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Peter Zeihan: The War With Iran Could Reshape the Global Economy | Prof G Conversations

Oil prices have surged past $100 a barrel, the Strait of Hormuz is 98% blocked, and 15 million barrels a day have been cut off for more than a week. Geopolitical strategist Peter Zeihan argues that even if the U.S.-Iran conflict ended today, the damage is already sufficient to trigger a global energy-induced recession. Yet the Trump administration has changed its stated objectives every 36 hours, with no discernible end goal — and Iran's new supreme leader is a militaristic hardliner with nuclear ambitions. What happens when the world loses Persian Gulf, Russian, and potentially American crude all at the same time? Can Europe survive without Middle Eastern energy, can East Asia endure without its primary oil supplier, and is the United States prepared for the manufacturing crisis that follows?

The Prof G Pod – Scott Galloway4 Personas mencionadas4 Términos del glosario
Duración del vídeo: 47:34·Publicado 12 mar 2026·Idioma del vídeo: English
7–8 min de lectura·8,393 palabras habladasresumido a 1,534 palabras (5x)·

1

Puntos clave

1

The Strait of Hormuz blockade has already removed 150 million barrels from global supply in ten days, guaranteeing a recession even if the war stops immediately.

2

Iran's new supreme leader is far more militaristic than his father and now has every incentive to pursue a deliverable nuclear weapon within a year.

3

The U.S. is fighting an asymmetric drone war it cannot win: Iranian Shaheds cost $50,000 each and can be built in garages, while American PAC-3 interceptors cost $4 million and take a year to produce 700 units — Iran makes 700 Shaheds per week.

4

East Asia, especially China, faces existential risk if Persian Gulf oil remains offline for more than 40 days — the region relies on the Gulf for 80% of its crude imports.

5

The U.S. remains the least damaged major economy in relative terms, but its manufacturing capacity is woefully underprepared for a world without Chinese and European supply chains.

En resumen

The conflict with Iran has already inflicted enough economic damage to guarantee a global recession, and the strategic missteps — from ignoring Shahed drone asymmetry to accelerating Iran's nuclear timeline — mean the worst may still be ahead.


2

The Strait of Hormuz Is Functionally Closed

Ten days in, 150 million barrels offline, global recession already locked in.

Reduction in Strait of Hormuz Traffic
98%
Roughly one-fifth of global oil supply normally passes through the strait.
Barrels Per Day Blocked
15 million
Conservatively estimated loss; 4 million barrels per day of crude already shut in permanently for at least 60 days.
Total Barrels Lost (First 10 Days)
150 million
Global LNG Supply Blocked
20%
All comes from Qatar; that facility takes even longer to bring back online than oil fields.
Oil Price (March 9, 2026)
$100–112/barrel
First time above $100 since 2022; spiked to $112 overnight before settling near $100.

3

Iran's New Leader and the Nuclear Timeline

The supreme leader's militaristic son now has every reason to build a bomb.

Iran's new supreme leader is the son of the assassinated Ayatollah Khamenei — and he is nothing like his father. Zeihan describes him as «what Don Jr. wishes he was»: a leader with both financial acumen and frontline military experience. Unlike his father, who maintained Iran's deterrent posture one step short of a nuclear weapon, the new leader has no political capital, no decades of clerical authority, and no reason to believe restraint will protect Iran. The old strategy — keeping a credible enrichment program that could be weaponized within weeks to months — was already under debate after Israel's June attacks. Now, with the supreme leader dead and a wide-ranging U.S. air campaign underway, Iran's calculus has shifted decisively toward acquiring a deliverable nuclear weapon within a year. Even if the U.S. declares victory tomorrow, Zeihan warns, the damage is done: Iran will pursue the bomb, and the strategic balance of the region has been permanently altered.


4

The Asymmetric Drone War America Cannot Win

Cheap Shaheds overwhelm expensive interceptors in a war of industrial attrition.

IRANIAN SHAHEDS
700 Drones Per Week, $50,000 Each
Shaheds are built from styrofoam, plywood, and off-the-shelf components in garage workshops. Launch systems are welded rails bolted to pickup trucks, assembled in four hours. Iran fires hundreds per day and can sustain production indefinitely. The U.S. ignored the lessons of Ukraine's drone war and has no counter-strategy for this industrial-scale threat.
AMERICAN INTERCEPTORS
700 PAC-3s Per Year, $4 Million Each
A single PAC-3 interceptor costs $4 million. The United States can manufacture roughly 700 per year. Gulf states have already exhausted 80–90% of their interceptor stockpiles after ten days of Iranian attacks. Within days, oil infrastructure — pumping stations, refineries, loading platforms — will be undefended and vulnerable to Shahed strikes.

5

The Risk of Losing Three Oil Supplies at Once

Persian Gulf, Russian shadow fleet, and U.S. export ban could all vanish simultaneously.

The world is facing a convergence of energy supply shocks unprecedented in modern history. First, the Persian Gulf — normally 20 million barrels per day, half of all internationally traded oil — is functionally offline. Second, European nations have accelerated seizures of Russian shadow fleet tankers over the past two months, threatening 4 million barrels per day of Russian exports. Sweden, Belgium, and France have each taken ships; the U.S. has targeted Venezuela's shadow fleet; India has seized Iranian tankers. Third, under the 2015 omnibus bill, the U.S. president retains unilateral authority to shut off all American oil exports with no congressional review. If all three supply sources vanish simultaneously — Persian Gulf blockade, Russian shadow fleet crackdown, and U.S. export ban — the result would be a «society-ending event» for many countries, Zeihan warns, though not for the United States. East Asia, particularly China, would collapse first. Europe would face impossible choices between national security and environmental goals, likely reverting to lignite coal. The global manufacturing base that underpins the modern economy would simply cease to function.


6

Why Iran Targeted Gulf States, Not Israel

🚢
No Navy Left
In the first 48 hours, every Iranian ship was sunk. The U.S. Navy is functionally immune to Shaheds — you cannot target a moving vessel with a dumb GPS-guided drone.
✈️
No Air Force Left
Every Iranian plane was shot down. Striking Israel means 90%+ interception rates. Iran had to choose targets it could actually hit.
🎯
Gulf States in Range
Iran fired 2,000–3,000 Shaheds at Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, UAE, and even Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Oman. Static oil infrastructure — pumping stations, refineries, loading platforms — is easy to hit.
🛡️
Interceptors Exhausted
Gulf states have burned through 80–90% of their missile defense stocks. Within days, there will be no interceptors left, and Persian Gulf oil facilities will be undefended.

7

What Happens to East Asia Without Persian Gulf Oil

China, Japan, Korea, and India face existential economic risk within weeks.

⚠️

What Happens to East Asia Without Persian Gulf Oil

Roughly 80% of Persian Gulf oil exports go to East Asia. Most countries in the region have 200 days of import cover. India has far less. China's oil reserves may be as little as 40 days, though the true number is unknown. If the conflict lasts one month, «that's enough to probably break the economic models of most of East Asia,» Zeihan warns. «China would be the first one to go down because they just don't have sufficient alternatives from anywhere else.» South Korea's KOSPI index fell 6.5% in a single session. This is not a temporary shock — it is a structural break in the supply chains that underpin Asia's industrial base.


8

The Strategic Void: No Clear U.S. Objectives

Trump changes demands every 36 hours; Iran has no path to appease.

Part of the problem with answering that question is we still don't know what the administration's goals are, so there's no way to judge what success or the end might be. Two of the more recent things that Donald Trump has said is that he wants to be able to handpick the next leader. The other one is that he says he demands an unconditional surrender of Iran. Both of those are wildly unrealistic options unless you have a million troops in the country and have physically crushed dissent in a way that we were unable to do in Iraq and Afghanistan or Vietnam or Korea.

Peter Zeihan


9

Ukraine's Starlink Advantage and Russian Communication Collapse

Musk reversed policy; Russians lost real-time drone guidance and front-line comms.

1

Starlink Enabled Russian Precision Strikes Russia used portable Starlink terminals to guide cruise missiles and Shaheds in real time, hitting moving trains and other dynamic targets with previously impossible accuracy.

2

Ukraine Proved Starlink Complicity Ukrainian forces recovered equipment proving Starlink was actively aiding Russian mass-murder operations, presenting the evidence publicly.

3

Starlink Changed Policy Starlink restricted moving terminals in the theater and implemented a whitelist system, gutting Russian communication and targeting capabilities.

4

Russians Lack Fallback Communication Russia's pre-war communication infrastructure was poor. After losing Western platforms and Starlink, they reverted to radio, which can be intercepted. Ukraine has been on the offensive and captured significant territory in the past month.


10

America's Manufacturing Gap and the Collapse of Globalization

The U.S. lacks industrial capacity to fly solo; Trump's chaos halted buildout.

The United States is energy independent, has strong internal consumption, and remains the safest destination for global capital — but it has one critical vulnerability. «From an economic point of view, the only real weakness the United States has is in manufacturing,» Zeihan explains, «whether it's the primary processing of raw commodities like cobalt or lithium, or cars or jets and everything in between.» Biden began addressing this gap, but Trump's tariff chaos — 6,000 tariff changes in a single year — froze new investment. Businesses finished projects already underway but stopped starting new ones. Now the U.S. must double the size of its industrial plant in an environment of extreme regulatory uncertainty, expensive capital, and a collapsed immigration pipeline for labor. Globalization was always going to fail, Zeihan argues, due to demographics and the end of the Cold War security bargain. Trump is simply compressing the timeline. «We were always going to get to some version of where we are now,» he says. The question is whether America can build fast enough to avoid being «sucker punched» by shortages of everything needed to industrialize.


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Valores mencionados

WTIWest Texas Intermediate Crude Oil

12

Personas

Peter Zeihan
Geopolitical Strategist
guest
Scott Galloway
Host
host
Donald Trump
U.S. President
mentioned
Ayatollah Khamenei
Former Iranian Supreme Leader (deceased)
mentioned

Glosario
Shahed DroneAn inexpensive, GPS-guided kamikaze drone built from styrofoam, plywood, and commercial components; flies in a straight line to a preset coordinate and explodes on impact.
PAC-3 InterceptorPatriot Advanced Capability-3 missile, a U.S.-made anti-ballistic missile defense system; costs $4 million per interceptor.
Shadow FleetA network of aging, uninsured tankers used by sanctioned nations like Russia, Iran, and Venezuela to evade export restrictions and ship oil covertly.
Import CoverThe number of days a country can sustain its economy using stored oil reserves if imports are cut off.

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