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The recent joint U.S.–Israeli operation against Iran has sent shockwaves far beyond the Middle East. While the primary theater is the Arabian Gulf, the conflict’s strategic reverberations have found immediate resonance on the Korean Peninsula.

Iran Operation Raises Stakes For North Korea
North Korean destroyer Choe Hyon conducts a missile launch test. AFP

Middle East War: Statistics

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Middle East War: Statistics

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Attacks

Casualties

The Red Sea is emerging as a second front in a dual-chokepoint crisis driven by the Iran war. The Hormuz Strait is operating under sustained disruption, placing pressure on a primary corridor of global trade, energy flows. Instability in the Red Sea extends pressure into a second maritime corridor, linking both into one operational system.

Regional crises function as strategic signaling events within the global system characterized by intensifying multipolar competition. When major powers become directly involved in regional conflicts, their military actions and escalation decisions generate signals that are closely observed by other states assessing the broader balance of power.

President Trump’s decision to go to war with Iran has exposed a fundamental strategic contradiction: the U.S. has reinforced its dependence on fossil fuels while simultaneously triggering a conflict in the world’s most critical energy chokepoint, the Strait of Hormuz, without a credible plan to manage the consequences.

The United States does not suffer from a lack of power, but from a growing inability to convert military superiority into lasting credibility across multiple theaters at once. The gap between the ability to hit and the ability to shape outcomes has become structural, emerging wherever American commitments come under sustained pressure.

Intensified competition and distrust among the great powers—manifested in regional wars and a stalled arms control environment—have increased the possibility of renewed nuclear testing. There are indications that China, Russia, or the US might resume yield-producing tests of nuclear weapons—or have already done so—despite the collective self-imposed moratorium on such tests.

For decades, NATO operated under a predictable security architecture, with the United States providing a high-tech arsenal for European allies. However, the war in Ukraine has exposed the brittle nature of Western industrial production capacity and the costs of US hardware. Amid this, a new “K-Defense” wave is reshaping the alliance’s procurement strategy.

The diplomatic rupture between Spain and the United States is not merely a discrete dispute over language but the visible edge of a deeper contest over the legitimacy of the U.S.-led campaign against Iran, the limits of allied acquiescence, and the extent to which economic coercion can substitute for consensus-building in alliance management.

The Ukrainian political and military system stands at a critical juncture, as rival factions risk deepening internal divisions. Recent developments suggest that President Zelensky’s appointment of former military intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov as chief of staff was not merely an administrative change. It marked the beginning of a subtle but consequential redistribution of power.

Personnel recovery operations are no longer merely a traditional military obligation; they have become a strategic imperative closely tied to national reputation and internal political pressures.

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