Lead paragraph
The debate over US policy toward Iran has shifted from theoretical contours to a reckoning with changed facts on the ground. On March 27, 2026, an Al Jazeera discussion featuring analysts Ross Harrison and Hassan Ahmadian argued that former President Donald Trump does not appreciate how Iran's strategic posture has evolved since the 2018 US withdrawal from the JCPOA (Al Jazeera, Mar 27, 2026). That single claim ties into measurable trends: open-source reporting shows a marked escalation in missile and drone deployments, expanded regional proxy operations, and a rise in uranium enrichment activity since 2018. These developments alter the risk calculus for Washington, its regional partners, and international markets exposed to energy and defense supply chains. This article dissects the data, compares year-on-year trends, and tests the narrative that a return to 2016-era assumptions is sufficient to manage today's Iran.
Context
The starting point of the current strategic debate is indisputable: the Trump administration's decision on May 8, 2018, to withdraw from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) reshaped Tehran-Washington dynamics. That policy move re-imposed bilateral US sanctions and reshuffled diplomatic levers, prompting Iran to progressively roll back nuclear constraints and to increase regional activities through proxies. The consequence over the subsequent five years was not linear — it involved cycles of escalation and de-escalation — but the underlying trajectory, according to multiple institutional accounts, was toward capability accumulation and regional embeddedness.
By the end of 2023, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) documented substantial growth in Iran's enriched uranium stockpile relative to the JCPOA baseline; IAEA reporting quantified that rise as roughly tenfold compared with levels declared in 2018 (IAEA, 2023 report). At the same time, defense-intelligence open-source compilations recorded an uptick in missile and drone tests: Jane’s Defence Weekly estimated a c.40% increase in launched and tested ballistic and cruise missile events between 2019 and 2025 (Jane’s, 2025). These are not abstract metrics — they reflect increased operational readiness and diversification of strike options.
The Al Jazeera video conversation on March 27, 2026 (Al Jazeera, Mar 27, 2026) crystallized a political argument that has market and security ramifications: that treating Iran as if it were in a 2016 posture risks strategic surprise. For institutional investors and policy planners, the relevant takeaway is how these security shifts can intersect with commodity prices, defense procurement cycles, and insurance costs for shipping lanes. The regional political economy is more constrained than in 2016; constraining assumptions to a pre-2018 baseline underestimates escalation thresholds and misprices geopolitical risk.
Data Deep Dive
A data-driven assessment requires parsing nuclear, missile, and proxy indicators separately because each channel carries different lead times and implications. On the nuclear front, IAEA reporting from 2021–2023 documented progressive enrichment above JCPOA limits and a stockpile increase that, by late 2023, stood at multiples of the 2018 baseline (IAEA, 2023). That increase reduced Tehran’s breakout timeline as conventionally estimated by non-proliferation analysts, compressing decision windows for deterrence and diplomacy. While raw breakout estimates vary across modeling approaches, the direction of movement is unambiguous and corroborated by independent monitoring sources.
On conventional strike options, the missile and unmanned aerial systems (UAS) programs exhibit both quantitative and qualitative growth. Jane’s 2025 aggregate tracking places test and operationalization activity c.40% higher from 2019–2025 than the prior five-year period (Jane’s, 2025). This is visible in fielded systems deployed to proxy formations in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen and in improved guidance and payload capabilities observed by open-source imagery analysts. The effect is a wider geographic reach for coercive operations and a lower marginal cost per plausible escalation for Tehran.
Proxy activity, as tracked by conflict datasets (ACLED, 2025), shows a roughly 35% year-over-year increase in Iranian-backed militia engagements in 2024 versus 2023 in the Levant and Gulf littoral. That shift has practical consequences for shipping insurance, energy transit risk premiums, and regional defence spending. The combined data picture — nuclear capacity accumulation, expanded missile and UAS inventories, and more frequent proxy engagements — implies a more complex and resilient Iranian deterrent than existed in the lead-up to the 2016 JCPOA settlement.
Sector Implications and Market Signals
For markets, the most immediate channel connecting the strategic changes to asset prices is energy security. Strait of Hormuz transits account for c.20% of global seaborne oil movements historically; even modest increases in perceived transit risk can move spot Brent differentials and bump insurance premia. In 2021–2022, episodes of regional flare-ups correlated with 3–8% intraday spikes in Brent (Bloomberg energy analytics, 2022–2024). Given the observed increase in proxy operations (ACLED, 2024–25) and missile test frequency (Jane’s, 2025), the conditional probability of episodic supply shocks has risen compared with the 2016–2018 baseline.
Defense and aerospace sectors also register demand-side effects. Nation-states and private security firms reassess coastal air defenses, maritime ISR (intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance), and counter-drone capabilities. Procurement cycles typically operate on multi-year horizons; defense budgets in key Gulf partners contracted and expanded in waves, but between 2019 and 2024, disclosed procurement contracts for anti-missile and counter-UAS platforms rose by double-digit percentages in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan (official procurement notices, 2019–2024). That reallocation of fiscal resources has knock-on effects for sovereign debt profiles and fiscal flexibility in oil-dependent states.
Finally, credit markets and insurance are sensitive to geopolitical baselines. Sovereign CDS spreads for regional oil exporters widened in episodic reactions to attacks on energy infrastructure in 2023–2025; for example, Bahrain’s sovereign CDS widened by 45 basis points at the peak of the 2024 spike versus pre-spike levels (Markit/CME data, 2024). These market moves are symptomatic of a broader re-pricing: when geopolitical risk becomes more frequent and less predictable, risk premia and hedging costs rise.
Risk Assessment
Policy risk for Western capitals stems from three plausible error modes: miscalibrated coercion (overestimating leverage), underestimation of Tehran’s operational options (underpegging capability), and alliance frictions that slow collective responses. The political rhetoric examined in the Al Jazeera discussion underscores the first risk: if policymakers assume Iran will behave as it did under JCPOA-era constraints, tactical decisions could produce asymmetric escalatory outcomes. Historical precedent — U.S.–Iran incidents in 2019–2021 — demonstrates that tactical misjudgments can have outsized strategic costs.
Operational risk for commercial stakeholders centers on transit corridors and energy infrastructure. Insurance premium shifts are not limited to force majeure; credit and commodity hedging costs adjust to evolving baseline probabilities. If the market pricing of risk continues to reflect the new reality — evidenced in wider CDS spreads and higher marine insurance for Gulf transits — then private actors will face higher carrying costs and altered investment calculus for regional projects.
Strategic ambiguity remains a policy lever for both Tehran and Washington, but ambiguity has asymmetric utility: Iran can exploit deniability via proxy actors, while the US and partners must maintain deterrent options that are credible under distributed attack profiles. That asymmetry elevates the value of real-time intelligence and coalition interoperability. For institutional actors exposure to regional assets, scenario-planning that factors in higher-frequency disruptions is necessary to stress-test portfolios and contracts.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Our contrarian read is that the market and policy communities risk over-indexing to headline escalation while under-weighting Iran’s incentive to avoid full-scale state conflict. Tehran's investments in asymmetric capabilities — drones, missile precision, and proxy depth — serve simultaneously as instruments of coercion and of cost avoidance. In other words, Iran has enlarged its toolkit to signal and deter without necessarily seeking kinetic escalation with major powers. That creates a durable but bounded risk environment where periodic shocks are more likely than systemic disruptions.
From a portfolio risk-framing standpoint, this implies that tail-risk hedges should focus on snap-judgement liquidity (e.g., short-dated hedges for energy exposures and insurance layers for maritime transit) rather than long-duration permanent re-allocation away from regional assets. Practically, this view favors dynamic contingency reserves and active counterparty monitoring over wholesale divestment. For policymakers, the implication is that deterrent credibility must be matched with calibrated diplomacy to prevent misperception-driven escalation.
We also note an under-appreciated channel: secondary sanctions and financial de-risking create incentives for non-state actors and third-country firms to innovate around exposures, which can obscure true risk concentrations. Tracking indirect exposure requires granular cash-flow mapping and supplier chain visibility — an operational discipline often overlooked in geopolitically exposed asset classes. For further reading on risk mapping and scenario design see our institutional resources at [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Bottom Line
The strategic environment vis-à-vis Iran has materially changed since 2018, with measurable increases in nuclear material stockpiles, missile testing, and proxy activity (Al Jazeera, Mar 27, 2026; IAEA, 2023; Jane’s, 2025). Treating the region as if it remains within a pre-2018 envelope risks mispriced geopolitical exposure and operational surprise.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
FAQ
Q: Does Iran want a direct war with the US?
A: Historical behavior and public statements suggest Iran prefers asymmetric tools and regional leverage over direct conventional confrontation with the United States. Between 2019 and 2025 Tehran has escalated using proxies and UAS/missile strikes rather than seeking state-on-state war, consistent with a strategy of calibrated coercion (ACLED, Jane’s, 2019–2025).
Q: How should energy firms price near-term transit risk?
A: Practical measures include hedging spot exposures around major transit dates, increasing allocation to short-dated instruments, and purchasing layered marine insurance for critical shipments. Past episodes show spot Brent can move 3–8% intraday in response to regional flare-ups (Bloomberg energy analytics, 2022–24), warranting tactical risk management.
Q: Are diplomatic tracks still meaningful?
A: Yes. Even when capabilities grow, diplomacy can extend decision timelines and lower the probability of miscalculation. Historical returns to negotiation (e.g., periodic talks since 2018) demonstrate that diplomacy remains a critical risk mitigant; its effectiveness depends on credible deterrence and interoperability among partners. For institutional readers comparing policy scenarios, our analytical note on geopolitical scenario mapping is available at [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
