The Iranian foreign ministry has issued a chilling warning to the international community: any U.S. or Israeli attack will result in “insecurity for everyone.” This threat is widely seen as a promise to target oil shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and American assets across the Middle East. As the Iranian government braces for a precision strike, they are signaling a willingness to drag the entire region into a “comprehensive and regrettable” conflict.
Regional powers are already feeling the heat. The UAE’s declaration that it will not allow its airspace to be used for an attack reflects a deep-seated fear of being caught in the crossfire. However, the U.S. deployment of the USS Abraham Lincoln to the Mediterranean and the arrival of F-15E Strike Eagles at various bases suggest that Washington has built a “coalition-lite” strategy that minimizes the need for direct local cooperation.
Military experts warn that a strike on Iran’s political leadership would likely trigger a swarm of proxy attacks. From Hezbollah in Lebanon to militias in Iraq and Yemen, the “Axis of Resistance” is expected to activate if Tehran comes under direct fire. This is the scenario that has caused some in the Trump administration to hesitate, demanding more robust plans for the defense of Israel and regional energy infrastructure.
The humanitarian toll is already spilling across borders, with families of the 27,000 detained protesters seeking help from international bodies. The UN’s inability to verify the massive death toll has created a vacuum of accountability that both sides are filling with their own narratives. While the U.S. frames the conflict as a liberation, Tehran frames it as an existential struggle against “urban terrorists” backed by foreign masters.
The Iranian government is bracing for a war that they hope will be too costly for the West to sustain. By threatening to turn a targeted strike into a regional conflagration, they are attempting to use the world’s reliance on Middle Eastern stability as a human shield. But with the U.S. fleet already in striking range, the time for threats may be giving way to the time for action.