for Washington.
First, the United States projects military dominance across the Middle East without carrying the entire financial burden alone. Second, Gulf states continue purchasing massive quantities of American weapons to reinforce their own defenses. Between 2019 and 2023, Gulf nations accounted for approximately 22 percent of global arms imports, much of it sourced directly from U.S. defense manufacturers. In May 2026 alone, Washington fast-tracked more than $8.6 billion in new weapons sales to Gulf allies and regional partners.
Third, instability in the Strait of Hormuz indirectly benefits American energy exporters. Washington understood from the beginning that any escalation with Iran would threaten or partially restrict traffic through the world’s most important oil chokepoint. The disruption of Gulf energy routes naturally drives global consumers to seek alternative suppliers. As Gulf exports become politically risky or operationally uncertain, American oil and liquefied natural gas gain competitive advantage in Asian, African, and European markets.
Thus, while Gulf states suffer from higher insurance premiums, shipping disruptions, aviation risks, and investor anxiety, the United States simultaneously expands energy influence, increases defense exports, and reinforces its strategic leverage.
This explains why many analysts increasingly describe the arrangement as a “cost externalization model.” The geopolitical benefits remain concentrated in Washington, while much of the geographic exposure and economic shock remains localized within the Gulf.
The contradiction is especially painful for Gulf governments because the same military bases intended to provide protection have now become potential targets. Iranian officials repeatedly warned that states facilitating military operations against Iran could face retaliatory strikes. As missiles and drones targeted facilities linked to American operations, Gulf policymakers were forced to confront a difficult question: are these bases security guarantees, or are they magnets for escalation?
The debate has become increasingly visible inside United Arab Emirates and other Gulf capitals where strategists now openly question whether permanent dependence on external military umbrellas truly serves long-term regional stability. Some Gulf scholars and officials have gone so far as to describe the foreign military presence as a “burden rather than a strategic asset.”
At the same time, Gulf sovereign wealth funds remain deeply integrated into the American economy. Collectively managing roughly $5 trillion in global assets, these funds hold significant stakes in U.S. infrastructure, technology, Treasury securities, banking, real estate, and defense-linked industries. More than one-third of Gulf sovereign investments are estimated to be tied directly to the United States.
This creates a circular financial system unlike any other in modern geopolitics. Gulf oil wealth flows into the American economy through investments and arms purchases. American military power protects Gulf regimes and trade routes. Regional instability then increases demand for American weapons and alternative American energy exports. The cycle continuously reinforces itself.
For the United States, it becomes an extraordinarily efficient mechanism of global power projection. For the Gulf states, however, the equation is becoming increasingly expensive, politically risky, and strategically uncomfortable.
The 2026 conflict may therefore be remembered not merely as another Middle Eastern war, but as the moment Gulf nations began reassessing whether the costs of hosting global power rivalries now outweigh the security guarantees they once promised.
American News
The Contradictions at the Heart of America’s Iran War
Paris (Imran Y. CHOUDHRY) :- Former Press Secretary to the President, Former Press Minister to the Embassy of Pakistan to France, Former MD, SRBC Mr. Qamar Bashir analysis : The recent Pentagon hearing on the Iran war, held on April 29, 2026, before the House Armed Services Committee, was expected to bring clarity to one of the most consequential military decisions in recent U.S. history. Instead, it revealed a pattern of contradictions, evasions, and inconsistencies that raise serious questions about the coherence of the policy itself.
Testimony from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, delivered under sustained questioning from lawmakers in Washington, D.C., combined with emerging reporting and prior briefings, suggests that the war has been driven less by a unified strategic vision and more by shifting justifications and disputed assumptions. What should have been a straightforward explanation of objectives, costs, and outcomes instead became an exercise in deflection, leaving members of Congress, policy experts, and the public with more uncertainty than answers at a moment when clarity is urgently needed.
One of the most striking issues to emerge from the hearing was the lack of agreement on the financial cost of the war. The Pentagon’s official estimate placed the total expenditure at approximately $25 billion, a figure that the Secretary presented as comprehensive.
However, members of Congress quickly challenged this number, arguing that it fails to account for a wide range of additional costs, including replacement of destroyed equipment, long-term operational commitments, and broader economic consequences.
Some estimates presented during the hearing suggested that the true cost could reach or exceed $600 billion, with American households effectively bearing an annual burden of around $5,000. The Secretary did not provide a detailed rebuttal or breakdown to counter these claims, instead redirecting the discussion toward the hypothetical cost of allowing Iran to acquire nuclear weapons. This response, while rhetorically compelling, left unresolved the central question of how much the war is actually costing and whether those costs are being transparently communicated to the public.
The confusion surrounding cost is mirrored by an equally significant contradiction in the stated justification for the war. At its outset, the conflict was framed as a necessary response to an imminent nuclear threat posed by Iran, a characterization that implied urgency and immediate danger.
Yet during the hearing, the Secretary asserted that Iran’s nuclear program had been effectively “obliterated,” suggesting that the threat had already been neutralized. When pressed to reconcile these positions, he shifted the rationale once again, arguing that Iran’s ambition to develop nuclear weapons justified continued military action.
This progression—from imminent threat to neutralized capability to future ambition—reveals a lack of consistency that undermines the credibility of the war’s original premise. A conflict justified on the basis of immediate necessity cannot easily be sustained on the grounds of speculative intent without raising fundamental questions about its legitimacy.
Further complicating the narrative is new information indicating that key risks associated with the war were clearly identified before it began. According to reporting, Dan Caine warned that a U.S. attack on Iran could prompt retaliation in the form of closing the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most vital shipping lanes. Military assessments indicated that Iran possessed the capability to deploy mines, drones, and missiles to disrupt or shut down the strait.
President Donald Trump was aware of these risks but chose to proceed, operating under the assumption that Iran would either capitulate quickly or that the United States could easily manage any escalation. In reality, neither outcome materialized. Iran did not back down, and the Strait of Hormuz quickly became a critical leverage point, contributing to global energy instability and economic disruption. This sequence demonstrates that the consequences now being faced were not unforeseen accidents but rather foreseeable outcomes that were consciously discounted in the decision-making process.
The consequences of these decisions have also been felt at the operational level, most notably in the case of a drone attack on a U.S. base in Kuwait that resulted in the deaths of six American soldiers and injuries to more than thirty others.
Testimony during the hearing revealed that the base had been assessed as vulnerable and difficult to defend, with requests for additional protective systems reportedly going unfulfilled. Survivors described the base as lacking even basic drone defense capabilities, a characterization that stands in stark contrast to the Secretary’s assertion that maximum defensive measures had been implemented. The disparity between these accounts suggests that known risks were not adequately addressed, raising serious concerns about the decision to deploy personnel under such conditions. The loss of life in this instance underscores the tangible human cost of strategic miscalculations and highlights the gap between official assurances and operational realities.
Beyond individual incidents, the war appears to be part of a broader expansion of U.S. military activity across multiple regions. Reports indicate that under the current administration, the United States has engaged in more than twenty military interventions spanning Africa, the Middle East, Latin America, and the Pacific.
In one instance, operations were conducted across three continents within a span of just three days, illustrating the scale and intensity of this expanded posture. This global engagement has been accompanied by a significant rise in civilian casualties, with estimates suggesting that more than 2,000 civilians have been killed during the current term. In Iran alone, reported deaths range from approximately 1,700 to over 2,300, including a substantial number of children.
One particularly controversial incident involved a strike on a school, which reportedly resulted in mass civilian casualties, yet remains officially classified as under investigation. The persistence of such responses raises questions about accountability and the extent to which civilian harm is being addressed or acknowledged.
The economic impact of the war is also becoming increasingly evident within the United States, even as official assessments remain limited. Lawmakers highlighted rising fuel and food costs, linking them to disruptions in global energy markets and broader geopolitical instability. Some estimates suggest that the economic ripple effects of the war are contributing to a significant financial burden on American households, further intensifying concerns about the true cost of the conflict.
Despite these concerns, the Pentagon did not present a comprehensive analysis of domestic economic impacts during the hearing, leaving a critical dimension of the war’s consequences largely unexplored. This absence is notable, particularly given the historical precedent of acknowledging and preparing for the economic sacrifices associated with major conflicts.
Throughout the hearing, a consistent pattern of evasion emerged in the Secretary’s responses to questioning. Direct inquiries were frequently met with indirect answers, while requests for specific data were often redirected toward broader strategic arguments. This approach may have been intended to maintain flexibility in messaging, but it also contributed to a perception of uncertainty and lack of clarity.
When confronted with contradictions, the responses tended to shift rather than resolve them, reinforcing the impression that the underlying strategy itself may not be fully coherent. The inability to provide clear, consistent answers on key issues such as cost, justification, and operational decisions raises concerns about the extent to which the war is being guided by a well-defined plan.
Taken together, the evidence presented during the hearing and in subsequent reporting points to a conflict that lacks a stable foundation. The war was launched despite clearly articulated risks, justified through evolving and sometimes contradictory arguments, and sustained without a transparent accounting of its costs. Its consequences—military, economic, and humanitarian—continue to expand, even as the rationale for its continuation remains uncertain.
At its core, the conflict appears to rest on an unresolved question: whether it was initiated to counter an immediate threat or to prevent a potential future one. This distinction is critical, as it shapes not only the justification for the war but also the criteria by which its success or failure will ultimately be judged. If the war is indeed based on assumptions about future intentions rather than concrete evidence of present danger, then its premise is inherently unstable, and its long-term trajectory uncertain.
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