Origins, Global Shockwaves, Strategic Outlook, Policy Solutions & Singapore’s Exposure
Prepared: March 12, 2026 — Day 13 of the Conflict
1. Case Study: Background & Conflict Dynamics
1.1 Origins of the Conflict
The US–Israel–Iran war of 2026 constitutes the most consequential rupture in Gulf security architecture since the 1990–91 Gulf War. The conflict emerged from a sustained deterioration in US–Iran–Israel relations through late 2025, culminating in a coordinated US–Israeli strike campaign launched on 28 February 2026, which killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and decapitated Iran’s senior political-military leadership.
Operation “Epic Fury,” as designated by the United States, was explicitly aimed at degrading Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile capabilities while inducing regime change. Within 72 hours of the initial strikes, the United States had sunk nine Iranian warships, struck Iran’s naval headquarters, and deployed B-2 stealth bombers against hardened underground missile facilities. Iran responded with hundreds of missile and drone attacks, killing US service members and triggering a cascade of retaliatory and counter-retaliatory cycles that persist as of Day 13.
1.2 Conflict Timeline (Key Milestones)
| Date | Event | Significance |
| 28 Feb 2026 | US–Israel launch Operation Epic Fury | Supreme Leader Khamenei killed; IRGC put on maximum alert |
| 1 Mar 2026 | Iran retaliates: 3 US troops KIA | First confirmed US service member deaths; Gulf states on alert |
| 2 Mar 2026 | Hezbollah resumes strikes on Israel | Lebanon front reopened; Beirut bombed |
| 3 Mar 2026 | IRGC declares Hormuz “closed” | Tankers stranded; oil prices spike past $100/bbl |
| 5 Mar 2026 | Iran strikes Qatar, UAE, Kuwait | GCC energy infrastructure damaged; QatarEnergy suspends LNG |
| 9 Mar 2026 | Brent crude hits $119.50 intraday | IEA unlocks 400M barrel emergency reserve release |
| 10 Mar 2026 | US school strike controversy | NYT reports Tomahawk hit Iranian school killing 168 children |
| 12 Mar 2026 | War enters Day 13 | ~2,000 killed; Lebanon front escalates; no ceasefire in sight |
1.3 Key Actors & Positions
| Belligerents / Supporting Actors | International / Diplomatic Actors |
| United States: Lead strike force; seeks unconditional Iranian surrender | Qatar: Last functional mediator; PM called Tehran directly |
| Israel: Co-initiator; focused on nuclear disarmament & Hezbollah | UK: Non-combatant; allowed use of Diego Garcia & RAF Fairford |
| Iran: Retaliatory posture; new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei | UN Security Council: GCC-sponsored ceasefire resolution pending |
| Hezbollah: Reopened Lebanon front; firing rockets into N. Israel | Spain: Refused base access; threatened with US trade sanctions |
1.4 Humanitarian Dimensions
As of Day 13, the conflict has killed approximately 2,000 people, predominantly Iranian and Lebanese civilians. The United States military mistakenly struck an Iranian elementary school on 28 February, reportedly due to outdated targeting data, killing at least 168 children and 14 teachers. Over 800,000 people have been displaced in Lebanon alone. Iran has accused the US and Israel of deliberately targeting civilian infrastructure, allegations that have intensified international condemnation.
2. Global Energy & Economic Shockwaves
2.1 The Strait of Hormuz: The World’s Critical Chokepoint
The Strait of Hormuz, at its narrowest just 34 kilometres wide, carries approximately 20–21% of global oil trade and one-fifth of all LNG shipments daily. In 2024, 84% of crude oil transiting the strait was destined for Asian markets. Iran’s declaration of a formal Hormuz closure on 3 March 2026, backed by missile attacks, drone strikes, and the threat of mining, has transformed a regional military conflict into a structural global energy shock.
2.2 Energy Market Response
| Metric | Pre-Conflict (Feb 2026) | As of 12 Mar 2026 |
| Brent Crude (per barrel) | ~$65–$67 | $107+ (intraday high $119.50) |
| Natural Gas Futures | Baseline | +40% since escalation |
| US Natural Gas | Baseline | +20% since strikes |
| IEA Emergency Reserves | N/A | 400M barrels released (record) |
| QatarEnergy LNG Exports | Normal (~20% of global LNG) | Suspended (first time in 30 years) |
2.3 Global Trade & Shipping Disruptions
Marine insurers withdrew war risk cover for vessels operating in the Gulf, leaving over 100 tankers stranded or forced to reroute via the Cape of Good Hope, adding up to 14 additional transit days and sharply increasing freight and insurance costs. Three cargo vessels were struck near the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has targeted oil-exporting neighbours, threatening the infrastructure of the GCC’s energy export capacity, including a drone strike on Saudi Arabia’s Ras Tanura refinery — one of the world’s largest.
3. Strategic Outlook
3.1 Short-Term Outlook (Days 14–30)
| Critical Variables Governing Near-Term TrajectoryOutcome of the UN Security Council vote on the GCC-sponsored ceasefire resolutionWhether Mojtaba Khamenei’s new government enters any form of ceasefire negotiation (current signals suggest this is unlikely)Extent of IEA strategic reserve releases and effectiveness of Gulf pipeline workarounds (Saudi East-West Pipeline: 7mb/d capacity; UAE Fujairah bypass)Durability of the Lebanon front: Hezbollah’s operational capacity and Israeli targeting prioritiesUS domestic political dynamics: Trump’s contradictory signals about war objectives complicate adversary signalling |
The elimination of Qatar and Oman as mediators — through Iran’s retaliatory strikes on both countries — is strategically self-defeating for Tehran, removing the interlocutors best positioned to facilitate a face-saving Iranian exit from the conflict. Qatar’s Prime Minister’s direct call to Tehran represents the last intact diplomatic thread.
3.2 Scenario Analysis
| Scenario | Probability(analyst consensus) | Key Outcome |
| Short conflict (<3 wks), limited Hormuz disruption | 25–30% | Manageable energy shock; markets recover by Q2 2026 |
| Prolonged conflict (1–3 months), partial Hormuz disruption | 45–50% | Sustained $100+ oil; global recession risk elevated |
| Regional conflagration incl. full Hormuz closure | 15–20% | Oil $150+; severe global recession; GCC instability |
| Iranian regime collapse / rapid ceasefire | 5–10% | Market relief rally; reconstruction boom; diplomatic reset |
3.3 Geopolitical Reconfiguration
The conflict accelerates several pre-existing structural trends in the international order. US credibility as a security guarantor in the Gulf has been simultaneously reinforced (through military demonstration) and undermined (through civilian casualty controversies). China is exploiting the crisis by purchasing discounted Russian energy as a Gulf hedge, while quietly positioning itself as a post-conflict reconstruction partner for Iran. The rules-based international order faces a significant stress test, with the US’s unilateral military action and threats of economic retaliation against Spain (for refusing base access) weakening multilateral norms.
4. Policy Solutions
4.1 Diplomatic & Security Track
| Diplomatic RecommendationsActivate a Qatar-led humanitarian ceasefire framework: Leverage Qatar’s residual diplomatic access to Tehran to broker a temporary halt to Hormuz interdiction in exchange for a pause in US strikesConvene an emergency P5+1 format with expanded ASEAN+3 participation to construct a multilateral exit rampEstablish a protected humanitarian energy corridor through the Strait analogous to post-UNCLOS freedom of navigation protocolsPursue a UN-mandated maritime safety regime with international naval escorts for LNG and crude tankersEngage Iran’s new Khamenei government through Track II back-channels via Oman, which retains residual credibility |
4.2 Energy Security Solutions
| Energy Policy ResponsesIEA member states to maintain and expand emergency petroleum reserve releases beyond the initial 400M barrel commitmentAccelerate Gulf pipeline bypass activation: Saudi Arabia’s East-West Pipeline (7mb/d) and UAE’s Fujairah bypass to circumvent the StraitEmergency LNG supply diversification: Australia, the US, and Norway to increase spot LNG exports to Asian marketsPrice cap mechanisms on Gulf crude analogous to the G7 Russian oil price cap deployed in 2022Long-term: Accelerate transition to renewables, hydrogen, and distributed energy systems to reduce structural dependency on Gulf hydrocarbons |
4.3 Economic & Financial Stabilisation
| Macroeconomic Policy ToolsCoordinated G20 fiscal stimulus package to offset demand destruction from the oil price shockIMF emergency facility deployment to oil-importing developing economies most exposed to balance-of-payments crisesCentral banks to clearly communicate inflation-tolerant monetary policy frameworks to avoid premature tightening that could tip economies into recessionTrade finance guarantee schemes to maintain the flow of goods through disrupted maritime corridors |
5. Singapore: Strategic Exposure & Policy Response
5.1 Singapore’s Structural Vulnerabilities
Singapore is among the world’s most trade-dependent open economies, with a GDP-to-trade ratio exceeding 300%. Its near-total dependence on energy imports, the concentration of its trade routes through contested chokepoints, and its role as Asia’s premier maritime and financial hub expose it to second and third-order effects from the conflict that far exceed its minimal direct exposure to Iran bilaterally.
5.2 Energy Security Exposure
| Energy VulnerabilitiesSingapore imports virtually 100% of its energy requirements; crude oil from the Middle East remains a substantial feedstock component for Jurong Island’s integrated refinery complex — one of the world’s largestQatarEnergy’s unprecedented suspension of LNG exports directly impacts Singapore’s gas supply, given Qatar’s role as a primary LNG supplierUS natural gas futures are up 20%+ since the conflict began; Singapore and Thailand are identified by analysts as the most acutely exposed Southeast Asian economiesGoldman Sachs estimates a $14/bbl risk premium has already been priced into oil; Brent crossed $107 with an intraday high of $119.50 on 9 March 2026Critically, when core inflation is already above the MAS’s comfort zone, each $10 oil price increase has three times the normal inflationary impact on expectations |
5.3 Port, Shipping & Trade Impact
PSA International, operator of the world’s second-busiest container port, is acutely sensitive to disruptions in Middle Eastern shipping lanes. Tankers stranded on both sides of the Strait of Hormuz directly reduce LNG and crude oil transshipments at Jurong Island and Pasir Panjang terminals. Shipping companies rerouting around the Cape of Good Hope add up to 14 additional transit days, increasing costs and disrupting Singapore’s role as a regional bunkering hub. Gulf–Asia trade lanes are directly disrupted, reducing container throughput from Middle Eastern origin markets.
5.4 Aviation: Singapore Airlines & Changi Airport
| Aviation Sector VulnerabilitiesSingapore Airlines (SIA) and Scoot cancelled 26 flights to and from the Middle East by 2 March 2026 (Singapore–Dubai, Singapore–Doha, Singapore–Abu Dhabi among SIA’s highest-yield long-haul routes)Airspace closures over Iran, Iraq, and parts of the Gulf force extended rerouting, increasing fuel burn and disrupting crew schedulingChangi Airport’s 2026 target of recovering to 19 million annual visitors (pre-COVID levels) is now at risk, particularly from the GCC visitor segmentHigher jet fuel costs at a time of thin post-pandemic margins compound the sector’s vulnerability |
5.5 Financial Sector Exposure
Singapore’s status as Southeast Asia’s premier financial centre exposes it to financial contagion. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) faces a complex policy challenge: elevated oil price pass-through is increasing headline CPI, complicating its exchange-rate-based monetary policy framework. Risk-off sentiment is reducing capital inflows and could affect the Singapore dollar’s safe-haven appeal. DBS, OCBC, and UOB’s trade finance and SME lending books face rising credit quality pressures as energy costs feed through to corporate earnings across the region.
5.6 Sectoral Impact Summary
| Sector | Impact Direction | Severity |
| Refining & Petrochemicals (Jurong Island) | Negative | High — feedstock cost surge |
| Port & Bunkering (PSA, Jurong) | Negative | High — throughput & route disruption |
| Aviation (SIA, Changi) | Negative | High — cancellations, fuel costs, tourism |
| Banking & Finance (DBS, OCBC, UOB) | Mixed | Medium — trade finance risk, wealth mgmt |
| Retail & Consumer | Negative | Medium — CPI pass-through, petrol, food |
| Commodity Trading (energy traders) | Positive | Medium — volatility creates margin opportunities |
| Logistics & Shipping services | Mixed | Rerouting costs offset by higher rates |
5.7 Singapore’s Policy Response Options
| Immediate Fiscal & Monetary MeasuresDeploy U-Save utility rebates and cost-of-living credits targeted at lower-income households, which bear disproportionate energy pass-through costsMAS to review energy component weighting in CPI and adjust exchange rate policy guidance accordinglyRelease strategic oil reserves to cushion supply shortfalls and stabilise refinery feedstock availability |
| Structural & Long-Term Policy ResponsesAccelerate the Green Lane hydrogen import framework: position Singapore as a hub for Australian and less geopolitically exposed Middle Eastern hydrogenDevelop floating solar capacity in Singapore’s reservoirs and territorial waters to reduce energy import dependencyPermanently diversify Jurong Island’s refinery feedstock base away from Gulf monoculture supplyInvest in bilateral strategic reserve-sharing agreements with Japan and South Korea, analogous to Singapore’s post-1973 energy diversification strategyDeepen port resilience planning: invest in rerouted shipping throughput capacity and absorb volatility from Hormuz-dependent trade lanesEmbed the Gulf conflict’s lessons into Singapore’s energy security white paperPosition Singapore as a neutral arbitration and dispute resolution centre for post-conflict reconstruction contractsAdvocate in multilateral forums (UN, IMO, ASEAN) for a permanent international maritime safety regime for the Strait of Hormuz |
5.8 Singapore’s Geopolitical Positioning
Beyond economics, the conflict poses fundamental strategic questions for Singapore’s foreign policy. As a small state whose prosperity depends on the rules-based international order and freedom of navigation, Singapore has a systemic interest in the conflict’s early resolution. Its membership in ASEAN, its longstanding bilateral relationships with both the United States and Arab Gulf states, and its reputation for principled non-alignment give it a more credible voice in multilateral peace forums than its size alone might suggest. Singapore should actively leverage these relationships to support ceasefire diplomacy while carefully preserving neutrality.
6. Conclusions
The US–Israel–Iran war of 2026 is not merely a regional military conflict; it represents a structural shock to the post-Cold War security and energy architecture that has underpinned global prosperity for three decades. Its consequences — energy market dislocation, the breakdown of Gulf mediation channels, the paralysis of critical maritime chokepoints, and cascading economic shocks for trade-dependent economies — extend far beyond the direct belligerents.
For Singapore, the conflict crystallises longstanding structural vulnerabilities: near-total energy import dependency, trade route concentration through contested chokepoints, and the inherent fragility of an open economy embedded in a geopolitically contested global order. The critical variable determining the severity of Singapore’s exposure remains the conflict’s duration and the ultimate fate of the Strait of Hormuz. A conflict contained within weeks with limited maritime interdiction would produce manageable macroeconomic headwinds. A prolonged conflict involving full Hormuz closure or broader GCC destabilisation would pose a material threat to Singapore’s economic stability of a magnitude not seen since the Asian Financial Crisis.
In the long run, the most important implication of the Iran war for Singapore is structural: it validates the urgent need to accelerate the energy transition away from fossil fuel import dependence, to deepen ASEAN economic integration as a hedge against global supply chain fragmentation, and to continue building the fiscal and foreign reserve buffers that have consistently enabled Singapore to navigate global crises with resilience and strategic credibility.
Sources: Reuters, CNA, Mothership.SG, Business Times, New Lines Institute, Eco-Business, Foreign Policy, Goldman Sachs Research, IEA, Nomura, BMI (Fitch Solutions). All data as of 12 March 2026.