Wednesday, April 1, 2026
News

US pullback may trigger more volatile regional phase in Iran crisis: Report

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

New Delhi, | April 1, 2026 1:22:09 PM IST
A potential US military pullback from the Iranian theatre may not signal an end to the ongoing crisis, but instead mark the beginning of a more fragmented and less controllable regional phase, according to a recent geopolitical briefing reported by Ask Private Wealth.

"A US pullback would not necessarily mark the end of the crisis. It could mark the start of a more regional, less controllable phase," the report noted.

The briefing cautioned that markets may misread such a move as de-escalation. "The temptation in markets will be to read any US military pullback as de-escalation. That would be far too tidy," it said, adding that "an American step back could mean peace -- but it could just as easily mean that the conflict becomes more regional, more fragmented, and more expensive for the global economy."

It emphasised that a reduction in US military presence would not automatically resolve core disruptions in the region. "A US withdrawal from the front line would remove one escalatory force, but it would not by itself reopen the Strait of Hormuz, halt Israel-Iran strikes, repair damaged energy infrastructure, or restore confidence in energy shipping," the report stated.

Highlighting the strategic importance of global energy routes, the report underlined that "the Strait is not merely a military issue. It is a pricing mechanism for the global economy -- with approximately 20 per cent of global oil shipments normally passing through it."

The analysis further suggested that Washington may prioritise disengagement even amid unresolved disruptions. It noted that the US "may be prepared to live with an unresolved shipping crisis if it can declare operational success and move on."

On likely outcomes, the report said a clear resolution remains unlikely. "The most likely outcome is neither an orderly peace settlement nor outright regional collapse. It is a messy middle," it observed.

It added that while markets may initially respond positively to reduced US involvement, this could be misleading. "Markets will initially cheer the absence of fresh US escalation, only to discover that partial access to Hormuz is not the same thing as restored normality," the briefing said. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE BUSINESS NEWS
Japan's Leading Crypto Tax Platform, cry...
Commercial LPG prices revised amid globa...
GST collections rise 8.8% in March to Rs...
GIVA Unveils VEDA: Bangalore's Newest Pr...
No IIT, No Funding, No Team An Indian AI...
Qoruz Deepens Partnership with YouTube t...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Panchkula Municipal Fraud: Haryana Polic...
'Lucknow has reached new development hei...
Excise Case: Delhi HC issues notice to K...
Govt of Karnataka, NIMHANS draft policy ...
'Raising wrong issues so that no one tal...
'Vote for LDF or Pinarayi Vijayan is goi...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
"Aap sabhi Dhurandhar ho!": Vicky K... 
Delhi HC seeks responses on PIL all... 
About 5,98,000 passengers return to... 
DMK alliance projected to retain po... 
"Neighbours that cannot be moved ap... 
RK HIV AIDS Research and Care Cente... 
Supreme Court asks MP High Court to... 
Priyanka Gandhi alleges 'mafia rule...