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Home»Spreely News

Epic Fury Secures US Middle East Allies, Weakens Iran

Kevin ParkerBy Kevin ParkerApril 22, 2026 Spreely News No Comments3 Mins Read
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Operation Epic Fury has upended a lot of confident predictions from Washington’s foreign policy class, and the early evidence shows many of those warnings were off the mark. This piece looks at where the naysayers were wrong on China, regional proxies, energy markets, and NATO allies, and it explains how bold U.S. action and allied choices have reshaped the landscape. The story is not finished, but the pattern so far favors decisive American leadership over timid forecasting.

When Operation Epic Fury began, pundits warned of a regional drift toward China and a collapse of American influence. That hasn’t happened. China stayed largely on the sidelines, showing little appetite to project power into the Gulf or pick up the diplomatic slack; instead, regional capitals moved closer to the United States and to Israel, not to Beijing.

The idea that Iran’s campaign would stitch together a broad front around Israel, the so-called “ring of fire,” has proven exaggerated. Iran’s proxies have been quieter than expected, and Israel has both struck back and pursued pragmatic diplomacy with neighbors like Lebanon. That combination of force and negotiation has undercut Tehran’s ability to rally a durable coalition of proxies.

Energy panic predictions, including breathtaking price forecasts, failed to materialize in full. Yes, market jitters bumped fuel and jet prices higher, but the worst-case scenarios did not arrive. Strategic moves by Gulf producers to route around choke points and a surge in U.S. oil and gas output helped stabilize global supply, blunting what might have become a devastating shock.

>A significant reason price shock was avoided is the rapid regional pivot to pipelines and alternative routes that bypass the Strait of Hormuz, and because American energy production hit record levels during the crisis. Those shifts absorbed much of the strain on global markets, while natural gas exports from the U.S. acted as a buffer for Europe and Asia facing tighter supplies.

European reactions exposed uncomfortable truths about capability and will. The initial fury from capitals in Brussels, Paris, London and Madrid gave way to posturing and strongly worded statements, followed by pledges that sounded better on Zoom than on the ground. That display of impotence, while embarrassing for those governments, finally forces an honest discussion about Europe’s defense contributions.

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Not all of Europe behaved the same, and that split matters. Countries in the Baltics, Scandinavia, Poland, and Romania showed real support for the United States, signaling that security ties still matter to nations that feel threatened by hostile powers. The New York Times may have been technically mistaken when it referred to the alliance as the “North American Treaty Organization,” but it was substantively correct that without America, NATO would not exist in anything like its current form.

President Trump’s direct posture toward Tehran, offering a clear ultimatum to halt nuclear ambitions or face escalation, has reshaped bargaining dynamics. That blunt diplomacy, backed by targeted military pressure, has changed the calculations of regional players and reminded allies and adversaries alike that American leadership still moves markets and alliances. Experts who predicted chaos now have to explain why order, however fragile, has returned in several key areas.

Looking ahead, the conflict remains fluid and dangerous, and new twists are possible at any moment. Still, the early record shows that decisive action combined with energy independence and realistic alliance politics can prevent the cascade of disasters some pundits promised. The outcome will be decided by what comes next on the ground and in the halls of power, not by last season’s predictions.

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