The first explosions were never witnessed by the public, nor were they captured by the watchful eyes of international news cameras. Instead, they ripped through the dense, silent darkness deep beneath an Iranian mountain—a subterranean fortress designed to house a nuclear program that many governments had spent years publicly denying they feared. These strikes did not just destroy concrete and centrifuges; they shattered a decade of careful geopolitical posturing. Within mere minutes of the impact, the digital tickers of global oil futures began a vertical ascent, western embassies from Cairo to Jakarta slid their reinforced gates shut, and war rooms from Washington to Tehran pulsed with the harsh, rhythmic glow of emergency alerts. The world woke up to a new reality: the era of “managed tension” had officially collapsed, replaced by the terrifying clarity of open conflict. Continue reading…