CivilsWisdom.
Updated · Today
International Relations May 05, 2026 5 min read Daily brief · #29 of 55

Iran-Israel war LIVE: Trump urges Iran to 'do the smart thing'

The Iran-Israel conflict, which escalated dramatically through the "Twelve-Day War" in June 2025 (involving US airstrikes on Iranian nuclear sites), has cont...


What Happened

  • The Iran-Israel conflict, which escalated dramatically through the "Twelve-Day War" in June 2025 (involving US airstrikes on Iranian nuclear sites), has continued to generate regional and global repercussions into 2026.
  • The US conducted "Operation Epic Fury" — airstrikes on Iranian military, governmental, and nuclear infrastructure — with Israel providing targeting intelligence; Iran retaliated with drone and ballistic missile strikes on Israel and US military bases across the region.
  • All six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states were struck by Iranian retaliatory fire — airports, ports, and military facilities in Bahrain and the UAE were targeted.
  • The conflict triggered a closure of the Strait of Hormuz, sending Brent crude oil above $100 per barrel for the first time in four years — peaking at $126 per barrel — a 40%+ spike from pre-war levels of ~$65.
  • US-Iran indirect diplomatic negotiations (via Oman) began in early 2026 but have produced no agreement; the US administration has signaled airstrikes remain on the table while maintaining diplomacy is preferred.

Static Topic Bridges

The Strait of Hormuz: Global Energy Chokepoint

The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman, connecting the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea. It is the world's most critical oil chokepoint — approximately 20 million barrels of crude oil per day, or roughly 20% of global oil consumption, transits the strait. Any closure or disruption triggers immediate global oil price spikes and supply chain crises.

  • Approximately 35% of global seaborne crude oil and 20% of global LNG transits the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Major exporters dependent on this route: Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, and Iran itself.
  • India's dependence: approximately 40–45% of India's crude oil imports passed through the Strait of Hormuz before recent diversification efforts; by March 2026, India had shifted ~70% of crude imports to alternative routes.
  • The 2026 conflict-driven closure has been compared to the 1973 Oil Crisis in structural significance — described as "the largest disruption in the history of the global oil market."
  • Brent crude surpassed $100/barrel on 8 March 2026 and peaked at $126/barrel.

Connection to this news: India's energy security is directly threatened by Strait of Hormuz disruptions. India imports ~89% of its crude oil (FY2024-25 data), and the West Asian supply corridor is critical. A prolonged conflict-driven closure would spike inflation, widen the current account deficit, and stress India's fiscal position.

India's West Asia Policy: Balancing Multi-Alignment

India's engagement with West Asia is one of its most consequential foreign policy domains — involving the Gulf states (source of 8+ million Indian diaspora and over $100 billion in annual remittances), Iran (Chabahar Port, connectivity to Central Asia and Afghanistan), and Israel (defense cooperation, technology, agriculture). India has historically maintained ties with all parties simultaneously, a posture demanding constant diplomatic balancing.

  • India-Israel relations: defense cooperation is the backbone — India is Israel's largest arms customer; Israeli agricultural and water technology has transformed Indian drip irrigation practices.
  • India-Iran relations: the Chabahar Port in Iran's Sistan-Baluchestan province is India's gateway to Afghanistan and Central Asia, bypassing Pakistan; India has committed significant investment in the port's development.
  • India-Gulf relations: 8.5 million Indian diaspora in the Gulf (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain); remittances from the Gulf exceed $50 billion annually.
  • India's Iran-Israel balancing act: India has avoided taking sides, calling for de-escalation and dialogue; any forced choice would damage either strategic connectivity (Chabahar) or defense and tech cooperation (Israel).
  • India has benefited from the Abraham Accords (2020) — normalization of Israel-Arab relations enabled the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) framework.

Connection to this news: An escalating Iran-Israel conflict directly strains India's multi-alignment posture. Damage to Chabahar disrupts India's Central Asia connectivity strategy; diaspora safety in Gulf states becomes a domestic concern; and oil price spikes translate into inflationary pressure on the Indian economy.

Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Iran's Nuclear Program

Iran's nuclear program has been a central source of global security tension since the early 2000s. The international community's primary framework for managing nuclear proliferation is the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), supplemented by IAEA safeguards and, specifically for Iran, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA — the Iran nuclear deal).

  • NPT (1968): 191 state parties; obligates non-nuclear weapon states to forgo nuclear weapons development in exchange for peaceful nuclear energy access and disarmament commitments from nuclear states.
  • JCPOA (2015): Iran agreed to cap uranium enrichment, reduce centrifuge numbers, and accept enhanced IAEA inspections; in return, the US, EU, and UN lifted nuclear-related sanctions. The US unilaterally withdrew in 2018 (Trump's first term); Iran has been enriching uranium above JCPOA limits since.
  • IAEA: the International Atomic Energy Agency verifies nuclear compliance; its safeguards system is the key monitoring tool under NPT.
  • US airstrikes on Iranian nuclear sites (June 2025) — described as targeting enrichment facilities — represent the most significant direct military action against a nuclear program since the Israeli airstrike on Iraq's Osirak reactor (1981) and Syria's Al-Kibar facility (2007).
  • India's position: India is not party to the NPT (along with Pakistan, Israel, and North Korea) but supports global non-proliferation norms and is a member of the IAEA and Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG).

Connection to this news: The military destruction of Iranian nuclear infrastructure resets the non-proliferation calculus in the region and raises questions about the viability of diplomacy-first frameworks when states believe adversaries are approaching nuclear capability. This has implications for how other states — including in South Asia — interpret nuclear security guarantees.

Key Facts & Data

  • Strait of Hormuz: ~20 million barrels/day transiting; 35% of global seaborne crude, 20% of global LNG
  • India's crude import dependence: ~89% imported (FY2024-25)
  • India's Hormuz exposure (pre-conflict): ~40–45% of crude imports; reduced to ~30% by March 2026 via diversification
  • Brent crude price peak: $126/barrel (March 2026), up from ~$65 pre-war
  • Indian diaspora in Gulf: 8.5 million people; annual remittances exceeding $50 billion
  • Chabahar Port: India's connectivity gateway to Afghanistan and Central Asia, bypassing Pakistan
  • JCPOA (2015): US-Iran nuclear deal; US withdrew in 2018 (Trump first term)
  • NPT (1968): 191 state parties; India is not a signatory
  • IAEA: Vienna-based; verifies nuclear compliance under NPT safeguards
  • GCC states all affected by Iranian retaliatory strikes: Bahrain and UAE sustained strikes on civilian infrastructure
  • Operation Epic Fury: US-Israel airstrikes on Iranian nuclear and military sites (June 2025)
  • Abraham Accords (2020): Israel-Arab normalization; enabled IMEC framework
  • IMEC: India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor — announced at G20 New Delhi (2023)
On this page
  1. What Happened
  2. Static Topic Bridges
  3. The Strait of Hormuz: Global Energy Chokepoint
  4. India's West Asia Policy: Balancing Multi-Alignment
  5. Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Iran's Nuclear Program
  6. Key Facts & Data
Display