Scott Lucas, University College Dublin; Andrew Thomas, Deakin University; Chris Ogden, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau; Jessica Genauer, UNSW Sydney, and Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, Rice University
On February 28, the US and Israel launched a war against Iran following weeks of US military build-up in the region and threats from US President Donald Trump.
In the ensuing weeks, Iran has retaliated by striking US assets in the Persian Gulf states and targets across Israel. Israel has launched a ground invasion into southern Lebanon in response to attacks from Hezbollah.
Oil and gas shipments through the Strait of Hormuz have come to a virtual standstill, threatening a global energy crisis. And thousands have been killed, most in Iran and Lebanon.
The entire Middle East has been affected by this war – and the region will no doubt be very different once it’s resolved.
We asked five experts in international politics and Middle East studies to explain the most important changes they see happening following the war.
The academic experts who shared their analysis of this topic are:
Scott
Lucas
Professor of International
Politics, Clinton Institute, University College Dublin. He
joined University College Dublin in 2022 as Professor of
International Politics, having been on the staff of the
University of Birmingham since 1989. He began his career as
a specialist in US and British foreign policy, but his
research interests now also cover current international
affairs – especially North Africa, the Middle East, and
Iran – New Media, and Intelligence
Services.
Andrew
Thomas
Lecturer in Middle East
Studies, Deakin University. He teaches units on
International Relations, Middle East conflict and global
governance. His book “Iran and the West: a non-Western
approach to foreign policy” (2024) explores how
non-Western perspectives on the Middle East and beyond can
improve our understanding of intractible
conflict.
Chris
Ogden
Associate Professor in Global
Studies, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau. He
specialises in the interplay between identity, culture,
security and domestic politics in India, China, South Asia,
East Asia and the Indo-Pacific. His latest book is “The
Authoritarian Century: China’s Rise and the Demise of the
Liberal International Order” (Bristol University Press,
2022).
Jessica
Genauer
Academic Director, Public
Policy Institute, UNSW Sydney. She is an expert in
international conflict and provide regular analysis for
national and international outlets on war and conflict. Her
research interests include conflict, threat perceptions, and
post-conflict institution-building with a focus on the
Middle East as well as Russia / Ukraine and the
US.
Kristian
Coates Ulrichsen
Fellow for the Middle
East at the Baker Institute, Rice University. His research
examines the changing position of Persian Gulf states in the
global order, as well as the emergence of longer-term,
nonmilitary challenges to regional security. Previously, he
worked as senior Gulf analyst at the Gulf Center for
Strategic Studies and as co-director of the Kuwait Program
on Development, Governance and Globalization in the Gulf
States at the London School of Economics.![]()
Scott Lucas, Professor of International Politics, Clinton Institute, University College Dublin; Andrew Thomas, Lecturer in Middle East Studies, Deakin University; Chris Ogden, Associate Professor in Global Studies, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau; Jessica Genauer, Academic Director, Public Policy Institute, UNSW Sydney, and Kristian Coates Ulrichsen, Fellow for the Middle East at the Baker Institute, Rice University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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