US and Israel Strike Iranian Nuclear Sites as Iran Retaliates Across Persian Gulf
Via theweek_in, Aljazeera, Bloomberg and Euronews
- •The US and Israel jointly struck Iran's Arak heavy-water reactor, a yellow cake facility in Yazd, and major steel plants, according to Bloomberg.
- •Iran retaliated across the Persian Gulf, per Bloomberg, while the IRGC warned of further escalation.
- •No radiation leak was reported from the strikes on nuclear facilities, according to Euronews.
- •Global markets sank and oil prices surged on fears of a prolonged Middle East conflict.
- •Reports of Washington-Tehran talks continued even amid the strikes, Euronews reported.
What Happens Next
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- →Destruction of Arak heavy-water reactor and Yazd yellowcake facility sets Iran's fissile material production timeline back 2-5 years, forcing reliance on covert enrichment pathways and increasing proliferation risk through illicit procurement networks.
- →Strikes on major steel plants degrade Iran's capacity to domestically manufacture ballistic missile components and military hardware, increasing Tehran's dependence on imports from China and Russia for defense materiel.
- →Iranian retaliation across the Persian Gulf raises maritime insurance premiums for tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz by an estimated 30-50%, compressing profit margins for Asian refiners dependent on Gulf crude.
- →Concurrent Washington-Tehran diplomatic channels constrain both sides from full-scale escalation, but US credibility in future nonproliferation negotiations erodes as adversaries interpret the strikes as evidence that diplomacy is subordinate to military action.
Near-term: Oil prices sustain a $15-25/barrel premium over pre-strike levels as insurers reprice Gulf shipping risk and US Central Command surges carrier strike groups into the Arabian Sea, disrupting normal commercial transit patterns. Long-term: Major Asian importers: China, India, Japan, South Korea, structurally diversify crude sourcing toward West Africa, Guyana, and domestic strategic reserves, permanently reducing Persian Gulf market share in global oil trade by 5-10 percentage points.