Iran War and the New Security Architecture of the Middle East

The Iran war is no longer a limited military confrontation, but the beginning of a broader strategic realignment across the Middle East. This analysis examines how the Gulf states are absorbing the immediate costs of the conflict while potentially standing to gain long-term regional stability if Iran’s destabilizing capacity is significantly reduced. It also explains why Romania’s decision to grant the United States access to military bases places Bucharest more clearly within the West’s strategic security architecture.