Ninety-four days into the conflict, the war between the United States and Iran has entered a new phase, with American forces striking Iranian sites directly and Kuwait intercepting missiles in its airspace. The widening geographic footprint of the conflict signals that fighting is no longer contained to a single front.
What Is Happening on the Ground
US strikes have hit Iranian targets, though the specific sites, scale, and method of attack are not detailed in current reporting. Kuwait's interception of missiles marks a significant development: a Gulf state that has historically maintained cautious neutrality is now physically engaged in the conflict's fallout. That intercept alone suggests missile trajectories are reaching well beyond the immediate Iran-US theatre.
Simultaneously, Israel has deepened its offensive into southern Lebanon. This adds a second active front linked to the broader regional confrontation. Israel's move into Lebanon is consistent with its stated goal of pushing back Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran. The convergence of US-Iran direct strikes and Israeli ground action in Lebanon means multiple armed actors are now operating under the same regional conflict umbrella.
Peace negotiations between Washington and Tehran have so far produced no deal. The fact that talks are ongoing, even as strikes continue, reflects the dual-track nature of the crisis: military pressure running in parallel with diplomatic contact, neither pausing for the other.
Why This Matters
Kuwait's missile intercept is the detail that most directly shifts the strategic picture. The Gulf states sit atop a significant share of global oil infrastructure. Any conflict that draws them into active defensive operations raises the probability of supply disruption fears being priced into energy markets. Oil shipping lanes through the Strait of Hormuz and Gulf waters are among the most consequential chokepoints in the global economy.
For India, the stakes are direct. India sources a large portion of its crude oil from Gulf producers and routes significant trade through the region. Indian workers number in the millions across Gulf countries. A conflict that forces Gulf states into active defensive postures could affect crude import costs, remittance flows, and the safety of Indian nationals in the region.
The expansion of Israeli operations into southern Lebanon adds further complexity. Hezbollah has the capacity to strike deep into Israel and has ties to other Iran-aligned groups across the region. A sustained Israeli push into Lebanon could provoke a wider Hezbollah response, pulling more actors into an already crowded conflict space.
On the economic side, prolonged US-Iran hostilities with no peace deal in sight keep uncertainty elevated for energy prices, shipping insurance premiums, and investor appetite for emerging market assets with Middle East exposure. Companies with supply chains running through the Gulf are likely reassessing contingency plans, even if they have not publicly said so.
The absence of a peace framework after 94 days suggests neither side sees an acceptable off-ramp yet. US strikes on Iranian soil, if confirmed at scale, represent a significant escalation from earlier phases of the conflict that may have relied more heavily on proxy engagements and sanctions pressure. Direct strikes change the diplomatic calculus and narrow the space for de-escalation without a clear concession from one side.
What to watch: whether Kuwait's intercept triggers a formal Gulf Cooperation Council response, whether Israel's Lebanon offensive draws a large-scale Hezbollah counterattack, and whether the US-Iran diplomatic channel produces any framework, even a temporary ceasefire, in the coming weeks. Any one of these developments could sharply reprice energy markets and regional risk assets.