the iranian war with israel and usa

Kharg Island and the Strait of Hormuz: How They Move the World Economy

Imagine a single narrow waterway — barely 33 kilometres wide at its tightest point — through which one-fifth of all the world’s oil passes every single day. Now picture a small coral island, barely 20 kilometres across, that serves as the beating heart of one of the world’s most consequential oil export systems. These are not hypothetical vulnerabilities. Kharg Island and the Strait of Hormuz are, right now in 2026, the most strategically explosive pieces of energy infrastructure on Earth — and their fate is rippling through every economy on the planet, from Shanghai to São Paulo.

This isn’t abstract geopolitics. It’s the reason you’re paying more to fill your tank, why shipping costs have surged, and why central bankers from Washington to Frankfurt are losing sleep. So let’s pull back the curtain on this tiny island and this narrow strait — and explain exactly why they hold the global economy hostage.

20M Barrels of oil per day through the Strait of Hormuz in 2024 ~27% Share of total global seaborne oil trade through the Strait 96% Of Iran’s crude exports handled by Kharg Island (2025) $53B. Iran’s net oil export revenues in 2025 — ~11% of GDP

The Island That Runs on Black Gold

Kharg Island sits roughly 25 kilometres off Iran’s southwestern coast in the northern Persian Gulf. From the air, it looks unremarkable — a flat coral outcrop shimmering in the heat. But beneath that surface lies a web of pipelines, massive crude storage tanks holding up to 34 million barrels, and some of the deepest natural berths in the Gulf, deep enough to accommodate VLCCs — Very Large Crude Carriers, the supertankers that haul two million barrels per voyage.

Iran has spent more than six decades building Kharg into its primary oil collection and loading point. Pipelines from major inland oilfields in Khuzestan Province converge on the island, feeding crude into storage before it loads onto tankers bound for Asia. According to Kpler’s tanker tracking data, Kharg handles roughly 96% of Iran’s crude exports — about 1.54 million barrels per day.

Why no other Iranian terminal comes close

Iran has tried hard to diversify. The Jask terminal, located strategically outside the Strait of Hormuz on the Gulf of Oman, was designed to give Iran a sanctions- and chokepoint-proof export route. Its pipeline was built for up to one million barrels per day. But the reality is far more modest — effective throughput is estimated at closer to 300,000 barrels per day, with historically low utilisation. Smaller terminals like Sirri and Lavan handle only marginal volumes. So when the world talks about disrupting Iranian oil exports, it is really talking about disrupting Kharg — and that is why both Washington and Tehran understand it as Iran’s “crown jewel.”

The Strait of Hormuz: The World’s Most Dangerous Bottleneck

The Strait of Hormuz is where geography becomes destiny. Wedged between Iran to the north and Oman to the south, this narrow passage connects the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and then the broader Indian Ocean. It is the only exit for the oil and gas produced by Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, the UAE, Qatar, and Iran. Every single day, oil tankers queue up, load their cargo in the Gulf, and funnel through this 33-kilometre pinch.

“One-fifth of the world’s oil and one-fifth of global LNG trade — through a gap you could drive across in half an hour.”

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), oil flows through the Strait averaged 20 million barrels per day in 2024, representing roughly 27% of total global seaborne oil trade. An additional one-fifth of global liquefied natural gas (LNG) trade — primarily from Qatar — also transits the Strait. Saudi Arabia alone accounts for 38% of all crude flows through the waterway. And the destinations? A massive 84% of all Hormuz crude flows to Asian markets — China, India, Japan, and South Korea.

Why alternatives barely exist

There are bypass pipelines — Saudi Arabia’s East-West pipeline and the UAE’s Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline — but their combined capacity is a fraction of what flows through the Strait daily. The EIA notes that most volumes transiting the Strait have no practical alternative means of exiting the region. So when Iran threatens the Strait, it isn’t bluffing about a secondary shipping lane. It is threatening the jugular of the global energy system.

Who Depends Most on the Strait of Hormuz?

The table below illustrates the stark concentration of global energy dependence on this single waterway.

Country / RegionHormuz ExposureKey DependencyResilience Buffers
China~1/3 of total oil importsPrimary buyer of Iranian crude; largest Asia consumer~1 billion barrel strategic reserve
IndiaTop 4 Hormuz crude importerGulf crude dominates refinery input mixStrategic Petroleum Reserve; diversifying to Russia
Japan & South KoreaHighly exposedCombined 69% of Hormuz crude flows go to these four Asian nationsIEA member reserves; some LNG diversification
Europe12–14% of LNG supply (Qatar)Gas price sensitivity; spot market exposureUS LNG, Norwegian gas, storage expansion
United States~0.5 M b/d direct importsOnly ~2% of US petroleum consumption from HormuzLargest strategic reserve; domestic production
Gulf Arab StatesPrimary exportersSaudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Iraq — all export via HormuzSome pipeline bypass; limited spare capacity if Strait closed

When the Strait Trembles, Markets Shudder

History makes the economic stakes crystal clear. Every time Iran threatens to close the Strait — in 2008, 2011, 2019, and again in 2025 and 2026 — global oil prices spike immediately, often before a single tanker is stopped. Because oil markets are forward-looking, the mere possibility of disruption is priced in instantly.

The current 2026 crisis is the starkest example yet. Following joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran in late February 2026 and Iran’s subsequent declaration that the Strait was “closed,” analysts at Deutsche Bank reported that Brent crude surged 42% and WTI jumped 47% since the conflict’s start. JPMorgan warned that an attack on Kharg Island’s oil infrastructure could push prices toward $120 per barrel, while Goldman Sachs flagged the risk of a global recession if the Strait remained blocked for more than a few weeks.

💡 Key insight: Much of the world’s OPEC spare production capacity is physically located in Gulf states — and if the Strait is closed, that spare capacity cannot reach global markets, no matter how much Saudi Arabia wants to pump. The bottleneck defeats the buffer.

The cascade effect: beyond oil prices

A Strait closure isn’t only about energy. It is about shipping insurance, which skyrockets when war risk premiums kick in; about the cost of goods that depend on petrochemicals — plastics, fertilisers, pharmaceuticals. It is about inflation creeping back into economies that had only just tamed it. And it is about emerging market currencies in Asia collapsing as their import bills balloon. The Strait of Hormuz is not just an oil pipe — it is a macroeconomic transmission belt.

Kharg Island in the Crosshairs — and the Calculation Behind Restraint

In mid-March 2026, the United States struck over 90 military targets on Kharg Island, including missile storage, drone facilities, and naval mine depots used by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. But here is what made the operation remarkable: oil infrastructure was deliberately spared.

President Trump wrote that the US had “totally obliterated” every military target on the island — Iran’s “crown jewel” — but had chosen not to destroy its oil facilities. The reason? The economics cut both ways. Experts told TIME magazine that destroying Kharg’s export terminals would remove 1.5 to two million barrels per day from global supply immediately, devastating Iran’s economy — but also threatening to push global oil prices to levels that would devastate every oil-importing economy on Earth, including those of US allies in Asia and Europe.

Meanwhile, shipping data showed tankers continuing to load crude from Kharg’s terminals even after the strikes, underlining how carefully the operation was scoped. One VLCC reportedly completed a two-million-barrel loading shortly after the bombing.

The double-edged sword of energy war

This reveals an uncomfortable strategic truth: targeting Kharg’s oil infrastructure is a weapon that injures the user almost as much as the target. Iran sells the oil, but the world buys the stability. So both sides are, in their own way, hostage to the same infrastructure — and that mutual dependence is, paradoxically, one of the few forces keeping a broader energy catastrophe at bay.

Can the World Wean Itself Off the Strait?

The honest answer is: not quickly, and not fully. The world has been aware of Hormuz vulnerability for decades, but so far, alternative infrastructure has not kept pace with the risk. Saudi Arabia’s East-West pipeline can carry roughly five million barrels per day — but the Strait handles 20 million. The UAE’s ADCO pipeline adds another 1.5 million. So bypass capacity covers perhaps a third of normal Strait volumes, at best.

Iran’s own Jask terminal — built to give Tehran an export route that bypasses the Strait entirely — remains far below design capacity. Oman’s ports, once considered safe alternatives for rerouted cargoes, have themselves come under drone attack during the current crisis. And most Persian Gulf producers have no land routes to deep-water ports on the other side of the Arabian Peninsula.

So the medium-term answer is: more investment in bypasses, more diversification of supply routes, more strategic reserves, and ultimately, more renewable energy. But none of these structural changes happen fast enough to change the vulnerability landscape this year or next.

What This Means for You — and for the Global Economy

Whether you are a consumer paying more for petrol, a manufacturer facing higher feedstock costs, or an investor watching oil majors and tanker companies move in lockstep with Persian Gulf bulletins — Kharg Island and the Strait of Hormuz are already affecting your economic life.

The 2026 crisis has demonstrated, with painful clarity, that the global economy remains structurally dependent on a 33-kilometre strip of water and a single coral island. The International Energy Agency has urged member countries to release strategic reserves, but as analysts noted, spare capacity held by OPEC nations cannot reach global markets while the Strait remains contested.

For investors, the crisis has accelerated interest in energy security plays — tanker stocks, liquefied natural gas infrastructure, and pipeline operators have all surged. For policymakers, it has reignited the conversation about the speed of the energy transition. Every barrel of oil that still needs to pass through the Strait is a reminder of why diversification is not just environmental policy — it is national security strategy.

“The world’s most dangerous economic chokepoint isn’t a bank or a stock exchange. It’s a 33-kilometre strait in the Persian Gulf.”

Conclusion: A Small Strait, a Very Large Problem

The story of Kharg Island and the Strait of Hormuz is ultimately a story about concentration of risk — how decades of global energy infrastructure have funnelled the world’s dependence into a single, narrow, and deeply unstable passage. It is a story about the difficult arithmetic of energy war, where destroying your enemy’s oil hub means destroying your own economy along with it. And it is a story that is still unfolding, in real time, with consequences that will shape energy markets, geopolitics, and global growth for years to come.

So the next time oil prices spike on a headline from the Persian Gulf, remember: it is not just traders speculating. It is the world holding its breath over a small island and a narrow strait that, together, hold more economic power than almost any institution on Earth.

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References & Sources

  1. U.S. Energy Information Administration — Strait of Hormuz Remains Critical Oil Chokepoint (2025)
  2. Kpler — Kharg Island: Iran’s Oil Backbone & Greatest Vulnerability (March 2026)
  3. TIME Magazine — What To Know About Kharg Island, the Oil Hub at the Center of the Iran War (March 2026)
  4. Euronews — Why Kharg Island is Vital to Iran and the Global Economy (March 2026)
  5. Iran International — Why Iran’s Kharg Island is Central to Strait of Hormuz Security (March 2026)
  6. Argus Media — Explainer: Kharg Island, Iran’s Oil Export Hub (March 2026)
  7. Congressional Research Service — Iran Conflict and the Strait of Hormuz: Impacts on Oil, Gas, and Other Commodities (March 2026)
  8. Wikipedia — 2026 Strait of Hormuz Crisis
  9. Washington Times — Iran’s Kharg Island is Key to Its Oil Exports. Targeting It Carries Major Risks (March 30, 2026)
trump-israeli-solution-for-iran

The US-Israeli Attack on Iran:The Implications for Global Peace and Stability

The World Changed on Saturday Morning

There are moments in history when the international order does not bend — it breaks. Saturday, February 28, 2026 was one of those moments. At dawn over Tehran, the US-Israeli attack on Iran — codenamed Operation Epic Fury by Washington and Operation Roar of the Lion by Jerusalem — struck at least nine Iranian cities simultaneously, killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and his most senior commanders, and ignited a retaliatory firestorm that is, as of this writing on Day 3, showing no signs of extinguishing itself.

The strikes were not a surprise to strategists. But their scale, their audacity, and their explicit goal — regime change in a nation of 88 million people — have produced a shockwave that is radiating outward far beyond the borders of Iran and Israel. Oil prices surged 9% on Monday morning. More than 11,000 flights across the region were cancelled. The US State Department issued “depart now” warnings across 15 Middle Eastern countries. And the ICRC president warned that a “dangerous chain reaction” of military escalation was underway with “potentially devastating consequences for civilians.”

So the question this article sets out to answer — with depth, with data, and without diplomatic softening — is this: what does the US-Israeli attack on Iran actually mean for global peace and stability? Not the peace of one region. Not the stability of one market. But the architecture of the world order that has kept great powers from direct confrontation for eighty years.

9%Oil price surge in first 24 hours — Brent hit $79.41/barrel Monday morning

150Oil tankers stalled behind the Strait of Hormuz as of March 2

20%Of global daily oil supply transits Hormuz — 20 million barrels per day at risk

11,000Flights cancelled to and from the region since Saturday’s strikes began

9 citiesIranian cities struck simultaneously in the opening wave of Operation Epic Fury

$100B+Goldman Sachs threshold — oil price at which extended Hormuz disruption tips global recession

How Diplomacy Died — and Why That Matters Beyond Iran

To understand the full implications of the US-Israeli attack on Iran, you must first understand that it did not happen in a diplomatic vacuum. It happened at the precise moment that diplomacy appeared, for the first time in years, to be working.

The UK House of Commons Library confirmed that in February 2026, US-Iran nuclear talks in Oman had reached what the Omani mediator described as “substantial progress.” Iran had agreed, in a formulation the mediator called “completely new,” to “never, ever have nuclear material that will create a bomb.” But Trump said publicly he was “not thrilled” with the talks. And then, days later, the bombs fell.

This use of force sends a message that regimes may be safer if they develop a nuclear programme first. It is telling that there is little talk from this administration of imposing regime change on North Korea.— Stimson Center Expert Analysis, March 1, 2026

The Stimson Center’s panel of geopolitical experts identified the most dangerous long-term implication of this sequencing: the attacks “frame US negotiations as PR stunts meant to buy time, gain information, and conclude with regime change.” If adversaries now believe that engaging in diplomacy with Washington simply tells the US when and where to strike — then diplomacy itself, as a mechanism of global stability, has been critically wounded. And that wound extends far beyond the Middle East.

North Korea is watching. So is Venezuela. So are the dozen countries currently weighing whether to advance their own nuclear programmes. Every one of them just received the same lesson: disarmament leads to vulnerability. The bomb is the only guarantee.

The Strait of Hormuz: The World’s Most Dangerous Chokepoint

For the global economy, the most consequential single piece of geography in this conflict is not Tehran. It is a stretch of water 33 kilometres wide at its narrowest point, between Iran and Oman. The Strait of Hormuz is the passage through which, according to the US Energy Information Administration, approximately 20 million barrels of crude oil — roughly 20% of global liquid petroleum consumption — travel every single day.

Iran has already announced that the Strait is to be closed to shipping. Iran’s IRGC-affiliated news agency Tasmin confirmed the closure announcement. And while multiple Iranian naval ships have been destroyed by US forces — limiting Iran’s immediate ability to enforce a blockade physically — as Al Jazeera reported, at least one oil tanker has already been struck off the coast of Oman, signalling a shift from targeting military facilities to targeting energy assets directly.

Economic IndicatorPre-Strike LevelPost-Strike LevelRisk Scenario
Brent Crude Oil$72.87/barrel$79.41/barrel (+9%)$100+ if Hormuz closes extended period
US Crude (WTI)$67.02/barrel$72.57/barrel (+8%)Inflationary impact within weeks
GoldSafe haven neutral+2% safe-haven flightContinued rise in prolonged conflict
Dow Jones FuturesStable-521 points (-1%)Deeper correction if conflict widens
S&P 500 FuturesStable-1%Risk-off sentiment spreading
Dubai Int’l AirportFull operationsClosed / Partial reopeningLimited ops from March 3 onward
Global Inflation~2.8% averageProjected +0.6–0.7%If oil sustained above $100/barrel

Capital Economics analyst Hamad Hussain told Al Jazeera that if crude reached and sustained $100 per barrel, global inflation could rise by 0.6–0.7%, “pushing fragile economies closer to recession in a matter of weeks.” And JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warned directly that while he believed the odds of “long, just peace” were higher, businesses should “expect cyberattacks or terrorist attacks, either here or around the world — banks may be targets.”

A World Divided: How Global Powers Are Responding

The US-Israeli attack on Iran has produced the sharpest global diplomatic division since the 2003 invasion of Iraq — and in some ways a more dangerous one, because this time China and Russia are more directly invested and more strategically capable of acting on their opposition. Al Jazeera’s comprehensive world reaction analysis makes the fault lines unmistakable.

United States: Trump declared the operation justified by “imminent threat.” Secretary of State Rubio told Congress there “absolutely was an imminent threat” from Iran. Bombing will continue.

Israel: FM Gideon Sa’ar said action was “urgently needed” to prevent Iran reaching nuclear immunity. Netanyahu confirmed Khamenei killed in “Operation Roar of the Lion.”

United Kingdom: Did not participate but granted US use of British bases for “defensive” strikes. RAF deployed in defensive capacity as UK bases in Bahrain, Qatar, and Cyprus were attacked.

European Union: EU Commission President von der Leyen supported “credible transition” for Iran while calling the conflict “greatly concerning.” Urged “maximum restraint” and civilian protection.

China: FM Wang Yi held emergency call with Russia’s Lavrov calling the attacks “unacceptable.” China buys 80%+ of Iran’s oil exports — has enormous economic stake in outcome.

Russia: Medvedev accused the US of using nuclear talks as a “cover-up before military operations.” Called on the international community to assess what it termed “irresponsible actions.”

Turkey: Condemned strikes as starting “a chain of events that risks the future of our region and global stability.” Called on all parties to end the “spiral of violence.”

Pakistan: FM Ishaq Dar “strongly condemned” the attacks, calling for an immediate halt to escalation and urgent resumption of diplomacy to achieve a peaceful resolution.

The Nuclear Shadow: Has the Strike Made the World Safer or More Dangerous?

The UN’s nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi urged a return to diplomacy on Day 3, citing “increasing risk to nuclear safety in the region.” The IAEA Board of Governors convened an emergency session in Vienna requested by Russia — the second emergency UN-level meeting in three days. And Grossi confirmed that while no evidence has been found that nuclear facilities themselves were damaged in the strikes, the risks of accidental nuclear contamination from conventional strikes near nuclear sites are “real and escalating.”

But the deeper nuclear question — the one that will define global security for the next generation — is not about Iran’s current programme. It is about the message the operation sends to every other government on earth currently calculating whether a nuclear weapon is their best guarantee of sovereignty.

⚠️ The Proliferation Paradox — Stimson Center Analysis

Stimson Center experts concluded that Operation Epic Fury “incentivizes proliferation globally.” Nations that gave up nuclear ambitions under US diplomatic pressure — or engaged in negotiations — now see what happens to countries without nuclear deterrence. The administration’s explicit rejection of a near-complete deal in favour of force will be studied in Pyongyang, in Caracas, and in dozens of capitals across the developing world. The US may have set Iran’s nuclear programme back by years. But it may have accelerated everyone else’s by decades.

The Humanitarian Crisis the World Cannot Afford to Ignore

Behind the geopolitical analysis and the market data, there is a human catastrophe unfolding inside Iran that the internet blackout imposed by the Iranian government is making almost impossible to document in real time. UNESCO confirmed that a primary school was bombed during the US-Israeli strikes on Saturday, calling it “a grave violation of humanitarian law.” Iranian state media has confirmed that Khamenei’s wife also died of injuries sustained in the strike. The ICRC president Mirjana Spoljaric warned that “a dangerous chain reaction” of military escalation was underway with “potentially devastating consequences for civilians.”

  • Internet access severely restricted inside Iran — making civilian casualty figures impossible to verify independently
  • The port city of Bushehr was struck — the location of Iran’s nuclear reactor, raising immediate nuclear safety concerns despite IAEA’s initial assessment
  • Iranian retaliatory strikes hit civilian infrastructure in Dubai, including the Fairmont The Palm hotel and Dubai International Airport
  • The US Embassy in Riyadh was struck by Iranian drones — the first confirmed attack on a US diplomatic facility in the conflict
  • Hundreds of Iraqis attempted to storm the US Embassy in Baghdad’s Green Zone in protest
  • The US State Department issued “depart now” emergency warnings to Americans in 15 countries: Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, the West Bank, Gaza, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, UAE and Yemen

China’s Strategic Calculation — The Wild Card Nobody Is Discussing

While the world watches missiles arc over the Persian Gulf, the most consequential long-term shift may be happening not on a battlefield but in Beijing’s strategic planning rooms. China purchases more than 80% of Iran’s oil exports, accounting for 13.5% of all crude China imports by sea. Iran is also a critical supplier of military drones and missiles that have aided Russia’s war in Ukraine.

CNBC’s analysis quoted analyst Aboudouh directly: “The weaker the Iranian regime gets, the more diplomatically, economically and technologically dependent on China it will become.” And for the longer term: “China will need to make a demonstration of power projection in its region to deter American military action and create a sphere of influence.”

🌏 The Great Power Realignment Nobody Wanted

The US-Israeli attack on Iran may have just accelerated what strategists have feared most: a hardening of the Sino-Russian-Iranian axis into a coherent counter-bloc to Western power. China and Russia’s coordinated condemnation, their emergency bilateral ministerial call, and Beijing’s explicit economic exposure through Iranian oil dependency all point toward a deeper strategic alignment against US unilateralism.

The Chatham House think tank warned that Arab Gulf leaders now view the greatest risks as “an expansionist and aggressive Israel and the chaos of a potentially collapsed Iranian state.” Both descriptions come from Washington’s own traditional regional allies. When your partners are more afraid of your success than your enemy’s strength — that is not a victory. That is a warning.

Conclusion: The Price of This Peace May Be Peace Itself

The US-Israeli attack on Iran has achieved something extraordinary in military terms. The supreme leader of a nation of 88 million people killed in the opening hours of an operation that simultaneously decapitated the military leadership, struck nuclear sites, and sent a message of devastating clarity to every authoritarian regime on earth.

But extraordinary military achievement and strategic success are not the same thing. And right now, on Day 3, the evidence for strategic success is thin. Oil is spiking. 150 tankers stalled at the world’s most important energy chokepoint. China and Russia are in emergency coordination against Washington’s actions. The UN is warning of nuclear safety risks. UNESCO is documenting war crimes. And the IRGC — the real engine of the Iranian state — is still intact, still armed, and now fighting with the fury of a regime that has nothing left to lose.

Stimson Center’s military historian concluded bleakly: “No matter how precise or devastating, air strikes alone cannot topple a government, and Iran in 2026 is likely to emerge battered but not broken — a costly example of American hubris and the limits of airpower.” Trump promised peace throughout the Middle East and the world. But on Day 3, the world has more active missile exchanges, more threatened civilians, more disrupted energy systems, and more alarmed great powers than it did on Friday. The price of this particular peace may yet prove to be peace itself.


This Is the Story That Defines 2026 — And Beyond

The implications of the US-Israeli attack on Iran will shape global politics, energy markets, and the international order for years. Share this analysis, subscribe for live updates as the conflict develops, and tell us in the comments: do you believe this makes the world safer — or more dangerous?💬 Share Your View📩 Subscribe for Live Updates📤 Share This Analysis

📚 Sources & References

  1. CNBC — Iran Conflict: Where Things Stand, Global Responses and What Comes Next (March 2, 2026)
  2. Al Jazeera — World Reacts to US-Israel Attack on Iran and Tehran Retaliation (February 28, 2026)
  3. Al Jazeera — How US-Israel Attacks on Iran Threaten the Strait of Hormuz and Oil Markets (March 1, 2026)
  4. UN News — Middle East Live: Strikes Continue as UN Urges Restraint (March 2, 2026)
  5. UK House of Commons Library — US-Israel Strikes on Iran: February/March 2026 Briefing (March 2, 2026)
  6. Stimson Center — Experts React: What the Epic Fury Iran Strikes Signal to the World (March 1, 2026)
  7. Atlantic Council — Don’t Worry About the Iran Conflict’s Impact on Oil Prices — Yet (March 1, 2026)
  8. CNBC — Iran May Lash Out Harder as Khamenei’s Death Puts Tehran on War Footing (March 1, 2026)
  9. CNBC — US Embassy in Riyadh Hit by Drones; Jamie Dimon Warns of Cyberattacks (March 2, 2026)
  10. CNN Business — What a US Attack on Iran Means for Oil Prices (March 1, 2026)
  11. Euronews — What Does the US-Israel Attack on Iran Mean for Oil Prices? (February 28, 2026)
  12. Wikipedia — 2026 Israeli–United States Strikes on Iran (Updated March 3, 2026)