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    1. Home
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    3. >Analysis-Gulf warnings and fears of miscalculation preceded Trump’s pause in Iran showdown
    Headlines

    Analysis-Gulf Warnings and Fears of Miscalculation Preceded Trump’s Pause in Iran Showdown

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on March 24, 2026

    6 min read

    Last updated: March 24, 2026

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    Analysis-Gulf warnings and fears of miscalculation preceded Trump’s pause in Iran showdown - Headlines news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
    Tags:FinanceBankingMarketsGeopoliticsEnergy

    Quick Summary

    Trump paused his threat to bomb Iranian power plants after Gulf states warned that such strikes would provoke retaliatory attacks on vital Gulf energy and water infrastructure, highlighting a miscalculation of Tehran’s resolve and regional consequences.

    Table of Contents

    • Escalation, Energy Risks, and Diplomatic Maneuvers in the Gulf Crisis
    • Gulf States Warn of Escalation and Energy Infrastructure Threats
    • Misjudgments and Calculations
    • U.S. and Regional Responses
    • White House and Regional Commentary
    • Strategic Pause and Diplomatic Channels
    • Potential Trajectories and Ongoing Risks
    • Tactical and Strategic Options
    • Gulf States' Vulnerability and Fallout
    • Regional Impact and Reactions
    • Trump’s Misjudgment and Global Consequences
    • Shifting Status Quo and Deterrence
    • Iran’s Negotiating Stance and Regional Order
    • Hardening Positions and Demands

    Gulf Warnings and Energy Fears Shape Trump’s Pause in Iran Showdown

    Escalation, Energy Risks, and Diplomatic Maneuvers in the Gulf Crisis

    By Samia Nakhoul

    Gulf States Warn of Escalation and Energy Infrastructure Threats

    DUBAI, March 24 (Reuters) - Donald Trump’s abrupt pause in his showdown with Iran followed warnings from Gulf states that the war was veering into a far more perilous phase and rising fears among officials in the region that Washington had misjudged Tehran’s readiness to escalate, regional sources and analysts said.

    Gulf Arab states warned him directly that U.S. strikes on Iran’s power plants would trigger Iranian retaliation on their own vital energy and desalination facilities, according to three regional sources who declined to be identified due to the sensitivity of the matter.

    Trump had threatened to hit Iran’s electricity grid unless Tehran reopened the Strait of Hormuz, which carries a fifth of global energy supplies from Gulf oil and gas producers. But Iran refused to yield, the strait stayed shut, oil markets spiked and global equities fell — exposing the limits of Trump’s leverage.

    Iran sent a warning to Gulf capitals, via an Arab intermediary, that any U.S. strike on its power plants would unleash unlimited retaliation, two other regional sources said.

    Misjudgments and Calculations

    "Trump totally miscalculated when he said 'you've got 48 hours to open the strait'," said Alan Eyre, a former U.S. diplomat and Iran expert. 

    “Once it became clear Iran was serious about hitting Gulf energy infrastructure in response, he had to back down.”

    U.S. and Regional Responses

    White House and Regional Commentary

    TRUMP IN CLOSE CONTACT WITH MIDDLE EAST PARTNERS, WHITE HOUSE SAYS

    Alex Vatanka of the Middle East Institute said Tehran had surprised Trump with its ability to stay in the fight and its willingness to escalate without restraint. “They showed no inhibitions, no restrictions, no holdbacks.” 

    There was no immediate response to requests for comment for this article from the Iranian government, Gulf Arab states and the U.S. State Department.

    Asked for comment, White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly said President Trump had assessed that the U.S. is close to completing its defined objectives for Operation Epic Fury.

    She added: "The President is in close contact with our partners in the Middle East, and the terrorist Iranian regime’s attacks on its neighbors prove how imperative it was that President Trump eliminate this threat to our country and our allies.”

    Strategic Pause and Diplomatic Channels

    Trump's pause on strikes ‌against Iranian energy infrastructure, the regional sources and analysts say, appeared to be a recognition the war he had threatened to escalate was already slipping beyond his control and its costs now outweighed any political advantage from projecting American strength.

    Behind the scenes, efforts to curb wider spillover continued through intermediaries including Pakistan, Turkey and Egypt, as well as Gulf partners unnerved at being drawn into a war they neither chose nor controlled.

    Potential Trajectories and Ongoing Risks

    Tactical and Strategic Options

    Ebtesam Al‑Ketbi, president of the Emirates Policy Center, said Trump’s pause pointed to two possible trajectories. 

    One is tactical -- buying time to complete deployments, test Iran’s response and issue a final warning before a larger strike. The other is strategic -- using de‑escalation to prepare the ground for a broader deal, including a reset of the regional security rules of engagement in the Gulf.

    In either case, she said, the war has not ended; it has simply been repurposed as leverage.

    Gulf States' Vulnerability and Fallout

    Regional Impact and Reactions

    GULF STATES WERE 'PUT AT ENORMOUS RISK WITHOUT THEIR CONSENT'

    From the outset, Iran escalated by attacking Gulf infrastructure and shipping, raising the spectre of a prolonged shock to oil, gas, LNG and trade through Hormuz. 

    Gulf states, Vatanka said, were left paying the highest price. “If I were a Gulf leader, I’d be furious,” he said.

    “They were put at enormous risk without their consent, and the damage inflicted in four weeks could take years to undo."

    Trump’s Misjudgment and Global Consequences

    Analysts said Trump misjudged both Iran’s resilience and the scale of the regional and global fallout. 

    Expecting Tehran to be too weak, divided or deterred to respond forcefully, he instead faced asymmetric escalation that imposed heavy costs on U.S. partners and the global economy, analysts and officials said.

    The result was a familiar Trump pivot: tough rhetoric, paired with delay. Preserving his options meant stepping back from an escalation that risked turning a show of strength into a presidency‑defining quagmire, the analysts said.

    Shifting Status Quo and Deterrence

    The deeper problem, analysts say, is that the war has shattered the status quo that Trump seemed to believe he could reshape. Iran, battered but not broken, has drawn a stark lesson: deterrence works. A mix of confidence and fear now shapes Tehran’s calculus: Extract something durable from this war, or risk being dragged back into it, the analysts said. 

    For Trump, any deal would be narrower, costlier and harder to sell than he might prefer.

    “Iran feels partly emboldened and partly afraid,” Eyre said.

    “They've taken heavy damage, destruction and death, and don't want to go through this again. But they can’t go back to the old status quo," he said, because Israel would simply "mow the grass" -- attack -- again.

    Iran’s Negotiating Stance and Regional Order

    Hardening Positions and Demands

    IRAN SEEKS BROADER SETTLEMENT, NEW REGIONAL ORDER

    Senior sources in Tehran said Iran’s negotiating stance has hardened sharply since the war began, signaling that any serious talks could come at a steep price for Trump.

    Iran would seek binding guarantees against future military action, compensation for wartime losses and formal control over Hormuz, the sources said.

    Any Iranian attempt at controlling the strait would alarm the Gulf states who share the waterway and worry that Iran will seek a new regional hegemony harmful to their interests.

    Abdulaziz Sager, Chairman of the Saudi‑based Gulf Research Center, told Reuters the strait "remains a vital strategic and economic route, and its stability is non-negotiable."

    Vali Nasr, an Iranian-American academic and f

    Key Takeaways

    • •Gulf Arab states directly warned the U.S. that striking Iran’s power plants would lead to retaliation on Gulf energy and desalination facilities, contributing to Trump’s pause (apnews.com)
    • •Iran’s threats to respond without restraint—including shutting the Strait of Hormuz and targeting civilian infrastructure—demonstrated Washington had underestimated Tehran’s readiness to escalate (apnews.com)
    • •Trump’s five‑day extension of the ultimatum reflects both tactical recalibration and recognition of diminishing leverage as oil markets spiked and regional allies grew wary of deeper involvement (lemonde.fr)

    References

    • Gulf allies complain US didn't notify them of Iran attacks and ignored their warnings, sources say
    • Iran threatens to 'completely' close Strait of Hormuz and hit power plants after Trump ultimatum
    • Trump steps back from his own Iran ultimatum

    Frequently Asked Questions about Analysis-Gulf warnings and fears of miscalculation preceded Trump’s pause in Iran showdown

    1Why did Trump pause his escalation with Iran?

    Trump paused after Gulf states warned of severe Iranian retaliation targeting vital regional energy and desalination facilities.

    2What role did the Strait of Hormuz play in the standoff?

    Trump threatened Iran over the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a key route for global energy, but Iran refused to yield, leading to market volatility.

    3How did Gulf states react to the US-Iran tensions?

    Gulf states were alarmed by the risk to their infrastructure and warned Trump that a US strike on Iran would trigger direct retaliation against them.

    4What were the broader consequences of the standoff?

    The crisis exposed limits to US leverage, destabilized the region, spiked oil prices, and left Gulf states paying the highest price.

    5Were efforts made to de-escalate the situation?

    Yes, intermediaries like Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt, and Gulf partners worked behind the scenes to curb a wider regional spillover.

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