In a move that signals both tactical restraint and strategic recalibration, US President Donald Trump has stepped back from imminent military strikes on Iran’s power infrastructure, citing “productive” backchannel talks with Iran even as tensions remain dangerously elevated across the Middle East.
The decision, announced via social media, halts planned US attacks on Iranian power plants and energy facilities for at least five days. Trump framed the pause as contingent on the success of ongoing negotiations, suggesting a fragile diplomatic opening after days of brinkmanship that had brought the region to the edge of a wider energy war.
However, the reversal also underscores the constraints shaping Washington’s posture. The climbdown follows explicit Iranian warnings that any US strike on its energy grid would trigger retaliation against Israeli infrastructure and facilities supplying US bases in the Gulf—raising the spectre of a cascading regional blackout with global economic consequences.
Trump’s earlier ultimatum had demanded that Tehran “fully open” the Strait of Hormuz within 48 hours or face devastating strikes. Yet, with Iranian actions effectively choking the passage—through which roughly a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas flows—the credibility of that deadline now appears diminished. Rather than enforcement, Washington has pivoted to negotiation.
Markets reacted instantly to the shift in tone: the dollar weakened while equities rallied, reflecting investor relief at the reduced likelihood of immediate conflict escalation. Still, the volatility highlights how tightly global financial stability is now tethered to geopolitical signalling in the Gulf.
Behind the diplomatic language, the broader picture remains stark. Since the outbreak of hostilities involving the US and Israel against Iran on February 28, the conflict has claimed over 2,000 lives and disrupted energy markets worldwide. Fuel prices have surged, inflation fears have intensified, and fractures within the Western alliance have become more visible.
Critically, Trump’s pause raises questions about the coherence of US strategy. The rapid shift from a hard deadline backed by military threats to a negotiation window suggests either successful deterrence by Iran or a recalibration driven by economic and geopolitical risks. In either case, it reveals the narrow margin for escalation in a conflict where energy infrastructure is both a weapon and a vulnerability.
For now, diplomacy has bought time. But with the Strait of Hormuz still constrained and mutual threats unresolved, the coming days of talks may determine whether this is a genuine de-escalation—or merely a temporary pause before a more dangerous phase.





