The spectre of a permanent state of crisis now hangs over the Middle East, according to Downing Street’s latest strategic assessment. Jeremy Bowen, the BBC’s veteran Middle East editor, has sounded the alarm that the policies of Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu are driving the region towards a ‘permacrisis’ a seemingly endless cycle of instability and conflict. For the British government, this serves as a clarion call for a fundamental diplomatic reset, but the question remains: can Whitehall shift the dial when market forces are already pricing in chaos?
The term ‘permacrisis’ not so long ago applied to financial turmoil is now a geopolitical reality. The Trump administration’s unilateralism combined with Netanyahu’s far right coalition has created a feedback loop of escalation. The gilt market has taken note. UK government bond yields have ticked up this week as investors demand a risk premium for a world where diplomatic off ramps are closing. The 10 year yield is now hovering near 4.2%, reflecting not just domestic inflation fears but a broader geopolitical unease.
Bowen’s analysis is stark. He points to the abandonment of the two state solution, the expansion of settlements, and the normalisation of hardline rhetoric as ingredients for a permanent emergency. For the City, this translates into capital flight from emerging markets and a flight to safety that has pushed gold to record highs. The irony is that the British government’s own fiscal headroom is being eroded by the very instability it seeks to manage.
Downing Street’s strategy is a cautious one. Rather than outright confrontation, the UK is pushing for a diplomatic reset, rebuilding bridges with European allies and courting moderate Arab states. This is a sensible hedge against the volatility that Trump and Netanyahu have unleashed. Yet Treasury officials must be sweating over the cost. Every pound spent on overseas aid or military readiness is a pound not used to shore up the public finances. The Office for Budget Responsibility will soon have to factor in a prolonged period of geopolitical risk into its forecasts.
The market’s verdict is already in. The pound has struggled to hold above $1.25, a sign that currency traders see little upside in a British economy exposed to global uncertainty. Meanwhile, inflation remains sticky above 3%, a hangover from energy shocks and supply chain disruption that shows no sign of easing. If the crisis deepens, the Bank of England may be forced to keep rates higher for longer, choking off the fragile recovery.
What of the protagonists? Trump’s transactional approach sees the Middle East as a business deal, but without a viable exit strategy. Netanyahu’s coalition partners are ideologically committed to annexation, a move that would torpedo any peace process. The result is a market failure of epic proportions: the price of stability has become unaffordable.
For the British taxpayer, the bottom line is clear. A permacrisis means higher borrowing costs, a weaker pound, and more money spent on defence and diplomacy. The diplomatic reset is a necessary first step, but it is no magic bullet. The market will be watching to see if Whitehall can turn rhetoric into results. If not, the crisis will not just be permanent, but costly.








