Tags
Benjamin Netanyahu, Chokepoint Warfare, Civilizational Overshoot, Climate Constraints, Collapse Trajectories, Donald Trump, Energy Infrastructure, Fossil Fuel Dependency, Future Civilizations, Geopolitical Hubris, Global Stagflation, Gulf Desalination, Industrial Civilization, Iran War, Petrostate Fragility, Regime Change, Resource Depletion, Strait Of Hormuz, Systemic Risk, Water Security

The Iran War and Civilizational Self‑Harm
For decades, worst‑case scenarios about the Gulf lived in the margins of strategic reports and collapse forums. What if a regional war shut the Strait of Hormuz? What if desalination plants were hit, or refineries and LNG terminals were cratered along the coast? The comfort baked into those scenarios was always the same: they were presented as tail risks. Possible, but unlikely. We told ourselves that no serious power would be stupid enough to roll the dice on destroying the very infrastructure that holds up the global economy and keeps tens of millions of people alive in the hottest, driest petro‑region on Earth.
The 2026 war on Iran is busy proving us wrong. What used to be labelled “worst case” now looks uncomfortably like the path of least resistance. The United States and Israel have launched a large‑scale, open‑ended campaign against Iran, Iran has responded by weaponizing the Strait of Hormuz and striking at energy and logistics targets across the Gulf, and regional actors like the Houthis have joined in with their own attacks on shipping and infrastructure, raising the odds that more than just Hormuz will be intermittently or permanently shut. Everyone insists they are still winning. No one seems willing to admit what they are actually burning through.
This is not just another bloody episode in the Middle East’s long history of imperial arrogance and local revenge. It is something closer to civilizational self‑harm: a war of choice that systematically chews up the water and energy systems that industrial society still stands on, at a moment when the planet’s climate and ecological buffers are already strained past anything recognizably “normal.” If we take the dynamics of this conflict seriously, the most probable outcome is not a quick ceasefire and a restored status quo. It is a prolonged, grinding, partly frozen war that leaves the Gulf’s physical infrastructure and political geography mangled, and the resource base for any future complex societies permanently narrowed.
The War No One Thought Through
On paper, the justifications for the attack on Iran are familiar: Iran’s support for armed groups, its missile and drone capabilities, its nuclear program, its refusal to accept its place in a US‑ordered regional hierarchy. Strip away the rhetoric and what remains is a straightforward act of hegemony maintenance. An aging superpower and its key client, unwilling to accept that their ability to dictate terms in the region has eroded, decided to try to bomb their way back to a position of comfortable superiority.
What is striking is not just the brutality of that decision but its intellectual laziness. At no point did the governments involved invite their own publics into a serious conversation about what closing or half‑closing Hormuz actually means, beyond an abstract nod to “higher oil prices.” At no point did they try to grapple, in public, with what a sustained attack on Iranian territory and command structures would do to the logic of escalation. They did not walk citizens through the geography of the Gulf, the co‑location of refineries, export terminals, power plants, and desalination complexes on the same vulnerable coastal strip. They did not ask what it looks like when those nodes, and the tankers threading between them, are all within range of relatively cheap missiles and drones.
Instead, they behaved as though the old rules still applied: that wars could be contained, that oil and shipping would more or less keep flowing, that “deterrence” would be restored after a few high‑profile strikes. Trump and his second‑term cabinet appear to have convinced themselves that a single, spectacular decapitation strike would do the job – kill the supreme leader and a tranche of senior commanders, call on the people and security forces to “take their country back,” and watch the regime fold, a bigger replay of the Maduro snatch‑and‑swap they had just pulled off in Venezuela. They treated Iran’s control of Hormuz, its internal resilience, and the Gulf’s water‑energy dependence as bargaining chips in a cartoon script about toppling dictators, not as the load‑bearing pillars of a tightly coupled global system. That is not strategy. It is magical thinking, welded to the kind of hubris that learns nothing from past regime‑change failures.
Iran, of course, is hardly blameless. Its decision to answer airstrikes and assassinations by mounting its own attacks on shipping, energy infrastructure, and bases across the Gulf was not made in ignorance. Tehran’s leadership knows how fragile the Gulf’s lifelines are. It knows that closing or constraining Hormuz hurts not just Washington and Tel Aviv but its own economy and its neighbors’. Yet it gambled anyway, convinced that demonstrating its ability to turn off the tap—and to survive the resulting shock better than US‑aligned regimes—would strengthen its hand in the long run.
On both sides, the same structural stupidity is at work: a refusal or inability to think beyond the next move in a prestige contest, even when the stakes have obviously migrated into the realm of systemic risk.
Water and Oil: The Same Target
To see how bad this can get, you have to look past the missiles and speeches and focus on pipes, plants, and grids.
The Gulf monarchies are not just rich countries sitting on sand and oil. They are artificial hydrological systems. For many of them, rainfall and groundwater are nowhere near sufficient to support their current populations, let alone their industrial and agricultural sectors. They survive on desalinated seawater: vast plants that suck in the Gulf, strip out salt, and push potable water through networks of pipes into cities, factories, and power stations. In several states, the vast majority of municipal water comes from these plants. Many of those plants share sites and power infrastructure with fossil‑fuel generators and petrochemical complexes. Some are key nodes in national grids.
In such a system, “energy” and “water” are not separable categories. They are the same target. Hit a power‑desalination complex and you do not just dim the lights; you threaten drinking water, sanitation, industrial operations, and the cooling systems of other plants. Damage a major refinery or gas processing facility and you also reduce the ability to fuel and maintain the machinery that keeps water flowing. In a region already pushed to the edge of a habitable climate by rising temperatures and humidity, those links are a matter of life and death.
Even before this war, analysts were warning that Gulf desalination plants were soft, high‑value targets in any serious regional conflict: large, hard to relocate, easy to spot on satellite imagery, and within range of relatively cheap long-range weapons. Now, after weeks of strikes, near misses, and open talk of “hitting the enemy where it hurts,” those warnings no longer sound theoretical. It takes no great imagination to sketch a sequence of events in which certain plants are hit, others are shut down pre‑emptively for fear of attack, and the entire system begins to operate in a state of chronic, fearful under‑capacity.
Overlay that with deliberate or incidental damage to refineries, LNG terminals, export pipelines, and offshore infrastructure, and the picture that emerges is grim: not a brief oil price spike followed by relief, but a sustained, partial crippling of the region’s ability to deliver fuels and water at anything like its previous scale.
The “Worst Case” as the Most Likely Path
Official documents still talk about this kind of scenario as if it were an outlier. Planners plot boxes labelled “low probability, high impact” and tuck the destruction of Gulf infrastructure into them, as though the mere placement on a chart will keep the world from actually going there.
That framing made some sense when the main Gulf risk was a single rogue missile or a terrorist attack. It makes much less sense once multiple state and quasi‑state actors with large missile and drone arsenals are fighting a broad war in and around the region, and once those actors have already demonstrated both the means and the will to hit high‑value infrastructure.
To treat full or partial destruction of Gulf energy and desalination capacity as a low‑probability event now is to cling to an optimism that nothing in the current situation justifies. What the incentives and capabilities now on display actually suggest is that, absent an abrupt and unlikely outbreak of restraint, we should treat something close to the worst case as the baseline.
That baseline does not necessarily entail glassed‑over ruins and cities emptying overnight. It looks more like this:
-
The Strait of Hormuz remains intermittently or structurally constrained for years, with shipping volumes well below pre‑war levels even during “lulls.”
-
Major pieces of export infrastructure and refining capacity on both sides of the Gulf are damaged badly enough that they take years, not months, to restore, if they are restored at all.
-
Key desalination plants and power‑desal complexes are hit directly or disabled by collateral damage often enough that their operators and governments are forced into chronic rationing and costly, ad hoc work‑arounds.
-
Insurance and risk premiums for shipping through the region never return to pre‑war norms, and importers treat Gulf barrels and molecules as politically risky even when they are technically available.
In other words, not a one‑off crisis but a ratcheting down of capacity and trust, with each new round of conflict damaging both the physical assets and the perception of safety around them. In plain terms, this war has enough leverage over oil, gas, fertilizer, and desalinated water that it can push industrial civilization off a plateau and onto a steeper downslope: not a theatrical lights‑out moment, but a sudden loss of altitude from which there is no easy climb back.
What That Means for the Rest of Us
From the standpoint of someone in, say, Europe, South Asia, or West Africa, this may sound remote. But the Gulf is still one of the central organs of the global economy. If you weaken it badly, the whole body suffers.
A damaged Gulf with weaponized sea lanes and impaired infrastructure means:
-
Higher and more volatile oil prices, because a chunk of cheap‑to‑develop, high‑throughput supply is off the table or politically tainted.
-
Higher and more volatile gas and LNG prices, especially in Asia and Europe, where switching away from Russian flows was already painful.
-
Higher fertilizer prices, because nitrogen and many other inputs are energy‑intensive and tightly linked to gas markets and Gulf producers; that translates directly into higher food prices and lower yields, especially in import‑dependent countries that can’t afford to make up the difference with subsidies.
-
A persistent drag on global economic growth, as energy and food import bills rise faster than incomes and as central banks tighten or hold interest rates higher than they otherwise would to fight cost‑driven inflation.
These are not speculative chains. We have seen weaker versions of them play out already with the war in Ukraine and earlier oil shocks. The difference now is that the systems under attack are both more central and more fragile, and the ecological backdrop is far less forgiving.
For households and workers at the margins, especially in the global South, this will look like a rolling crisis that never quite ends: fuel that stays expensive, transport and electricity that strain already thin budgets, food prices that creep up faster than wages, public services that get squeezed as governments pay more to import the basics. For governments, it will look like an endless series of hard choices between defaulting on debts, cutting social spending, and repressing unrest.
Add those shocks together and you don’t just get a bad recession. You get a break in the curve: a world where energy, fertilizer, and food are structurally scarcer and dearer, and where whole regions start to slide out of the zone where complex, globalized industrial life can be maintained.
Burning the Scaffolding
It is sometimes argued that wars like this, however terrible, are just one more chapter in the long history of empires and resource struggles, and that humanity has always rebuilt. Rome fell, China fractured, and yet centuries later, new centers of power and complexity emerged. Why should this be different?
The answer is that we are fighting this war on a planet that has already been radically altered by our previous rounds of overshoot, and we are fighting it in a way that damages not just resources but the systems that make those resources usable.
Earlier empires exhausted local soils, forests, and aquifers, but the climate system and the global biogeochemical cycles remained broadly stable. The ores they picked over were near the surface and rich. The rivers and seas they sailed were mostly clean. When those arrangements failed, there were still vast margins of unused capacity elsewhere, and the energy gradient available from fossil fuels remained untapped.
Today, the situation is different. The climate is hotter and more chaotic. Ice sheets and glaciers are committed to long‑term loss. Ocean ecosystems are stressed. The most accessible fossil deposits and ore bodies have been mined or are in decline. The great old‑growth forests that once buffered weather and hydrology have been cut back to archipelagos.
On top of that, we have built a single, tightly coupled global economic system, stitched together by shipping lanes, pipelines, and just‑in‑time logistics, all resting on a fossil energy base. The Gulf is one of the key nodes where that base still sticks above the waterline. It is also one of the places where the mismatch between natural habitability and current population and infrastructure is most extreme.
To launch a war that seriously degrades that node—its export capacity, its desalination output, its internal stability—is to burn part of the scaffolding that holds up the entire structure, at precisely the moment when there are no obvious replacements and no climatic slack left to soak up the shock.
Future societies will not, as a result, face the same menu of options our grandparents did. They will inherit a planet whose physical systems have been pushed harder, and a built environment that has been selectively smashed in ways that make some paths back up the complexity ladder far more difficult. They will have to rebuild intricate water‑and‑energy systems in a climate that is more hostile and with ore grades and easy fuels already exhausted. They will have to contemplate reopening trade routes and chokepoints that have a recent history of being turned into weapons.
That is the legacy being forged right now—not just in the carbon we pour into the air, but in the infrastructure we pulverize and the institutions we discredit.
The Stupidity of It All
It is tempting to search for some hidden rationality in this mess: a theory that, beneath the bluster, the planners have truly weighed the risks and decided that the gains are worth it. But the more you look at the decisions that led here, the less that story holds.
Launching an unjustified war on Iran—without a direct attack on US territory, without an imminent nuclear breakout, without even the fig leaf of a UN mandate—was already a moral and legal disaster. Doing it in full knowledge of how dependent the global economy remains on Gulf energy and shipping, and how the Gulf’s water and power systems are entangled, is something worse. It is an admission that the people steering the most powerful militaries and economies on Earth no longer take seriously the idea that there are planetary limits or systemic tipping points that apply to them.
They act as if there will always be more infrastructure to burn, more sea lanes to reroute, more climate slack to absorb another decade of chaos. On the other side, Iran’s leadership acts as if it can play the “oil weapon” and the “chokepoint card” forever, as if its own population and neighbors will somehow be spared the worst knock‑on effects of wrecked plants and poisoned trade routes.
There is a word for this, but it isn’t realism and it isn’t grand strategy. It is a cultivated, structural stupidity: an elite incapacity to see beyond the next news cycle, willing to gamble the water, energy, and trade systems that keep billions alive for the sake of domestic posturing and a long‑nurtured vendetta. For three decades, Benjamin Netanyahu has made Iran his favorite enemy, repeatedly insisting it was “three to five years” from the bomb and pushing for US strikes that even his own security chiefs often opposed. In 2026 he finally got the American president he wanted: Trump, persuaded in the Oval Office that a single “historic” decapitation strike would shatter Iran’s leadership and trigger a Venezuela‑style collapse, with loyalists melting away and a grateful populace welcoming a new order. That is not strategy. It is the hubris of two men who learned nothing from Iraq, nothing from the failed coup play in Caracas, and nothing from decades of crying wolf about Iran—now gambling not just with other people’s lives but with the fragile plumbing of the global energy and water system.
No Clean Reset
Those who still cling to a cyclical view of history might tell themselves that after this war, the Gulf will eventually rebuild; that pipelines can be laid anew, plants reconstructed, alliances reshuffled; that in a century or two, some new equilibrium will emerge. Maybe it will. But it will emerge on a planet whose climate is more hostile, whose ecosystems are more depleted, and whose resource and infrastructure base has been deliberately, not accidentally, thinned.
There is no clean reset waiting on the far side of this. There is no guarantee that after we are done smashing the machinery that feeds, waters, and powers us, future generations will be able to assemble something similar from the broken parts and the harsher world we leave behind. There may indeed be future civilizations with roads and walls and writing and hierarchies. They may even look back at our ruins and tell themselves stories about our arrogance and fall.
What they will not have is the same breadth of options. The floor they stand on will be thinner, the climate stranger, the margins for error tighter. And one of the reasons for that will be this: at a late, fragile moment in the fossil‑fueled experiment, the current custodians of the system chose to fight a reckless, unjustified war over dominance in a region that could have been used to cushion a difficult descent. They chose to bomb the scaffolding instead of climbing down.
There is still time, in theory, to pull back from the most extreme branches of that path—to stop hitting the water and energy organs of the Gulf, to accept that hegemony is over, to start thinking like a species that understands it has to live within limits. Nothing in the current behavior of the governments involved suggests they are interested.
When worst case becomes baseline, collapse is no longer a hypothetical to warn about. It is the edge of the cliff we have already driven onto, the destination embedded in the choices being made right now, in full view, by people who have everything but have learned nothing.