Monday, April 13, 2026

War : Survivors, Memory, and Moral Responsibility (31)

Few questions have preoccupied philosophers, theologians, and statesmen as persistently as the one posed here: is war an inescapable feature of the human condition, or is peace a genuine possibility? The twentieth century alone witnessed two catastrophic world wars, the Holocaust, the Cold War's nuclear brinkmanship, and dozens of regional conflicts—yet it also produced the United Nations, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the longest period of great-power peace in modern history. This paradox suggests that neither pure pessimism nor naive optimism captures the full picture.

The question is not merely academic. As the twenty-first century confronts new threats—from climate-induced resource scarcity to the proliferation of autonomous weapons—understanding the structural and moral roots of war and peace has never been more urgent. This essay proceeds in four sections: it first surveys lessons that history offers about the causes and patterns of war; it then examines the fundamental tension between conflict and cooperation in human societies; it considers the emerging prospects for peace in an interconnected world; and, finally, it integrates the perspectives of Islamic thought, which offers a rich and often overlooked framework for understanding both the ethics of war and the imperative of peace.

IS HUMANITY DESTINED FOR WAR?
Lessons from History: The Tension Between Conflict and Cooperation
and the Possibility of Peace in an Interconnected World

This essay examines whether humanity is inherently destined for war or whether enduring peace remains an attainable ideal. Drawing upon historical evidence, political theory, and the Islamic moral tradition, the essay argues that whilst conflict has been a recurrent feature of human civilisation, it is not an inevitable destiny. The interplay between war and cooperation reveals that human societies possess both the capacity for destruction and the potential for lasting reconciliation. In an increasingly interconnected world, structural, normative, and spiritual resources exist that may guide humanity towards sustainable peace—if the will to do so is collectively summoned.

I. Lessons from History
1.1 The Ubiquity of War

A survey of human history offers little immediate comfort to the pacifist. The historian Will Durant, reviewing five thousand years of recorded civilisation, famously calculated that in all of history there have been fewer than three hundred years without recorded warfare (Durant & Durant, 1968). From the ancient city-states of Mesopotamia and Greece to the dynastic struggles of medieval Europe and the colonial conflicts of the modern era, organised violence has accompanied human societies at virtually every stage of development.

Thucydides, writing in the fifth century BCE, offered one of the first systematic analyses of war's causes. In his account of the Peloponnesian War, he identified fear, honour, and interest as the three primary motivators of conflict between states—a taxonomy that scholars continue to regard as remarkably durable (Thucydides, trans. Strassler, 1996). This realist tradition, later elaborated by Thomas Hobbes, who described the natural condition of mankind as a 'war of all against all' (Hobbes, 1651/1996), suggests that without strong governance and mutual deterrence, violent competition is the default state of human relations.
 
1.2 War as a Social Construction

Yet the historical record also admits a more nuanced reading. Many anthropologists and historians argue that large-scale organised warfare is not a primordial human instinct but a relatively recent social invention, emerging alongside the development of agriculture, surplus wealth, and hierarchical political organisation roughly ten thousand years ago (Pinker, 2011; Gat, 2006). Hunter-gatherer societies, whilst certainly not peaceful, rarely engaged in the kind of organised, sustained military campaigns associated with state warfare.

Steven Pinker's influential but contested work, The Better Angels of Our Nature (2011), marshals extensive empirical data to argue that, measured in per-capita terms, humanity has become substantially less violent over millennia, centuries, and decades. The rate of death from inter-group conflict, Pinker contends, has declined dramatically as states have monopolised violence, trade has increased interdependence, and humanistic norms have spread. Critics such as John Gray (2015) and Nassim Nicholas Taleb have challenged Pinker's statistical methods and questioned whether declining rates of warfare represent a durable trend or merely a fragile interlude, but the debate itself underscores that war's historical prevalence does not make it biologically inevitable.
 
1.3 The Learning Capacity of Civilisations

History also demonstrates that societies learn from the catastrophe of war. The devastation of the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) gave birth to the Westphalian system of sovereign states and early norms of non-interference. The carnage of the Napoleonic Wars produced the Concert of Europe. The tragedy of the First World War prompted the creation of the League of Nations, and its successor—the United Nations, established in 1945—reflected a collective determination, however imperfect, to replace the law of force with the force of law (Kennedy, 2006). These institutional responses to warfare are not merely political artefacts; they embody a moral evolution in humanity's understanding of its own destructive potential.

II. The Tension Between Conflict and Cooperation

2.1 Dual Impulses in Human Nature

The debate between those who regard war as natural and those who see it as contingent ultimately reflects a deeper ambiguity in human nature itself. Social psychologists and evolutionary biologists have long observed that human beings are simultaneously predisposed towards both intra-group cooperation and inter-group competition (Wilson, 2012). This 'dual inheritance'—the capacity for extraordinary solidarity and extraordinary cruelty—means that neither peace nor war can be reduced to a simple biological programme.

Evolutionary theorist E. O. Wilson (2012) argues that the tension between selfish and altruistic impulses is not a defect but a feature of the human genome, the product of multi-level selection operating simultaneously at the individual and group level. Groups that cooperated internally were better able to compete externally, producing a species that is at once tribal, empathetic, and lethal. This does not mean that humans are condemned to warfare, but it does suggest that the institutions and norms that channel these impulses matter enormously.
 
2.2 Structural Causes of War

Beyond individual psychology, political scientists have identified structural conditions that make war more or less likely. Kenneth Waltz's systemic theory holds that the anarchic structure of the international system—the absence of a world government—creates persistent security dilemmas in which states, fearing one another, arm and compete even when none desires war (Waltz, 1979). This structural realist view explains why even well-intentioned states may stumble into conflict, as arguably occurred in 1914.

By contrast, liberal institutionalists such as Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye have argued that deepening economic interdependence, international institutions, and democratic governance can substantially mitigate the structural incentives for war (Keohane & Nye, 1977). The empirical record offers some support for this view: democratic states have rarely gone to war against one another (the 'democratic peace' thesis), and countries deeply embedded in global trade networks have strong material incentives to avoid the disruptions that conflict brings.
 
2.3 Cooperation as a Historical Constant

It would be misleading to focus exclusively on conflict. The historical record is equally rich with examples of cooperation across ethnic, religious, and national lines. The development of international humanitarian law, beginning with the first Geneva Convention of 1864, reflects a collective effort to humanise warfare and protect non-combatants — a project that, whilst imperfectly observed, has nonetheless saved countless lives (Best, 1994). The post-war European project of integration, which transformed centuries of Franco-German enmity into a shared political community, stands as perhaps the most remarkable exercise in peaceful reconciliation in modern history (Judt, 2005).

These examples are not anomalies; they are evidence that cooperation is as deeply rooted in the human repertoire as conflict. The question, then, is less whether human beings are capable of peace and more what conditions make peace durable.

III. The Possibility of Peace in an Interconnected World

3.1 Globalisation and Interdependence

The contemporary world is, by virtually every measurable indicator, more deeply interconnected than at any previous point in history. Global trade as a share of world GDP has increased dramatically since the mid-twentieth century; billions of people are linked by digital communication networks, and transnational challenges from pandemic disease to climate change require coordinated multilateral responses. This interdependence creates powerful material incentives for states to manage their disputes peacefully, lest conflict disrupt the supply chains, financial flows, and ecological systems on which modern prosperity depends.

The liberal peace theory, drawing on Immanuel Kant's vision of a federation of free republics in Perpetual Peace (1795/1991), posits that a combination of democratic governance, economic interdependence, and international law can progressively reduce the incidence of war. The empirical evidence for aspects of this thesis—particularly the democratic peace and the pacifying effects of trade—is reasonably robust, though scholars continue to debate its scope and limits (Russett & Oneal, 2001).

3.2 New Threats to Peace

Yet the interconnected world is not simply more peaceful; it is also more complex and in some respects more precarious. Climate change threatens to exacerbate resource scarcity and generate mass displacement, conditions historically associated with conflict (Burke, Hsiang, & Miguel, 2015). The proliferation of cyber capabilities and autonomous weapons introduces new forms of coercive power whose norms and governance remain underdeveloped. Great-power competition between the United States and China, conducted across economic, technological, and geopolitical dimensions, raises the spectre of a new cold war—or worse.

Moreover, the rise of populist nationalism in many parts of the world has weakened the multilateral institutions that the post-war order constructed. The fraying of the rules-based international order does not make major war inevitable, but it does make the international environment more volatile and the management of crises more difficult (Haass, 2017).
 
3.3 Grounds for Cautious Optimism

Despite these challenges, there are serious grounds for cautious optimism. The existence of nuclear weapons, whilst a source of existential anxiety, has paradoxically contributed to great-power stability by raising the costs of direct military confrontation to an intolerable level. The 'long peace' since 1945—the absence of direct conflict between major powers—is without precedent in modern history (Gaddis, 1987). International institutions, for all their limitations, have provided forums for conflict management and normative standard-setting that did not exist a century ago.

Furthermore, civil society—transnational advocacy networks, human rights organisations, religious bodies, and peace movements—has become an increasingly significant actor in shaping norms and holding governments accountable. The International Campaign to Ban Landmines and the International Criminal Court both owe their existence in large part to sustained civil society pressure (Boli & Thomas, 1999). This suggests that peace is not solely the prerogative of states but can be built from below.

IV. The Islamic Perspective

4.1 Islam, Peace, and the Meaning of Salaam

Any serious discussion of war and peace in the contemporary world must engage with Islamic thought, given that approximately 1.8 billion Muslims—nearly a quarter of humanity—draw on this tradition for moral and spiritual guidance. The very name of the faith, Islam, is derived from the Arabic root s-l-m, sharing its origin with the word salaam (peace), and points towards the centrality of peace, wholeness, and reconciliation in the Islamic worldview (Nasr, 2002). The Islamic greeting, as-salamu alaykum—' peace be upon you'—is not merely a social pleasantry; it is a daily affirmation of a moral commitment to peaceful coexistence.

The Quran explicitly describes God as Al-Salam, the Source of Peace (Quran 59:23), and characterises paradise as Dar al-Salam, the Abode of Peace (Quran 6:127). War, in Islamic jurisprudence, is not valorised as a positive good but treated as a regrettable necessity, permissible only under tightly constrained conditions. The Quran states: 'Fight in the cause of God those who fight you, but do not transgress limits; for God loves not transgressors' (Quran 2:190). This injunction establishes both the permission for self-defence and its moral limit—a framework that closely parallels just war theory in Western thought.
 
4.2 The Doctrine of Jihad: A Clarification

The concept of jihad is frequently misunderstood in popular discourse. Whilst jihad does encompass the notion of armed struggle under specific conditions, classical Islamic scholars have consistently maintained that its primary meaning is the inner struggle against one's own moral failings—what the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) is reported to have called the 'greater jihad' (al-jihad al-akbar) upon returning from battle (Nasr, 2002). The 'lesser jihad' of armed conflict is permissible only in defence of the community against aggression or oppression, and is subject to rigorous ethical constraints regarding the protection of non-combatants, the prohibition of environmental destruction, and the obligation to pursue peace whenever it becomes attainable.

The scholar and jurist al-Mawardi (972–1058 CE) codified these conditions in classical Islamic international law (siyar), establishing rules for the conduct of hostilities that anticipated many of the principles later enshrined in modern international humanitarian law (Khadduri, 1966). This tradition demonstrates that Islam possesses rich internal resources for limiting and humanising conflict, far removed from the distorted portrayals that equate the faith with perpetual warfare.
 
4.3 Islam and the Ethics of Peacemaking

Islamic ethics places a high positive value on sulh (reconciliation) and the resolution of conflict through dialogue and mediation. The Quran commands: 'If two parties among the believers fall into a quarrel, make peace between them' (Quran 49:9), and the Prophet Muhammad's life offers numerous examples of diplomatic resolution of disputes, most notably the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah (628 CE), in which he accepted short-term disadvantages in exchange for a peace agreement—a demonstration of strategic patience in service of a longer-term peace (Lings, 1983).

Contemporary Muslim scholars and institutions have increasingly applied this tradition to global peace-building. The Amman Message (2004), endorsed by scholars from across the Muslim world, explicitly condemned terrorism and affirmed the imperative of peaceful coexistence with non-Muslims. Organisations such as the Muslim World League and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation have, with varying degrees of effectiveness, worked to mediate regional conflicts. The Islamic tradition, in short, is not an obstacle to peace but a potential resource for it—provided its ethical core is recovered from the distortions of both external caricature and internal extremism.
 
4.4 The Islamic Vision of a Just World Order

Islam's vision of international relations is not one of perpetual conflict between civilisations—a Huntingtonian framing that many Muslim scholars vigorously reject—but of a world of nations recognising one another's dignity and managing their differences through justice and dialogue (Sachedina, 2001). The Quran declares: 'O mankind, indeed We have created you from male and female and made you peoples and tribes that you may know one another' (Quran 49:13). This verse—ta'aruf, or mutual recognition—constitutes a Quranic mandate for intercultural dialogue and peaceful coexistence.

The Islamic concept of maqasid al-shari'ah (the objectives of Islamic law), as elaborated by classical scholars such as al-Ghazali and al-Shatibi, identifies the protection of life (hifz al-nafs), intellect, lineage, property, and faith as the supreme goods that any just social order must safeguard. War, by definition, threatens all of these goods; peace protects them. From this perspective, working for peace is not merely a political preference but a religious obligation rooted in the deepest commitments of the Islamic moral tradition.

V. Conclusion

Is humanity destined for war? The evidence reviewed in this essay suggests that the answer is: not necessarily. War is real, recurrent, and rooted in identifiable features of human psychology, social organisation, and international structure. History offers no shortage of cautionary tales about the ease with which states, communities, and individuals descend into violence. The pessimists are not wrong to take this record seriously.

Yet the historical record also documents humanity's remarkable—if inconsistent—capacity for cooperation, institution-building, and moral learning. The decline of great-power war since 1945, the expansion of international law, the growth of global civil society, and the deepening of economic interdependence all represent genuine achievements that constrain, even if they do not eliminate, the incidence of organised violence. The liberal and institutionalist traditions of international relations theory provide analytical tools for understanding why and when these achievements endure.

The Islamic tradition enriches this picture by insisting that the pursuit of peace is not merely a strategic calculation but a moral and spiritual imperative. Rooted in the divine name Al-Salam and animated by the Quranic vision of ta'aruf—mutual recognition among peoples—Islam offers both a critique of unjust violence and a vision of a world ordered by justice, dialogue, and compassion. In a world where nearly a quarter of humanity draws moral sustenance from this tradition, its resources for peace cannot be ignored.

The ultimate answer to the question posed by this essay is, therefore, neither fatalistic nor naively optimistic: humanity is not destined for war, but neither is peace guaranteed. Peace must be constructed—institutionally, normatively, and spiritually—in each generation. As the charter of the United Nations affirms in its opening words, the determination 'to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war' is a choice, not a given. It is a choice that history, political theory, and religious ethics alike urge us to make—and to keep making, however difficult the path.
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Best, G. (1994). War and Law Since 1945. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Boli, J. and Thomas, G. M. (eds.) (1999). Constructing World Culture: International Nongovernmental Organizations Since 1875. Stanford: Stanford University Press.

Burke, M., Hsiang, S. M. and Miguel, E. (2015). 'Global non-linear effect of temperature on economic production', Nature, 527(7577), pp. 235–239.

Durant, W. and Durant, A. (1968). The Lessons of History. New York: Simon & Schuster.

Gaddis, J. L. (1987). The Long Peace: Inquiries into the History of the Cold War. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Gat, A. (2006). War in Human Civilization. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Gray, J. (2015). The Soul of the Marionette: A Short Inquiry into Human Freedom. London: Allen Lane.

Haass, R. N. (2017). A World in Disarray: American Foreign Policy and the Crisis of the Old Order. New York: Penguin Press.

Hobbes, T. (1651/1996). Leviathan. Edited by R. Tuck. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Judt, T. (2005). Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945. New York: Penguin Press.

Kant, I. (1795/1991). 'Perpetual Peace: A Philosophical Sketch', in H. Reiss (ed.), Kant: Political Writings. 2nd edn. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 93–130.

Kennedy, P. (2006). The Parliament of Man: The Past, Present and Future of the United Nations. New York: Random House.

Keohane, R. O. and Nye, J. S. (1977). Power and Interdependence: World Politics in Transition. Boston: Little, Brown.

Khadduri, M. (1966). The Islamic Law of Nations: Shaybani's Siyar. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Lings, M. (1983). Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources. London: Islamic Texts Society.

Nasr, S. H. (2002). The Heart of Islam: Enduring Values for Humanity. New York: HarperCollins.

Pinker, S. (2011). The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined. New York: Viking.

The Holy Quran. (n.d.). Various translations used, including Sahih International. Available at: https://quran.com

Russett, B. and Oneal, J. R. (2001). Triangulating Peace: Democracy, Interdependence, and International Organizations. New York: W. W. Norton.

Sachedina, A. (2001). The Islamic Roots of Democratic Pluralism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Thucydides (1996). The Landmark Thucydides: A Comprehensive Guide to the Peloponnesian War. Edited by R. B. Strassler. New York: Free Press.

Waltz, K. N. (1979). Theory of International Politics. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.

Wilson, E. O. (2012). The Social Conquest of Earth. New York: Liveright Publishing.

The Islamabad Talks Collapse

The peace negotiations between the United States of America and the Islamic Republic of Iran, convened at the Serena Hotel in Islamabad, Pakistan, on 11–12 April 2026, represented the highest-level direct engagement between the two nations since the Iranian Revolution of 1979. For more than four decades, relations between Washington and Tehran had been defined by sanctions, mutual hostility, and indirect confrontation. When delegations from both countries finally sat face-to-face across the same table for more than twenty-one consecutive hours, the international community watched with cautious optimism.

That optimism proved short-lived. Vice President JD Vance, who led the American delegation, departed Islamabad without an agreement, declaring that Iran had 'chosen not to accept our terms.' The failure of the Islamabad Talks is not merely a diplomatic setback — it is a pivotal moment with the potential to reshape the geopolitical, economic, and security landscape of the entire globe. This essay analyses the principal factors behind that failure, the likely consequences, key risks and challenges, the global economic impact, regional geopolitical implications, the risk of military escalation, and the probable scenarios that may unfold in the coming weeks and months.

Primary Factors Behind the Failure of the Negotiations

A. The Strait of Hormuz Impasse

The most critical issue that brought the negotiations to a standstill was the question of the Strait of Hormuz. The United States demanded that Iran open the strait as 'free waters', with no tolls or charges levied on passing vessels. Iran, however, regarded the strait as its most powerful strategic asset and insisted on maintaining its dominant role over this vital maritime corridor. For Tehran, the strait is not merely a geographical feature — it is an economic weapon, and arguably the only significant leverage Iran retains following six weeks of direct military confrontation against a combined US–Israeli force.

Experts have characterised the near-total closure of the Strait of Hormuz as the worst economic shock since the 1973 oil embargo. Whereas that embargo removed some 4.5 million barrels per day from global supply, the current closure has blocked approximately 20 million barrels — more than four times the scale of that earlier crisis. Iran's negotiating position at the table was substantially determined by this reality.
 
B. Deep Divisions over Iran's Nuclear Programme

According to a senior American official who spoke to TIME magazine, the talks collapsed after Iran declined to accept several 'red lines' set by the Trump administration. These included a complete cessation of all uranium enrichment, the dismantling of all major enrichment facilities, and permission for the United States to retrieve Iran's stockpile of highly enriched uranium. Iran has consistently maintained that its nuclear programme is a matter of sovereign right and has refused to accept externally imposed restrictions of this kind.

The urgency of the American position was underscored by the findings of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which reported in December 2024 that Iran had enriched uranium to levels approaching weapons-grade and had accumulated an unprecedented stockpile of highly enriched uranium — sufficient, in theory, to produce fissile material for multiple nuclear devices within a short timeframe. This left Washington with little appetite for compromise on the nuclear question.

C. Incompatible Negotiating Frameworks

Both delegations arrived in Islamabad with competing blueprints. Iran presented a ten-point proposal; the United States tabled its own fifteen-point framework. Both documents were widely regarded as opening positions rather than final demands, yet the distance between the two was considerable. Washington's non-negotiable parameters included dismantling Iran's nuclear enrichment facilities, recovery of more than 400 kilogrammes of highly enriched uranium, an end to Iranian funding of Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthi movement, and the full and unconditional opening of the Strait of Hormuz without any tolls.

Iran, meanwhile, demanded the release of all frozen Iranian overseas assets, the lifting of all primary and secondary sanctions, continued Iranian control of the Strait of Hormuz, the right to pursue uranium enrichment for peaceful purposes, and — critically — an end to Israeli military operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon. The gap between these positions was structural, not merely tactical.

D. A Deep-Seated Crisis of Trust

Iranian officials expressed profound scepticism about the good faith of the American side. Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, who led the Iranian delegation, stated that whilst his colleagues had put forward 'forward-looking initiatives', the United States had ultimately failed to gain the trust of the Iranian delegation. He pointed to a long history of failed agreements, most notably the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which the Trump administration had unilaterally abandoned during its first term.

This distrust was not without foundation. Iranian officials noted that earlier negotiations in Muscat and Geneva in February 2026 had collapsed when the United States began bombing Iran even whilst those talks were still ongoing. Against this backdrop, sustaining any genuine confidence in American commitments proved near-impossible.

E. The Lebanon Dimension

A further complication arose from Iran's insistence that any permanent agreement must include a halt to Israeli attacks against Hezbollah in Lebanon. The ceasefire announced on 8 April was described by Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif as encompassing Lebanon — a characterisation Iran fully endorsed. Israel, however, explicitly stated that the ceasefire did not apply to Lebanon and carried out dozens of strikes across the country within hours of the ceasefire's announcement, killing more than three hundred people in a single day.

This placed the United States in an untenable position: it was simultaneously attempting to negotiate a peace deal whilst its closest regional ally was actively violating the terms of the ceasefire that had made those negotiations possible. Prime Minister Netanyahu made no reference whatsoever to the Islamabad Talks in a televised address on the opening day of the negotiations.

F. Ambiguous Signals from the White House

The credibility of the American negotiating position was further undermined by contradictory statements from President Trump himself. On the day talks were underway, Trump told journalists in Washington: 'We're negotiating. Whether we make a deal or not makes no difference to me, because we've won.' Such remarks sent a signal to the Iranian delegation that Washington was not fully committed to achieving a settlement — a perception that made Iranian concessions even less likely.

Likely Consequences and Immediate Aftermath

A. US Naval Blockade of the Strait of Hormuz

Washington's response to the breakdown of the talks was swift and dramatic. President Trump announced that the United States Navy would immediately begin blockading all ships attempting to enter or leave the Strait of Hormuz. The announcement is deeply paradoxical: Iran had already effectively closed the strait from its own side; the United States has now announced its own blockade from the other. The net result is the complete paralysis of the world's single most important shipping lane.

A senior energy scholar at Columbia University's Centre on Global Energy Policy warned that it could be a very long time before oil prices decline, even after hostilities cease, since prices will not fall until the strait is reopened and damaged oil infrastructure is repaired — both of which remain deeply uncertain variables.
 
B. The Fragile Ceasefire at Risk

The two-week ceasefire that both parties agreed to on 8 April — the window that made the Islamabad Talks possible — is due to expire on 22 April 2026. The failure to reach any framework agreement in Islamabad leaves the ceasefire without institutional support, dependent entirely on the political will of two adversaries whose mutual distrust has been further deepened by the events of the past weekend. Pakistan's Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar has urged both sides to uphold the ceasefire, but has acknowledged that no date, venue, or format for a second round of negotiations has yet been agreed.

C. Intensified Economic Pressure on Iran

The US naval blockade, layered upon the existing Iranian closure of the strait, effectively severs Iran from all maritime oil export routes. Whilst this represents maximum economic pressure, it does so at the cost of further destabilising global energy markets — raising the question of whether Washington has miscalculated the collateral damage to its own allies and trading partners.

Global Economic Impact

A. An Unprecedented Energy Crisis

The International Energy Agency has characterised the supply disruption caused by this conflict as the largest in the history of the global oil market. The conflict has echoed the energy crises of the 1970s, generating acute supply shortages, currency volatility, inflation, and heightened risks of stagflation and recession across multiple continents.

Following the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, Brent Crude surged beyond 120 US dollars per barrel, and QatarEnergy declared force majeure on all its export contracts. The oil production of Kuwait, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates collectively fell by a reported 6.7 million barrels per day in the immediate aftermath, with losses subsequently widening significantly.

B. Impact on Asia

Asian economies face the most acute immediate consequences. China, India, Japan, and South Korea together account for approximately 75 per cent of oil exports and 59 per cent of liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports that normally transit the Strait of Hormuz. China receives roughly one-third of its total oil imports via this route and holds reserves of approximately one billion barrels — sufficient for several months — but the long-term impact of a protracted closure is severe. Countries such as Pakistan, Bangladesh, and the Philippines face the sharpest near-term shortages.

C. Impact on Europe

The crisis has precipitated a second major energy shock for Europe, primarily through the suspension of Qatari LNG and the effective closure of the strait. This has compounded an already vulnerable situation: European gas storage levels entering the current crisis were estimated at just 30 per cent of capacity, following a particularly harsh winter. Dutch TTF natural gas benchmark prices have nearly doubled, and the European Central Bank has postponed planned interest rate reductions whilst revising its inflation forecasts sharply upwards. Economists have warned that energy-intensive economies within the EU face a high risk of technical recession if the blockade persists through the summer refilling season.

D. Financial Markets in Turmoil

Immediately following the breakdown of the Islamabad Talks, risk-sensitive currencies suffered sharp declines, with the Australian dollar and the South African rand each falling approximately 1 per cent. Oil futures rose further on the news of the US blockade, whilst Asia-Pacific equity indices slid. The market reaction reflects a broader loss of confidence in a near-term diplomatic resolution.

Regional Geopolitical Implications

A. Pakistan's Elevated Diplomatic Role

One of the few positive outcomes of the Islamabad Talks is the enhanced standing of Pakistan as a neutral mediator. Islamabad successfully facilitated the first direct high-level engagement between the United States and Iran in over forty years — a remarkable diplomatic achievement in itself. Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar, and Chief of Army Staff Asim Munir all played active roles, with the army chief participating directly in trilateral sessions with both delegations — a format that demonstrated Pakistan's determination to be more than a passive host. Pakistan has pledged to continue mediating and is well-positioned to broker a second round of talks.

B. The Major Powers

Russia called for restraint from all parties, urging a 'responsible approach' that avoided undermining the negotiations. France expressed support for de-escalation and urged Iran's President Pezeshkian to use the talks to achieve a lasting settlement. These positions reflect a broader international consensus that the conflict poses unacceptable systemic risks — but neither Moscow nor Paris possesses sufficient leverage over either Washington or Tehran to alter the fundamental dynamics. Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi indicated after the talks that he wished to hold consultations with European counterparts in Berlin, Paris, and London, suggesting Tehran is exploring whether European diplomatic pressure might shift American positions.

C. The Collapse of the Gulf Cooperation Council Economic Model

The broader Gulf region faces an existential economic disruption. States such as Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE rely on the Strait of Hormuz not only for energy exports but for the import of food — over 80 per cent of the region's caloric intake transits the strait. By mid-March, approximately 70 per cent of food imports to the Gulf had been disrupted, forcing emergency airlifts of basic staples. Iranian strikes on desalination plants — the source of virtually all drinking water in Kuwait and Qatar — have added a humanitarian dimension to what began as an economic crisis.

Risks of Military Escalation

A. Direct Naval Confrontation

The announcement of a US naval blockade, combined with Iran's own closure of the strait and the IRGC's warning that any military vessels approaching the Strait of Hormuz 'will be dealt with harshly and decisively', creates conditions in which a single miscalculation — a vessel that strays into contested waters, an intercept gone wrong, a communications failure — could trigger direct military engagement between two armed forces. The danger is not necessarily a deliberate act of war but an accidental escalation driven by the compressed geography and heightened tensions of the strait itself.

B. Nuclear Escalation Risk

With Iran's nuclear programme already at the threshold of weapons capability, and with direct diplomatic channels now suspended, the risk of a nuclear miscalculation rises significantly. The White House has stated that were Iran to develop a nuclear weapon, there would be 'all hell to pay.' Iran, for its part, has given no indication of willingness to dismantle its nuclear infrastructure under present conditions. The absence of a functioning diplomatic channel means that each side now relies on signals and posturing rather than direct communication — precisely the conditions in which nuclear crises have historically become most dangerous.

C. The Proxy Dimension

The failure to address Lebanon means that the conflict's proxy dimensions remain fully active. Iran retains the capacity to re-activate Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthi movement in Yemen. Each of these actors represents an additional potential flashpoint. A significant escalation by any one of them could draw the principal parties — the United States, Iran, and Israel — back into open conflict before any second round of negotiations can be convened.

Probability Scenarios

Scenario 1 — A Second Round of Negotiations (Probability: ~35%)

Despite the breakdown, both parties demonstrated willingness to engage. The United States stated it had left an offer on the table; Iran maintained that 'diplomacy never ends.' Pakistan has pledged continued mediation. A second round becomes possible if the ceasefire holds beyond 22 April, if Iran perceives that the costs of continued confrontation exceed the costs of concession, and if the United States moderates its most maximalist demands — particularly on the complete dismantling of enrichment facilities. European diplomatic pressure, channelled through Berlin, Paris, and London, could provide additional impetus. This scenario remains viable but requires significant political will on both sides within a very narrow timeframe.

Scenario 2 — Limited Military Escalation (Probability: ~40%)

This is the most likely near-term scenario. The US naval blockade will collide with Iran's own control measures over the strait, creating conditions in which an incident — deliberate or accidental — escalates into limited naval or aerial engagement. The ceasefire would collapse after 22 April, localised fighting would resume in the Gulf and possibly in Lebanon, and global energy prices would rise further. International pressure — from the European Union, China, and India — would ultimately compel both parties back to the negotiating table within weeks, but at significantly higher human and economic cost. This scenario represents a dangerous but ultimately bounded escalation.

Scenario 3 — Full-Scale Resumption of Hostilities (Probability: ~15%)

The worst-case scenario occurs if one party carries out a strike that crosses the other's threshold of tolerance — for instance, Iran targeting a US warship in the strait, or the United States striking Iranian civilian infrastructure. In this case, the ceasefire collapses entirely, large-scale military operations resume, and the global economic damage would far exceed any previous energy crisis. The IEA's characterisation of the current crisis as the greatest global energy security challenge in history would prove, in retrospect, to have been an understatement.

Scenario 4 — Tactical Freeze (Probability: ~10%)

A fourth possibility is that both parties tacitly accept an uncomfortable status quo — an informal, unacknowledged ceasefire with no formal agreement, a partially functioning strait operating at reduced capacity and under Iranian tolls, and continued economic pressure at a level both sides can endure. This is not peace; it is a protracted 'hot cold war' that could persist for many months, with all its attendant risks of sudden deterioration. It would represent a failure of diplomacy that is papered over rather than resolved.

Conclusion

The failure of the Islamabad Talks reflects more than a disagreement over specific negotiating positions. It reflects a structural gulf between two states that carry decades of mutual hostility, broken agreements, and deep ideological incompatibility. As one analyst from the London School of Economics observed, Iran views the Strait of Hormuz as its most potent strategic weapon, whilst America demands it be opened immediately — and that fundamental asymmetry proved impossible to bridge in a single round of talks, however protracted.

The world now finds itself at a genuinely dangerous crossroads. The strait — through which one fifth of the world's oil supply normally flows — remains effectively closed, blockaded from both sides. The ceasefire expires in ten days. The US naval blockade is in direct collision with Iranian sovereignty claims. And two powers — one already nuclear, one at the threshold — now face each other without stable diplomatic channels.

The window for diplomacy has not closed entirely. Pakistan remains willing and able to mediate. Both parties have shown, however fitfully, that they can sit at the same table. The twenty-one hours at the Serena Hotel, for all their failure to produce a deal, established a precedent that would have seemed inconceivable even months ago. But whether that precedent leads to a second round of meaningful negotiations, or is instead overtaken by events on the water, in the air, or in a nuclear facility somewhere beneath the Iranian desert — that question remains acutely, and dangerously, open.

Essay based on open-source reporting as of 13 April 2026. All figures and assessments reflect information available at the time of writing. Sources include NPR, TIME, CNN, Al Jazeera, Bloomberg, The National, NBC News, Xinhua, and Wikipedia (Islamabad Talks; 2025–2026 Iran–United States negotiations; 2026 Strait of Hormuz crisis; Economic impact of the 2026 Iran war; 2026 Iran war ceasefire).