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The Middle East Teeters On The Brink Of Absolute Chaos After Iran Vows Devastating Revenge For Operation Epic Fury Strikes On Nuclear Infrastructure

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shipping disruption, and regional pressure rather than immediate all-out conventional war. Historically, that aligns more closely with how Iran tends to operate under pressure. Direct large-scale war with the U.S. or Israel carries enormous risk, so indirect retaliation often becomes the preferred method.

The economic angle is also important and believable. Even the possibility of escalation in the Gulf region can move oil markets because so much global energy transit depends on stability there. Investors react not only to actual damage, but to uncertainty itself. That’s why geopolitical language alone can affect fuel prices, shipping insurance, and inflation concerns within hours.

What the article ultimately does well is connect geopolitics to psychology. It reminds readers that even when bombs fall far away, millions of civilians live under constant uncertainty—checking updates, worrying about escalation, and wondering whether the next strike triggers something larger. That human layer gives the piece emotional weight beyond military analysis.

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