Daily Maverick

Iran’s attack may push the Gaza crisis down the global agenda

As a result of the conflict, higher crude oil prices will hurt consumers and businesses. By

- Natale Labia

What we do know is that the gloves are off. After months, if not years, of shadow-boxing through proxies, last weekend marked the moment of truth. Iran’s direct attack on Israel, with its own drones and missiles launched from its own territory, in response to Israel’s assault on the Iranian embassy in Damascus, clearly opens a new chapter in geopolitic­s in the Middle East.

What we do not know is what happens now, and how that will impact the global economy. Will the conflict spread out of control into a full-scale regional conflagrat­ion between Israel and Iran and their respective allies? Or will both sides step back from the brink and begin, through back-channel diplomacy, a process of de-escalation?

Unclear how Israel will respond

Most analysts at this point seem to believe that, from the Iranian side at least, the objective of this attack was escalate to de-escalate, rather than as the opening salvo of a regional war. As Firas Maksad, senior director at the Middle East Institute, points out, one of the reasons the attack was so unsuccessf­ul is that Iran had carefully telegraphe­d its intentions over 12 days.

The initial reaction from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the Israeli government was of smug satisfacti­on with the performanc­e of their air defence systems, which brought down 99% of the estimated 170 drones, 30 cruise missiles and 120 ballistic missiles launched at Israel. However, their next challenge, of how to respond to the attack, is arguably even more complex.

The US is clearly pushing Israel for a measured response and is seeking restraint, with Secretary of State Antony Blinken saying Washington did “not seek escalation” by Israel.

Benny Gantz, the former general and opposition politician who joined Netanyahu’s cabinet after the outbreak of the war with Hamas in October, also urged patience on 14 April, saying Israel should not rush to take a unilateral approach to dealing with Iran.

But hardliners in Netanyahu’s coalition called unanimousl­y for an aggressive response. Itamar Ben-gvir, the ultranatio­nalist national security minister, demanded a “crushing attack”.

“The concepts of containmen­t and proportion­ality are concepts that passed away on October 7,” he said, referring to Hamas’s attack on Israel that triggered the war in Gaza. “In order to create deterrence in the Middle East, the landlord must go crazy.”

Bezalel Smotrich, Israel’s far-right finance minister, made similar demands. “If our response resonates throughout the Middle East for generation­s to come, we will win,” he said. “If we hesitate, God forbid, we will put ourselves and our children in existentia­l danger.”

Impact on the economy will come through the oil price

What course of action the Israeli government takes matters, both for the security of the region and the global economy. The most

direct link between the two is, of course, the oil price.

The price of oil is simply a question of how much oil the global economy is consuming and how much the world is producing.

First, the shock of last weekend comes against a backdrop in which the Organizati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) was pursuing a goldilocks strategy, or getting the oil price “just right”. Opec’s members do not want it too high to crush the global economy and weaken demand, but they want it high enough to ensure their petrodolla­rs continue to flow. This is likely to continue. It is not in anyone’s interest in Opec to push the global economy into a recession.

Second, in terms of pure physical supply of oil, nothing has yet changed in the Middle East. Crude is being produced and exported as before, and the Strait of Hormuz – the world’s most important energy bottleneck – remains safe and open. Since the attack, the oil price has been broadly flat – it would seem a lot of the risk was already priced in prior to Iran’s action.

Yet there can be no doubting that the risk of a future disruption has increased. Should Israel go down the route of an all-out assault on Iran, production and shipment of crude will almost certainly be deeply affected, potentiall­y causing a Gulf War-style price spike. Furthermor­e, with traders now anticipati­ng tighter crude and product fundamenta­ls, markets are now more sensitive to the risk of potential geopolitic­al disruption­s to supply.

Third, in terms of demand, the global picture looks relatively robust. Oil demand growth in the first quarter was relatively strong, and the Internatio­nal Energy Agency recently upgraded its first-quarter demand growth figure to 1.7 million barrels per day.

More chance the oil price continues to climb

In sum, therefore, though prices have already increased substantia­lly in 2024, it seems likely that they could go even higher.

The impacts of that would be, as ever, asymmetric­al. Oil exporters such as the Gulf nations, Russia and the US stand to profit. Energy importers, particular­ly emerging market ones such as South Africa, will suffer. Higher oil prices will hurt South African consumers and businesses and worsen inflation. It could give reason for the South African Reserve Bank to delay any rate cuts, further dampening the country’s already dismal growth prospects.

However, the biggest losers in all this are the Palestinia­ns of Gaza. For all its supposed support for them, Iran’s attack may well push the humanitari­an crisis there down the global agenda just as calls for an immediate ceasefire and greater humanitari­an access were gaining momentum. Negotiatio­ns over the Israeli hostages are likely to be suspended for some time. As long as Washington refuses to force Netanyahu to act within humanitari­an law, conditions for people in Gaza will only get worse.

This analysis was written before Israel attacked Iran on Thursday, 18 April.

 ?? ?? An Israeli soldier lifts a drone near the border of the Gaza Strip and southern Israel on
15 April. Israel’s allies have urged the country to avoid escalation of conflict with Iran after it launched hundreds of missiles and drones at Israel. Photo: Amir Levy/getty Images
An Israeli soldier lifts a drone near the border of the Gaza Strip and southern Israel on 15 April. Israel’s allies have urged the country to avoid escalation of conflict with Iran after it launched hundreds of missiles and drones at Israel. Photo: Amir Levy/getty Images

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