The Conflict’s Roots and Why It Hits Every Wallet Worldwide

Image: Healing Streams

For too long, elites and international institutions have chosen appeasement, “dialogue,” and reckless engagement, allowing rogue regimes and their proxies to arm themselves, choke strategic energy routes, and threaten global stability. This crisis exposes the fragility of a world order built on dependency, centralised control, and the false promise of international cooperation. Instead of defending sovereignty or prioritising national interests, globalists have enabled a system where every household, pension fund, and small business is left vulnerable to distant conflicts and manufactured emergencies. Now, as oil supplies are disrupted and energy prices soar, ordinary people across continents face real hardship higher bills, tighter restrictions, and an economy teetering on the brink, all under the watchful eye of those who profit from perpetual crisis.

The Conflict’s Roots and Why It Hits Every Wallet Worldwide

The 2026 Iran war is not an isolated flare-up but the culmination of years of tension, building on the October 2023 Israel-Hamas conflict and subsequent Houthi Red Sea attacks (2023-2025). US and Israeli forces have conducted thousands of strikes on Iranian nuclear, missile, and IRGC sites. Iran has responded with missile/drone barrages, attacks on Gulf shipping, and proxy activations. Hezbollah continues rocket fire into northern Israel; limited ground operations persist in southern Lebanon and Gaza. Iran has functionally impaired the Strait of Hormuz through attacks on vessels and threats, halting most commercial traffic. This is the largest oil supply disruption in history per the IEA, far exceeding past crises like 1973 or 1990-91. The current war US and Israeli strikes on Iran that kicked off February 28, 2026 didn’t start in a vacuum. It’s the predictable blowback from years of appeasement, proxy terror funding, and globalist “engagement” that let Iran’s regime and its Hezbollah/Houthi proxies arm up while choking key energy routes. Iran disrupted the Strait of Hormuz (20% of global oil and LNG flows). Retaliatory strikes hit Gulf infrastructure. Markets are reeling: Brent crude spiked past $120 before settling around $100-110, stocks gyrated worldwide, and inflation forecasts are being ripped up from London to Tokyo to New Delhi. This isn’t abstract geopolitics. It’s higher fuel costs for households in Europe, Asia, and beyond; soaring grocery prices everywhere; tighter mortgage rates; and battered pension funds. Global GDP growth could shave 0.3-0.5% this year if energy stays elevated; import-dependent economies get hammered hardest.

The Middle East Conflict’s Roots

Israel is fighting for its existence.

You first of all have to realize that for the US and Israeli leaders, the 2026 war is a defensive war of necessity against a rogue regime that has spent decades building tools of mass destruction, exporting terror, and destabilizing the Middle East while crushing dissent at home. The nuclear program was the red line; proxy aggression and missile threats provided the immediate triggers; failed talks proved diplomacy’s limits. The operation has already achieved significant degradation of Iran’s capabilities, buying time for regional security and potentially opening a path to a post-regime future. This stance is articulated consistently by Netanyahu, Trump, and senior officials as self-defence under international law (Article 51 of the UN Charter), pre-emption against an imminent threat, and a strategic imperative to prevent a nuclear-armed Iran from dominating the region. Critics dispute the imminence or legality, but truth is, the alternative waiting for Iran to weaponize would have been far costlier.

Energy Markets – The Oil and Gas Shock

The Strait of Hormuz normally carries 20 million barrels per day of crude/products (20% of global supply) and ~20% of LNG. Traffic is now at a standstill; Gulf production has fallen sharply (collective drop of 6.7-10+ mb/d from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE, Kuwait, Qatar). Iranian strikes damaged facilities, including a major Qatari LNG site with 17% of its export capacity lost. Brent crude surged from ~$72 pre-war to over $100–$120 with peaks near $150 in worst-case scenarios. European gas prices spiked 40%+ in days. This is not a temporary blip: even partial recovery would leave a sustained risk premium of $10–15. Why it matters globally? Well because Oil is the world’s most traded commodity. Every $10 sustained rise typically shaves 0.2–0.5 percentage points off global GDP while adding ~0.5–1 percentage point to inflation. Advanced economies which are net importers, face higher fuel, transport, and manufacturing costs; exporters like the US see mixed effects via higher revenues but consumer pain. Fertilizer and petrochemical feedstocks have also risen, threatening agriculture. Gulf states themselves are hit hardest: Goldman Sachs estimates potential 14% GDP contraction for Kuwait/Qatar and 3–5% for Saudi/UAE if prolonged into April.

The Strait of Hormuz – The World’s Energy Jugular, Now Slashed

The Strait of Hormuz is the single biggest vulnerability in the global energy system narrow, easily blocked, and controlled by a regime that just got hit hard. Iran’s retaliation (missile/drone strikes on tankers, Gulf infrastructure) has functionally impaired traffic. Result? The largest supply disruption in oil market history, per the IEA.

Oil & Gas Spikes – From the Pump to Your Grocery Bill and Factory Floor

Energy is the global economy’s bloodstream. Brent at $100-120+ means fuel up sharply in every importing nation, diesel crushing trucking and shipping worldwide, and fertilizer/natural gas costs exploding for farmers from Europe to Africa to Asia. OECD and IMF warn of stagflation risks—higher prices plus slower growth hitting developed and emerging markets alike. Europe’s gas prices +50% since early March; Asia (China, India, heavy importers) faces acute pain. Food systems disrupted downstream across continents. Markets? Stocks down on growth fears globally, bonds volatile, gold as a universal safe haven. Small businesses and consumers in every country feel it first exactly what globalist “just-in-time” fragility delivers.

Shipping, Trade, and Supply Chains

Shipping Nightmares – Red Sea Echoes Meet Hormuz Chaos

The disruption in the Strait of Hormuz has compounded the ongoing challenges from the previous Red Sea/Houthi crisis between 2023 and 2025. That earlier conflict forced a significant rerouting of vessels around the Cape of Good Hope, which added 10 to 14 days to each voyage and resulted in millions of dollars in additional fuel costs. With these compounded risks, insurance premiums have soared, and war-risk coverage has either been cancelled or repriced for many operators. Freight rates are rising across both energy and non-energy goods, impacting global shipping. During the peak of the Red Sea crisis, container spot rates for Asia-Europe routes surged by more than 250%. Now, similar dynamics are emerging across the Gulf region. Aviation in the Gulf has nearly ground to a halt, causing widespread disruption to global air cargo and passenger routes. As a result, global trade is facing downward revisions, especially if energy prices remain elevated. Specifically, there is at least a 0.3% reduction expected in global trade growth. Key sectors such as semiconductors particularly those reliant on Gulf energy like Taiwan and other Asian manufacture automobiles, and retail are experiencing increased input costs and delays. Poorer nations in Africa and South Asia, which depend heavily on Gulf oil imports and food or fertilizer shipments, are facing severe shortages. Some Gulf states are resorting to airlifting basic staples as consumer prices spike between 40% and 120%. With Hormuz crippled and the threat of renewed Houthi attacks, two critical maritime chokepoints are now under fire simultaneously. Container traffic and oil tankers are either rerouting or coming to a halt. This situation has caused global trade to slow significantly, with freight rates surging and supply chains for electronics, automobiles, and consumer goods experiencing delays from factories in China to store shelves in Europe. Egypt’s Suez economy is also suffering further declines as a result. These events highlight the vulnerabilities inherent in the globalist “just-in-time” supply chain model, which relies on adversarial sea lanes. The current crisis exposes the risks of such dependence, underscoring the need for nations to prioritize sovereign control of critical supply chains and secure sea lanes through strength and strategic action, rather than relying solely on international resolutions.

Inflation, Growth, and Macro Outlook

“Lockdown 2.0”: the energy crisis as an excuse to bring back Covid19 controls

Here’s the concerning part: globalists are using the energy crisis as an excuse to bring back strict controls, much like during COVID-19. In Asia, countries like Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippines, and South Korea are forcing shorter workweeks, work-from-home for government workers, closing schools, and capping fuel prices to force people to use less energy. Europe is telling people not to drive, and the IEA is spreading the same message worldwide. Big companies including TCS, Amazon, Google, JPMorgan, and Citi are sending workers home in affected areas. On social media, people are calling this “Lockdown 2.0”—not outright martial law yet, but soft restrictions that slow the economy, let governments tighten control, and get people used to new rules “for the greater good.” This isn’t really about saving energy; it’s about globalists seeing how far they can push public obedience in a crisis.

“Lockdown 2.0”: The IEA Published an Energy Lockdown Playbook

The International Energy Agency’s (IEA) 10-point plan is a textbook example of globalist overreach, demanding governments to restrict driving, ground flights, mandate remote work, and outlaw gas cooking. Their so-called “Sheltering from Oil Shocks” isn’t about protecting citizens—it’s about tightening central control.

·       Alternating driving days based on license plate numbers is not a mere suggestion; it’s the foundation for a movement permit system, where governments dictate who gets to travel and when. South Korea has already imposed these strict controls, showing how globalist policies get enforced at the national level.

·       Mandatory speed limit reductions across highways aren’t about safety—they’re about rationing fuel and curbing personal freedom of movement, using bureaucracy as a blunt instrument. You’re allowed on the road, but only under their terms.

·       “Avoid air travel where alternatives exist”—yet the IEA deliberately leaves ‘alternatives’ undefined. This ambiguity is a feature, not a bug, giving bureaucrats unchecked power to decide who can travel and when, further undermining individual autonomy.

·       The push to switch from gas cooking to electric is more than technical guidance; it’s a direct intrusion into private homes. The IEA, the same agency behind ‘Net Zero by 2050,’ now dictates what appliances are allowed, accelerating the march towards micro-managed lifestyles.

·       “Work from home where possible” a recycled tactic from the 2020 lockdowns, now repackaged as energy security. The playbook hasn’t changed: crisis is the excuse for more restrictions, with ‘security’ as the convenient justification for government control.

The IEA’s Net Zero roadmap openly calls for personal behaviour changes, citing COVID-era compliance as the model. This isn’t about managing emergencies it’s a globalist test-run for permanent rationing, digital surveillance, and engineered dependence. Restrict supply, ration access, digitise compliance, and repeat. This is the machinery of centralised control masquerading as crisis management.

How Globalists Want to Perpetuate This War and Reimpose COVID Controls

Globalist institutions and their allies have every incentive to drag this out. Prolonged war = sustained crisis = excuse for more centralized control. Watch how quickly Work From Home, shortened weeks, and energy rationing echo the COVID playbook measures that crushed small businesses, empowered Big Tech and Big Government, and trained populations to obey edicts “for safety.” IMF, WEF, and IEA types are in on Asia implementing soft lockdowns and Europe conservation mandates. This isn’t coincidence—it’s the same crowd that loved COVID for the Great Reset: digital IDs, remote surveillance, suppressed demand, and a push toward “green” dependency on unreliable foreign energy. They benefit from chaos because it justifies global coordination, more regulations, and eroding national sovereignty everywhere.

Written By Tatenda Belle Panashe

Get the latests of our Loveworld News from our Johannesburg Stations and News Station South Africa, LN24 International

Add Your Comment