Iran will lean on Russia after US blitz as world ‘closer to global conflict’

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TRUMP'S historic strikes against Iran could push the world to the brink of global conflict, experts have warned.

Wounded Iran has vowed to fight on, and at this very moment will be calling upon its allies to amass against the West.

(FILES) A handout picture provided by the Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's office shows him waving during a ceremony on the occasion of 36rd death anniversary of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, in Tehran on June 4, 2025. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told ABC News in an interview on June 16 that assassinating Iran's supreme leader would "end the conflict" between the two arch-foes. His comments were made when asked about reports that US President Donald Trump vetoed an Israeli plan to kill Khamenei out of concern it would intensify the Iran-Israel showdown. (Photo by KHAMENEI.IR / AFP) / === RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / HO / KHAMENEI.IR" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS === (Photo by -/KHAMENEI.IR/AFP via Getty Images)The Ayatollah has refused to back down even in the face of the US's decisive actionCredit: AFPVladimir Putin at a wreath-laying ceremony.Putin will be eager for Iran to disrupt the global oil industryCredit: APIllustration of a map showing the military strength of the US, Russia, and Iran, highlighting a potential alliance between Russia and Iran.

It comes after the US wiped out three key nuclear sites in a "spectacular" overnight bomb blitz in Iran.

US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth hailed Operation Midnight Hammer “an incredible and overwhelming success” that took months of planning.

He added that "any retaliation by Iran" against the US would be "met with force” and warned them to “heed Trump’s words”.

Keir Starmer backed US allies, saying: “We have consistently been clear that Iran can never have a nuclear weapon and can no longer pose a threat to regional security.”

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While the US and Israel have now stamped out much of Iran's power in the Middle East, the "bully" regime retains formidable allies with fiercely anti-West ambitions.

Experts believe Trump's strikes could force the Axis of Evil closer together, and set in motion a chain of events that embroils more countries into conflict.

Philip Ingram, a global defence expert, told The Sun: “Iranian ballistic missiles will not reach the United States and therefore to respond to the United States's attack, Iran is going to have to do something different.

"It'll bring its axis of evil. That means Iran, Russia, North Korea and China.

"We are a couple of feet further up the escalation ladder towards a global conflict."

North Korea showed its willingness to get involved with other wars when Kim sent 12,000 troops over to fight on Russia's front line with Ukraine.

With Iran increasingly desperate, the nuclear hermit kingdom could step in and provide military aid such as "missile technology", Ingram said.

Russia has been one of Iran's most vocal allies, warning all along that regime change would be "unacceptable" - and Iran's foreign minister has already made plans to visit Putin after the US hit.

The Kremlin said assassinating Iran's supreme leader would "open Pandora's box".

Ingram expects that “Iran and Russia will join forces to try and cause as much disruption in different countries as possible."

Watch Trump hail 'very successful' bombing on Iran's nuke bases

Russia is well-versed in the dark arts, and has already propagated a campaign of sabotage against the West, so would have plenty to teach Iran.

Ingram said: “The escalating conflict helps Russia by moving Russia-Ukraine further down the agenda so that people aren't focusing on it.

“It also ties up international geopolitical organisations and politicians in a complex Middle East situation - so again they don't have the capacity to focus on what Russia's doing in Ukraine."

Chip Chapman, a retired Major General in the British Army, told The Sun that the most immediate threat to western allies would be if Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz - which could even see the UK dragged into the conflict.

He said: "20 percent of the world's oil runs through the strait. Closing it could have huge implications for the oil price.

“And that's where the Brits may get involved. If the Iranians were to try and close the Strait of Hormuz, there would be a definite ask from the Americans to the Brits."

President Trump addressing the press with three other men.President Donald Trump ordered major strikes against Iranian nuclear targetsCredit: APA soldier stands amidst the rubble of bombed-out buildings.Iran struck back almost immediately with waves of missiles into Israel - causing serious damage in Tel AvivCredit: Getty

Russia would likely back Iran's decision to close the strait, because an increase in oil prices would help fund its activities, Ingram explained.

Closer to home, Iran for many years enjoyed considerable power in the Middle East through its proxies across the region.

Two of the key players were Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon - but over the past 20 months Israel has seriously crippled them.

However, Ingram says the Houthis in Yemen still pose a threat to the world.

Since Israel and Iran began trading missiles, there have been large-scale anti-West protests in Sa'na, Yemen's capital, where there is deep support for the Houthis.

Ingram said: "I think we will see a massive uptake in Houthi activity in disrupting international shipping in the Red Sea."

And that's another crisis that would threaten to drag the UK into direct action.

Ingram explained: "The Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force would have to help protect shipping there.

"I can see more bombing raids going in against the Houthis that we will be part of."

Thousands of Houthi supporters demonstrate in Sana'a, Yemen, holding anti-US and Israeli signs.Houthi supporters hold anti-US and Israel placards during a protest this weekCredit: EPAMissiles launched from Iran intercepted over Tel Aviv.Missiles launched from Iran are intercepted following the US strikesCredit: Reuters

US-driven regime change would likely drive a wedge further between the West and the Islamic world - as happened with Iraq - the experts suggest.

Ingram said: "If the Ayatollah was killed it could change the whole way the government is set up in Iran, like we had with the fall of the Shah (a former Iranian leader)."

Illustration of GBU-57 bomb penetrating an underground target, with images of Donald Trump and Hassan Rouhani.

The growing tensions in Iran could also act as a spark to other flash points around the world - such as the China-Taiwan tensions.

Ingram said: “China will likely sit back and wait to see what's happening, to begin with.

"Xi Jinping might think the international community is so tied up in the Middle East, that he has a window of opportunity, and he might try and take Taiwan.

“The world is not just a more febrile place, but the potential for a series of events to happen to take us into a global conflict have just become even more complex to try and analyse. 

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“We haven't moved away from conflict. We have moved away from a despot regime getting towns on nuclear weapons, but it's not made the world immediately safer. 

“What happens over the coming days and weeks will let us understand as to whether we have moved back from the brink of a global conflict or move further forward.”