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The Bill Is Being Sent to Europe. Everyone Pays -- Except Washington

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Adam Brown
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The war launched by the United States in February has already cost Europe tens of billions of euros. The Middle East is paying in thousands of lives. The White House, meanwhile, continues to insist it acted correctly.

There is a particular kind of cynicism embedded in the current architecture of global security: decisions are made in Washington, while the bills are paid in Berlin, Paris, Warsaw, and Milan. On February 28, 2026, President Trump authorized the first strikes against Iran. Within days, gas prices at Europe's benchmark TTF hub jumped from 31.9 to 54.3 euro per megawatt-hour. This was not normal market volatility. It was the direct consequence of foreign-policy escalation - one whose costs Europe is absorbing without meaningful influence over the decisions behind it.

EU Energy Commissioner Dan Jørgensen estimates that the bloc's additional costs have already reached 24 billion, or roughly 500 million euro per day. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen acknowledged that "Europe is once again paying the price for instability beyond its borders." It is a diplomatic phrasing, but the meaning is sharper: a key ally has once again presented Europe with a fait accompli.

The context makes the situation even more fragile. Europe entered 2026 with historically low gas reserves - 46 billion cubic meters at the end of February, compared to 60 billion a year earlier and 77 billion in 2024. In other words, the continent was more exposed than at any point in recent years. And at precisely that moment, Washington launched an operation whose consequences analysts had warned about with unsettling precision.

A School. A Hospital. A Market.

The American and Israeli airstrikes on February 28 hit military bases and government buildings, but also schools and hospitals. Civilian casualties were significant.

On the first day of the war alone, a U.S. strike hit a girls' primary school in Minab, near a military complex. One hundred fifty-six people were killed, including 120 students, 26 teachers, and seven parents. A Pentagon internal review later attributed the strike to "outdated intelligence." It is a technical explanation that lands as something else entirely: administrative language for human loss.

By April 7, according to the human rights organization HRANA, more than 3,600 people had been killed in Iran, including 1,701 civilians and at least 254 children. As of April 3, 307 medical facilities - hospitals, clinics, and emergency centers - had been damaged. At the same time, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health, more than 70,000 people have been killed in Gaza since October 2023, roughly 70% of them women and children.

Taken together, these figures have led some international law experts to describe the conflict as a pattern of systemic violations of international humanitarian law. The Center for American Progress has argued that the war is "unconstitutional on multiple levels" and that strikes on civilian infrastructure amount to collective punishment.

The White House rejects these assessments.

A Strategy Without a Strategy

What Washington actually intended to achieve remains a subject of debate even among U.S. analysts. Experts warned from the outset that despite the intensity of the campaign, full Iranian capitulation - including the abandonment of its nuclear and missile programs - was unlikely. Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps retained control over strategic decision-making, and expectations of internal collapse were not grounded in reality.

In other words, the United States entered a war with a country of 90 million people without a clear definition of what victory would look like. In Washington, this is often described as "strategic ambiguity." Elsewhere, it is more bluntly characterized as adventurism.

Oman, long a quiet intermediary between Tehran and Western capitals, said through its foreign minister that the United States had "lost control of its own foreign policy" and that allies should state clearly that national interests on all sides require an immediate ceasefire. It is a strikingly direct warning from a country that is normally careful in its diplomatic language.

Meanwhile, Iran responded with strikes on Qatar's energy infrastructure. On March 18, the Ras Laffan facility was hit, reducing Qatar's production capacity by 17%. Repairs are expected to take three to five years. LNG markets in Asia reacted immediately, with prices surging. For Europe - which had been relying on Qatari gas as part of its post-Russia energy transition - the shock hit an already strained system.

The crisis exposes a contradiction U.S. diplomacy has long preferred to avoid confronting. Washington supplies arms to Israel, guarantees Gulf monarchies' security, maintains trade relations across the region -- and simultaneously initiates military actions whose consequences reverberate through the same alliance network. Iran, in response, has struck all six Gulf Cooperation Council states - Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates - as well as Iraq and Jordan.

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I hold a PhD in Political Science and specialize in political developments across Northern Europe. My work regularly explores issues related to governance, democracy, migration, and foreign policy in the Nordic region, while I also closely follow (more...)
 
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