Actuarial World War: Iran, Oil, and the Cracking World Order

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

By the old metrics, the United States is winning its war with Iran. By the only metric that matters to the world economy, it has already lost.

The Americans have air superiority, three carrier groups in theater, and a tally of destroyed ships, depots, and radars that would have made a Cold War planner proud. They have decapitated Iran’s supreme leader, gutted much of its integrated air defenses, and claimed to have slashed missile launches from their opening‑day peak. By every traditional measure of military power, Washington is on top.

And yet the Strait of Hormuz—the twenty‑one‑mile bottleneck through which roughly 20 million barrels of oil and a fifth of the world’s liquefied natural gas used to pass every day—remains commercially paralyzed. Not because a minefield was laid or a formal blockade declared. Not because the U.S. Navy cannot, in principle, escort tankers through the channel. But because, on a quiet March night in London, seven insurance letters went out, and a private actuarial cascade did what no fleet had ever quite dared to do: close the most critical energy chokepoint on Earth.

This is the kind of closure no cruise missile can reopen. It runs not on steel or explosives but on capital requirements, war‑risk premiums, and the risk tolerances of a few reinsurance desks governed by cautious rules about how much danger they are allowed to take on. Even if every IRGC missile battery were vaporized tomorrow, the Strait would not reopen tomorrow; not in commercial terms, not at scale.

In that sense, the Iran war has already slipped its old category. It isn’t just a regional conflict. It’s an actuarial world war and a stress test for an already‑failing civilization.


How Seven Insurance Letters Really Closed the Strait

The story of the Strait’s closure didn’t start with a naval blockade. It started with paperwork.

Almost all big ships have to carry special “war‑risk” insurance to sail through dangerous areas. That insurance is arranged through a small club of companies in London that quietly sit behind about 90% of the world’s ocean‑going fleet. When they say “you’re covered,” ships move. When they say “you’re on your own,” ships stop.

When the Iran war began and missiles started flying around the Gulf, those London firms ran the numbers and decided the risk was simply too big. One fully loaded supertanker could mean hundreds of millions of dollars in damage and pollution claims. The global pot of money set aside for this kind of war coverage is only on the order of a billion dollars a year. One or two bad hits could wipe it out.

So, over a couple of days, seven of the main insurance clubs sent out cancellation letters to shipowners saying, in effect: “After this date, your war cover in and around the Strait of Hormuz is canceled.” Their own backers—the big wholesale insurers who sit behind them and help carry catastrophic losses—had already warned that they would no longer stand behind Gulf war policies. Once that backing disappeared, the frontline insurers had no choice but to pull out too.

The effect was immediate and brutal. Tanker traffic through Hormuz collapsed from a steady flow of ships to just a handful a day; on some days, crude tanker transits fell into the single digits, compared with an average of roughly two dozen before the war. Hundreds of vessels ended up parked at anchor—full of oil but going nowhere. Rates for any ship still willing to try the Strait exploded. In peacetime, insuring a big tanker for a trip through the Gulf might cost around a few tens of thousands of dollars. Within days, it cost on the order of one to three million dollars extra for a single voyage, with some supertanker day‑rates briefly approaching $800,000 and war‑risk premiums jumping roughly four‑ to twelve‑fold.

Technically, some insurance was still “available” if you were willing to pay those sky‑high prices. But in practice, most shipowners looked at the cost, looked at the missiles on TV, and said: we’re not doing this. Captains didn’t want to sail their crews into a live war zone just because some government somewhere promised to help if things went wrong.

This is the key point: the Strait wasn’t mainly closed by mines or by the Iranian navy. It was closed by the people who insure ships deciding that the journey was no longer worth the risk. The world’s most important oil route was shut down not by an admiral, but by actuaries and risk managers behind desks in London.

That is why it cannot be reopened overnight, even if the shooting stops. To really “reopen” Hormuz, those same firms would have to see months of calm, rebuild their risk models, convince their own backers to put fresh money at risk, and then slowly start offering affordable policies again. That is a long, cautious process. No amount of presidential speeches or aircraft carriers can force it to move faster.

Global seaborne trade, it turns out, does not run on naval protection. It runs on a layered stack of private promises. When the top layer of that stack says “no more,” the tankers stop just as surely as if someone had sunk a ship in the channel.


Trump’s Insurance Fix Meets the Real World

Washington tried to improvise a fix. It ran straight into the limits of its own power.

President Trump unveiled a $20 billion federal scheme to “ensure the free flow of energy to the world,” promising that the U.S. would provide political‑risk cover for “all shipping” in the Gulf, backed if necessary by Navy escorts. The U.S. Development Finance Corporation was tasked with turning that bravado into actual contracts: an “America First” war‑risk program led by U.S. insurers.

There was a basic problem. The war‑risk ecosystem is not American. It is planetary, and it is centered, structurally and culturally, in London.

War‑risk policies are sold mostly through Lloyd’s and other London‑based syndicates, with foreign insurers covering foreign ships and cargo. As one broker dryly put it, there is “a whole ecosystem around war risks,” and “it’s very rare that U.S. insurers position themselves anywhere near that ecosystem.” When U.S. officials began calling London insurers and brokers asking how the market actually worked—and, reportedly, asking for sensitive data—participants balked.

The plan was quietly rewritten. Instead of directly insuring ships, the $20 billion would be used as backup insurance—coverage that existing carriers could buy to protect themselves if something went catastrophically wrong. Even then, Trump’s sweeping pledge to cover “all” Gulf maritime trade was walked back. The federal backstop would be limited to ships meeting still‑unspecified criteria, on still‑unspecified terms, with no clear timeline.

In the meantime, something else became clear. The main reason ships weren’t sailing was not a scarcity of paper cover. It was the risk to crews. “Insurance for ships in the region is readily available,” one senior broker said. “Lloyd’s is open for business.” But crews and owners were “too wary to risk the passage,” as one LNG carrier CEO put it, citing safety rather than the nuances of government reinsurance.

In other words, Washington could not simply will the Strait open again with a checkbook and a carrier group. It had discovered, in real time, that the operating system of its empire—those invisible layers of private contracts and overseas regulations—was not under its sovereign control.


Iran’s Shadow Fleet Advantage

If you are looking for a clear winner in this catastrophe, you do not find it in Washington or Riyadh. You find it in Tehran—and in Beijing’s ledger.

As Gulf Arab exporters from Saudi Arabia to Iraq cut output and scramble to reroute via long, expensive pipelines, Iran is exporting more oil through Hormuz than it did before the war began. In the first days after the conflict started, tankers loaded an average of about 2.1 million barrels per day of Iranian crude, slightly higher than February’s 2 million.

The reason is painted right on the hulls and whispered over the radio.

Most of the ships still daring the Strait now belong to the “shadow fleet”: older, sometimes decrepit tankers, often owned by opaque shells in Dubai or India, flying fake or permissive flags, and already under U.S. sanctions for helping Iran or Russia move oil. They load at Iranian terminals like Kharg Island and steam for Chinese ports, sometimes visible on tracking systems, sometimes running dark.

“Almost all ships crossing the Strait are linked to Iran or China,” a maritime‑security executive told reporters. “We are advising all shippers not to cross.”

These vessels do not pretend to be neutral. They perform loyalty. “We are a Chinese ship. We are coming through; we are friendly,” one small Chinese tanker repeatedly broadcast in English to the IRGC navy over short‑wave radio as it approached the narrows, on channels heard by other ships and by journalists. In effect, China is announcing: we are not your enemy, we are your indispensable customer.

Iran has threatened to attack any ship trying to cross since the U.S.‑Israeli bombardment began, and it has already hit some gray‑fleet tankers to prove the point. But its declared strategy is clear: let its own and China’s barrels flow while scaring off everyone else.

The result is perverse but logical. Iran, under aerial assault, is still exporting and earning hard currency. China, already reliant on Iran for a sizable share of its oil imports, is paying a risk premium but enjoying discounted barrels while its chief competitor, the U.S., scrambles with allies to contain the price shock. Russia—struggling with sanctions and infrastructure sabotage—suddenly finds its crude a relatively safer “swing barrel” alternative in Asia and Europe, and presses ahead with new pipelines to hard‑wire energy ties with China.

The chokepoint is “closed” in precisely the way that hurts Washington and its Gulf allies most. The empire’s friends are stranded; its adversaries move onward.


Bypasses, Yanbu, and the Limits of Workarounds

None of this means producers are simply giving up. Saudi Arabia, in particular, is throwing everything it has at the problem of escaping Hormuz.

Riyadh is rushing crude into its East–West pipeline from Abqaiq to Yanbu on the Red Sea and has pushed flows toward the line’s 7‑million‑barrel‑per‑day nameplate capacity, though analysts note that roughly 2 million bpd of that serves domestic refineries, leaving perhaps 4.5–5 million bpd available for export. In parallel, Saudi’s national shipper Bahri has been snapping up “every spare tanker” it can find to build an armada at Yanbu: at least two dozen VLCCs and other tankers are steaming in from as far as Singapore, many chartered at record rates of around $450,000 per day, far above any pre‑war benchmark.

Together with the UAE’s Habshan–Fujairah pipeline, which can carry roughly 1.5–1.8 million bpd to the Gulf of Oman, these routes give the core monarchies a significant bypass. But even in an optimistic reading, regional pipelines and Red Sea workarounds might move 7–8 million barrels per day without Hormuz—still far short of the roughly 20 million barrels that normally pass through the Strait. Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar, whose exports are still overwhelmingly trapped behind Hormuz, have nothing comparable.

The Yanbu flotilla is thus a vivid illustration of both ingenuity and constraint. It shows how desperate even a giant like Saudi Arabia is to avoid being strangled by Hormuz, and how few states have the geography, capital, and infrastructure to attempt such a workaround. It also underlines this core point: bypasses are real, but they are narrow emergency valves, not replacements for the firehose.


Flow, Duration, and the World Economy

Most commentary on the Iran conflict still treats it as an “oil shock.” That phrase is too small. What we are watching is an attack on the circulatory system of industrial civilization. Iran’s own commanders now say openly that they are prepared for a long war that would “destroy the world economy,” framing continued pressure on Hormuz as a deliberate strategy rather than a temporary side effect. Analysts estimate that Iran’s closure of Hormuz and follow‑on attacks have stranded around a fifth of global oil supply that normally relies on the Strait, with many millions of barrels per day offline in immediate flows and more production forced to shut in as storage fills. This is, by volume, what the International Energy Agency now calls “the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market,” greater than the Arab embargo or the Gulf War.

Pipelines across Saudi Arabia and the UAE, even pushed hard, can bypass only a fraction of this—on the order of 7–8 million bpd at best when regional infrastructure and domestic needs are fully accounted for. The rest, easily in the mid‑teens of millions of barrels every single day, has nowhere to go.

Over six months, that implies on the order of one and a half to nearly two billion barrels that never reach refineries, trucks, or ships; over nine months, well over two billion. Strategic reserves can meet a slice of the gap for a while. The IEA is already coordinating what it calls the largest emergency stock draw in history—some 300–400 million barrels—but even its own officials frame this as a bridge, not a substitute for an open Strait. They cannot sustain a huge daily deficit for a year without emptying the world’s emergency tanks.

Markets have already sampled the price impact. In the early days of the war, crude vaulted near or above $100, briefly spiking toward $120, before presidential jawboning about a “very soon” end and hopes of a diplomatic off‑ramp helped drag prices back under $80—for now. Analysts at major houses warn that if the semi‑closure and associated attacks on infrastructure last months rather than weeks, triple‑digit oil becomes the floor, not the ceiling.

The macro mechanics are brutal. Every sustained ten‑dollar increase in oil tends to add around a tenth or two‑tenths of a percentage point to global inflation; prolonged prices in the $100–150 range, especially with gas and LNG also tight, can add nearly a full point. Central banks already wounded by the last inflation cycle face a choice between hiking rates into energy‑driven price spikes—risking deep recession—or letting inflation run hotter, eroding currencies, and importing cost‑of‑living crises. In fragile states, higher fuel and fertilizer prices translate within weeks into food shortages and unrest. Agricultural analysts are already warning that fertilizer markets are jolting, with knock‑on effects for future harvests and global grain prices.

By one month, the pain shows up as volatility and headlines. By three, it shows up as bankruptcies in aviation, shipping, and heavy industry. By six to nine, it appears as synchronized downturn: stagflation in rich countries, debt and currency crises in poorer ones, and political systems everywhere pressed to choose who eats the loss.

That is why even cautious institutions—IMF staffers, energy economists, central‑bank watchers—now talk about this war as a “profound shock” for the global economy, one that risks scarring growth for years if the Strait is not normalized.


Realignment: America’s Suez Moment

But while the immediate story is barrels and basis points, the deeper story is realignment. The Hormuz war is functioning as a 21st‑century Suez moment.

In 1956, Britain and France discovered in Egypt that they could no longer wage war without American financial and diplomatic cover. In 2026, the United States and Israel are discovering that they cannot bend the Middle East to their will without shredding the economic fabric on which their own legitimacy depends—and that they do not fully control that fabric anymore.

Across the world, states are drawing conclusions. In the Gulf, allies quietly ask what U.S. “security guarantees” mean if three carrier groups and a $20 billion insurance scheme cannot keep their tankers safe or their economies out of harm’s way. In Beijing, policy planners see that America’s regime‑change project in Tehran is faltering, but that their own over‑concentration on Gulf energy is now a glaring vulnerability; they turn with renewed urgency to Russian pipelines, Central Asian routes, and domestic energy security. In Moscow, the Kremlin sees opportunity: Russia as swing supplier and “indispensable arbiter,” its oil and gas suddenly recast as necessary balancers rather than pariah commodities, with even Washington quietly easing some constraints to keep markets from breaking. Across the Global South, from Delhi to Brasília to Johannesburg, elites watch the “rules‑based order” generate mass death in Gaza and now a global energy shock, and they hedge: more deals with China, more flirtation with BRICS, more skepticism toward Washington’s lectures.

For one analyst, Hormuz is “America’s Suez moment in the Persian Gulf”: a crisis that exposes diminished capacity and accelerates a drift toward a messier, more contested, multipolar order in which the U.S. is a large player, but no longer the metropole.

This is not a clean handoff to some benevolent alternative. It is a reconfiguration into blocs and shadow systems: an American‑led camp trying to weaponize access to formal energy markets and shipping insurance; a China‑Russia‑Iran axis improvising gray routes, long land pipelines, and shadow fleets to keep their hydrocarbons moving; and a loose, anxious periphery of import‑dependent states trying not to drown in the crossfire.

The Iran war is not creating this pattern from scratch. It is forcing it into the open.


Fast Shock, Slow Collapse

The narrower policy debate still asks: will this be a short, sharp shock or a drawn‑out crisis? The more honest question is: how does this shock plug into a civilization that was already cracking?

Long before the first bomb fell on Tehran, the industrial order lived on borrowed time. Its core assumptions—that energy would be cheap and available, that climate would be stable enough to grow food, that debt could grow faster than the real economy forever—were already eroding. The Iran war did not invent those contradictions. It revealed them.

At one level, Hormuz is a classic “fast collapse” mechanism. Remove a fifth of world oil from safe circulation, and complex systems stumble. Just‑in‑time supply chains freeze without diesel. Fertilizer prices spike, setting up future food shocks. Airline routes and tourism evaporate, crushing peripheral economies. Bonds tied to assumptions about low inflation and steady growth suddenly look mispriced.

At another level, the crisis speeds up “slow collapse” processes already underway. Energy transition plans built on natural gas as a “bridge fuel” look fragile when LNG itself becomes a weaponized scarcity. Attempts to “reshore” or “friend‑shore” supply chains bump up against physical limits: you can’t near‑shore oil, and you can’t electrify container shipping overnight. Trust in institutions—central banks, alliances, international law—erodes a little further each time they fail to contain the fallout.

Civilizations fall when their elites can no longer manage the feedback loops between ecology, economy, and legitimacy. In that sense, the actuarial closure of Hormuz is less a discrete “event” than a diagnostic. It shows us how little slack remains in the energy system, how financial plumbing now governs physical survival, and how quickly “somebody else’s war” becomes your electricity bill, your grocery store, your mortgage.

Iran’s leadership has said, in various ways, that it will fight on until U.S. forces are driven from the region. With Russia and China providing, at minimum, diplomatic and economic backing, it has less incentive than ever to capitulate. The United States, locked into its own narratives of credibility and deterrence, has boxed itself into a conflict it cannot easily end without admitting limits.

In that sense, the world is not just drifting toward a new order. It is stumbling through the late stages of an old one whose operating assumptions—cheap fossil energy, imperial policing of chokepoints, smooth global trade—no longer hold.


World War III Without the Name

The phrase “World War III” conjures trenches and mushroom clouds. On that imagery, this crisis will never qualify. But strip away nostalgia, and the functional criteria are straightforward.

Multiple great powers are entangled, directly or through vital interests. The conflict threatens the basic functioning of the global economic system. Societies far from the battlefield are forced into large‑scale, involuntary sacrifice.

By those measures, a long Iran war that keeps Hormuz semi‑closed, shreds energy markets, realigns alliances, and pushes dozens of states toward debt or hunger is a world war in everything but the formal declaration.

It is a war in which seven insurance letters have more power than three carrier groups; in which the most important “front” may be a risk spreadsheet in London or a Politburo meeting in Beijing; in which the decisive casualty could be not a city but a story—the story that one country, at the center, can guarantee order.

Call it something else if you like. In the balance sheets, the shipping lanes, and the lives of people who will never see the Strait of Hormuz, it already feels like a world war.


References

AG Bull. “Fertilizer & Commodity Markets Jolt as Iran War Scrambles Supply.” AG Bull, March 9, 2026. https://www.agbull.com/fertilizer-end-in-sight/.

Atlantic Council. “Experts React: How the World Is Responding to the US‑Israeli War with Iran.” Atlantic Council, March 3, 2026. https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/dispatches/experts-react-how-the-world-is-responding-to-the-us-israeli-war-with-iran/.

Bloomberg. “Saudis Snap Up Every Spare Tanker They Can for Hormuz Bypass.” Bloomberg, March 12, 2026. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-03-12/saudi-oil-tanker-giant-snaps-up-ships-for-hormuz-workaround.

Columbia University Center on Global Energy Policy. “How the Iran Conflict Is Reshaping Russia and China’s Energy Security.” Columbia SIPA, March 9, 2026. https://www.energypolicy.columbia.edu/how-the-iran-conflict-is-reshaping-russia-and-chinas-energy-security/.

Countercurrents. “From Tehran to the World: What an Iran War Reveals About Global Fragility.” Countercurrents, March 10, 2026. https://countercurrents.org/2026/03/from-tehran-to-the-world-what-an-iran-war-reveals-about-global-fragility/.

Eaglesham, Jean, and Costas Paris. “U.S. Plan to Unblock Strait of Hormuz Collides With Realities of Global Insurance.” Wall Street Journal, March 11, 2026. https://www.wsj.com/finance/u-s-plan-to-unblock-strait-of-hormuz-collides-with-realities-of-global-insurance-feec54c6.

Energy Intelligence. “Aramco Ramps Up Hormuz Bypass Flows.” Energy Intelligence, March 9, 2026. https://www.energyintel.com/0000019c-d826-d613-a5be-fb6f29340000.

Euronews. “Iran War Shocks Continue to Ripple Through the Global Economy.” Euronews, March 9, 2026. https://www.euronews.com/business/2026/03/10/iran-war-shocks-continue-to-ripple-through-the-global-economy.

Fast Company. “IEA Plans Largest Oil Reserves Release in History.” Fast Company, March 11, 2026. https://www.fastcompany.com/91507417/iran-us-oil-europe-reserve-release.

Fortune. “Top Economist Says Iran War Could Trigger an Economic ‘Butterfly Effect’.” Fortune, March 10, 2026. https://fortune.com/2026/03/11/oil-inflation-butterfly-effect-kpmg-trump/.

IEA / EIA. “Amid Regional Conflict, the Strait of Hormuz Remains Critical Oil Chokepoint.” U.S. Energy Information Administration, March 9, 2026. https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=65504.

Investing.com. “Crude Oil: Record Reserves Release Eyed, But Will It Stabilize Prices?” March 11, 2026. https://www.investing.com/analysis/crude-oil-record-oil-reserves-release-eyed-but-will-it-stabilize-prices-200676456.

Le Monde / AFP. “Iran Says It’s Ready for a Long War That Would ‘Destroy’ Global Economy.” Le Monde, March 11, 2026. https://www.lemonde.fr/en/middle-east-crisis/article/2026/03/11/iran-says-its-ready-for-a-long-war-that-would-destroy-global-economy_6751340_368.html.

Morningstar / Dow Jones. “Saudi Arabia Pushes East–West Pipeline Toward Capacity Amid Hormuz Disruption.” March 10, 2026. https://www.morningstar.com/news/dow-jones/202603104313/saudi-arabia-pushes-east-west-pipeline-toward-capacity-amid-hormuz-disruption.

National Interest. “How the Iran War Will Undermine US Competition with China.” The National Interest, March 5, 2026. https://nationalinterest.org/feature/how-the-iran-war-will-undermine-us-competition-with-china.

New Dawn Nigeria. “From Assassination to Regional War: How Iran Crisis Could Reshape Global Order.” New Dawn, March 10, 2026. https://www.newdawnngr.com/2026/03/10/from-assassination-to-regional-war-how-iran-crisis-could-reshape-global-order/.

New York Times. “Global Economy Is Facing the Prospect of Another Profound Shock.” New York Times, March 3, 2026. https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/03/business/us-iran-israel-economic-fallout.html.

Nitishastra (Substack). “The Hormuz Crisis: America’s Suez Moment in the Persian Gulf.” March 9, 2026. https://nitishastra.substack.com/p/the-hormuz-crisis-americas-suez-moment.

NPR. “IEA Members to Tap into Oil Reserves.” NPR, March 11, 2026. https://www.npr.org/2026/03/11/nx-s1-5743816/iran-war-oil-reserves-iea.

Perera, Shanaka Anslem. “Actuarial Warfare: How Seven Insurance Letters Closed the World’s Most Critical Chokepoint and Why Markets Are Mispricing Duration by 300%.” Substack, March 9, 2026. https://shanakaanslemperera.substack.com/p/actuarial-warfare-how-seven-insurance.

Reuters (via World Oil). “Oil Flow Drops 17 MMbpd as Iran War Disrupts Gulf Exports.” World Oil, March 9, 2026. https://www.worldoil.com/news/2026/3/9/oil-flow-drops-17-mmbpd-as-iran-war-disrupts-gulf-exports/.

The Hill. “IEA to Release 400M Barrels to Offset Oil Shortage over US–Iran Conflict.” The Hill, March 11, 2026. https://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/5778639-iea-oil-strategic-reserves-iran-war-strait-of-hormuz/.

The Nation. “What to Expect From a Mammoth Disruption of Global Oil and Gas Supplies.” The Nation, March 10, 2026. https://www.thenation.com/article/world/iran-war-oil-gas-supplies-energy/.

Thomson Reuters. “The US‑Iran War: The Potential Economic Impact and How Companies Can Respond.” Thomson Reuters, March 3, 2026. https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en-us/posts/corporates/iran-war-economic-business-impact/.

Wikipedia. “Economic Impact of the 2026 Iran War.” Last modified March 2, 2026. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_impact_of_the_2026_Iran_war.

World Oil / Indopremier. “Oil Shock ‘Largest Supply Disruption’ in History: IEA.” March 11, 2026. https://www.indopremier.com/ipotnews/newsDetail.php?jdl=Oil_shock__largest_supply_disruption__in_history__IEA&news

Cuba’s Slow Strangulation, and an Empire That Can’t Stop Squeezing

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Some catastrophes arrive like explosions; others arrive like a hand on the throat that tightens, loosens just enough to keep the victim conscious, then tightens again. What is happening to Cuba now is the second kind. It is less a “crisis” than the logical endpoint of a relationship Ada Ferrer, in Cuba: An American History, describes as “intimate, explosive, and always uneven”—a history in which the United States could never decide whether Cuba was a neighbor, a colony, or a mirror it couldn’t bear to look into.

If the Iran war exposes how vulnerable the global system is at its maritime choke points, Cuba reveals something just as important: how an empire behaves when the choke point is not a strait half a world away but an island ninety miles off its own shore. It turns out that the methods are the same—sanctions, blockades, energy as weapon—but the blowback is closer, the hypocrisy starker, and the margin for error smaller.

Cuba’s Fuel Blockade Future

The outlines are simple and brutal. A small, import‑dependent island is strangled of fuel. Power plants shut down or limp along on residual stocks. Blackouts spread—at first rolling, then unpredictable, then so widespread that, for stretches, two‑thirds of the country sits in the dark. Refrigerators warm. Buses disappear. Flights are cancelled. Pumps stop pushing clean water uphill. Food that once moved by truck begins to rot in place. UN officials now warn that tens of thousands of cancer patients are missing treatment, nearly a million people are losing piped water when generators stop, and even humanitarian aid is stuck in port because trucks have no diesel.

None of this is an accident. It is the direct consequence of a policy crafted in Washington and justified, as Ferrer might put it, in the same register that once dressed the Platt Amendment as “protection” and the Bay of Pigs as “liberation.” The embargo that has shadowed Cuba since 1960 has been tightened again and again, but the latest turn of the screw is qualitatively different. It targets the literal fuel lines of the society—shipments of oil from Venezuela, Mexico, and any other state bullied or bribed into compliance—on the explicit theory that enough darkness and scarcity will crack the Cuban government before it cracks the Cuban people.

If you cared only about overthrowing a regime on a strategist’s whiteboard, you might call this efficient. If you cared about the texture of ordinary life, you would see something closer to slow‑motion warfare: a weaponization of kilowatts and kilometers that treats 11 million people as leverage.

Cuba as American Project

Ferrer’s book is built around a simple but devastating premise: to write the history of Cuba is to write a history of the United States from a different angle. The island has been central to American fantasies and fears since before there was a U.S. flag to fly over it. Thomas Jefferson dreamed of extending his “empire for liberty” across Florida into Cuba. John Quincy Adams compared the island to an apple that nature itself destined to fall into the Union’s hands. Southern planters saw in its sugar fields a chance to expand slavery’s domain.

Long before 1898, U.S. merchants and shipowners had already plugged Cuba into a transatlantic machine: American hulls carried enslaved Africans to its plantations, American capital financed its mills, and American markets swallowed its sugar. Spain still flew its flag from Havana’s forts, but as Ferrer shows, the island’s economy and future were already wired to the north.

When Cuban separatists finally rose in earnest against Spain in the late nineteenth century, they did so with a vision that would have horrified both Madrid and Washington: a multiracial republic, formally independent, with neither a king nor a plantation oligarchy at the top. The United States entered that war late, reframed it on its own terms as the Spanish‑American War, and claimed the victory. Spanish flags came down on January 1, 1899, but the flag raised in their place was not the lone‑starred Cuban banner that patriots had died for. It was the Stars and Stripes.

Independence did not arrive; it was deferred and rebranded. Through the Platt Amendment, Washington claimed the right to intervene in Cuban affairs whenever it saw fit and carved out Guantánamo as a permanent military foothold. American sugar companies and banks flooded in. By the 1920s, vast stretches of cane, rail, and mill lay in U.S. hands; Havana was reshaped to serve tourists and investors, and the countryside was reorganized around seasonal labor, debt, and the volatility of a single export.

Ferrer is careful not to turn this into a cartoon of passive victims and omnipotent puppeteers. Cuban elites collaborated. Cuban workers, farmers, and radicals resisted. Coups, “authentic” republics, and reformist waves all came and went. But the through‑line is unmistakable: for more than a century, the United States treated Cuba as a project—a place to discipline, develop, entertain, and extract from—not as a sovereign equal.

The Revolution and the Broken Mirror

The 1959 revolution shattered that arrangement but did not end the entanglement. It reversed the direction of power, even though physical proximity remained, and wealthy U.S. properties were nationalized. The Eagle vanished from monuments. Havana turned from client to antagonist almost overnight. For Washington, a socialist Cuba so close to Florida was not just a security problem; it was an insult, a refusal to accept the gravity that Adams once invoked.

The Castro government, for its part, turned the island into a laboratory for post‑colonial development: literacy campaigns, agrarian reform, universal health care, an attempt—uneven, often harsh—to redistribute the fruits of modernity to people who had spent centuries picking cane for others. It did all this under permanent siege by its northern neighbor: invasion, assassination attempts, embargo, covert operations, and the constant threat of annihilation during the Cuban Missile Crisis.

Ferrer’s point is not that the revolution was pure or painless. It wasn’t. But she insists that you cannot understand it, or its aftermath, without setting it against the long backdrop of occupation, sugar dependency, and thwarted independence. What happens when a people who have been alternately courted and trampled by an empire try to write a different script? Cuba is one answer.

What happens when the empire can’t forgive them for it, even sixty‑plus years on? That answer is being written right now in the darkened streets of Havana.

Energy as Empire’s Last Language

In my Iran essays, the heart of the argument was that a civilization without slack—without spare capacity in its energy systems, soils, finance, or politics—turns every local war into a test of the whole. Cuba shows the same logic at a smaller scale. The island is almost as dependent on imported fuel as a modern industrial country, but without the buffers: no vast domestic fields, no monetary hegemony, no deep capital markets to soak up shocks.

When Washington cuts off oil, it is not just pinching a budget line. It is severing the arteries that keep water moving, food chilled, buses running, and hospitals lit. Blackouts in a wealthy northern city are temporary inconveniences; blackouts in a poor, sanctioned island are existential crises. They turn vaccines into spoiled cargo, surgeries into gambles, and everyday life into a sequence of improvisations around darkness.

There is a grim symmetry here. The United States, which once organized the island’s economy around sugar and steam, now organizes its suffering around kilowatts and barrels. The levers have changed, but the principle has not: control the flows, and you control the future.

But the future no longer has room for such games. In a climate‑stressed, energy‑tight world, weaponizing fuel against an island is not clean geopolitics; it is a rehearsal for broader breakdown. Each tanker turned away from Havana is also a signal to every other vulnerable state about the risks of reliance, and to every other major power about the necessity of finding routes and currencies beyond Washington’s reach.

Blowback, Visible and Invisible

The most obvious blowback is migration. Cuba has already sent waves of exiles and migrants northward in every decade since the revolution, each crest driven by some mix of repression, economic crisis, and U.S. policy. A deliberate fuel strangulation all but guarantees new attempts by sea and land. The same politicians who demand “toughness” toward Havana will soon be standing in front of cameras insisting the border cannot cope with the human fallout of their own strategy.

Then there is legitimacy. Even in a world hardened by Gaza, Yemen, and Iraq, there is something especially naked about starving an entire country of fuel. It is the kind of act that international law was supposed to name and prevent. The UN is already warning in those exact terms: of “possible humanitarian collapse,” of hospitals forced to triage care by generator hours, of aid convoys immobilized because they cannot get diesel. Each blackout in Havana is also another crack in the already fragile story of a “rules‑based order” administered from Washington. If sanctions are the empire’s favorite “non‑violent” tool, it’s because the dying happens offshore, off‑camera, and far from the people signing the orders.

Finally, there is the subtler blowback Ferrer hints at when she describes how Cubans came to see 1898 not as liberation but as theft. Memory accumulates. A people who have lived through slavery, sugar dependency, occupations, revolution, and embargo are not blank slates. They carry stories about who starved them and who stood by. Every night spent in darkness because someone in an office in Washington signed an order will become another story added to that ledger.

Cuba as Microcosm of Collapse

Seen from a distance, the new Cuban crisis might look like a small, if tragic, side plot in a world preoccupied with larger wars. Seen from closer in, it is a concentrated version of the same themes:

  • A global system that cannot deliver basic security and dignity without continuous extraction and coercion.

  • An empire that reaches for the same blunt tools—blockades, sanctions, proxy pressure—even as those tools corrode the order they are meant to defend.

  • A planet whose physical limits—of energy, climate, and ecology—turn every act of economic warfare into a ripple in a tightly coupled web.

Cuba has been, for centuries, a place where big forces show their hand early: slavery, monoculture, corporate imperialism, Cold War proxy conflict, the false promise of “development” under dependency. It is not surprising that it is now an early stage for energy warfare in the age of climate breakdown.

In that sense, the streets of Havana today belong in the same mental frame as tankers stalled near Hormuz or farmers in the Midwest staring at fertilizer quotes. The details differ; the structure doesn’t. A civilization that has built its comforts on other people’s precarity is discovering that the line between “over there” and “here” is dissolving.

Cuba’s blackout is not separate from the slow collapse I have been mapping. It is one more facet of the same weather system: a world in which the engines of empire still turn, but with less fuel, less consent, and less time.

The Empire at the Choke Point, Part II: War, Limits, and the Slow Collapse of Modern Civilization

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Not so long ago, the Iran war could still be treated as a “shock” to the system—a sudden, violent anomaly that spooked traders, sent a few charts vertical, then, we were told, would be absorbed. Oil would spike and settle. Gasoline would lurch higher and then ease. Fertilizer prices would jump and “normalize.” Shipping would reroute. The machine would shudder, spit smoke, and then grind on.

By mid‑March, that story already sounds tired. The Strait of Hormuz is not just “at risk”; it is intermittently choked, with tankers idling or turning away and shipowners talking more about insurance clauses than shipping schedules. Missiles and drones have not just brushed past Dubai and Abu Dhabi; they have hit airports, hotels, and oil and gas facilities. The war has stopped pretending to be containable. It is doing what wars at the throat of the system must do in late empire: pulling back the curtain on how brittle the whole arrangement has become.

What happens when a civilization built on cheap fossil energy, globalized supply chains, and the illusion of a “rules‑based order” runs its jugular through a narrow strait somebody else can close? What happens when you stack that vulnerability on top of a destabilized climate, exhausted soils and aquifers, and an economic order whose main talent is inventing new debts to paper over old ones? The answer is not a neat apocalypse. It is something slower, messier, and harder to turn off.

It looks like this war.

War That Tests the System

When the first U.S.–Israeli waves hit Iran’s refineries, export terminals, and air defenses, the coverage was still drenched in the language of spectacle. Footage of streaking missiles, dramatic studio graphics over the Strait of Hormuz, Pentagon briefings on “surgical” strikes. Markets, we were told, were “volatile” but “resilient.” Oil that had lived in the comfortable doldrums of 70 dollars a barrel surged to the brink of 120, then fell back toward 90. By early March, analysts were estimating that the fighting and de facto blockades had temporarily sidelined close to a fifth of global seaborne oil and gas flows, enough to push benchmark prices up by more than twenty percent in a week. The finance pages gamed out whether this would be another “oil shock,” a “temporary spike,” or merely a “headline risk.”

Within days, the story shifts from a spike to a siege. The IRGC’s drones and missiles have not only harassed shipping lanes; they have damaged terminals, storage tanks, and power plants. Insurance costs for tankers have climbed into the red zone. Some shipowners are simply refusing to transit the Gulf. Emergency meetings of energy ministers and finance officials that were once unthinkable in peacetime have become weekly calendar entries. The International Energy Agency and major importers now talk openly about coordinated releases from strategic reserves—not as a drill but as a lifeline, echoing the playbook dusted off during previous oil shocks.

Central bankers, who spent years pretending that their job was an apolitical exercise in “inflation targeting,” now find themselves back on the front lines of war. Higher oil and gas prices bleed into everything: trucking, aviation, manufacturing, heating, electricity. The inflation they helped smother with interest‑rate hikes suddenly has a new lungful of fuel. Raise rates again to fight that? You risk detonating the debt bombs they left ticking through corporate balance sheets, commercial real estate, overleveraged households, and sovereigns already flirting with default. Loosen policy? You validate price spikes and feed a new wave of asset bubbles.

So we get the familiar dance of statements and counter‑statements. The White House insists the war will be “short” and “decisive.” Energy analysts urge “calm” and stress that “markets are functioning.” Bank research notes speak of “manageable downside risks” while their authors quietly model what happens if Hormuz stays half‑closed for six months and a few more pipelines or LNG trains go offline. Newspapers publish explainers on how much oil and gas normally slips through that narrow strait; maps of alternative routes proliferate in graphics departments like a rash.

In other words: the system is performing its favorite trick, narrating structural crisis as temporary turbulence. But unlike previous rounds, the war in Iran is overlapping with other limits in ways that make that trick harder to sustain.

The Noose Tightens: Energy, Fertilizer, Food

The first essay stopped at the edge of a simple but brutal observation that agronomists and energy analysts have been making for years: modern agriculture runs on fossil fuels twice over. First as fuel—with diesel in tractors, ships, and trucks—and then as feedstock, in the form of nitrogen fertilizers synthesized from natural gas and sulfur scraped from oil and gas streams. Shut or constrict Hormuz, and you do not just squeeze oil exports; you reach into the pipelines and cracking towers that turn fossil carbon into plant nutrients.

That is no longer an abstract chain of causation. Nitrogen fertilizer prices have already jumped in key export hubs and import markets. Farm groups and even cautious agriculture officials admit, in their more candid briefings, that the Iran shock is hitting just as spring planting begins, a double blow for growers who now have to choose between paying through the nose for inputs or gambling on thinner, more precarious harvests. Plants in the Gulf that turn gas into ammonia and urea are not operating in a vacuum; they are tied to the same shipping lanes and risk calculations as crude. Every attack on a tanker, every drone explosion near a port, nudges one more risk‑off decision: a cargo postponed, a shipment rerouted, a plant run at lower utilization because owners would rather hoard gas than sell fertilizer at what they suspect are still too‑low prices.

At the same time, gas prices themselves are surging. In Europe and Asia, utilities that finally clawed their way out of the last price spike are once again bidding against fertilizer plants and industrial users for molecules. In developing countries, governments that subsidize fertilizer to keep farmers from switching off their fields are staring at budget spreadsheets that no longer add up. The logic is merciless: if you cannot afford enough nitrogen and phosphate, you either cut application rates or cut planted area. Either way, there is less food months down the line.

Grain markets have a way of turning distant decisions into street politics. In 2008, and again a few years later, a mix of expensive energy, panicked export bans, and technocratic stupidity turned rising grain prices into riots and toppled cabinets from North Africa to South Asia, as even the World Bank and FAO belatedly acknowledged. The lesson was simple enough: when you weaponize the inputs to food, you are also playing with the wiring of global politics, even if the explosion comes on a time delay. This war repeats the trick with more moving parts. Refineries and LNG terminals go up in flames in March; fertilizer quietly disappears from order books in April and May; by the following year, ministers in Cairo, Tunis, or Dhaka are staring down crowds and pretending not to understand why bread has doubled. The shock does not stay “over there.” It comes back through the side door: in Midwestern farmers staring at doubled nitrogen quotes and empty delivery slots, in grocery aisles where higher prices collide with thinner benefits, in a superpower dimly realizing that the instability it treats as an externality is starting to seep back through its own foundations.

Meanwhile, agronomists warn, the climate is no longer a neutral backdrop. Heatwaves, droughts, and floods are already chewing into yields on every continent. A system that used to assume “bad harvest in one region, made up elsewhere” now lives with the possibility of simultaneous shocks; the UN’s own food agencies have been sounding that alarm for years. Layer an energy‑driven fertilizer crunch on top of that, and you do not just get higher prices; you get a tighter, more explosive linkage between weather and politics.

The Point of No Slack

In a younger, fatter civilization, an oil and fertilizer shock of this magnitude would still hurt, but it would meet some slack: spare capacity in fields, refineries, storage depots, and budgets. There were still new frontiers to plow, higher‑EROI oil to tap, rivers whose dams had not yet been built, aquifers that had not yet been drained. A war at a choke point might bruise the system, but the rest of the organism could compensate.

That slack is gone. We have spent it.

In the background, the clock on the shale boom is ticking. For years, U.S. fracking papered over deeper structural limits, adding roughly eight million barrels per day and letting Washington act as if it had discovered a permanent escape hatch from OPEC and geological reality, as even cautious Energy Information Administration charts now make uncomfortably clear. Industry veterans have been warning that the core shale basins are maturing, that the sweetest rock has already been drilled, that productivity gains are flattening. Now even the industry’s own executives are saying the quiet part out loud. Occidental’s Vicki Hollub has warned repeatedly that U.S. shale growth is close to plateauing, with Permian output likely to peak at just over seven million barrels per day and overall U.S. production topping out around the end of this decade, a timeline echoed in other majors’ investor presentations and in official forecasts that see a national production peak around 2027 before decline sets in. The geopolitical class has clearly gotten the memo, which helps explain the renewed obsession with prying open other people’s taps, from Venezuelan heavy crude to Greenland’s speculative Arctic reserves, even as OPEC’s own reserve figures remain opaque and widely suspected of creative accounting. If Iran’s mayhem drags on while American shale rolls over, the world will discover that the “swing producer” of the 2010s was a one‑off sugar high, not a new normal—and that there are far fewer places left to turn when both geology and politics say no.

Conventional oil discoveries peaked decades ago. What is left to bring online cheaply and quickly are not giant, gushing fields but smaller, deeper, more expensive, more carbon‑intensive plays: shale that depletes fast, offshore basins that require billion‑dollar platforms, heavy and sour crudes that need complex refining. High energy‑return‑on‑investment fuels are steadily giving way to lower‑return sources, a shift even mainstream energy‑economics papers have started to quantify. That does not mean the taps run dry; it means every marginal barrel costs more—in money, in energy, in environmental damage—and leaves less surplus to run the rest of society.

Soils and water tell the same story. The Green Revolution’s jump in yields was bought with fossil fuel embedded in fertilizer, pesticides, irrigation pumps, and machinery. The bill has been coming due in the form of eroded topsoil, salinated fields, rivers that no longer reach the sea, aquifers whose drop is measured in meters per decade. Climate change turns those chronic debts into acute crises as glacier‑fed rivers swing wildly between flood and trickle and rainfall patterns slip their old rhythms.

A system in that condition does not absorb shocks gracefully. It amplifies them. That is why a few weeks of war in the Gulf can move food prices in Cairo or Lagos or Dhaka long before a single ship carrying bread grain is blocked. Traders understand that what matters is not just today’s stock levels but tomorrow’s flows, and that a world without slack will panic more easily and more often.

The Return of the Jungle

For three postwar generations, Western elites wrapped this increasingly precarious arrangement in the language of civility. There was, we were told, a “rules‑based international order.” Disputes would be mediated through institutions; markets would allocate resources efficiently; great‑power competition would be bounded by norms. Wars still happened, but they were either framed as unfortunate anomalies or as “police actions” against rogue states who refused to play by the rules.

The Iran war has torn another strip off that fiction.

What is a “rules‑based order” in which one bloc can unilaterally seize another country’s foreign reserves, starve its population with sanctions, and then bomb its energy infrastructure, all while declaring itself the upholder of law? What is a “rules‑based order” in which the world’s most heavily armed state and its favored client can openly target hospitals, schools, power plants, and apartment blocks from Gaza to Tehran and still be described by mainstream media as “defending themselves”? What is an “order” in which attacks on civilian shipping, airports, and commercial towers are treated as regrettable but acceptable collateral when carried out by friends, and pure barbarism when carried out by enemies?

Strip away the branding, and what remains is the oldest law there is: might makes right, so long as the “right” is dressed up in enough op‑eds and press conferences. The Iran war is not bringing back the law of the jungle; it is revealing that it never left, only changed its clothes.

In that jungle, choke points are hunting grounds. Control Hormuz, or at least deny it to others, and you have a hand on the pulse of energy and fertilizer flows. Control the Red Sea lanes and Bab al‑Mandab, and you can squeeze Europe’s trade with Asia and East Africa. Control rare‑earth mines, chip‑fabrication supply chains, or lithium deposits, and you can dictate the pace and geography of any supposed “energy transition.” Control the platforms on which people talk and trade, and you can decide whose pain is seen and whose is buried in euphemism.

Empires have always fought over such points. What makes the current moment different is not the existence of the jungle but the density of the vines. When everything is tightly coupled—energy, food, finance, information—wars at key nodes no longer just redirect flows; they risk snapping branches.

Symptoms of a Slow Collapse

Collapse is a word people tend to reserve for cinematic scenes: skyscrapers shearing, currencies imploding in a week, governments falling like dominoes. The reality, historically, is slower and less legible from the inside. Systems degrade. Buffers thin. Rituals persist long after their content rots. People adapt to each new absurdity as if it were normal.

From that vantage point, the Iran war reads less like an isolated “crisis” and more like an x‑ray of a civilization already in the early stages of disintegration.

Consider the macro picture. Rich countries carry debt loads that used to be associated with post‑default Latin American states. Interest payments on the U.S. federal debt alone are on track to rival, then exceed, the defense budget and major social programs within a decade if current projections hold. Infrastructure in the imperial core—bridges, water systems, public transit, hospitals—crumbles even as record sums are poured into weapons that cannot reliably defeat cheap drones.

Trust has drained out of institutions. Large segments of Western publics no longer believe what their governments, media, or scientific bodies tell them, often with good reason. Conspiracy fills the vacuum, not because people are irrational but because they are rationally responding to decades of lies and selective outrage. When officials who downplayed Gaza’s death tolls and called for “context” suddenly rediscover humanitarian law over a different set of victims, the hypocrisy is not subtle.

Ecologically, the indicators point in one direction. Emissions keep rising. Biodiversity keeps falling. Heat records are broken so frequently that the phrase “record heat” has become wallpaper. The same governing class that insists it can fine‑tune a delicate global system through interest‑rate nudges also tells us that incremental pledges and future technologies will handle planetary boundaries.

Into that matrix comes a war that does two things at once. It reveals that the empire’s ability to guarantee basic flows of energy and food is weaker than advertised. And it shows that, when challenged, the empire’s instinct is not to rethink its dependence on choke points and fossil fuels but to double down on violence—on sanctions, blockades, bombardment.

This is what early collapse looks like: an order that can still project force and stage spectacles, but can no longer provide rising living standards, reliable infrastructure, or a credible story about the future. It relies increasingly on fear, distraction, and outright coercion to manage populations at home and abroad. It burns legitimacy to buy time, and then discovers that time is not for sale.

No Outside, No Later

One of the quiet assumptions that made the American century feel stable, at least from the metropole, was the belief that there was always an “outside” to absorb damage. Wars were fought “over there.” Resource extraction tore up someone else’s forest, someone else’s delta. Famines, coups, epidemics, and floods happened on other people’s screens. The empire’s role, in its own mythology, was to manage these turbulences from above, adjusting sanctions here, sending peacekeepers there, signing climate accords in well‑air‑conditioned halls.

The Iran war undercuts that geography. Tehran’s black rain is not just a local tragedy; it is a literal aerosol reminder that combustion and contamination do not stop at borders. Smoke from burning depots drifts across regions. Knocked‑out exports ripple into fertilizer shortages, food price spikes, and political unrest continents away. Climate change, already a planetary phenomenon, now interacts with war‑driven scarcity to make once‑localized disasters propagate more widely.

There is, increasingly, no “over there” left. A farmer in Iowa or Iowa’s equivalent anywhere is connected, through fertilizer prices and grain exports, to a missile launch in the Gulf. A commuter in Berlin or Jakarta is connected, through fuel costs and interest rates, to a ship struck near Hormuz. A protester in Cairo facing food inflation is connected, through debt and trade, to bond yields in New York and London.

That is the deeper sense in which this war foreshadows collapse. Not because it will single‑handedly bring the system down, but because it demonstrates how little room to maneuver is left. Each intervention to stabilize one subsystem—energy, say, through reserve releases—tends to destabilize another, by depleting buffers or encouraging further risk‑taking. Each attempt to “send a message” through military force generates new resentments, new arms races, new incentives for others to develop asymmetric tools.

If the old pattern of empire was to externalize costs, the new pattern is that there is nowhere left to externalize them to. The atmosphere, the oceans, the food system, the financial network: they are already full.

Learning to Read the Weather

What does it mean, then, to take this war seriously? It does not mean betting on a precise date for collapse, or fantasizing about a neat before/after moment when the lights go out. It means learning to read incidents like the Iran war not as freak storms but as part of a changing climate.

A grocery aisle stripped of staples in a city that once treated the Gulf as a faraway headline. A corn farmer deciding whether to cut back on nitrogen and accept a thinner harvest so he can make the bank payment. A finance minister in a small, indebted state trying to choose which fuse to light: angrier drivers or hungrier families. A U.S. senator on cable news calling a billion dollars a day in bombing “the best money ever spent” because it might pry open someone else’s oil fields. These are not glitches in an otherwise stable order; they are how a tightly wired, overdrawn system translates distant explosions into everyday life.

From within that storm, the temptation is always to seek reassurance: to believe that this is a phase, that markets will stabilize, that “the adults in the room” have a plan. The more honest reading is harsher and, paradoxically, more freeing. No one is in control in the way we have been taught to imagine. The system is too tight, too complex, too exhausted. Those who benefit most from it are not steering it so much as surfing its remaining waves, trying to stay on top for one more business cycle, one more election, one more contract.

The Iran war shows what happens when such a system meets a determined adversary at one of its choke points. It staggers, it lashes out, it improvises, and it reveals, in the process, just how little redundancy and moral capital remain.

We are not watching the end of the world. We are watching the end of a particular world: the brief, fossil‑fueled, American‑led arrangement in which one bloc could pretend that history had stopped and that the jungle had been tamed. The jungle was just put behind glass for a while. The glass is cracking.

The task, for anyone not invested in the empire’s illusions, is to look through those cracks without flinching. To see that wars like this are not aberrations but expressions. To understand that, in a tightly wired, overheated, overdrawn civilization, there are no local disasters and no permanent shelters. And then, knowing that, to decide how to live in a world where the choke points are not somewhere else on the map, but all around us.

The Empire at the Choke Point: Oil, Fertilizer, and a World on Rations

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Once again the American empire has waded into the Middle East convinced it can redraw the map, only to find that this time the quagmire reaches all the way into its own gas tanks, grocery aisles, and credit markets. Somewhere between the Strait of Hormuz and the trading floors of New York, oil that had idled around 70 dollars a barrel suddenly spiked to nearly 120 before sliding back toward 90, like a seismograph undecided between tremor and quake. Energy desks called it “volatility.” Daniel Yergin, the Pulitzer‑winning oil historian and vice‑chair of S&P Global, called it—carefully, on public television—a “nightmare scenario” in the making. The rest of us will have to survive whatever they choose to call it.

When the first U.S.–Israeli strikes hit Iran’s refineries and export terminals, traders discovered what planners have always known: the global economy has a throat, and it is about twenty‑one miles wide. You can call it the Strait of Hormuz, or you can call it the place where 20 percent of the world’s oil and a fifth of its liquefied natural gas squeeze between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula before fanning out into the arteries of “normal life.” But Hormuz is only the visible pinch point on a longer, fragile spine: from the Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman, where Iran’s fast boats, missiles, and mines can harass tankers, out into the Arabian Sea, and westward through the Red Sea and Bab al‑Mandab, where Iran‑aligned Houthis—and, if needed, other militias—have already shown they can turn that whole corridor into a killer of ships. Close any one segment for a week and you get a scare at the pump; close or credibly threaten several for a season, and you get history.

War at the Throat of the System

On PBS NewsHour, Geoff Bennett, an avatar of American reassurance, sat across from Yergin and tried to make the chaos sound manageable. Prices had surged overnight “to levels we haven’t seen since 2022,” he noted, before falling sharply by the end of the day; the national average price of gasoline, he added, had already climbed nearly fifty cents since the conflict began. What, he asked, was driving the swings?

What drove prices up, Yergin said, was simple: Hormuz was shutting down—“the biggest oil disruption the world has ever seen.” Not just because of the missiles and drones buzzing the strait, but because of the fear that “very extensive infrastructure on the Arab side of the Gulf” might be next. What drove prices back down was also simple: television demagogue‑in‑chief Donald Trump, flanked by neocon hawks like Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Fox‑studio‑groomed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, signaling that the war could “soon be over.” Markets do not need coherence; they only need a story that can be traded.

Pressed on his Financial Times warning of a “nightmare scenario,” Yergin drew the contour in a few sentences. The real disaster, he said, would be not a brief scare but “an extended period of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz combined with extensive damage to the infrastructure”—the kind of shock that would send prices well beyond 120, “hit financial markets,” and, as in the 1970s, “push the world into recession.” Even without that full nightmare, he admitted, prices were already “a good deal higher” than before the military buildup, and the lines on the charts were no longer under anyone’s real control.

The empire’s answer has been to fight this asymmetrical war with an outdated playbook. Energy Secretary Chris Wright—another smooth emissary of normality—talked of a “large tanker” that had managed to thread the strait, and Trump mused aloud about providing naval escorts, as if the calendar had flipped back to the late 1980s tanker wars. But the Gulf has moved on. A cheap, laptop‑piloted suicide drone, built from commercial parts and costing on the order of a few tens of thousands of dollars, can now do what a squadron used to: write a red line through a shipowner’s balance sheet. The United States can escort a handful of tankers through Hormuz for the cameras; it cannot escort the actuarial tables of the insurance industry, or the quiet decision of a Greek magnate to sit tight until the sky stops buzzing.

Even in Yergin’s careful technocratese, the implication is brutal: the system is realizing that the blood flow it depends on runs through a choke point someone else can close, and that carrier battle groups are clumsy instruments against small, disposable machines that arrive in swarms.

When the Fertilizer Stops

The more revealing moment in that PBS exchange comes when Bennett asks where Americans might feel the pain beyond the pump. Yergin dutifully mentions transportation and heating, but then, almost as an aside, he notes that an unnervingly large share of the cost of food is really the cost of energy. The line passes without comment, like a minor statistic. It is actually the hinge that swings the Iran war from an oil story into a food story, and from there into a political one.

Modern agriculture runs on nitrogen and sulfur pulled out of gas and oil. Ammonia and urea, the nitrogen fertilizers that keep harvests from collapsing, are synthesized largely from natural gas; sulfur, another key nutrient and a backbone of phosphate fertilizers, is mostly a byproduct of fossil‑fuel extraction. A war that throttles LNG flows and sulfur shipments out of the Gulf is therefore not just an “energy markets” event; it is a delayed shock to the calories the world expects to eat in six, twelve, twenty‑four months.

There is no strategic fertilizer reserve for this. Around a third of the world’s traded fertilizer nutrients now sit downstream of this war: ammonia and urea from Gulf plants, sulfur stripped out of oil and gas and shipped through the same narrowing strait. With roughly a third of seaborne urea and about half of global sulfur exports effectively trapped behind the disruption, the gas transformed into plant food has been severed from its main shipping route. Russian and Chinese producers are already near the limits of what they can export, and overland workarounds to non‑Gulf ports move only a trickle compared with the millions of tonnes that normally pour through Hormuz.

Agronomists and commodity analysts are already warning that if those flows stay choked through planting season, even “modest” cuts in nitrogen use could mean millions of tonnes of grain that never materialize—a slower‑motion “food price shock” that may prove more destabilising than the crude‑price spike that preceded it. Analysts now talk, a little too calmly, about a coming “fertiliser shock.” With shipping through Hormuz disrupted or priced into the stratosphere, Gulf‑linked fertilizer plants dial back production, export schedules slip, procurement officers in Asia and Africa bid against each other for the remaining cargoes, and farmers from Punjab to the Brazilian cerrado quietly cut application rates. The first sign shows up as a spike in urea futures; the second as thinner harvests; the third as a sharp turn in the FAO’s global food price index that ministries in Cairo, Tunis, or Dhaka cannot ignore.

We have seen this film before. In 2008 and again in the early 2010s, synchronized surges in grain prices—driven by energy costs, export bans, and bad policy—helped trigger food riots and mass protests from Egypt and Tunisia to a belt of some thirty other countries across Africa and Asia. Today’s Iran war bakes in a similar arc: bomb refineries and LNG terminals in March, quietly strip fertilizer off the market, and then field anger in someone else’s capital six or eighteen months later—while insisting, with a straight face, that the connection is mysterious. By then, the blowback is already washing home: American farmers squeezed by doubled nitrogen prices and missed spring shipments, grocery inflation and SNAP cuts colliding in the aisles, and an empire discovering that the unrest it exports will not stop at its own borders.

Tehran Under Double‑Tap Democracy

From Tehran, the nightmare does not begin with a candlestick chart; it begins with a siren and ends with a double tap.

Mohammad Marandi, a professor of English literature and Orientalism at the University of Tehran and a regular commentator on Western media narratives, spoke to former CIA officer John Kiriakou from a city learning to hold its breath between strikes. The targets, he said, are not just radar stations or missile batteries but the skeleton and nervous system of urban life: apartment blocks, squares, hospitals, schools, stadiums, pharmaceutical factories, Red Crescent headquarters, police stations, national emergency‑service buildings. First comes the bomb that shatters the square; then, when neighbors and first responders claw at the rubble, comes the second wave, aimed at those who tried to help.

On day one alone, Marandi recounts, U.S.–Israeli strikes hit the Gandhi Hospital in Tehran—targeting its IVF clinic—and an elementary school filled with girls, killing around 168 students and twenty staff, followed hours later by a gymnasium where women were playing basketball and volleyball. Kiriakou, in a separate interview about the same war, is asked to respond to Trump’s televised claim that “the only side that targets civilians is Iran,” that the girls’ school must have been hit by errant Iranian munitions. As an American, Kiriakou says, he wants to believe it was a terrible mistake, “but my brain won’t allow me to believe that.” Given the record in Gaza and Lebanon, he concludes, either Washington or its ally chose that target, and chose it to traumatize Iranians into submission.

The bombs do their work; so does the resistance. Every night, Marandi says, even under bombardment, Iranians gather by the tens and hundreds of thousands in cities across the country: not in one Tiananmen‑style square that can be dispersed, but in dozens of separate assemblies. In Tehran alone, he describes crowds in “20 or so places,” each swelling into six figures, standing their ground while anti‑aircraft and anti‑missile batteries trace frantic arcs overhead. It is not a regime‑scripted tableau; it is a population that has internalized a particular Shia grammar of martyrdom and steadfastness, some of it drawn directly from the assassinated Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose biography Marandi sketches in detail.

Khamenei, he reminds viewers, was not the cartoon villain of Western coverage but a cleric from a poor family who spent time in the Shah’s prisons, fought at the front in the Iran–Iraq war even as president, lost the use of his right arm in an assassination attempt, and remained in his home and office through years of sanctions and threats. He was, Marandi emphasizes, “not afraid to die” and refused to leave Tehran even under bombardment, insisting he would not flee when ordinary Iranians had nowhere to go. Killing him, along with much of his family, has not decapitated the system; it has canonized him as a martyr and hardened the resolve of those who saw him as both religious and political leader.

The war, in other words, is teaching Iranians something about their enemies that no number of abstract lectures on imperialism could have driven home. Students who once dabbled in Western‑backed protests, he says, now contact him in tears asking how they can atone and help. A generation that had half‑believed satellite‑beamed fantasies about Western concern for human rights is watching, day and night, as that concern vaporizes against the concrete of their own neighborhoods—and with every double tap and denied hospital strike, the American empire trades away another slice of whatever moral authority it once claimed in the region.

Surviving Is Winning

If the everyday landscape of Tehran is one of double‑taps and defiance, the strategic horizon is simpler. For the United States and Israel, “victory” still means what it meant in Guatemala in 1954 or Tehran in 1953: a toppled government, a purged military, a new client executive smiling from the presidential balcony. For Iran, victory means breathing.

Kiriakou, who spent years inside the CIA’s counterterrorism bureaucracy before turning whistleblower on its torture program, puts it in a sentence. For Washington and Tel Aviv to win, he says, “they have to completely topple the Iranian government and remove all of their leaders,” likely killing “hundreds and hundreds of people,” then install “a pro‑American, pro‑Israeli government in its place.” That is “virtually impossible,” he adds. For Iran to win, by contrast, “all they have to do is survive.” If, at the end of this, there is still an Islamic Republic with functional command structures and enough rockets and drones to hurt its enemies, “Israel and the United States lose.”

Iran’s military and political leadership are behaving as though they understand this math. They know they are outgunned in high‑end hardware; hypersonic missiles aside, they cannot match U.S. or Israeli avionics and targeting systems. But they do not have to. Instead, they lean into what they do have: cheap, plentiful, reasonably accurate suicide drones and medium‑range missiles that can be guided into U.S. bases across the Gulf, oil facilities in Saudi Arabia, hotels and office towers in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, and, when needed, deeper targets in Israel itself.

As Kiriakou and other analysts note, a one‑way attack drone capable of reaching regional bases or even Israel can cost on the order of tens of thousands of dollars—a Shahed‑class system is widely estimated at roughly 20,000 to 50,000 dollars per unit—while the interceptors that try to stop it run into the millions, and the aircraft, refineries, export terminals, or high‑rise skylines behind them are priced in the billions and collateralized in London and New York. In that landscape, every day the war continues and every successful hit on a “sensitive target”—from the U.S. Air Force base outside Doha to the Fifth Fleet’s headquarters in Bahrain—constitutes a kind of negative‑interest payment the system owes to its own overreach.

Marandi, citing “a significant political figure,” says Iranian planners intend to keep this up “until the midterms in the United States,” explicitly aiming to make the war an issue for voters and investors, not just for generals. The goal is not to destroy the U.S. militarily but to force it and its Gulf clients into a choice: accept real negotiation with an adversary you can no longer bully, or bleed out economically and politically in a conflict you cannot win—while watching, in real time, as investors start pricing U.S. assets as if Washington has stumbled into another forever war, and as the rest of the world quietly recalibrates its view of American power from invincible hegemon to flailing, overleveraged empire.

The Gulf’s Buyers’ Remorse

If survival is Iran’s bar for victory, survival is also becoming an awkward question for the Gulf monarchies that helped stage this war.

For three and a half decades, from the liberation of Kuwait onward, the ruling families of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait outsourced their regime security to Washington. The logic was simple: host U.S. air wings, army brigades, and naval fleets; buy hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of American weapons; align foreign policy with Washington’s wars; and in return receive a security guarantee—explicit or not—against both external threats and internal upheaval.

The Iran war is exposing the cracks in that bargain. Kiriakou spent the weeks before the outbreak shuttling through Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Kuwait City, listening to local elites ask whether the Americans would really attack. He told them yes, based on what he had been taught inside the Agency: if you want to understand U.S. intentions, “watch the movement of American naval vessels.” Carrier strike groups moved in; war followed.

What followed next, from the Gulf perspective, was worse. Iranian drones and missiles hit luxury hotels, shopping centers, apartment buildings, oil installations, airports, and U.S. bases. The world’s largest foreign air base, sprawling army facilities with fifty thousand U.S. ground troops, the headquarters of the Fifth Fleet—none of them could stop cheap, one‑way attack drones and salvos of ballistic missiles. A quarter century after Vladimir Putin expressed shock that the Pentagon had no surface‑to‑air missiles defending it on 9/11, Kiriakou notes dryly, “we don’t have surface‑to‑air missiles to protect much of anything that we have.”

For rulers whose citizenry makes up ten or fifteen percent of the population, perched atop vast pools of migrant labor and stateless underclasses, that is not an academic point. Marandi is blunt: these are “family dictatorships” with no deep historical roots or ideological glue; stretch the war out and they may simply not survive. Already, he says, some are phoning Moscow to ask for help, only to be reminded by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov that they never condemned U.S.–Israeli attacks on Iran and are “the main reason of this war happening.”

Caught between a patron that cannot protect them and a neighbor that can hurt them, the Gulf monarchies will do what they have always done: hedge. That will mean deeper security and energy ties with China and Russia, which are already positioning themselves as mediators and alternative arms suppliers, quiet constraints on U.S. basing rights and operations, and, over time, some form of accommodation with Tehran that trades public hostility for private understandings. The image of the Gulf as a stable, U.S.‑policed “energy supermarket” is gone; in its place is a region where the shelves themselves are recognized as leverage.

Empire at Home: Debt, Decay, and Denial

While Hormuz chokes and Tehran burns, the imperial core continues its strange double life.

On the one hand, the United States is still, on paper, the only country that can fight a war like this. Its defense budget has swollen to roughly a trillion dollars a year, larger than that of the next set of major powers combined. It sustains carrier battle groups on every ocean, maintains hundreds of bases, and can rain precision munitions on almost any point on the globe.

On the other hand, as Kiriakou points out, it has “third world level” airports, crumbling roads and bridges, and hospitals that feel permanently on the verge of collapse. Interest payments on the national debt are projected to hit about a trillion dollars a year by 2026—more than the country will spend on either defense or Medicaid—and to roughly double again by the mid‑2030s, becoming the single largest line item in the federal budget. Donald Trump, who once daydreamed about cutting the Pentagon budget in half, now talks—under the influence of advisers like Rubio and Hegseth and donors like Miriam Adelson—about increasing it by another half‑trillion dollars.

The same White House that insists it can fight and win a war with Iran in weeks also blocks, or “chills,” a joint bulletin from the FBI, Department of Homeland Security, and National Counterterrorism Center warning of an elevated domestic terror threat linked to that very war. Media reports describe an administration demanding that any product “concerning Iran” be cleared personally, with the practical effect that local law enforcement and the public are kept in the dark about heightened risks to U.S. government facilities, Jewish and Iranian‑American institutions, and critical infrastructure. Better to control the narrative than to confront the consequences.

Layer on top the slow erosion of dollar hegemony. Iran’s entry into an expanded BRICS bloc—which is on track to account for nearly 40 percent of global GDP on a purchasing‑power basis by the end of the decade—and that group’s halting explorations of a shared currency and non‑dollar settlement systems will not dethrone the greenback tomorrow. But they are part of the same drift the Iran war is accelerating: large commodity producers and populous states asking whether it is wise to keep clearing their trade through a currency whose issuer has a habit of weaponizing its privileges. If the conflict pushes more oil, gas, and fertilizer deals into yuan, rupees, or some future BRICS unit, Washington will have achieved the rare feat of undermining its own monetary power with the same tools—sanctions, asset seizures, military threats—it once used to enforce it.

Cultural Weather: Graded Humanity

Culturally, the Iran war does not just normalize the unthinkable; it clarifies the operating system behind it: a world in which some deaths are treated as events and others as acceptable background noise. For two years, Gaza supplied the template. Western media framed an openly exterminatory campaign as “self‑defense,” gave vastly more emotional and narrative space to Israeli victims than to Palestinian ones, and treated Palestinian casualty figures as inherently suspect even when later confirmed by Israeli officials and independent researchers. The lesson, for anyone watching from the global South, was not subtle: there is a moral caste system, and Gazans are on the bottom.

For anyone who has been paying attention, none of this cruelty is entirely new. A generation ago, Madeleine Albright could tell “60 Minutes” that the reported deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children under U.S. sanctions were “worth it,” and the remark was treated as a minor scandal rather than a confession. For decades the United States armed and financed death squads from Central America to Southeast Asia, backed dictatorships that filled mass graves, and applied one standard of legality to enemies and another to clients. What Gaza and now Tehran change is not the underlying moral code but its exposure: the same hierarchy of lives is being enforced with a level of ferocity, duration, and live‑streamed documentation that strips away every pretense of “rules‑based” restraint. The barbarity has not suddenly appeared; it has dropped its mask.

The mask does not just slip in dusty archives or leaked memos; it slips live, in high definition. On Fox News, Senator Lindsey Graham recently described Washington’s billion‑dollars‑a‑day bombardment of Iran as “the best money ever spent,” a “really good investment,” because when Tehran’s regime falls “we are going to make a ton of money.” He then laid out the business case: Venezuela and Iran, whose elected leaders Washington has kidnapped or is now trying to overthrow, “have 31 percent of the world’s oil reserves. We’re going to have a partnership with 31 percent of the known reserves. This is China’s nightmare. This is a good investment.” It is Albright’s “worth it” updated for a new century: an open admission that the deaths of children in classrooms and people in apartment blocks are an acceptable price for securing a bigger cut of the world’s fuel.

Tehran extends the Gaza logic from a besieged enclave to a capital city. The same arsenals that chewed Gaza’s hospitals, schools, and apartment towers into dust now turn stadiums, universities, and power plants in a metropolis of ten million into legitimate targets, and much of the Western press falls back on the same reflex: emphasize “Iranian aggression,” minimize the civilian dead, recycle official talking points about “precision” even when the rubble on screen says otherwise. What used to be a seminar debate about a “rules‑based order” has become a live demonstration that, for favored states, the rules are optional; for disfavored populations, even the word “genocide” is treated as a breach of etiquette rather than a description.

This produces two very different psychic climates. In much of the global South, Gaza and now Tehran confirm a long‑standing suspicion that universal values were always a veneer for a hierarchy of “worthy” and “unworthy” victims; the death of a Ukrainian civilian is a violation of civilization, the death of a Palestinian or Iranian civilian is a regrettable data point on a graphic. Among audiences in the metropole, the effect is more corrosive than clarifying: each new atrocity is framed, litigated, and memed until it becomes a genre of content, something to scroll past rather than a crime to stop. What looks, from the outside, like moral bankruptcy looks, from the inside, like fatigue.

Kiriakou’s Los Angeles vignette is not a curiosity but a case study. A few hundred monarchists and their fellow‑travelers, waving Shah‑era and Israeli flags, are asked on camera about the bombing of a girls’ school and reply that “it’s okay,” a sad but acceptable cost of doing business. That is empire’s moral education distilled: people you will never meet, in places you will never visit, can be sacrificed for abstractions like “our credibility” or “regime change.” Marandi, in Tehran, describes a different crowd entirely: ordinary Iranians, who have already absorbed years of sanctions and are now under bombardment, gathering in public spaces under fire to insist, by their sheer presence, that they are not expendable. Those two scenes are not just a split‑screen of this war; they are a portrait of a civilization that has learned to live with its own atrocities, and of those who are forced to live under them.

The System Writes Its Own Obituary

None of this guarantees apocalypse. The likeliest outcome is not a clean, theatrical end to the American empire but something slower and more squalid: a long, grinding partial closure of Hormuz; a jagged plateau of higher energy and fertilizer prices; a series of recessions and food‑price spikes that topple governments far from the Gulf; a further hollowing out of Western infrastructure and public trust; a gradual hedging away from the dollar; an even more militarized and secretive policy apparatus in Washington and its allies.

In that sense, Yergin’s “nightmare scenario” is too narrow. The real nightmare is not that one regional war briefly “pushes the world into recession.” It is that the war reveals, in accelerated form, what was already true: key subsystems—energy, food, finance, information—have been wired together so tightly, and left so brittle, that any serious shock anywhere now ripples everywhere. A drone operator over the Strait of Hormuz can close a lane of traffic and, a few weeks later, a taxi driver in Cairo finds his fuel bill up by thirty percent and passes the cost on to passengers who were already skipping meals.

The Iran war is not an aberration in that system; it is its expression. It is what you get when a political and economic order built on fossil extraction, covert coups, and selective law decides, yet again, that the answer to every limit is more force. It assumes you can bomb refineries and depots and still have a stable energy market; that you can choke a strait and still have affordable food; that you can loot or freeze other people’s reserves and still have a trusted reserve currency; that you can shred another country’s social fabric and still have a safe, docile homeland; that you can do all of this and still be treated as a referee, not a player.

When it is “over”—when some paper deal is signed, when tankers inch back through Hormuz under heavier escort, when indices and anchors declare that “markets have calmed”—none of the underlying debts will have been paid. The fertilizer that did not ship will still be missing from the soil and from future harvests. The bridges that did not get repaired because the money went to missiles will still sag over their rivers. The trust that drained out of politics and media will not be magically refilled.

You can call that a nightmare scenario if you like. It is also just how this system keeps its books: paying interest on past follies with new ones, rolling over the principal into whatever periphery still has something left to strip. Tehran’s black rain, the empty grocery aisle in a country that thought it was far from Hormuz, the senator on television calling a billion dollars a day in bombing “the best money ever spent” because it buys control over someone else’s oil—these are not side‑effects. They are the weather report of a civilization that turned its choke points into weapons, and is only now discovering that they cut both ways.

References

Al Jazeera. “How Western officials, media coverage pushed to discredit Gaza death toll.” 1 Feb 2026.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/2/1/how-western-officials-media-coverage-pushed-to-discredit-gaza-death-toll

Al Jazeera Media Institute. “How Israeli and Western Media Cover the War on Gaza.” 4 Mar 2025.
https://institute.aljazeera.net/en/ajr/article/3081

Al Jazeera. “We are going to make a tonne of money: US Senator Graham on US war on Iran.” 9 Mar 2026.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/9/we-are-going-make-a-tonne-of-money-us-senator-graham-on-us-war-on-iran

Al‑Monitor. “Egyptians feel Iran war shockwaves as fuel prices jump.” 9 Mar 2026.
https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2026/03/egyptians-feel-iran-war-shockwaves-fuel-prices-jump

AOL. “What to know about ‘black rain’ that fell in Iran after strikes on oil reserves.” 10 Mar 2026.
https://www.aol.com/articles/know-black-rain-fell-iran-210738940.html

AP / PBS NewsHour. “Oil and gas prices rise rapidly as Iran war escalates.” 7 Mar 2026.
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/oil-and-gas-prices-rise-rapidly-as-iran-war-escalates

AP / PBS NewsHour. “War with Iran delivers high oil prices and another shock to the global economy.” 10 Mar 2026.
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/war-with-iran-delivers-high-oil-prices-and-another-shock-to-the-global-economy

BBC. “Six ways the Iran war could affect you – in charts.” 5 Mar 2026.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4g5574pwreo

Bloomberg. “Iran Conflict Sparks Global Rush for Critical Fertilizers.” 5 Mar 2026.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-03-06/iran-conflict-sends-farmers-rushing-to-secure-critical-fertilizers

Bloomberg. “Iran War Threatens Vital Supplies for Feeding the World.” 6 Mar 2026.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2026-03-06/iran-war-s-impact-on-strait-of-hormuz-threatens-fertilizer-supplies-food-prices

CBS News. “Column: Don’t Forget Madeleine Albright’s Past Failures.” 25 Sep 2008.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/column-dont-forget-madeleine-albrights-past-failures

CNN. “Oil prices surge above $100: This is the biggest oil disruption in history.” 9 Mar 2026.
https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/09/economy/oil-price-shock

CounterPunch. “The Vast Gaza Death Undercount.” 2024.
https://www.counterpunch.org/2024/xx/xx/the-vast-gaza-death-undercount

CounterPunch. “The Real Gaza Death Toll Is Impossible to Know Today, But the Minimum Isn’t.” 2024.
https://www.counterpunch.org/2024/xx/xx/the-real-gaza-death-toll

Fortune. “Tehran engulfed in fire, smoke and acid rain following strikes.” 7 Mar 2026.
https://fortune.com/2026/03/08/tehran-fire-smoke-acid-rain-us-war-israel-airstrikes-fuel-depot

Fox 6ABC. “US stocks erase a big early loss and rise after oil prices whip around as Iran war rocks markets.” 8 Mar 2026.
https://6abc.com/post/iran-war-crude-oil-prices-spike-120-barrel-conflict-impedes-production-shipping/18695278

Gore Langton, Louis. “Energy shock, fertilizer crunch, freight surge: Food manufacturers face triple hit from Iran war.” Food Ingredients First, 4 March 2026.
https://www.foodingredientsfirst.com/news/hormuz-crisis-food-ingredients-supply-chain.html

IFPRI. “The Iran war: Potential food security impacts.” 5 Mar 2026.
https://www.ifpri.org/blog/the-iran-war-potential-food-security-impacts

Independent. “The real threat from a Strait of Hormuz closure isn’t an oil shortage – it’s a global food crisis.” 6 Mar 2026.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iran-war-hormuz-closed-fertiliser-b2933574.html

Jacobin. “Gaza Exposes the Bankruptcy of Western Liberalism.” 7 Aug 2025.
https://jacobin.com/2025/08/gaza-western-liberalism-genocide-israel

Kiriakou, John. “INSIDE IRAN: What the World Isn’t Seeing – with Dr. Mohammad Marandi.” Deep Focus (YouTube transcript). 5–6 Mar 2026.
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZhztQM2tuP8

Kiriakou, John. “CIA Hit in Iran’s Retaliation Strike — Breakdown of WAR.” 9 Mar 2026.
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8QL0KvdzMzk

Le Monde. “Tehran plunged into midday blackout from Israeli strikes on oil depots.” 8 Mar 2026.
https://www.lemonde.fr/en/middle-east-crisis/article/2026/03/08/tehran-plunged-into-midday-blackout-from-israeli-strikes-on-oil-depots_6751217_368.html

Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention. “Statement on the Western Media Narrative Regarding Israel’s Genocide in Gaza.” 12 Apr 2024.
https://www.lemkininstitute.com/statements-new-page/statement-on-the-western-media-narrative-regarding-israel%E2%80%99s-genocide-in-gaza-

Mediaite. “Trump White House Reportedly Blocking Intelligence Report Warning of Homeland Security Threats in Midst of Iran War.” March 7, 2026.
https://www.mediaite.com/media/news/trump-white-house-reportedly-blocking-intelligence-report-warning-of-homeland-security-threats-in-midst-of-iran-war

NPR. “Crude oil prices swing wildly as the Iran war stretches on.” 8 Mar 2026.
https://www.npr.org/2026/03/08/nx-s1-5741818/iran-israel-trump-oil-100

Palestine Chronicle. “Gaza: Destroying the Moral Foundations of the ‘Rules-Based’ Order.” 20 Feb 2026.
https://www.palestinechronicle.com/gaza-destroying-the-moral-foundations-of-the-rules-based-order

PBS NewsHour / AP. “Oil expert warns of ‘nightmare scenario’ Iran war could spark.” 9 Mar 2026.
https://www.pbs.org/video/oil-crisis-1773091469

Peterson Foundation. “Interest Costs on the National Debt.” Updated Feb 2026.
https://www.pgpf.org/programs-and-projects/fiscal-policy/monthly-interest-tracker-national-debt

Pew / Others. “States Are Falling Behind on Roadway Maintenance.” 19 Feb 2026.
https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/issue-briefs/2026/02/states-are-falling-behind-on-roadway-maintenance

Rapier, Robert. “Beyond Oil: How the Iran War Could Send Food Prices Soaring.” 4 Mar 2026.
https://oilprice.com/Geopolitics/International/Beyond-Oil-How-The-Iran-War-Could-Send-Food-Prices-Soaring.html

Reuters. “Farmers see fertiliser price surge as Iran war blocks exports ahead of planting season.” 5 Mar 2026.
https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/iran-war-threatens-asia-fertiliser-supplies-ahead-planting-season-2026-03-05

Reuters. “Sterling slumps as oil’s surge to $120 on Iran war rocks markets.” 9 Mar 2026.
https://www.reuters.com/business/sterling-slumps-oils-surge-120-iran-war-rocks-markets-2026-03-09

Salon. “How the Gaza war changed America.” 24 Feb 2026.
https://www.salon.com/2026/02/25/how-the-gaza-war-changed-america

Shokri, Nima, and Salome M. S. Shokri‑Kuehni. “How the Iran war could create a ‘fertiliser shock’ – an often ignored global risk to food prices and farming.” The Conversation, 29 January 2026.
https://theconversation.com/how-the-iran-war-could-create-a-fertiliser-shock-an-often-ignored-global-risk-to-food-prices-and-farming-277552

The Guardian / AP. “America’s Infrastructure Report Card 2025 – Progress Amid Challenges.” 27 Mar 2025.
https://rebuildsocal.org/2025/03/americas-infrastructure-report-card-2025

The Independent (Wikipedia). “Economic impact of the 2026 Iran war.”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_impact_of_the_2026_Iran_war

The Nation Thailand / PBS embed. “Oil shock prompts urgent action: price caps, subsidies and tariff cuts across Asia.” 10 Mar 2026.
https://www.nationthailand.com/news/world/40063556

The Western Producer. “Iran war to disrupt urea and sulphur supplies.” 5 Mar 2026.
https://www.producer.com/crops/iran-war-to-disrupt-urea-and-sulphur-supplies

TRT World. “In Gaza war not all victims are equal: A critique of US rules-based order.” 15 Nov 2023.
https://www.trtworld.com/article/15822235

Truthout / Yahoo / others. “Lindsey Graham Says $1B a Day on Iran War Is ‘Best Money Ever Spent’.” 8 Mar 2026.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/lindsey-graham-1-billion-day-171002332.html

Washington Post. “Oil prices seesaw as Trump sends mixed messages on what’s next in Iran war.” 9 Mar 2026.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2026/03/09/iran-war-stock-markets-oil-prices-gas

Wood Mackenzie podcast. “The war with Iran: what does the disruption in the Strait of Hormuz mean for global energy?” 9 Mar 2026.
https://www.woodmac.com/podcasts/energy-gang/the-war-with-iran-what-does-the-disruption-in-the-strait-of-hormuz-mean-for-global-energy/

The Coup, the Nakba, and the Black Rain

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Tehran’s rain turned black today, a fitting weather report for a civilization still drunk on the very fossil fuels it’s now setting on fire. After the first week of US–Israeli strikes on refineries and oil depots, the Iranian Red Crescent warned residents that the downpour sluicing off balconies and satellite dishes was “highly acidic,” laced with burned hydrocarbons, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxides from the great fire rings encircling the capital. People were told not to go outside, not to run their air conditioners, not to breathe too deeply beneath a sky their enemies had decided to weaponize. The footage that did leak past censors—streets running with flaming fuel, smoke columns punching into low clouds, umbrellas useless under the toxic drizzle—looked less like a modern air war than the planet trying to cough its lungs out.

America did not arrive at this moment by accident, nor did Israel. A country whose secret government learned in the 1950s how to topple elected leaders over oil now targets the petroleum infrastructure of the same nation it “saved” from democracy three generations ago. And a state built on the ethnic cleansing of one people under the banner of “security” now exports that operating logic into another country’s airspace, treating a foreign capital the way it once treated the villages of the Galilee. The black rain over Tehran is more than a war crime in progress; it is blowback vaporized and condensed, falling on the city we remade and then declared irredeemable.

And this new war does not start on a blank slate. It comes directly after Israel’s genocidal campaign in Gaza, where the official ministry tallies of tens of thousands killed—many of them children and women—are now understood as only a fraction of the dead, and conservative analyses drawing on Lancet studies and UN data point to at least 115,000 people killed directly by bombs, bullets, and collapsing buildings, and more than 400,000 Palestinians dead overall¹ once you count those killed by hunger, disease, and the destruction of every system that kept 2.3 million people alive. UN officials described the 2024 siege of northern Gaza as “apocalyptic,” and by August 2025 Israeli siege policies had produced a man‑made famine, with images of starving children becoming commonplace worldwide. Israel has spent an estimated 352 billion shekels (around 112 billion dollars) on the Gaza war, including roughly 243 billion shekels (around 77 billion dollars) in direct defense costs, while the US has poured roughly 31–34 billion dollars into military aid and regional support operations for Israel’s wars since 2023. The UN now estimates that rebuilding Gaza’s blasted cities and infrastructure will cost around 70 billion dollars and take decades, after a campaign that has “significantly undermined every pillar of survival” for its remaining population. The techniques perfected there—prolonged bombardment of dense civilian areas, siege by hunger, deliberate infrastructural annihilation—are the immediate prelude to what is now unfolding over Iran.

The Coup That Wrote the Script

David Talbot’s The Devil’s Chessboard follows Allen Dulles from his days as a Wall Street lawyer for banks and oil companies to his reign as CIA director, where he engineered coups, backed dictators, and helped build an unaccountable “secret government” that often ran ahead of, or against, elected presidents. Nowhere is that clearer than in Iran in 1953.

In Talbot’s account, Dulles arrives at Rome’s Hotel Excelsior just as Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the young shah of Iran, flees there in fear that his dynasty is finished. Back in Tehran, Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh has nationalized the Anglo‑Iranian Oil Company, the British state‑backed giant that controlled Iran’s oil for much of the first half of the 20th century (later becoming BP), and taken his case to the Iranian public; his government rides a wave of popular legitimacy and a simple conviction that 20th‑century Persians should not live as sharecroppers to a British oil monopoly. MI6 and the British establishment see the move as an existential threat, but their embassy has been shut and their networks crippled, so they turn to Washington and the newly empowered CIA.

The Dulles brothers barely bother to disguise their motives. Through Sullivan & Cromwell, a powerful New York–based corporate law firm, they have long represented US oil majors; Allen sits on the board of the J. Henry Schroder Bank, financial agent for the Anglo‑Iranian Oil Company. Both brothers had helped quietly kill a US antitrust case that threatened the giant “Seven Sisters” oil cartel. Mossadegh’s offense is not ideological—it is commercial. He has interrupted a flow of rents from Iranian ground to Western balance sheets. To sell the coup to Eisenhower, Allen and John Foster simply launder oil politics through Cold War language: if Iran falls to nationalism, they warn, it will fall to Communism next; if the Tudeh Party gains, Moscow will control 60 percent of the “free world’s” oil.

The plan they present, drawn up by CIA operative Kermit Roosevelt, becomes a template for a generation of coups. CIA money hires mobs and muscle, corrupts senior officers, and underwrites a campaign of intimidation and murder against those loyal to Mossadegh. General Mahmoud Afshartous, tasked with purging the military of conspirators, is kidnapped and found dumped on a roadside; other loyalists turn up in the mountains with their throats cut. When CIA‑paid crowds finally surge through Tehran and pro‑shah units move, Mossadegh is undone not only by brute force but by his fatal belief that Washington will accept an independent Iran. Ambassador Loy Henderson threatens to withdraw US recognition and evacuate all Americans if Mossadegh does not clear his own supporters from the streets; when he does, Roosevelt’s mobs take their place and tanks drive on his home.

It works. Mossadegh is overthrown, the shah returns on a KLM flight Dulles himself may have helped arrange, and CIA cash ensures there are staged, ecstatic crowds waiting at the airport. The “man of destiny” is restored to his throne; in reality he is now a client monarch, his security apparatus rebuilt and trained by Americans, his country’s oil opened to a new cartel that includes US firms. For Allen Dulles, this is one of his two “greatest triumphs,” alongside Guatemala the next year; for Iranians, it is the moment when a fragile parliamentary experiment is replaced with a police state whose tools—torture, disappearances, one‑party rule—will define their lives for a quarter century.

The blowback is not a mystery. A US‑installed shah rules through SAVAK, jails and kills his opponents, and deepens the perception that sovereignty itself has been outsourced. When the revolution comes in 1979, it is not a polite turnover of elites; it is a volcanic rejection of the 1953 settlement and of the Western powers behind it. The Islamic Republic, with its Revolutionary Guards and anti‑imperialist theology, is the regime that grows in the crater left by Allen Dulles’s “victory.” Every drone flight, every missile launch, every entrenched IRGC network that Washington now condemns is a branch on the tree Dulles planted.

The Ethnic Cleansing Operating System

Ilan Pappé’s The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine uses Israeli archival material to show that the 1948 expulsions of Palestinians were not chaotic wartime accidents but the implementation of a coordinated plan—what he and others link to Plan Dalet—to permanently remove most of the Arab population from the new Jewish state. He traces how a small inner circle around David Ben‑Gurion, known as the Consultancy, shifted from retaliatory actions to a doctrine of initiative and intimidation aimed at making Palestinian life untenable.

The Consultancy listens in December 1947 as intelligence officer Ezra Danin explains that Palestinian rural life is still largely normal; villages greet him as a customer, not an occupier, and there is no general mobilization or offensive intent. If left alone, these people will simply go on living where they are, within the borders of the future Jewish state. This is the problem. The solution, Danin argues, is violent action designed not to answer aggression but to change the mood entirely: destroy lorries carrying produce, sink fishing boats from Jaffa, shut shops, starve factories of raw materials, “terrify” the population so that outside help is meaningless. Ben‑Gurion likes the idea. In a letter to Moshe Sharett, he writes that the goal is to put the Palestinian community entirely “at our mercy,” able to do with them “anything the Jews wanted,” including starving them to death.

What follows is not an accidental fog of war but a campaign of calibrated brutality. Night “violent reconnaissance” raids on undefended villages—Deir Ayyub, Beit Affa—where troops enter after dark, fire on houses, distribute threats, and leave corpses behind. The assault on Khisas, where Palmach units blow up homes at night, killing fifteen people, and Ben‑Gurion later classifies the “unauthorized” operation as a success. In Haifa, Jewish forces use their high ground above Arab neighborhoods to roll down oil‑soaked, burning rivers, ignite streets, and machine‑gun residents as they run out to extinguish the flames. Haganah intelligence officers compile detailed “village files” and, once communities are captured, select men for execution or long detention while others are expelled or packed into camps.

This is not restrained reprisal; it is ethnic cleansing, backed by legal and bureaucratic follow‑through. When refugees try to return in 1949 to harvest fields or retrieve possessions, they are labeled “infiltrators” and frequently shot; homes are demolished to prevent repatriation; a “Minority Unit” of Druze, Circassian, and Bedouin soldiers is tasked explicitly with blocking Palestinian return. In some cases, such as the Christian villages of Iqrit and Kfar Birim, courts briefly side with displaced residents, only for the army to respond by leveling the villages under cover of “military exercises” and fabricating retroactive expulsion orders. The pattern is clear: terrorize, expel, destroy the physical basis of return, then legislate the new demographic reality into permanence.

If the CIA in Talbot’s book is the hand that topples governments for oil and empire, Pappé’s Consultancy is the hand that learns to erase communities and call it security. Both are schools in which today’s war planners were implicitly educated, even if they have never read a page of either book.

Gaza, Then Iran: A Single Arc

The Gaza genocide is the recent culmination of that Nakba logic. As Al Jazeera’s accounting shows, Israel has used an immense share of its national wealth to “level” Gaza and destroy its institutions, killing tens of thousands outright and, on conservative estimates, ultimately hundreds of thousands of Palestinians through direct violence and siege‑induced deprivation, and pushing the survivors into engineered starvation. The Bank of Israel puts the war’s economic toll at around 352 billion shekels (around 112 billion dollars), with roughly 243 billion shekels (around 77 billion dollars) in direct defense costs, while daily spending estimates in early 2025 imply a mechanized routine where, on average, around 100 Palestinians were killed each day for months. The UN’s projection of 70 billion dollars and decades to rebuild only scratches at what it means to strip an entire population of housing, water, sanitation, and schools.

For Washington, the Gaza operation has been an investment as well as a crime: Brown University’s Costs of War project estimates that the US has spent over 21.7 billion dollars in military aid to Israel since October 2023 and another roughly 10–12 billion on its own regional military operations in support of Israel, including in Yemen and Iran. That is the same US polity now underwriting “Epic Fury” in Iran, with the same industrial base profiting from the munitions and the same political class insisting that this is how “civilization” defends itself.

The step from Gaza’s pulverized neighborhoods to Tehran’s black rain is not conceptual; it is logistical. Israel’s army has already normalized the total destruction of dense urban environments, the use of siege to induce famine, and the long‑term crippling of a society’s “pillars of survival.” Extending that logic to the refineries, depots, and industrial plants of a sovereign state—and to the atmospheric consequences that follow—is an escalation of scale, not kind. The Nakba, Gaza, and now Iran form a continuous line of experimentation in how far a settler‑colonial and imperial alliance can go in making other people’s territories uninhabitable.

Two Traditions Converge Over Iran

Fast‑forward to 2026, and those two operating systems—the Dulles coup logic and the Nakba/genocide logic—have fused into a single project.

On the US side, the pattern is recognizably Dullesian: a national security elite steeped in the idea that certain countries are too important to be left to their own politics, especially when hydrocarbons are involved. The immediate pretext today is Iran’s drones, missiles, and nuclear program; the structural fact is that the Strait of Hormuz carries a fifth of global oil and a large share of gas and refined products, and that the region hosts irreplaceable LNG capacity. When war disrupts shipping, Qatar declares force majeure on gas exports after Iranian drone attacks, and Saudi’s Ras Tanura complex goes dark under missile fire, global prices spike and storage tanks back up; the same logic that made Dulles panic about Mossadegh now drives planners to treat Iranian military capacity as an intolerable threat to world commerce.

On the Israeli side, the 1948 template has been portable for decades. Gaza’s repeated pulverizations, the destruction of Lebanese infrastructure in 2006 and again in this war, and the casual talk among ministers about “voluntary migration” for Palestinians all follow the line Pappé traces from Haifa and Safsaf to the Galilee “mopping up” operations. What is new is the geographic ambition. With Tehran’s depots, refineries, and oil docks now deliberately targeted, the tools once used to empty villages and pressure a stateless people are aimed at a regional state of nearly ninety million. Acid rain over a capital is ethnic‑cleansing logic upgraded to atmospheric scale.

The succession in Tehran underscores the perversity of the project. US–Israeli strikes kill Ali Khamenei and much of the senior leadership; Donald Trump and his allies sell the decapitation as an opening for moderation or even regime change. Instead, Iran’s Assembly of Experts elevates Mojtaba Khamenei, the dead leader’s son, a man long entwined with the IRGC’s networks and hardline clerical currents. A revolution that once swore it had ended dynastic rule now becomes a family inheritance precisely because an external shock tips the balance in favor of the security organs and the war party. The pattern is familiar: relentless external pressure cements the most intransigent forces inside a system, in Tehran as surely as in Gaza or Moscow. It is also a specific echo of 1953: American and allied forces once again snuff out a constrained but real space for political contestation and midwife an even more openly authoritarian successor.

Meanwhile, US domestic politics repeats another old script. An interagency bulletin warning of elevated homeland terror risk linked to the Iran war is drafted by the FBI, DHS, and the National Counterterrorism Center, only to be blocked or chilled by the White House, which insists that anything “concerning Iran” be cleared before dissemination. Local law enforcement is kept in the dark so that the administration can avoid admitting that its distant war is raising the threat level at home. The intelligence community is told to mute the connection between an aggressive foreign operation and domestic vulnerability—just as earlier generations were told to ignore or downplay the role of US policy in triggering anti‑American militancy elsewhere. Blowback, once again, is not a lesson to be learned but a reality to be managed through censorship.

War as a Symptom of Civilizational Breakdown

All of this would be grim enough if it were “only” about Iran and the Middle East. But this war sits atop, and accelerates, a broader unraveling of modern industrial civilization.

First, the energy system that underwrites everything else is being weaponized against itself. The same tankers and pipelines that built the post‑war boom are now targets; the Iran war has already suspended around a fifth of global crude and gas supply, as ships avoid Hormuz and producers shut in fields while storage fills. Oil and gas prices jump; power futures for cities like Tokyo spike; import‑dependent economies across Asia and Europe scramble for alternatives in markets already distorted by earlier crises.

Second, the food system that lets eight billion humans stay fed is chained to the same machinery. Modern agriculture runs on nitrogen and phosphate fertilizers made from natural gas and sulfur, much of it sourced, processed, or shipped through the Gulf. Iran is the world’s third‑largest producer of ammonia, and the wider region supplies a large share of global urea and sulfur exports. When war knocks out LNG terminals, disrupts gas flows, and chokes off Hormuz, it does more than raise input prices for a season; it quietly shrinks the amount of food the world can grow months and years down the line. Today’s “global fertilizer supply shock” is tomorrow’s unrest in import‑dependent states from North Africa to South Asia, another round of blowback seeded in fields far from the front. The pattern is familiar from 2008 and the Arab Spring: when global food prices spike, brittle regimes do not just face higher subsidy bills, they face angrier streets. Today’s disruption of Gulf‑linked fertilizer flows is thus not only an agronomic problem but the seeding of future political crises far from the Strait of Hormuz.

This is what collapse looks like from the inside: key subsystems—energy, food, finance—becoming so tightly coupled and so brittle that a single regional war threatens to “bring down the economies of the world,” as Qatar’s energy minister bluntly put it. The war does not create fragility from nothing; it reveals and amplifies fragility that decades of just‑in‑time efficiency, deregulation, and geopolitical gambling have baked in.

Third, the political and informational organs meant to detect and correct danger are themselves compromised. In the US, intelligence about rising domestic terror risk linked to the war is suppressed for political convenience. In Iran, external attack helps install a dynastic hardliner with deep ties to the security apparatus. At the global level, institutions that might once have mediated or constrained this kind of conflict are sidelined. States that solemnly pledge to phase down fossil fuels at climate summits are, within months, using those same fuels and their transit routes as instruments of coercion and siege.

Finally, the ecological base that sustains any complex society is being treated as just another theater of operations. Acid rain over Tehran is not just an environmental accident; it is the direct result of deliberate strikes on oil depots and industrial plants whose combustion products seed toxic precipitation. Historical analogues—from Kuwaiti oil fires to Ukrainian chemical depot explosions—show that such “war weather” leaves long‑lived scars in soils, water, and human bodies. Launching a campaign that knowingly produces black, acidic rain over a megacity is a choice to trade long‑term habitability for short‑term military signaling.

In earlier work I argued that an empire staring down climate chaos and financial exhaustion chose not to slow but to gamble—on carbon capture schemes, militarized borders, and ever more extractive finance. This war is simply that same wager placed in real time. It assumes that the system can absorb: a prolonged interruption of energy flows through its most vital maritime artery; a fertilizer shock that ripples through global harvests; a new hardening of regimes in Tehran and Jerusalem; a further erosion of political trust and institutional competence in Washington and beyond.

The histories Talbot and Pappé excavate show how we got here: by normalizing coups and ethnic cleansing as tools of order, by treating other people’s sovereignty as a tweakable setting in a larger game, by externalizing the costs of “civilization” onto peripheries we assumed would never speak back. Gaza’s genocide and Iran’s black rain mark the point where those peripheries vanish. The atmosphere is shared; the choke points are global; the feedbacks—whether in the form of soot‑laden storms, spiking food prices, or panicked energy markets—arrive everywhere at once.

The black rain over Tehran, in other words, is not just the weather over someone else’s catastrophe. It is civilizational weather, written in the language of blowback. It marks the moment when an order built on fossil extraction, covert empire, and demographic engineering and ethnic cleansing discovers that there is no outside left to dump its consequences into.

The men who ordered this war will tell you it was an emergency, a deviation, a tragic necessity. They will not say that it is the logical expression of the world they built: a world where energy is extracted, markets are sacralized, people are sorted and sacrificed, and any tremor in the periphery is met with airstrikes. They will not say that the missiles over Shiraz and the oil slick in the Strait are the same policy as the eviction notice in Phoenix or the closed clinic in Ohio, just written in a different dialect.

We live, still, as though there were somewhere else to send the costs. For two centuries, the rich world pushed its carbon into the sky, its waste into the sea, its coups and debt and demographic projects into other people’s homelands. The promise at home was that the check would always be mailed to someone else. But the sky is a single system. The food chain is a single system. The weapons supply chain is a single system. There is no longer any “over there” sturdy enough to carry what this order needs to throw away.

The black rain over Tehran is one expression of that closure. The flooded subdivision, the burned town, the empty grocery aisle are others. They are not aberrations. They are how a system this large, this brittle, and this unaccountable keeps its books. The only real decision left is whether we continue to let the same people roll the dice with larger and hotter stakes, or whether we treat this as a final credit‑limit notice from physics and from history.

When power finds itself cornered, it does not reform; it digs in. It narrows the circle of those who decide, expands the list of those who can be sacrificed, and treats each new disaster as proof that harsher measures are required. The question that remains is not just what everyone else is prepared to do, but how much they are prepared to lose, and how late, before they decide that doing nothing costs more.

Notes
¹ Conservative excess‑mortality estimates that correct Gaza Ministry of Health body counts for under‑reporting and add indirect deaths from hunger, disease, and infrastructural collapse now put the toll well into the hundreds of thousands; see Adam Rzepka, “The Real Gaza Death Toll is Impossible to Know Today, But the Minimum Isn’t,” CounterPunch, August 19, 2025, building on recent Lancet analyses and UN data, and Ralph Nader, “The Vast Gaza Death Undercount,” CounterPunch, March 31, 2025.

Further reading

  1. David Talbot, The Devil’s Chessboard: Allen Dulles, the CIA, and the Rise of America’s Secret Government (New York: HarperCollins, 2015).

  2. Ilan Pappé, The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine (Oxford: Oneworld, 2006).

  3. “The Cost of Genocide: Israel’s War on Gaza by the Numbers,” Al Jazeera, February 19, 2026, https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/2/19/the-cost-of-genocide-israels-war-on-gaza-by-the-numbers.

  4. “Israel’s War on Gaza: The Human and Economic Cost in Numbers,” International Workers’ Committee for Peace, February 18, 2026, https://iwcp.net/israels-war-on-gaza-the-human-and-economic-cost-in-numbers/.

  5. “How the Iran War Could Create a ‘Fertiliser Shock’ – An Often Ignored Global Risk to Food Prices and Farming,” The Conversation, January 29, 2026, https://theconversation.com/how-the-iran-war-could-create-a-fertiliser-shock-an-often-ignored-global-risk-to-food-prices-and-farming-277552.

  6. “Iran War Snarls Key Global Hub for Fertilizer Supplies,” Bloomberg, March 2, 2026, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-03-02/iran-war-snarls-key-global-hub-for-fertilizer-supplies.

  7. Zachary Folk, “‘Toxic’ Black Rain Falls on Tehran After Oil Sites Struck,” Forbes, March 8, 2026, https://www.forbes.com/sites/zacharyfolk/2026/03/08/black-toxic-rain-falls-on-tehran-after-air-strikes-hit-oil-refineries/.

  8. “Tehran Shrouded in Toxic Smoke After Israel Strikes Fuel Depots,” Time, March 8, 2026, https://time.com/7383099/iran-news-oil-strikes-tehran/.

Billion‑Dollar Bets on a Dying World

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The war in Iran is already built to break things. It is grinding through munitions at nearly a billion dollars a day, rerouting ships around two continents, and quietly starving the fertilizer arteries that make modern harvests possible—all as Washington places yet another unvoted, multi-billion‑dollar bet on the idea that the system can take one more hit. The question beneath all of this is brutally simple: how many more of these bets can a fraying, fossil‑fueled civilization place before it finally hits a limit it cannot bluff or bomb its way past?

Eight days into the US–Israeli campaign, Hormuz has become less a shipping lane than a test of how much risk a fossil‑fueled civilization can absorb. Iran’s Revolutionary Guard claims “complete control” over the strait and has vowed to set on fire any vessel that dares to cross. Tanker traffic has collapsed, maritime insurers have doubled or withdrawn war coverage, and the waterway that once carried roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and gas flows is effectively closed. Saudi Arabia’s Ras Tanura refinery—the beating heart of its export system—has been shut down twice by Iranian drones. Qatar declared force majeure—legal shorthand for saying an unforeseen, uncontrollable event made it impossible to deliver on its export contracts. Analysts now estimate that roughly a fifth of the planet’s crude and gas supply is suspended, either because fields and refineries have had to shut or because there is simply nowhere safe to send the barrels.

Energy prices have reacted immediately. Global oil benchmarks have surged by more than 25 percent since the first strikes, pushing Brent into the low 80s and driving up gasoline and diesel prices from Tokyo to Toledo. European gas prices spiked by more than 50 percent in a single day on news of Ras Laffan’s closure. But these moves, dramatic as they feel to consumers, are only the opening chords. On their own, oil in the 80s and a few weeks of high LNG prices are survivable. What threatens to become truly dangerous is the possibility that the war locks the system into structurally higher prices and chronic uncertainty, at the same time that it quietly sabotages the inputs that grow food.

To understand how far this can go, it helps to mark the thresholds. History suggests that oil at 90–110 dollars for a few months can slow growth and aggravate inflation without collapsing the architecture; the 1970s crises only arrived when prices quadrupled and stayed high for years. Today, analysts at Goldman Sachs reckon that each sustained 10‑dollar jump in oil adds roughly 0.3 percentage points to US inflation and knocks 0.1 points off growth. That is annoying, not apocalyptic. But the war is already flirting with the next band. Hormuz’s near‑shutdown forces Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, and the UAE to curb production as storage fills and tankers stay in port. Qatar’s loss deprives Europe and Asia of a key gas supplier at precisely the wrong time. Oilfields that are shut in cannot simply be flipped back on; depending on age and geology, it can take weeks or months to restore previous flows once the pipelines and loading arms are safe again.

If this continues—if Hormuz remains unsafe, if Ras Tanura and Ras Laffan and other Gulf facilities limp along or stay dark—the world drifts toward a scenario where Brent hovers in the 120–150 dollar range, not for days but for seasons. At that point, energy costs stop being a bad quarter and start becoming the air a recession breathes. High‑income countries can tap strategic reserves and lean on their own production. Import‑dependent states in Asia, Africa, and Latin America cannot. They face soaring import bills, weaker currencies, and the kind of fiscal squeeze that makes debt crises and IMF “rescues” feel inevitable.

Yet oil is only the most visible part of the story. The deeper fuse runs through fertilizer. The same Gulf that exports crude and LNG also exports the nitrogen and sulfur that underpin modern yields. According to recent trade data reported in The Economic Times and Bloomberg, the Strait of Hormuz handles roughly a third of global fertilizer trade, including about 35 percent of global urea and 45 percent of sulfur exports. Iran is the world’s third‑largest producer of ammonia, and Qatar and its neighbors ship vast quantities of urea, ammonia, and sulfur‑based products worldwide. Those flows are now snarled. Granular urea prices in the Middle East have surged; European ammonia futures have climbed into the 700‑dollar‑per‑tonne range; Indian urea producers are already cutting output as LNG cargoes from Qatar disappear. Russia, despite being the single largest fertilizer exporter, cannot fully backstop these losses because of production bottlenecks, its own export limits, and domestic obligations.

The timing could hardly be worse. Northern Hemisphere farmers are heading into spring application season now. Fertilizer is not like oil; you cannot simply “catch up” by applying it later. If supplies are tight and prices elevated during planting and early growth, farmers either pay through the nose, cut back on application, switch to lower‑input crops, or leave land fallow. The full effect only shows up months later, when harvests are weighed and markets discover that there is less wheat, corn, soy, and rice than planned. Analysts quoted in the Financial Times and Reuters warn that if this disruption runs through the current planting window, the world could see a food price shock equal to or worse than the one triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

This is the shape of genuine systemic risk: not a single commodity going vertical, but multiple interlocked flows—oil, gas, fertilizer, container shipping—staying kinked for long enough that the fabric starts to tear. Hormuz’s closure forces producers to shut in fields and storage; Iranian drones and missiles hit refineries and LNG trains; ships avoid the Red Sea as Houthis again menace Bab el‑Mandeb, driving container lines like Maersk back around the Cape of Good Hope and adding weeks and cost to global trade. Qatar’s energy minister, not known for alarmism, has already warned that if the war continues “for a few weeks,” it will “bring down the economies of the world,” by which he means push them into a combination of chronic inflation, weak growth, and cascading shortages.

Even the financial plumbing that has long underpinned the American order is starting to flinch. The wealthiest Gulf monarchies—Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, and Kuwait—are now reviewing tens of billions of dollars in planned and existing investments in the United States and other Western markets as war damage, lost exports, and higher defense spending squeeze their budgets. Sovereign wealth funds built as “rainy day” vehicles are being tapped to plug fiscal holes at home, and officials are quietly signaling that future capital will be redirected toward domestic projects and non‑Western partners rather than automatically recycled into Wall Street. For an empire that has long relied on Gulf petrodollars to finance its deficits and asset bubbles, a war that simultaneously threatens those states’ export arteries and erodes their appetite for US exposure is not just a regional miscalculation; it is another way of sawing at the floorboards beneath its own financial house.

In Washington, this unauthorized adventure is burning money at a rate that would make even a Pentagon comptroller blink. Because Congress never debated, let alone passed, a new authorization for war with Iran, the administration is operating entirely on the fumes of old Authorizations for Use of Military Force and a creative reading of the president’s Article II powers. There has been no declaration of war and no specific statutory authorization for bombing a sovereign state on this scale; constitutional scholars from the ACLU to former government lawyers have been blunt in calling it illegal. Yet every day, the United States pours roughly 900 million to 1 billion dollars into Operation Epic Fury. Estimates from the Center for Strategic and International Studies, echoed by ABC News and CNN, suggest the first 100 hours cost about 3.7 billion dollars—some 891.4 million per day—in munitions and operations alone. A congressional source has relayed a preliminary Pentagon estimate of roughly 1 billion dollars a day going forward, with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth hinting the tempo will increase as more bomber missions and missile defenses come online.

Almost none of this is budgeted. CSIS’s breakdown notes that only a sliver of the first week’s spending fit inside existing appropriations; the rest will require supplemental requests to replace thousands of precision munitions—Tomahawks, Patriots, THAAD interceptors—and cover the burn rate of advanced aircraft and naval groups. Pentagon planners are reportedly working on a 50 billion dollar supplemental just to refill missile stocks, and that assumes the war does not expand or drag on beyond the eight‑week horizon some officials are whispering to reporters. That is money Congress has not authorized for this purpose, spent on a war Congress has not formally approved, at a time when lawmakers already profess alarm at deficits and interest costs. It is hard to think of a clearer illustration of what “managed collapse” looks like in fiscal form: unlegislated commitments made on the assumption that someone, somewhere, will be forced to pick up the bill.

The bill is not just monetary. The same unauthorized war powers logic that allows a president to launch a massive air campaign without a vote also normalizes the idea that fundamental decisions about national and planetary risk can be made by a small executive circle and a handful of think‑tank lawyers. The Office of Legal Counsel has, over decades, evolved a test under which presidents are permitted to wage significant military operations without Congress so long as they serve “sufficiently important national interests” and are not expected to rise to the level of “war” in the constitutional sense. In practice, that amounts to: if the president says it is important and thinks he can keep casualties manageable, he can do it. Iran blows that premise apart. The risks of escalation, regional spillover, and major American losses are obvious. That they were ignored tells you a great deal about how degraded the checks on imperial power have become.

All of this reads like a close‑up of the operating system I have been describing. A war sold as decisive and contained is rapidly turning into an open‑ended drain: on munitions stockpiles, on fiscal space, on shipping routes, on the fertilizers and fuels that keep shelves stocked. Oil in the low 80s is a warning shot; oil sustained north of 120 dollars for six to twelve months, with LNG tight and fertilizer scarce, would be something closer to a slow‑motion heart attack. It would not “destroy” the global economy in the sense of flicking a switch to off. But it would likely drive multiple major economies into synchronized recession, tip heavily indebted, energy‑importing states into default and IMF tutelage, inflate food prices in ways that hit the poor hardest and stoke unrest, and justify further securitization—more border walls, more riot gear, more surveillance—in the name of stability.

And all of it would be framed as unfortunate but necessary side effects of a war that, constitutionally speaking, was never actually authorized. The president spends a billion dollars a day on an illegal war; the war sends oil, gas, and fertilizer prices into the red; the resulting inflation and shortages are used to argue that there is no money for climate transition, no room for expanded social protections, no alternative to tightening belts and tightening controls. That is managed collapse in miniature: the system does not fall by accident, it is steered down a staircase of “tough choices” that somehow always protect the same people.

There is, of course, nothing inevitable about this trajectory. Congress could still claw back its war powers, refuse supplemental requests, and force a halt. Diplomats could, in theory, broker a ceasefire that reopens Hormuz before planting seasons are fully lost. The US could decide that it is not, in fact, worth risking stagflation and food crises in exchange for another symbolic display of air supremacy. But none of those outcomes are consistent with how the American empire has behaved in recent decades. It is far more consistent with its habits to keep bombing, keep spending, keep insisting that victory is around the corner, while supply chains fray and households watch prices climb.

The war in Iran is not yet the event that shuts down the global economy for good. But it is a real‑time demonstration of how little slack remains in the system, and how casually that slack can be burned by leaders unbound by law and insulated from consequence. Oil does not have to stay at 150 dollars forever to break things; fertilizer does not have to vanish completely to starve people. It is enough that prices and shortages cross certain thresholds and stay there long enough to erode what remains of social and ecological resilience.

In that sense, the daily billion dollars Washington is quietly spending on unauthorized war is not just a line item; it is a wager that the machine can take yet another shock without coming apart. Each new strike, each new supplemental, assumes there will always be enough slack in the system—enough credit, enough patience, enough ecological cushion—to absorb the blow. At some point, a civilization this frayed and this fossil‑fueled will place one bet too many—and realize, with perfect clarity and no way back, that the system it kept gambling on has already come apart.

The Iran War and the Quiet Suicide of Modern Civilization

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The likeliest outcome of the US–Israeli war on Iran is not a clean victory for anyone but a grinding, partial, and mutually costly “non‑defeat.” It will leave Iran battered yet intact, the US and Israel strategically weakened, the Gulf and global economy scarred, and the world nudged further into a fragmented, more authoritarian multipolar order. This essay is part of a larger exploration of managed collapse—how late‑imperial wars, techno‑financial extraction, and apocalyptic nationalism fuse into a single operating system that would rather burn the world than relinquish control—and it reads the Iran war not as an exception to that trajectory, but as one of its clearest expressions. The opening weeks of the conflict have already set this pattern. Coordinated US–Israeli air and missile strikes have killed senior Iranian figures, including the supreme leader, and hit Revolutionary Guard bases, nuclear and missile infrastructure, and power and communications networks across multiple cities. Iran has responded with dense salvos of missiles and drones against US bases, Israeli targets, and Gulf capitals, along with attacks on oil facilities, ports, airports, and cloud infrastructure. Commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has effectively halted, insurance markets are in crisis, and rerouted vessels add time and cost by circling Africa. Both sides talk as if decisive outcomes are within reach—Washington and Tel Aviv hinting at the permanent defanging or even collapse of the Islamic Republic, Tehran promising to drive the US out of the region—but the balance of capabilities and constraints points toward something far messier and more symmetrical in its damage.

Air power can devastate, but it is unlikely to decapitate the Islamic Republic. Iran’s state is not a single man or building; it is a dense security apparatus with the IRGC, Basij militias, intelligence organs, and overlapping clerical and political structures that have operated under war and sanctions for decades. Removing a supreme leader and blowing up ministries and headquarters is a heavy blow, but the most probable internal result is not liberalization or collapse; it is consolidation. A harder, more openly militarized regime—a Revolutionary Guard–dominated junta, or some hybrid with clerical cover—will likely emerge, claiming legitimacy from survival under fire and from the blood price paid by the population. In that configuration, rival factions within the elite will have fewer incentives to compromise and more reasons to purge critics, blame internal enemies, and tighten ideological control. The war will give the state a simple story: foreign crusaders tried to destroy us, we survived, and anyone who now questions the line is a traitor. For ordinary Iranians, that translates into more repression, not less. From the US and Israeli perspective, this is already a strategic failure: enormous violence expended, yet the core regime endures and in some respects becomes more rigid and hostile.

Tehran’s external strategy is not to contest US conventional dominance head‑on, but to bleed the periphery and raise the cost of US presence to intolerable levels. Iran and its allied militias are using large numbers of relatively cheap drones and missiles—some costing tens of thousands of dollars—to force the US and its partners to expend interceptors that cost hundreds of thousands or millions apiece. Each wave of Iranian drones and rockets obliges Gulf air defenses and US ships to fire off expensive munitions; even when interception rates are high, the financial asymmetry is ruinous over time. The math is stark: a drone that costs a family home can force defenders to launch interceptors priced like a luxury yacht. Stockpiles of Patriots, SM‑series missiles, and other high‑end weapons are finite and slow to replace; American and Israeli air‑ and missile‑defense capacity has already been strained across multiple theatres. The US industrial base can ramp up production, but adding new lines, training workers, and retooling plants takes years. Every missile fired at a Shahed over Kuwait is one that cannot be sent to another contested theater. Iran does not need to “win” in a conventional sense here. It simply needs to avoid being destroyed while proving that US and allied forces cannot defend themselves and Gulf infrastructure indefinitely without unsustainable expense and diversion of resources.

By choking Hormuz and expanding the target set beyond bases to include oil, LNG, fertilizer, container shipping, and data centers, Iran is weaponizing the geography at the heart of the global economy. The Strait of Hormuz still carries a very large share of the world’s seaborne oil and LNG exports. When commercial shipping through that narrow channel is halted or radically reduced, tankers queue, insurers raise or withdraw coverage, and vessels are rerouted via the Cape of Good Hope, adding weeks of sailing and substantial cost. Those shocks feed directly into global energy prices, already volatile in a warming world. They also ripple into petrochemicals and nitrogen fertilizer: the Gulf region is home to some of the world’s largest fertilizer plants, and Hormuz handles roughly one‑third of global fertilizer nutrient trade and about half of globally traded sulfur, a key input for phosphate fertilizer. There is no global strategic fertilizer reserve to smooth such a break. If these flows are disrupted long enough, farmers half a world away may find inputs unaffordable or unavailable, with reduced harvests showing up months later as higher food prices and shortages. Within the Gulf, the same ports and shipping lanes bring in an overwhelming share of food and consumer goods; the monarchies of the GCC import most of what they eat. Supermarket shelves are only a few weeks of shipping away from being bare if those arteries remain cut.

Layered onto this is the vulnerability of Gulf cities’ water and power systems. Desalination plants—energy‑hungry factories that turn seawater into drinking water—provide the vast majority of municipal supply in several Gulf states, with estimates of 70 to 90 percent dependence in some cases. They are large, immobile industrial complexes, often clustered along the coast in known locations. A handful of well‑placed missiles or drones, or even cyber‑physical attacks, could take key facilities offline for days or weeks. Engineers and disaster‑risk experts have long warned that a determined adversary could, in effect, put millions of people on a countdown to dehydration: without desalination, distribution systems and household tanks drain quickly, and there are no major rivers to fall back on. Power plants feeding those desalination systems and the massive cooling needs of Gulf megacities are also obvious targets. The same is true of the huge data centers that American and global cloud providers have been building in the UAE and other Gulf states, attracted by cheap energy and friendly regulation; some have already experienced disruptions from attacks on regional power and network infrastructure. In threatening oil, gas, fertilizers, food imports, water, power, and data, Iran is not just striking its enemies; it is reaching into the nervous and circulatory systems of a world economy that has made itself dependent on fragile, geographically concentrated assets.

Against this, the United States retains immense latent advantages. Its economy is far larger than Iran’s; its technological base is deeper; its alliance network and global basing give it options Tehran can only dream of. But its war machine was optimized for short, high‑intensity campaigns designed to shock and deter, not for protracted attritional defense against swarms of cheap systems in a theater saturated with fragile, high‑value infrastructure. Sustaining current operations for months or years would require not only money but political willingness to accept rising costs, stretched stockpiles, and the diversion of attention and materiel from other priorities like Asia or domestic renewal. At home, the war lands on a society already weary of Iraq and Afghanistan, anxious about inflation and inequality, and deeply polarized. Even without mass US casualties, a conflict that manifests as higher prices, cyber scares, intermittent base attacks, and a general sense of permanent emergency is unlikely to be popular indefinitely. Congress will intermittently balk at supplemental spending, and factions will leverage the war to press inward‑facing cultural and political agendas. In Israel, the war compounds the trauma of Gaza and earlier conflicts, deepens domestic divisions over the direction of the state, and accelerates diplomatic isolation. In Iran, it reinforces a siege mentality that legitimizes harsher domestic control while rationalizing more aggressive external behavior.

The nightmare escalation path would be a large‑scale ground invasion of Iran. Historically, regime change by air alone has almost never succeeded; Iraq, Libya, and Serbia all required some combination of ground forces, extensive proxy use, or prolonged sanctions and isolation to produce limited and unstable political shifts. Iran is bigger, more populous, more mountainous, and more cohesive than Iraq was in 2003. Its IRGC and allied militias are trained for asymmetrical defense and insurgency. A land campaign would likely require multiple axes—amphibious operations from the Gulf, pushes from the west via Iraq, and extensive airborne moves—supported by massive logistics over long distances under constant missile and drone fire. The risk of heavy casualties and long‑term quagmire would be extreme, and many US officers and analysts know it. Yet the pressures in that direction are real. Gulf rulers and Israeli leaders, facing continued strikes on their cities and infrastructures, will demand a more “decisive” solution if the conflict drags. US political elites who have sold this war as the moment to “solve” Iran once and for all may find it hard to back down openly and accept a stalemate. The sunk‑cost logic of empire—having already paid so much, you cannot stop short—will tempt some toward escalation. If Washington were to cross that line, it might achieve more extensive destruction in Iran, but at the cost of a generational occupation dilemma, enormous bloodshed, and a further plunge in global standing. In that sense, the very pursuit of victory would lock in a long strategic loss.

Even if ground invasion is avoided and the war remains an air‑and‑proxy contest, the geopolitical and economic map will not snap back to its prewar shape. The aura of unchallengeable US deterrence has already been punctured by visible failures of interception, base evacuations, and the sheer inability to keep Gulf airspace and shipping fully secure. Allies and partners, from Europe to Asia to the smaller Gulf monarchies, are watching closely. For many, this war confirms that American power remains formidable but is no longer singularly stabilizing or reliably wise. They will hedge accordingly: deepening deals with China and Russia, building out their own defense industries, exploring alternative payment systems and currencies, and quietly lowering their exposure to US sanctions risk. The conflict accelerates a transition already underway, from a US‑centered unipolar order to a messy, contested multipolarity in which Washington’s tools of influence—sanctions, security guarantees, control over financial plumbing—still matter but no longer dominate unchallenged. Iran, for its part, will likely emerge more dependent on and integrated with other revisionist powers, more committed to drones, missiles, and proxy networks, and more convinced that only such tools keep it alive.

Domestically, the war will push all involved societies toward greater securitization. In the United States, wartime emergency measures—expanded surveillance authorities, broader definitions of “extremism,” harsher penalties for leaks and protests—will find new justifications and institutional footholds. Some of these will be rolled back on paper as the war cools, but many will remain embedded in practice. In Israel and Iran, already heavily militarized politics will harden further, with dissent more easily framed as disloyalty in a time of existential struggle. The same is true, to lesser degrees, in Gulf states that will use the crisis to crack down on restive populations and labor forces under the pretext of security. These shifts do not just constrain individuals; they shape the future of governance itself, making it more normal to treat citizens as potential threats to be monitored and managed. That is exactly the kind of juridical‑security operating system I have been tracking: an order in which states and their corporate partners reserve ever greater discretion to act in the name of “stability” while insulating themselves from accountability.

Seen from the vantage point of civilizational collapse, this war is less an aberration than an expression of the underlying trajectory. A high‑energy, fossil‑driven industrial civilization that has overshot planetary boundaries is desperately trying to hold onto the foundations it built itself on: oil, gas, global shipping, synthetic fertilizers, and cloud infrastructure powered by cheap hydrocarbons. The US–Iran conflict is, at base, a struggle over those foundations—a fight over who controls which valves and straits, which grids and nodes, in a context where the overall system is becoming less stable and more ecologically untenable. Rather than treating this fragility as a warning to decarbonize and localize, major powers are doubling down on militarizing chokepoints and hardening vulnerable infrastructure. Money and engineering talent that could have gone into redesigning food systems, water use, and energy grids for a hotter, more volatile world are instead poured into missile defenses, hardened bunkers, and redundant data centers in new but equally exposed locations. Every barrel burned to move a carrier group through a contested strait, every gigawatt devoted to training larger AI models in the desert, extends the life of the old model at the cost of making its eventual breakdown sharper.

The war also intertwines with the spiritual and narrative aspects of collapse. Inside the US military and political class, apocalyptic and civilizational rhetoric has been steadily normalized, framing geopolitical contests as struggles for the survival of “the West” or “Judeo‑Christian civilization.” That layer of meaning offers purpose to soldiers and citizens asked to risk their lives or livelihoods in wars whose material logic is abstract, technocratic, and troubling. It recodes structural decline and geopolitical overreach as prophecy fulfilled: rising seas, economic turmoil, and global unrest become signs that the timetable is advancing as promised. In Iran, a different eschatology frames resistance to the “Great Satan” and its allies as part of a sacred history leading toward eventual redemption. Both sides, in different idioms, mobilize myths that make sacrifice and destruction endurable, even desirable, in service of a larger story. In that sense, the war is not just about pipelines and ports; it is also about whose vision of the end of the world will be allowed to define meaning as the old order frays.

Ultimately, how the US–Israeli war on Iran “plays out” is inseparable from how modern industrial civilization plays out. A likely military and political path—no decisive victory, enduring damage, intensified multipolarity, expanded security states, normalized economic shocks—maps neatly onto the picture of managed decline I have been studying. The war hastens a world where energy is more tightly securitized, trade more militarized, rights more contingent, and futures more unequal. It does not by itself bring the system down; it teaches those who rule it how to keep riding it as it sinks, shifting burdens downward and outward. In that sense, the most honest description of the war’s likely end is neither triumph nor apocalypse, but another turn of the ratchet in a civilization that is losing without admitting it. It is fighting over the control panel of a machine that is burning itself out, and arguing over whose gods and laws will bless the ride down.

Red‑Hat Jesus at the End of the World

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Christian Nationalism as the Chaplaincy of Technofeudal War

Imagine being so devoted to Jesus but somehow you end up playing the Roman soldiers who crucified him. That dark irony captures a grim symmetry of the present moment. In early 2026, as the United States and Israel expanded their war against Iran, a civil‑rights group representing service members began receiving a flood of complaints from the ranks. More than a hundred troops across dozens of units and installations reported that their commanders were telling them the Iran war was “entirely about Armageddon,” that it was “God’s plan,” and that it was meant “to bring back Jesus.”

In their accounts, briefings about logistics and rules of engagement blurred into sermons drawn from the Book of Revelation. Officers assured soldiers that the conflict was part of a divinely scripted end‑times drama, that they had been chosen to play a role in the final battle between good and evil, and that fear was unnecessary because events were “foretold.” Some commanders, according to these complaints, went further, describing President Trump as “anointed” to light the spark in Iran that would trigger Armageddon and Christ’s return.

At the same time, the Pentagon under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced a sweeping overhaul of the military’s religious infrastructure. Hegseth promised to “make the Chaplain Corps great again,” scrap an Army spiritual‑fitness guide he derided as too secular, and “streamline” the list of officially recognized faith and belief codes—reducing more than 200 distinct categories to a smaller, more tightly curated set. The message was that chaplains should function as explicitly religious ministers serving a narrowed understanding of “acceptable” faith, not as multi‑faith counselors.

In my essay “Oil, Algorithms, and the End of Worlds: How the War on Iran Sustains a Collapsing Civilization,” I argue that the Iran war is not a tragic anomaly but a maintenance operation for a failing order. Industrial modernity has overshot the planet’s biophysical limits; elites are responding not by planning a just transition, but by building technofeudal fortresses—platform monopolies, surveillance systems, AI‑driven management—to preserve their own positions through a long decline. The war, in that frame, is about defending fossil‑fuel chokepoints and keeping the growth machine jolted alive a little longer.

The religious developments inside the military are the spiritual counterpart to that project. Christian nationalist end‑times theology offers a mythology in which endless conflict, ecological crisis, and social breakdown are not signs of a dying system but proof that God’s plan is unfolding. It is the chaplaincy of technofeudal managed decline.

Turning a War into a Prophecy

The core of the service‑member complaints is simple: commanders are explicitly telling troops that the Iran conflict is an Armageddon war, divinely ordained and necessary to bring about Christ’s return. That framing does specific political work.

It de‑politicizes the war. If the conflict is written into Scripture rather than into policy, it no longer appears as a contingent choice subject to debate, accountability, or reversal. Questions about oil routes, shipping insurance, and regional hegemony are displaced by a cosmic narrative in which the only real options are obedience or rebellion against God.

It moralizes the chain of command. Orders are no longer merely institutional; they are framed as expressions of divine will. A commander who opens a briefing by explaining that the mission is part of God’s plan positions dissent not just as insubordination but as spiritual failure. In that atmosphere, a soldier’s doubts about the justice or prudence of the war can feel, even to themselves, like a lack of faith.

It simplifies a complex geopolitical situation into a binary of the saved and the damned. The oil‑and‑algorithm machinery described in my essay—Gulf energy infrastructure, just‑in‑time tanker routes, global supply‑chain dependencies—drops out of view. In its place is a story of God’s chosen nations facing down God’s enemies. That story is emotionally potent and easy to sell in a culture already saturated with apocalyptic fiction and Christian Zionist preaching.

Finally, it absorbs anxiety about collapse into a reassuring teleology. For believers steeped in this theology, climate chaos, economic volatility, pandemics, and permanent war are no longer terrifying glitches in the system. They are evidence that the timetable is advancing as promised. The worse things get, the closer redemption feels.

For a ruling class presiding over a civilization in structural crisis, such a narrative is invaluable. It channels fear away from systemic critique and into eschatological excitement. It tells those at the sharp end of empire that the very signs of breakdown are reasons for hope.

Re‑Clericalizing the Military

The chaplain reforms push in the same direction. For years, military chaplains have existed in tension between two roles: pastors of particular traditions and quasi‑therapists serving a religiously plural, increasingly secular force. The recent shift is an explicit attempt to resolve that tension by privileging a narrower, more overtly confessional model.

When the Defense Secretary laments that an official spiritual‑fitness document mentions “God” only once but refers repeatedly to “feelings” and “playfulness,” he is not making a literary criticism. He is signaling that the institution should treat religion not as one dimension of well‑being among others, but as the primary axis of meaning and cohesion. Scrapping that document and commissioning a replacement anchored in explicitly theistic language elevates chaplains as guardians of a particular kind of faith.

Streamlining faith and belief codes serves the same goal. A coding system that recognized hundreds of beliefs—including small denominations, minority religions, and non‑belief—made room, at least on paper, for a genuinely pluralistic chaplaincy. Collapsing that list into a shorter one sweeps many of those identities off the ledger. Chaplains are nudged, by design, toward focusing on a presumed “core” faith, which in practice means conservative Christianity.

Overlay that structural change with a culture of high‑profile Bible studies and prayer breakfasts where attendance by senior officers, contractors, and political allies is treated as an informal sign of loyalty, and you get a soft but pervasive message: advancement is smoother for those who publicly align with the “right” faith. The chaplain becomes not just a spiritual caregiver but a gatekeeper of ideological conformity.

From the perspective of my technofeudal analysis, this is the spiritualization of platform governance. Just as private digital empires set the terms of access to communication, commerce, and visibility, a re‑engineered chaplaincy helps set the terms of access to belonging and advancement within the military. It polices the boundaries of acceptable belief in a way that meshes neatly with a broader project of narrowing dissent.

Technofeudalism’s Hunger for Myth

My earlier essay argues that industrial civilization is entering a phase of “managed decline.” The global economy depends on fossil‑fuel infrastructures in volatile regions, has built fragile, just‑in‑time supply chains, and is destabilizing the biosphere it rests on. In response, elites are not dismantling the machine, but retrofitting it: building digital fortresses that channel diminishing returns into private rents, using AI to automate oversight and reduce labor’s leverage, and tightening security apparatuses to handle unrest.

I describe this as technofeudalism: a regime in which the key levers of power are held by “cloud‑castles and data‑fiefs,” where corporations and states merge into mini‑polities that own not just factories and fields but the platforms through which life is coordinated. It is a system optimized not for shared flourishing but for preserving hierarchy in the face of contraction.

That system cannot run on spreadsheets alone. It needs stories.

  • It needs a story about why the energy must keep flowing through vulnerable chokepoints, even if doing so risks war.

  • It needs a story that explains why some people will be protected and others abandoned as climate shocks and resource shortages bite.

  • It needs a story that tells those tasked with enforcing the order—soldiers, police, analysts—that their work is noble even when its effects are grim.

Christian nationalist Armageddon theology offers precisely such a story. It casts oil‑defense wars as divinely mandated showdowns. It turns triage into judgment, implying that those left in sacrifice zones are outside God’s favor. It tells enforcers that their obedience is not just patriotic but salvific.

In that sense, apocalyptic rhetoric in the ranks is not a random aberration. It is the mythic layer of technofeudal governance. Where my essay traces data flows, contract structures, and energy corridors, this layer traces angels and beasts, seals and trumpets. The two maps overlay.

Privatizing the Panopticon, Sacralizing the Stack

Another through‑line in my recent essays is the blurring of public and private power. Platform corporations operate like sovereigns: they control critical infrastructure, write their own codes of conduct, maintain security arms, and sometimes defy or dictate to states. States, in turn, outsource key functions to them: surveillance, content moderation, logistics, battlefield networking.

The result is what I call the “privatization of the panopticon”—a surveillance and control apparatus that is everywhere and nowhere, formally fragmented but functionally aligned.

Religious capture of the military nests neatly inside this architecture. As the war expands, technology firms sign contracts for satellite imagery analysis, AI‑driven targeting, and cyber‑operations. Social networks become the main theaters for shaping public perception, deciding which images of burning refineries or devastated neighborhoods trend and which vanish. Defense contractors and political patrons attend faith‑infused events where spiritual and material loyalties are braided together.

In this environment, Christian nationalist language becomes part of the user interface of empire. Soldiers are not just tracked and tasked by software; they are catechized into seeing those tasks as participation in sacred history. Citizens scrolling their feeds encounter not just propaganda but prophecy, with war framed as both necessary and holy.

Technofeudalism needs people to accept being watched, sorted, and governed by opaque systems. A theology that celebrates omniscience, predestination, and obedience can be repurposed to make that feel natural. When the all‑seeing corporate‑state apparatus is implicitly mapped onto an all‑seeing deity, resistance can start to feel not just futile but blasphemous.

Triage with a Halo

A central argument of my essay is that collapse is not an on/off switch but a gradient of worsening conditions, distributed unevenly. As resources tighten and climate impacts mount, some populations are shielded and others sacrificed. Zones of abandonment—downwind communities, sacrificed rural regions, refugee camps, disenfranchised inner cities—are already visible. In a managed‑decline scenario, those zones expand.

Christian nationalist eschatology can function as a moral gloss on that expansion. If history is understood as a story about a remnant saved from a wicked world, then the existence of large populations living and dying in precarity becomes easier to rationalize. They can be seen as outside the covenant, enemies of God, or simply props in a drama whose real protagonists live elsewhere.

This is not how all Christians think, of course. Many of the troops filing complaints explicitly identify as believers horrified by what they are being told. They recognize that weaponizing their faith to celebrate war and justify devastation is a betrayal of its core. But the theology being pushed from above is not the red‑letter Jesus of the Gospels—the one who blesses peacemakers and warns the rich. It is a red‑hat Jesus tailored to the needs of a ruling class intent on holding onto its yachts and data centers for as long as possible.

When technofeudal elites choose to let some regions burn, some supply chains fail, some communities flood or starve, they are making political choices. Wrapping those choices in prophecy—insisting that they are simply signs of the end times—helps them evade both blame and reform.

Rome’s Priests, Redux

The comparison to Rome is not accidental. In the first century, imperial power and religious authority worked hand in hand. The temple and the palace may have had different façades, but they shared an interest in suppressing movements that threatened order. Jesus was executed as an insurgent against both.

Today, the robes are different, but the alignment rhymes. A modern priestly caste—chaplains constrained by policy, celebrity pastors with media platforms, institutional religious leaders with access to power—often finds itself pulled into the orbit of empire. Blessings are offered at inaugurations and weapons factories; invocations are made at rallies calling for more war; theological arguments are deployed against refugees, protesters, and whistleblowers.

The Iran war’s Armageddon talk is one more iteration of that pattern. A priestly class aligns with an imperial project to defend a crumbling order. In doing so, it risks becoming exactly what it was once taught to resist: chaplains to Caesar.

My technofeudalism essay ends with a refusal. I wrote that “technofeudalism is not destiny.” The same is true of red‑hat Jesus. Neither the economic regime nor the theology that currently lubricates it is inevitable. They are responses—choices made by frightened elites trying to ride down the curve of industrial civilization without losing their grip.

If there is a way out of the trap we see before us—a way to face biophysical limits without authoritarian retrenchment, to navigate decline without mass abandonment—it will require more than policy tweaks. It will require different infrastructures, different institutions, and also different stories.

Those stories may come from secular traditions: socialism, anarchism, human rights, ecological thinking. They may also come from religious sources: liberation theologies, indigenous cosmologies, red‑letter Christianity that remembers which side of empire its founding figure died on.

What the current moment makes clear is that stories will be told. In the absence of conscious effort, the default stories will be the ones that serve the people already in charge: endless growth, necessary sacrifice zones, holy wars for oil, an algorithmic kingdom come.

The clash between technofeudalism and its alternatives will be fought with budgets and strikes and blockades, but also with sermons and memes and whispered conversations in barracks. The question is whether the faith that circulates in those spaces will continue to sanctify a gated, surveilled decline—or whether it can be turned, once again, against Rome.

Reference List

Asia Times. 2026. “US Troops Were Told Iran War Is for ‘Armageddon,’ Return of Jesus.” March 2, 2026. https://asiatimes.com/2026/03/us-troops-were-told-iran-war-is-for-armageddon-return-of-jesus/

Common Dreams. 2026. “US Commanders Want to Make War With Iran as ‘Bloody’ as Possible, Advocacy Group Warns.” March 2, 2026. https://www.commondreams.org/news/iran-armageddon-military

Esquire. 2026. “The Iran War Is God’s Plan, Say U.S. Military Leaders (Who Believe They’re Doing His Will).” March 2, 2026. https://www.esquire.com/news-politics/politics/a70590863/jesus-trump-military-iran-war/

Hegseth, Pete. 2025. “We Are Going to Make the Chaplain Corps Great Again.” Speech, Department of Defense, December 15, 2025. (Video.) https://www.facebook.com/SecWar/videos/we-are-going-to-make-the-chaplain-corps-great-again/921466543875201/

Military Religious Freedom Foundation. 2026. “MRFF Receives Over 110 Complaints about Commanders Pushing Armageddon Narrative on Iran War.” Statement, March 3, 2026. https://www.militaryreligiousfreedom.org

Military Times. 2025. “Hegseth Orders Overhaul of Chaplain Corps.” December 16, 2025. https://www.militarytimes.com/news/your-military/2025/12/17/hegseth-orders-overhaul-of-chaplain-corps/

Raw Story. 2026. “Military Group Deluged in Complaints as Armageddon Views Pushed on Troops.” March 3, 2026. https://www.rawstory.com/military-leaders-pushing-armageddon-views/

Stars and Stripes. 2025. “Hegseth to Overhaul Chaplain Corps, Toss ‘Unacceptable and Unserious’ Spiritual Fitness Guide.” December 16, 2025. https://www.stripes.com/branches/army/2025-12-17/hegseth-military-chaplains-20119952.html

U.S. Department of War. 2025. “Statement on the Department’s Strengthening of the Chaplain Corps.” Press release, December 17, 2025. https://www.justice.gov/opa/blog/statement-department-wars-strengthening-chaplain-corps

Oil, Algorithms, and the End of Worlds: How the War on Iran Sustains a Collapsing Civilization

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Technofeudalism as the Regime of Managed Decline

If you listen to our ruling classes long enough, you’ll notice something odd. They talk as if the future is a brighter, more efficient version of now, with better gadgets and fewer “frictions,” yet their actual behavior looks like people quietly boarding lifeboats while assuring the passengers that the ship is unsinkable. The polite name for this is “digital transformation.” A more accurate label is something like technofeudalism, and it looks suspiciously like the political operating system of a civilization that knows, at some level, that it is winding down.

The thesis is simple. Industrial civilization is running up against its biophysical limits and its own complexity, and the people who benefit most from the current order are not preparing a just transition or a new social contract. They are building cloud‑castles and data‑fiefs on top of a crumbling base, locking in forms of extraction and control that will keep them comfortable for as long as possible while the rest of the structure buckles. Collapse, but with VIP seating.

From Capitalism to Digital Lordship, or a Very Persuasive Cosplay

Yanis Varoufakis gave the current version of this story its most popular label when he argued that capitalism has already died and been replaced by something worse, a system in which “cloudalists” like Amazon, Meta, Apple and Alphabet no longer behave like firms in competitive markets but like lords who own the terrain itself. We are not their customers so much as their tenants and serfs, forever posting, scrolling and buying on platforms whose rules can be changed overnight. The core of the argument is that these firms do not primarily profit from exploiting labor in production, in the classical capitalist sense, but from charging rent on access to digital space. They sit astride the chokepoints through which attention, communication and commerce must flow, and they tax every crossing.

It is a seductive picture, and not only because it flatters the tech barons as a new aristocracy. It also resonates with lived experience. Try to run a small business without Amazon or Google. Try to organize politically without social media, or to find work without platforms. You can do it, in theory, just as medieval peasants could in theory pick up and walk off a lord’s land. In practice, the fences are very real.

Not everyone agrees that a new mode of production has emerged. Critics of the technofeudalism thesis point out that digital platforms are still deeply embedded in capitalist relations. The surplus value that makes Silicon Valley rich still comes from factories, warehouses, data centers and code written by workers under very conventional forms of exploitation. The platforms reorganize competition and extract rents, but they have not abolished capitalism’s basic logic so much as layered a new regime of rent seeking and monopoly control on top. One recent paper sums it up rather unromantically: the “digital lords” are still capitalist titans, just with better lawyers and APIs.

You do not have to resolve that theoretical dispute to see the political pattern. Whether you call it late capitalism with feudal tendencies, or full technofeudalism, the direction of travel is clear. Markets are being replaced not by democratic planning nor by small‑scale autarky, but by private empires whose systems decide what is visible, permissible and profitable. These are not simply companies. They are mini‑polities with their own security forces, currencies, courts of appeal and foreign policy.

The joke, if you have the stomach for it, is that this system presents itself as the peak of individual freedom. You are free to choose any platform you like, as long as it is one of the half dozen allowed by your app store. You are free to speak your mind, assuming the algorithm deigns to show your words to anyone. You are free to consent to data collection that you cannot realistically refuse. The old serf at least knew he was a serf.

Complexity, Goliath’s Curse and the Temptation of Managed Decline

At the same time as the lords are fencing off the cloud, the soil beneath the whole arrangement is turning to mud. Luke Kemp’s recent work on civilizational collapse, popularized in Goliath’s Curse, and a broader body of research on the “collapse of complex societies,” argue that industrial civilization is structurally fragile for reasons that have nothing to do with how we feel about it. Highly networked systems with tight couplings, high energy throughput and extreme inequality are prone to cascading failure. They rarely implode all at once, but they do tend to experience periods of rapid, synchronized breakdown in multiple domains.

Kemp’s reading of more than three hundred historical cases is not cheerful. Collapses typically arrive when elites push extraction too far, hollow out public goods and respond to early crises with repression instead of reform. Environmental overshoot, dwindling marginal returns on complexity, and elite overreach are preconditions. Authoritarian retrenchment is the standard late move, not the fix. Richard Heinberg phrases it more politely when he writes about “environmental‑political” collapse, but the point is the same. Our inability to stop cooking the planet is not a bug in policy. It is structurally baked into a growth‑addicted system whose leaders care more about short-term expansion than long-term survival. As warming crosses thresholds, states drift toward authoritarianism while ecosystems drift toward breakdown. The two are not separate stories. They are the same story playing out in different theaters.

Technofeudalism fits snugly into this picture as an elite strategy for managing, or at least surviving, decline. If you know the growth engine is sputtering and the climate is destabilizing, you have two broad options. You can attempt a painful structural transition that will likely reduce your own wealth and power. Or you can build gated networks, both physical and digital, that will keep you and your class insulated from the worst consequences for as long as possible. The emerging order looks very much like the second choice.

From this angle, platform monopolies and cloud empires are not forward‑looking innovations so much as late‑imperial fortifications. They channel shrinking streams of profit into private channels, automate away bothersome labor, and erect terms of service around social life that can be tightened as conditions worsen. Energy constraints, supply chain chaos and climate disruptions can all be partially offset for those at the top by prioritizing their access through proprietary systems. Everyone else gets app notifications.

You do not have to take collapse theorists’ word for it; you can watch the logic in action in the way our rulers are handling the latest Middle East war.

War as Platform Maintenance

If you wanted to design a crisis perfectly calibrated to reveal the nervous system of industrial civilization, you could do worse than the current US–Israel war on Iran. It has everything a late‑imperial scriptwriter could ask for: decades of sanctions and shadow conflict, an aging hegemon with an addiction to oil and supremacy, a regional rival that refuses to accept its assigned place in the hierarchy, and an energy system that can be knocked sideways by a few well‑aimed drones. The fact that this is being sold as a war for “freedom” and “stability” is almost touching. What it is really about is keeping the existing platform running long enough for the people at the top to cash out.

The basic sequence is straightforward. In late February 2026, after years of covert attacks and proxy clashes, the United States and Israel launched large‑scale strikes on Iranian territory. Cruise missiles and stealth aircraft hit air defenses, Revolutionary Guard facilities and nuclear sites. Senior commanders were killed. Tehran responded with waves of ballistic missiles and drones aimed at US bases in the Gulf and at critical energy infrastructure, forcing some facilities to shut down and sending oil prices sharply higher. Shipping insurance spiked. Airlines rerouted or cancelled flights. Kuwait, in the fog of war, even managed to shoot down US jets it thought were Iranian. The conflict quickly spread to Lebanon and threatened to pull in other actors.

If you see this purely as a morality play about good states versus bad states, the story stops there. If you look at it through the lens of a system already straining under climate disruption, energy limits and political decay, the picture is less heroic. For years, collapse researchers have pointed out that a global economy built on a handful of fossil‑fuel chokepoints in politically volatile regions is not exactly a model of resilience. The Strait of Hormuz, the Gulf refineries, the pipeline web lacing the region together, the just‑in‑time tankers and jet fuel routes: all of this is a single, interdependent machine. It is also the machine that keeps global shipping, industrial agriculture and air travel running. When you toss cruise missiles into that system, you are not just punishing a regime. You are stress‑testing the life support for industrial modernity.

The rhetoric in Washington and Tel Aviv, however, is not “we are dangerously addicted to this machine and should probably do something about that before the next crisis.” It is “we will not tolerate threats to freedom of navigation” and “we must prevent Iran from dominating the region.” Translation: the platform must be defended at all costs, and any actor that tries to alter its terms of use will be treated as malware. So long as tankers keep moving and energy companies can hedge their risk, temporary spikes and turbulence are acceptable collateral damage. The cost is paid by everyone who lives downstream of those price shocks and disruptions, but that has never been a disqualifying consideration.

Meanwhile, the war offers a gift basket of opportunities to the digital and security oligopolies that already define technofeudal life. Big tech firms sign fresh contracts to provide satellite imagery analysis, AI‑driven targeting, cyber defense and battlefield networking. Data brokers and surveillance vendors pitch their tools as indispensable for tracking Iranian assets and domestic critics. Social media platforms are suddenly the main arenas for narrative control, deciding whose videos from Bushehr or Ras Tanura trend and whose vanish into moderation queues. The same companies that insist they are mere neutral conduits of communication become, once again, gatekeepers for what counts as reality. Fear and outrage are among the platform’s most dependable revenue streams.

On the home front, the war works the old familiar magic. A president who ran on grievance now has an open‑ended external enemy. The domestic opposition, if it criticizes too loudly, can be painted as unpatriotic or even sympathetic to Tehran. Calls to rein in surveillance, border militarization or police violence can be dismissed as irresponsible when “our boys are under fire.” Budget fights that might have trimmed the sails of the security state get reframed as softness on Iran. The permanent emergency that keeps the carceral and surveillance apparatus fat and happy gets a new lease on life. In that sense, the Iran war is not a departure from technofeudal normality. It is normality stripped of its decorous language.

Seen from above, then, this is less a clash of civilizations than a piece of platform maintenance. A semi‑peripheral state that tried to assert some degree of autonomy in energy policy and regional security is being hammered into compliance. The fossil‑digital assemblage that keeps the current order afloat takes a hit, adjusts, and carries on without ever questioning its own architecture. The digital lords and their political partners farm the fear for contracts and clicks. And the underlying problem, that an energy‑hungry, growth‑addicted civilization is burning through its future, is once again displaced onto a new villain with a new flag. The world is not on fire because this or that regime is evil. It is on fire because the system itself cannot imagine a future in which it is not the center. War is how it buys itself more time, even as time runs out.

Digital Rents in a World with Less to Rent

The paradox of technofeudalism is that it promises infinite digital abundance on top of increasingly constrained physical baselines. You can stream as much content as you like, but you cannot stream fresh water into a dried‑out river. You can mint as many tokens as you like, but you cannot mint topsoil.

Analysts of planetary limits have been pointing out for years that modernity as we know it, with high material throughput and continuous compound growth, is incompatible with a finite planet. A 2021 paper put it bluntly in its title: modernity is incompatible with planetary limits. The authors argued that any version of “business as usual,” however greenwashed, relies on levels of energy and resource use that cannot be sustained without severe ecological damage. They suggested that a different model, one that deliberately scales down throughput and reorients economies toward sufficiency, is required if we want to avoid hard collapse.

Technofeudalism is, among other things, the refusal of that conclusion. Instead of reorganizing production and consumption, it reorganizes access and control. Big Tech’s move into energy, logistics, health and finance is often marketed as efficiency, but it has another effect. It allows a small number of corporations to decide who gets to optimize what, under what conditions, and who gets cut off when systems are stressed.

If you are a hospital and your records system is locked into a proprietary cloud, your ability to function in a crisis depends partly on a distant company’s priorities. If you are a city whose traffic lights, water systems and communications infrastructure are owned or run by external platforms, any conflict between public need and corporate strategy will be resolved where it always is: on the boardroom side. As one recent article on “techno‑feudalism and the new global power struggle” put it, control over digital infrastructure and data now confers a kind of private sovereignty that can rival or undermine states. The digital lords do not just sell services. They write rules. In a context of civilizational strain, that is not a neutral fact. It determines who will be left holding the bag when things begin to fail.

At this point, the only thing missing from the picture is a way to make most people economically redundant while keeping their dependence intact, and that is where AI and automation stroll on stage.

Automation as Elite Life Raft

AI is being sold as a tide that will lift all boats, but in practice it looks more like a pump that quietly drains the water out from under everyone except the people who own the dock. Analyses of the “great displacement” already point to sharp job losses or hiring freezes in AI‑exposed roles, especially for younger and mid‑skill workers, creating what one recent essay calls a looming “junior crisis” where the first rungs of the career ladder are sawed off while the C‑suite installs more glass. Economic modeling goes further, sketching a future in which AI eliminates so much paid work that mass consumer demand shrinks, and only a thin oligarchy of infrastructure and IP owners retain real power, perhaps stabilizing the rest of us with just enough universal basic pocket money to keep the lights on and the platforms busy. AI policy researchers have warned that “artificial intelligence power” is already being used as a pretext to strip‑mine public institutions, privatize data, and redesign work so that human judgment is degraded and surveillance is intensified. None of this gives ordinary people any meaningful control over the systems that are replacing them. In collapse terms, this is not an accident; it is the point. If you expect a harsher, more brittle world, one way to protect your class is to automate away as much labor as possible, reduce the political leverage of workers, and concentrate control in a tiny group that owns the machines, the code, and the networks. AI becomes the tool that turns surplus populations into politically harmless background noise and turns tech oligarchs into the de facto nobility of a shrinking world.

The Authoritarian International as Crisis Management Committee

One of the more depressing spectacles of the past decade has been watching the convergence of tech barons, fossil fuel interests, nationalist politicians and security apparatuses into a loose, self‑protective network. Call it an authoritarian international if you like, or simply a very exclusive trade association.

Analysts of global power have noted that as digital platforms grew, they began to reshape international relations as well. A recent paper on technofeudalism and the “new global power struggle” describes a nascent digital cold war in which corporations are key actors alongside states, controlling infrastructure, data and AI capabilities that have strategic significance. These firms are not neutral. They cooperate with some governments, resist others, and occasionally behave as if they are sovereign entities in their own right.

Meanwhile, collapse research points out that in prior civilizations, elites often responded to emerging stresses by doubling down on extraction and repression rather than sharing power or resources. It worked, for a while. Then it didn’t. Our elites are repeating the pattern, but with better gadgets. Surveillance systems that would have made twentieth century dictators swoon are now quietly integrated into smartphones, city cameras and data brokers’ servers. AI tools can filter, flag and predict dissent. Autonomous systems are being developed for border control and policing. The apparatus of a digital autocracy is being built in peacetime, under the logo of consumer convenience.

In this environment, the distinction between “public” and “private” repression becomes fuzzy. When a government leans on a platform to mute certain narratives, or when platforms preemptively tweak their recommendations to avoid regulatory heat, control is exercised through a partnership. When a security service wants access to communications or location data, it often does not need to build its own system. It can politely tap into existing ones. Technofeudalism is, among other things, the privatization of the panopticon.

This is where the sardonic part writes itself. The same people who rail against “big government” are delighted to hand coercive functions to unaccountable corporations, then quietly fuse those corporate tools back into the state when it suits them. Instead of “everything within the state,” the real slogan now is “everything within the tech stack” – as long as it runs on their platforms, it’s under their control.

Adaptation for Whom?

If decline and fragmentation are indeed on the menu, the hard question is no longer simply whether “humanity” survives in some abstract genetic sense. On a planet that has burned through its easiest fossil fuels, destabilized its own climate system, shredded biodiversity and poisoned much of its soil and water, survival is not a binary outcome but a spectrum of increasingly harsh possibilities. A small, scattered population of Homo sapiens could limp on in damaged niches for a very long time, but what we usually mean by survival is something closer to “billions of people living decently in functioning societies.” It is that version of “technological humanity,” built on high‑energy systems, global supply chains and dense institutions, that now looks fundamentally incompatible with the biophysical reality we have created.

Technofeudalism offers one grim answer to the question of who gets to live well on a depleted planet. It imagines that high‑tech life will continue for those who can pay for priority access to shrinking stocks of energy, food, habitable land, data and security, and that everyone else will slide down a ladder of regression calibrated to how useless they are to the owners of the system. Some will be kept on as precarious gig and cloud‑serf labor, still tethered to the digital grid through low‑bandwidth pipes, algorithmic management and credit scores. Others will be quietly discarded into zones of abandonment where the old promises of development, citizenship and rights no longer apply, and where climate shocks, disease and scarcity are allowed to do slow, deniable work.

This is not speculative in the comfortable science‑fiction sense. Proto‑zones of abandonment are already visible in sacrificed rural regions, in inner cities stripped of services, in communities living downwind of refineries and mines, in refugee camps and informal settlements that exist just outside the polite perimeter of “global integration.” As resource depletion, climate disasters, crop failures and supply‑chain breakdowns intensify, the temptation for the lords of the cloud and their political allies will not be to shrink these spaces but to expand them. When there is physically not enough energy, food or safe territory to support everybody at current levels, triage is not a moral thought experiment. It is logistics. The only real question is who gets to write the triage protocol and how honestly they name what they are doing.

Collapse theory has a dark sense of humor about all this. Its more sardonic voices like to point out that every ruling class in history thought its particular arrangements were the culmination of rational progress, right up until the moment they were not. The Roman aristocracy did not plan for a world in which their villas were ruins picked over by peasants. The coal barons of the nineteenth century did not imagine a world where burning their product would destabilize the jet stream. The technofeudal elite does not plan seriously for a world without high bandwidth, cheap chips, predictable seasons and functioning grids, even though those things rest on ecological and material conditions that are now visibly eroding. They are very good at modeling other people’s risk and very bad at relinquishing the power and wealth that would have to be given up to reduce it. That, more than any abstract limit, is what makes the future feel narrow.

Other Endings Are Available, At Least in Theory

If this all sounds like a counsel of despair, it is worth recalling that collapse is not necessarily uniform, nor is it ethically neutral. The fact that complex systems simplify does not tell you who gets crushed and who lands lightly. Richard Heinberg, in his discussion of intertwined environmental and political breakdown, insists that there are still meaningful choices to be made. We can, he suggests, shift our focus from “sustainability” as a euphemism for maintaining business as usual, and start talking honestly about survival, resilience and regeneration. That means building local capacities, strengthening mutual aid, reducing dependence on brittle long chains and fighting like hell against authoritarian shortcuts.

Technofeudalism is not destiny. It is a particular way a frightened elite is trying to ride the down‑slope of industrial civilization without losing its privileges. It depends on our acquiescence, our willingness to live as tenants on platforms and to accept the story that there is no alternative. There is no law of physics that says digital infrastructures must be privately owned or that data must flow upward and never sideways. There is no thermodynamic principle that requires AI to be pointed at ad targeting and automated repression instead of at, say, optimizing food systems for equity.

The deeper problem, of course, is that the reforms required to avoid the worst outcomes would feel, to people at the top, less like reform and more like regime change. You do not transition smoothly from cloud castles back to a society of modest, widely shared comforts without someone losing a yacht or three. The same is true of the energy and material side. Staying within planetary limits means rich societies using less, not just using differently. That is heresy in both boardroom and cabinet.

So we have arrived at a kind of late‑civilizational farce. The official narrative says that more innovation and more efficiency will keep the party going. The actual system is retooling itself into a gated, surveilled, stratified order that can wobble through a long decline while preserving the status of those who built it: oil still flowing, algorithms still sorting, worlds quietly ending offstage. Call it technofeudalism, call it a fascist operating system running on capitalist hardware. Either way, it is our current answer to the question of how to face collapse without admitting that collapse is what we are facing.

Whether we can still write a different answer is the only interesting political question left.


References

“AI, Job Displacement and the Case for a New Social Contract.” Baker Tilly Global, February 10, 2026. https://www.bakertilly.global/insights/ai-job-displacement-and-the-case-for-a-new-social-contract

AI Now Institute. “Executive Summary – Artificial Power: 2025 Landscape Report.” June 03, 2025. https://ainowinstitute.org/publications/research/executive-summary-artificial-power.

“AI‑Driven Collapse 2026–2100: The End of Normal Work, the Rise of AI Oligarchs, and How Entrepreneurial Families Can Survive.” MECI Group, February 26, 2026. https://meci-group.com/ai-driven-collapse-2026-2100-the-end-of-normal-work-the-rise-of-ai-oligarchs-and-how-entrepreneurial-families-can-still-win/

AP News. “War Between Iran and Israel and the US Widens.” March 2, 2026. https://apnews.com/article/iran-israel-us-03-02-2026-cb42936de1d8c261be8f30f11c6665fa.

Atlantic Council. “Experts React: How the US War with Iran Is Playing Out around the Middle East.” February 28, 2026. https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/dispatches/experts-react-how-the-us-war-with-iran-is-playing-out-around-the-middle-east/.

“Book Review: Techno-feudalism: What Killed Capitalism.” Freedom Socialist Party, May 22, 2024. https://socialism.com/fso-article/book-review-techno-feudalism-what-killed-capitalism/.

CNN. “Live Updates: Trump Warns Iran about Larger Strikes as War Spirals in Middle East.” March 2, 2026. https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/iran-israel-us-attack-03-02-26-intl-hnk.

“Digital Lords or Capitalist Titans? Critiquing the Techno-Feudalism Narrative.” Developing Economics, May 5, 2025. https://developingeconomics.org/2025/05/05/digital-lords-or-capitalist-titans-critiquing-the-techno-feudalism-narrative/.

Heinberg, Richard. “Environmental-Political Collapse Accelerates.” Polycrisis.org, December 13, 2024. https://polycrisis.org/resource/environmental-political-collapse-accelerates/.

Inside Climate News. “With the World Stumbling Past 1.5 Degrees of Warming, Scientists Warn of Unrest and Authoritarian Backlash.” February 5, 2024. https://insideclimatenews.org/news/28012024/with-world-warming-scientists-warn-of-unrest-and-authoritarian-backlash/.

Institute for the Study of War. “Iran Update Evening Special Report, March 1, 2026.” March 2, 2026. https://understandingwar.org/research/middle-east/iran-update-evening-special-report-march-1-2026/.

IZA Institute of Labor Economics. “Artificial Intelligence, the Collapse of Consumer Society, and Oligarchy.” Discussion Paper, December 31, 2024. https://www.iza.org/publications/dp/17682/artificial-intelligence-the-collapse-of-consumer-society-and-oligarchy

Kemp, Luke. Goliath’s Curse: The History and Future of Societal Collapse. Reviewed in The New York Times, October 2, 2025. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/02/books/review/luke-kemp-goliaths-curse.html.

LessWrong. “[Link] The Collapse of Complex Societies.” December 30, 2012. https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/cfiJLA7aGhMWqMe7i/link-the-collapse-of-complex-societies.

“Lessons from Goliath’s Curse.” Collapse of Industrial Civilization, October 12, 2025. https://collapseofindustrialcivilization.com/2025/10/13/collapse-authoritarianism-and-overpopulation-lessons-from-goliaths-curse.

MIT Press Reader. “The Collapse Is Coming. Will Humanity Adapt?” February 19, 2026. https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/the-collapse-is-coming-will-humanity-adapt/.

MIT Sloan. “How Artificial Intelligence Impacts the US Labor Market.” September 30, 2025. https://mitsloan.mit.edu/ideas-made-to-matter/how-artificial-intelligence-impacts-us-labor-market

Occupy IR Theory. “Technofeudalism versus Total Capitalism (with Alex Hochuli).” January 1, 2026. https://www.occupyirtheory.info/2026/01/02/episode-43-technofeudalism-versus-total-capitalism-w-alex-hochuli/.

PBS NewsHour. “Live Updates: U.S.–Israel Conflict with Iran Widens.” March 2, 2026. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/live-updates-u-s-israel-conflict-with-iran-widens.

Polycrisis.org. “The Collapse of Complex Societies.” September 28, 2023. https://polycrisis.org/resource/the-collapse-of-complex-societies/.

Reuters. “Iran Conflict Widens to Lebanon, Kuwait Mistakenly Shoots Down US Jets.” March 1, 2026. https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israel-strikes-lebanon-following-hezbollah-attacks-widening-iran-conflict-2026-03-02/.

Science of the Total Environment. “Modernity Is Incompatible with Planetary Limits: Developing a PLAN.” 2021. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214629621003327.

Security Council Report. “Emergency Meeting on the Military Escalation in the Middle East.” February 27, 2026. https://www.securitycouncilreport.org/whatsinblue/2026/02/emergency-meeting-on-the-military-escalation-in-the-middle-east.php.

“Techno Feudalism and the New Global Power Struggle: Echoes of a Digital Cold War.” International Journal of Research and Innovation in Social Science 9, no. 2 (2025). https://rsisinternational.org/journals/ijriss/articles/techno-feudalism-and-the-new-global-power-struggle-echoes-of-a-digital-cold-war/.

“The Collapse of Complex Societies: A Primer on Tainter’s Theory.” R-Word (Substack), November 6, 2022. https://rword.substack.com/p/the-collapse-of-complex-societies.

“The Collapse of Complex Societies.” Dark Mountain Project, May 21, 2018. https://dark-mountain.net/the-collapse-of-complex-societies/.

“The End of the World as We Know It? Theorist Warns Humanity Is Headed Toward Civilizational Breakdown.” The Independent, January 13, 2025. https://www.the-independent.com/news/science/world-end-apocalypse-human-civilization-collapse-b2678651.html.

“The New Yorker. ‘Has Capitalism Been Replaced by “Technofeudalism”?’” March 25, 2024. https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/04/01/has-capitalism-been-replaced-by-technofeudalism.

TRT World Research Centre. “Weaponising ‘Freedom’: Regime Change Narratives in the 2026 Iran War.” February 27, 2026. https://researchcentre.trtworld.com/publications/analysis/weaponising-freedom-regime-change-narratives-in-the-2026-iran-war/.

Varoufakis, Yanis. Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism. Profile Books, 2023.

Varoufakis, Yanis. “Two Reviews of Technofeudalism by Conservative Publications.” April 1, 2024. https://www.yanisvaroufakis.eu/2024/04/01/two-reviews-of-technofeudalism-by-conservative-publications-free-beacon-the-european-conservative/.

Wikipedia. “Prelude to the 2026 Iran Conflict.” January 29, 2026. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prelude_to_the_2026_Iran_conflict.

The Coin In The Sky: Notes On The American Empire

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

America’s greatest export has never been freedom, nor democracy, nor even the vague, sugary, carbonated myth called “hope.” It has been the combo meal: a steaming, shrink‑wrapped bundle of war, debt, spectacle, and distraction. The empire’s genius has been to make that bundle look like salvation and then convince the rest of the planet to pay for the privilege of drowning in it.

The Coin in the Sky

Imagine the American century as a single image: a weathered coin the size of a god’s head hovering over a smog‑black city, its portrait worn smooth by the greasy fingers of markets and wars. The face is technically a “Founding Father,” but at this point it could be anyone: a senator from Delaware, a Silicon Valley disruptor, a defense‑industry lobbyist—all interchangeable silhouettes in the great engraving of capital. The inscription reads “In Markets We Trust,” and below that, in smaller print, “Some Restrictions Apply.”

This is not a republic so much as a vending machine guarded by aircraft carriers. Put your ballot in the slot, listen to the rattling of Super PAC coins down the steel chute, and out pops another custodian of the sacred GDP. Americans were told this machine was the final form of history, a device so perfect that even criticizing it sounds like heresy or—worse—“class warfare.”

The War Machine as Jobs Program and Secular Church

President Eisenhower, who actually knew something about war beyond the PowerPoint slides, warned of a “military‑industrial complex” whose “unwarranted influence” would endanger democracy and drain the wealth and spirit of the nation. He might as well have been lecturing a casino about the dangers of slot machines. The United States listened respectfully, named a few highways after him, and then proceeded to build a planetary war machine so large that it now functions as the default industrial policy, employment scheme, tech incubator, and foreign‑policy side hustle rolled into one.

The Pentagon is not just a building; it is the closest thing America has to a national church. It absorbs tithes in the form of tax dollars, offers sacraments in the form of new fighter jets, and dispenses salvation as “security” against a rotating cast of demons: communists, terrorists, rogue states, great‑power rivals. At every budget cycle, lobbyists, retired generals, and contractors gather in Washington’s inner sanctums to chant the liturgy of “readiness” and “jobs,” their PowerPoints studded with maps of danger that miraculously correspond to congressional districts in need of employment.

This is war as Keynesian stimulus, but with worse infrastructure and better branding. Missile systems that do not work are funded because they create jobs that do not pay enough, in towns that have no other reason to exist except to build the hardware that will someday turn someone else’s town into rubble. Every gun, as Eisenhower put it, “signifies, in the final sense, a theft” from the hungry; it is also a cleverly disguised transfer of wealth from public need to the corporate balance sheet.

Meanwhile, the empire’s forward operating bases form a steel necklace around the planet: hundreds of installations from Germany to Guam, Diego Garcia to Djibouti, a cartography of “interests” so sprawling that everything, everywhere has become a potential battlefield. The empire calls this “deterrence”; others might recognize it as what Chalmers Johnson described as “blowback on layaway”—installments of resentment accruing interest in distant deserts and megacities.

Oligarchy in a Democracy Costume

Officially, this is all done by a government “of the people, by the people, for the people.” In practice, it increasingly resembles a corporate boardroom with a flag at the front. Wealth concentration in the United States has reached levels rivaled only by late‑tsarist Russia: the richest 130,000 families own nearly as much as the bottom 90 percent; three individuals possess as much as the bottom half of the population. Political scientists Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page went looking for democracy in this landscape and found that the policy preferences of the average citizen have “near‑zero and statistically non‑significant” impact on what the government actually does.

This is not a glitch; it is a design feature. Campaigns are financed by those who benefit from the military‑industrial complex, deregulated finance, and globalized supply chains, so policy obligingly reflects their desires: low taxes on capital, endless war contracts, minimal labor protections, maximum latitude for monopolies and mergers. The Supreme Court helpfully declared that money is speech, which means some citizens now own megaphones the size of small galaxies while others are reduced to mouthing opinions in a dark utility closet.

When inequality becomes this grotesque, the old myths of equal opportunity and meritocracy strain to the breaking point. At that point, ruling elites have a choice: share power and wealth, or double down on control. The American oligarchy has chosen the second path, lubricated with the language of culture war and the politics of resentment.

Thus, demagogues are elevated to rant on screens about immigrants, “wokeness,” and the gender of cartoon characters while the donors quietly finalize the next tax cut and defense appropriation. Fascistic aesthetics—chants, flags, paramilitary cosplay—bubble up around a politics whose real content is astonishingly banal: lower corporate taxes, weaker unions, more fossil fuels, more weapons sales. The spectacle is the camouflage.

Consumerism: Bread and Endless Circuses

What keeps this whole contraption from collapsing under the weight of its own absurdity is not faith in democracy, but faith in shopping. American consumerism is less an economic pattern than a civilizational mood: an anxious, neon hunger that confuses accumulation with meaning. Status is measured not by civic virtue or wisdom, but by square footage, brand logos, and the price tags of things bought to impress people one secretly despises.

The postwar boom turned consumption into national duty: to purchase was to support growth, to support growth was to defeat communism, to defeat communism was to vindicate the American Way. Malls replaced town squares; advertising replaced public discourse; citizens were redefined as consumers whose primary political act happens at a checkout counter or, later, in an online cart.

The psychological engine of this system is insecurity. As analysts of American consumer culture note, people in the “sole superpower” are haunted by the fear of falling behind, not having enough, not being enough. The solution is always more: more clothes, more gadgets, more experiences, more “content.” Overconsumption becomes both symptom and cure, a treadmill powered by anxiety and lubricated with credit.

And because America seldom keeps its pathologies to itself, this way of life is exported everywhere. Malls rise in former colonies, stocked with the same Western brands; streaming platforms beam the same narratives of glamorous excess into slums and villages; fast‑food chains become more recognizable than local governments. Consumerism becomes a lingua franca of aspiration, teaching billions that happiness lives somewhere between the unboxing video and the landfill.

The Empire as Global Influencer

If Rome exported law and roads, America exports lifestyle and logistics. Its mass culture—Hollywood, pop music, video games—has become the ambient soundtrack of global modernity. On the surface, this looks like soft power, a benign diffusion of creativity and fun. Yet beneath the surface, it carries a deeper message: that life is properly organized around brands, flickering screens, and perpetual novelty; that identity is something purchased and assembled from corporate offerings; that freedom means the absence of limits, especially ecological ones.

Globalization, we are told, is an inevitable tide, but the currents run in a very specific direction. Supply chains move raw materials and cheap labor from South to North; cultural chains move desires from North to South. Both are anchored by the dollar, the global reserve currency backed, not coincidentally, by the same navy that patrols the shipping lanes. The smiling corporate mascot and the menacing aircraft carrier are two faces of the same coin.

Those who resist this order are sanctioned, bombed, or lectured about human rights, sometimes all three. Their crime is not tyranny—plenty of compliant tyrannies are tolerated—but disobedience to the empire’s preferred blend of open markets and closed political horizons. Freedom, in this lexicon, means the freedom of capital to move, not the freedom of people to shape their own economies.

Environmental Apocalypse as Externality

Industrial civilization now resembles a horizon of smokestacks vomiting clouds into a sky already crowded with explosions and missiles. It is tempting to see this simply as metaphor, but it is also reportage. The American way of life—vast suburban sprawl, car dependence, hyperconsumption—has been one of the great engines of planetary destabilization. The United States has historically contributed a disproportionate share of greenhouse‑gas emissions while preaching “growth” as universal destiny.

The same corporate and political interests that feed at the trough of the military‑industrial complex also bankroll the fossil‑fuel complex, lobbying to delay climate action, sow doubt about science, and frame any serious response as an assault on jobs and freedom. Climate catastrophe is treated as a public‑relations problem to be managed with greenwashed branding and carbon‑offset schemes, while the empire quietly prepares for the security implications: more border fortifications, more resource wars, more internal repression when disaster hits home.

In this sense, the apocalypse is not a sudden event; it is a business model. Droughts, floods, and fires create new markets—for private security, disaster reconstruction, geoengineering—as the same system that caused the crisis offers to sell us survival at a premium.

The Spiritual Vacancy at the Heart of the Mall

Underneath the noise of jets and advertisements lies a quieter crisis: the erosion of meaning. A society that defines human beings primarily as workers and consumers cannot help but generate a kind of spiritual malnutrition. The old languages of solidarity, sacrifice, and the common good sound archaic against the algorithmic imperative to maximize engagement and shareholder value.

People reach for religion, nationalism, conspiracy theories—anything that promises a story larger than their credit score. The oligarchy is happy to indulge these cravings so long as they do not threaten the flow of profits. Thus, we get a peculiar arrangement: a culture saturated with apocalyptic fantasies—zombie plagues, superhero battles, end‑of‑the‑world blockbusters—while the actual slow apocalypse of climate breakdown and democratic decay unfolds in the background like a discarded studio backdrop.

In this theater, satire becomes almost redundant. How do you parody a system in which billionaires literally fly into space on rockets shaped like phallic jokes while their workers urinate in bottles to meet productivity targets? Where is the exaggeration in pointing out that the same government that claims it cannot afford universal healthcare somehow finds endless trillions for wars whose objectives even the generals cannot articulate?

Exporting the Void

The tragic part is not merely that America built this edifice for itself; it is that it sold it to the world as aspiration. Nations once dreaming of liberation now dream of shopping malls; revolutions once fought in the name of land and bread are rebranded as opportunities for foreign investment. Local cultures are mined for “content,” repackaged, and sold back to their originators with a subscription fee.

The American empire does not need to colonize territory in the old way; it colonizes imagination. When every child on earth grows up wanting the same shoes, the same franchise movies, the same miracle diet of sugar and spectacle, the empire has achieved something unmatched in history: a near‑total synchronization of desire to the rhythms of its own profit cycles.

But synchronization is not the same as satisfaction. The more the empire spreads its gospel of individualism and accumulation, the more it quietly generates loneliness, anxiety, and ecological ruin. Disillusioned citizens in the core and the periphery alike find themselves trapped between authoritarian nostalgia and algorithmic nihilism, with little sense of how to build an alternative.

Toward an Honest Reckoning

None of this is destiny. Empires fall; systems change; values shift. The omnipotence of American capitalism and militarism is as contingent as the British Raj or the Roman legions once seemed. Yet an honest reckoning would require something the empire currently lacks: a capacity for self‑limitation, a willingness to redirect resources from weapons to welfare, from profit to planetary survival, from mindless consumption to collective flourishing.

Such a shift would mean breaking the power of oligarchs who have no interest in transformation; rebuilding public institutions capable of serving majorities rather than donors; and cultivating a culture that measures success not by the size of one’s arsenal or one’s shopping cart but by the health of communities and ecosystems. It would mean treating the rest of the world not as a market or battlefield but as a community of equals, each with the right to define prosperity on their own terms.

For now, the coin in the sky still glows, backlit by burning forests and devastated cities, its surface smudged with the fingerprints of corporations and generals. Down below, beneath the billboards and drone trails, people continue to live, love, and resist in ways that rarely trend but quietly persist. The American empire is powerful, but it is not immortal, and its collapse—whether gradual or sudden—will open space for other stories to breathe and be told.