- The US and Iran intensified their attacks for a sixth consecutive day Thursday, with the conflict expanding beyond purely military targets: the US struck six road bridges in southern Iran overnight, per Iranian state media, in strikes apparently aimed at degrading Iran’s logistics and supply chain infrastructure; separate reports emerged of attacks on the area around Bushehr — which houses Iran’s only nuclear power plant — and on the western province of Lorestan; the geographic breadth of the strikes and their focus on infrastructure rather than purely military installations marks an escalation in the scope of the US campaign, moving closer to a strategy of systematic degradation of Iranian state capacity.
- No agreement has been reached over the Strait of Hormuz after six days of continuous hostilities, leaving the world’s most critical oil chokepoint in a state of contested closure that is disrupting global energy flows and increasing economic pressure on importing nations; the US reimposed its shipping blockade on Tuesday and has expanded its enforcement to deep within the Persian Gulf — striking the sanctioned supertanker Belma near Iran’s Kharg Island oil export terminal — while Iran has continued to attack vessels in the waterway, forcing shipowners to route around the strait at significantly higher cost and longer transit times.
- The escalation trajectory over six days has been steep and accelerating: the conflict has expanded from Hormuz interdiction to US airstrikes on Iranian territory, Iranian strikes on Gulf neighbors including Kuwait, US targeting of Iranian road bridge infrastructure, and now reports of activity near Bushehr — each step representing a higher threshold of direct confrontation than the previous; analysts are increasingly concerned that the escalation ladder is running out of intermediate rungs before the two sides either reach a negotiated pause or face choices about even more significant military actions, including potential strikes on nuclear facilities that Trump has publicly stated he is considering.
- The human and economic costs are accelerating alongside the military escalation: Iran’s civilian population is bearing the weight of both US airstrikes on infrastructure and the economic blockade that is cutting off oil revenue; global shipping and commodity markets remain severely disrupted, with the IEA warning the global economy could be in peril if Hormuz is not resolved within weeks; Gulf oil and gas producers are reviewing export plans as Iran continues to threaten regional shipping; and every additional day of Hormuz disruption translates to higher energy costs, tighter supply chains, and greater inflation pressure in economies from Asia to Europe that depend on Persian Gulf energy flows.
What Happened?
The US and Iran entered a sixth straight day of hostilities Thursday, with attacks expanding beyond military targets. The US struck six road bridges in southern Iran overnight per Iranian state media, targeting logistics infrastructure. Separate reports indicated strikes near Bushehr — home to Iran’s only nuclear power plant — and in western Lorestan province. No Hormuz agreement has been reached. Fears are growing that the conflict is returning to full-scale war after a period of ceasefire that collapsed earlier this month.
Why It Matters?
The six-day escalation arc represents a qualitative shift from the earlier conflict pattern: strikes are now hitting civilian infrastructure (bridges, logistics routes) in addition to military targets, and reports of activity near Bushehr raise the specter of nuclear facility involvement that would dramatically escalate the geopolitical stakes. Every day without a Hormuz agreement increases the economic damage to global energy markets and the probability that one side commits an action that makes a negotiated pause politically impossible. The IEA has put the timeline for economic peril at weeks — not months — if this trajectory continues.
What’s Next?
Watch for any signal of back-channel diplomatic contact — the January ceasefire was negotiated through Omani and Qatari intermediaries, and those same channels are presumably being tested now; any indication of resumed talks would move energy markets sharply. Also watch Trump’s public statements on nuclear site strikes, which he has previously said he is considering — a decision to strike Bushehr or Fordow would represent the most significant US military action in the Middle East in decades and would almost certainly trigger a wider regional response. Oil markets, shipping rates, and sovereign credit spreads in Gulf states will be the real-time indicators of how markets are pricing the escalation risk.
Source: Bloomberg













