The escalation in the Middle East has entered a new and dangerous phase. Following a first wave of US airstrikes on Iranian military facilities, a second wave is now underway, targeting what the Pentagon describes as 'nuclear and ballistic missile infrastructure'. The strikes, launched from carrier-based aircraft and long-range bombers, represent a significant intensification of hostilities that began with the assassination of a senior Iranian general last week.
From a strategic standpoint, the shift from punitive strikes to decapitation attempts against Iran's nuclear programme is a profound escalation. The physical reality is that such infrastructure is often buried deep underground, in facilities like Fordow, which is built inside a mountain. Airburst munitions may crater the surface, but they are unlikely to destroy hardened centrifuge arrays. The more likely outcome is a temporary setback, not a permanent degradation of capability.
Iran's response has been calibrated but unequivocal. Ballistic missiles have been launched at US bases in Iraq and Kuwait, with limited effect due to Patriot interceptors. However, the real risk is not tactical but systemic. The Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for 20% of global oil transit, is now effectively militarised. Iranian fast-attack craft and anti-ship missiles can interdict tankers. The energy transition, already faltering, will face immediate price shocks. The climate and biosphere implications are secondary now, but they will resurface as economies burn more coal to replace disrupted oil.
The wider risk is a regional conflagration. Hezbollah in Lebanon has already increased rocket fire into Israel. Iranian-backed militias in Syria and Iraq are targeting US positions. The probability of a multi-front conflict is rising. The United Nations Security Council has convened an emergency session, but with Russia and China opposing further action, diplomatic off-ramps are narrowing.
For the global scientific community, this is a moment of grim data collection. The atmospheric effects of large-scale conventional warfare include aerosolised dust and potential fires at oil facilities. Climate models will need recalibration if persistent conflict disrupts emissions monitoring. But the immediate human cost is what we must document. Civilian casualties are mounting, and displacement is inevitable.
The calm urgency of this moment demands action. The physical world does not care about political posturing. It will respond to physics: missiles, countermeasures, and the fragile networks of supply chains and diplomacy. The question is how many more waves of strikes will occur before the system breaks. The answer is not in my data. It is in the hands of leaders who must now decide if this is a limited engagement or the start of something far worse.
This is Dr. Helena Vance, reporting on the physical reality of a crisis that risks outpacing our ability to contain it.









