The Iran Conflict and Africa’s Exposure: External Shock, Internal Pressure, and Emerging Instability

The ongoing Iran conflict is affecting Africa primarily through energy markets, maritime disruption, and second-order political effects rather than direct military exposure and the conflict’s consequences will almost certainly outlast the high intensity military phase. The most likely trajectory is a sustained period of higher fuel costs, disrupted shipping, tighter fiscal conditions, and renewed food inflation, with the sharpest pressure falling on import-dependent states in East and North Africa. The highest-impact scenario remains a continuation to a multi-month Gulf confrontation which keeps oil prices and supply at crisis thresholds, constrains fertiliser and fuel flows, and converts economic strain into wider political and humanitarian instability across already fragile regions.

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