// Global Analysis Archive
Al Jazeera reports continued US-Israeli strikes across Iran affecting industrial and essential-service-linked infrastructure, alongside ongoing Israeli operations in Lebanon and widening Gulf spillovers impacting aviation and maritime security. Diplomatic signaling remains contradictory and low-trust, while energy-market volatility and coalition logistics constraints increase the likelihood of a protracted disruption scenario.
The source argues that U.S. coalition warfare in the Iran–Israel–U.S. conflict demonstrates how alliances multiply military power through basing, intelligence, air and missile defense, and strategic depth. It suggests China’s limited formal alliances could leave Beijing comparatively isolated in a Taiwan contingency, forcing a reassessment of its preference for flexible partnerships.
The source argues India has tacitly aligned with the United States, Israel, and Gulf partners in the 2026 Iran war, prioritizing economic and security equities over traditional non-alignment narratives. It suggests New Delhi views deeper Western partnership as essential to long-term capability-building, while managing risks of regional spillover, domestic polarization, and Iranian retaliation.
A February 28, 2026 missile strike on a girls’ school in Minab, Iran killed more than 170 people and has become a central attribution and legitimacy battleground in the US–Israeli war on Iran. The source cites preliminary reporting and expert assessments suggesting a US Tomahawk targeting error, driving heightened escalation, oversight scrutiny, and regional spillover risk.
Turkish FM Hakan Fidan warned that Israel appears to be seeking an opportunity to strike Iran, arguing such action would further destabilise the region. The report also highlights intensified US-Iran deterrence signalling, including reported US naval movements and Iranian statements that any attack would be treated as an all-out war.
President Trump says a major US naval force is moving toward the Gulf with Iran as the focus, reinforcing deterrence after the June 2025 strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. Tehran warns it will retaliate forcefully and that any renewed conflict could spread across the region and disrupt global stability.
According to the source, rising regional tensions involving Iran are increasing security risks across GCC states that host roughly 3 million Bangladeshi workers. With over $24 billion in remittances reported for FY2024–2025, Dhaka faces growing pressure to move beyond rhetoric toward practical, non-offensive crisis-response cooperation to protect citizens and economic stability.
The Diplomat reports that the February 28 outbreak of a new Gulf conflict has forced Mongolia into rapid consular action, including MIAT-facilitated returns of citizens via Dubai. The escalation also threatens Mongolia’s longer-term strategy to diversify partners and logistics routes, including prospective connectivity via Iran and deeper investment engagement with Gulf states.
The source argues Pakistan is leveraging the Iran conflict to project proactive strategic autonomy and raise its standing with China, Gulf states, and the United States. It cautions that credibility constraints, regional contradictions, and domestic economic and political fragilities may limit Islamabad’s ability to convert mediation optics into durable national gains.
Al Jazeera reports continued US-Israeli strikes across Iran affecting industrial and essential-service-linked infrastructure, alongside ongoing Israeli operations in Lebanon and widening Gulf spillovers impacting aviation and maritime security. Diplomatic signaling remains contradictory and low-trust, while energy-market volatility and coalition logistics constraints increase the likelihood of a protracted disruption scenario.
The source argues that U.S. coalition warfare in the Iran–Israel–U.S. conflict demonstrates how alliances multiply military power through basing, intelligence, air and missile defense, and strategic depth. It suggests China’s limited formal alliances could leave Beijing comparatively isolated in a Taiwan contingency, forcing a reassessment of its preference for flexible partnerships.
The source argues India has tacitly aligned with the United States, Israel, and Gulf partners in the 2026 Iran war, prioritizing economic and security equities over traditional non-alignment narratives. It suggests New Delhi views deeper Western partnership as essential to long-term capability-building, while managing risks of regional spillover, domestic polarization, and Iranian retaliation.
A February 28, 2026 missile strike on a girls’ school in Minab, Iran killed more than 170 people and has become a central attribution and legitimacy battleground in the US–Israeli war on Iran. The source cites preliminary reporting and expert assessments suggesting a US Tomahawk targeting error, driving heightened escalation, oversight scrutiny, and regional spillover risk.
Turkish FM Hakan Fidan warned that Israel appears to be seeking an opportunity to strike Iran, arguing such action would further destabilise the region. The report also highlights intensified US-Iran deterrence signalling, including reported US naval movements and Iranian statements that any attack would be treated as an all-out war.
President Trump says a major US naval force is moving toward the Gulf with Iran as the focus, reinforcing deterrence after the June 2025 strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. Tehran warns it will retaliate forcefully and that any renewed conflict could spread across the region and disrupt global stability.
According to the source, rising regional tensions involving Iran are increasing security risks across GCC states that host roughly 3 million Bangladeshi workers. With over $24 billion in remittances reported for FY2024–2025, Dhaka faces growing pressure to move beyond rhetoric toward practical, non-offensive crisis-response cooperation to protect citizens and economic stability.
The Diplomat reports that the February 28 outbreak of a new Gulf conflict has forced Mongolia into rapid consular action, including MIAT-facilitated returns of citizens via Dubai. The escalation also threatens Mongolia’s longer-term strategy to diversify partners and logistics routes, including prospective connectivity via Iran and deeper investment engagement with Gulf states.
The source argues Pakistan is leveraging the Iran conflict to project proactive strategic autonomy and raise its standing with China, Gulf states, and the United States. It cautions that credibility constraints, regional contradictions, and domestic economic and political fragilities may limit Islamabad’s ability to convert mediation optics into durable national gains.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-3347 | Day 33 of US-Israel Strikes: Infrastructure Targeting, Gulf Spillover, and Rising Constraints on De-escalation | Iran | 2026-04-01 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2709 | Middle East War Highlights China’s Alliance Gap and Taiwan Contingency Risks | China | 2026-03-16 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2600 | India’s Iran War Posture Signals Deeper US-Israel-Gulf Alignment | India | 2026-03-14 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2451 | Minab School Strike Becomes Flashpoint in 2026 US–Israel War on Iran | Iran | 2026-03-12 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-127 | Türkiye Warns of Israel-Iran Strike Window as US Naval Posture Tightens in the Gulf | Türkiye | 2026-01-24 | 1 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-71 | US Carrier Strike Group Redirected to Gulf as Trump Warns Iran Under Close Watch | US-Iran | 2026-01-23 | 2 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2611 | Bangladesh’s Gulf Exposure Deepens as Iran-Linked Spillover Raises Risks to Migrant Workforce | Bangladesh | 2025-10-18 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2622 | Mongolia Caught in the Shockwaves: Gulf War Escalation Hits Consular Security and Diversification Plans | Mongolia | 2025-10-17 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-3408 | Pakistan’s Iran-War Mediation: Tactical Diplomatic Gains, Strategic Constraints | Pakistan | 2024-12-12 | 0 | ACCESS » |