The expanding US-Israeli war on Iran is no longer a crisis confined to the Middle East. Entering its third week, the conflict is increasingly exposing strains in Washington’s global security network, as allies in the Gulf, East Asia and Europe absorb the military, political and economic costs of a war whose endgame remains unclear.
President Donald Trump has publicly downplayed the conflict, but the operational demands are growing more visible.
Military assets once stationed in East Asia are being shifted toward the Middle East, while Gulf states hosting American bases are facing renewed threats from Iranian retaliation.
In Europe, governments are confronting a fresh energy shock and new security burdens tied directly to the widening war.
The conflict has also renewed scrutiny of US strategic credibility. Analysts say Washington appears to have opened a dangerous new front without clearly explaining how it plans to secure vital shipping routes, contain Iranian retaliation, or reassure nervous allies already questioning the durability of American guarantees.
The Strait of Hormuz has become one of the clearest symbols of that uncertainty. The narrow waterway carries roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas supplies, and disruption there has driven energy prices sharply higher.
Reuters reported this week that Iran allowed limited passage for some Indian vessels amid the blockade, underlining how major economies are increasingly forced into direct diplomacy to protect their own energy lifelines.
In the Gulf, the war is intensifying long-standing doubts about the value of hosting US forces. States that once saw American bases as their ultimate insurance policy are now finding themselves exposed to drone and missile threats because of their links to Washington.
Regional powers have already begun diversifying their defence relationships, and analysts say that trend could accelerate once the conflict subsides.
East Asia is also feeling the consequences. Reports that the US could redeploy missile defence assets, including systems linked to South Korea, have stirred unease in Seoul.
For a country that paid a high economic and political price to host advanced US defences, the possible reassignment of those resources raises difficult questions about whether Washington’s commitment can be relied on when crises erupt elsewhere.
European allies, meanwhile, face a dual burden. Even as they continue coping with the fallout of Russia’s war on Ukraine, they are now confronting higher energy costs tied to instability in the Gulf.
France is pursuing wider diplomatic efforts to protect shipping lanes in Hormuz, while denying reports of secret bilateral arrangements with Iran.
The broader concern is no longer just military overstretch. It is the growing perception that the United States may be weakening its own alliances by pulling partners into a conflict without offering a convincing route to stability.
For allies from Doha to Seoul to Brussels, the Iran war is becoming a test not only of American firepower, but of whether US leadership still provides security or increasingly produces.
