Operation Epic Fury: Why the “Quick War” in Iran is Spawning a Global Risk Contagion

The Secondary Contagion

While the world watches the kinetic strikes (the use traditional, tangible weapons that cause physical impact versus, say, cyber-attacks) of Operation Epic Fury, our analysts and risk governance board is discussing a development perhaps a little more insidious: the secondary contagion now bleeding into the periphery of Europe and the Caucasus.

As the conflict enters its 12th day, the ICRG metrics underscore something rarely seen in a collective sense over its 42-year series, involving not just in Tehran, but in the Balkans and the South Caucasus.

The Axis of Resistance: Expanding the Map

The “Axis of Resistance”—the coordinated network of Hezbollah, the Houthis, and Iraqi PMF—is no longer just a Middle Eastern concern. Under the “Unity of the Arenas” doctrine, this alliance is actively targeting NATO’s soft underbelly. From drone threats against UK bases in Cyprus to potential sabotage of NATO air assets in Albania and Croatia, the geography of risk has shifted.

Flashpoint: The Zangezur Corridor

The most volatile secondary theater is the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan. What was recently rebranded as the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity (TRIPP) is now a primary target. Iran views this corridor as a strategic threat; the recent strikes on Nakhchivan prove that the Axis is willing to open a second front to strain Western resources.

The ICRG Breakdown: What the Metrics Tell Us

Four specific ICRG sub-categories are captured in this crisis.  Clients should watch how they evolve.

External Conflict: The risk of “Cross-Border Strikes” is at a decade-high for Greece and the Balkan states. Proximity to NATO assets makes these nations accidental front lines.

Socio-Economic Conditions: Europe is reeling. With the Strait of Hormuz closed, the energy “tax” on Germany and Italy is triggering emergency price caps and threatening social stability.

Military in Politics: With the reported “functional decapitation” of Iranian leadership, we are monitoring the rise of a garrison state: A possible transition to IRGC military rule makes Iranian policy completely unpredictable.

Internal Conflict: The threat of Balkanization within Iran creates a massive migration risk for Europe, echoing the 2015 crisis and destabilizing EU domestic politics.

The Bottom Line

Political risk is no longer a localized variable. In a world of “structural cutoffs,” a drone strike in the Persian Gulf can shut down a factory in the Rhine and trigger a border skirmish in the Caucasus.

As opposed to Trump’s promises of an early ending to the war, right now clients should be looking at and preparing for how far the contagion will spread.

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An early look at emerging risks and trends in the propriety International Country Risk Guide (ICRG) data. In addition to insights from our Country Reports and Economic Research affecting 18-month and 5-year regime scenarios and related investment risk.

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