A live diplomatic tremor has erupted in the White House. Jeremy Bowen, the BBC’s veteran Middle East editor, has issued a stark warning that the alliance between Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu is driving the region towards a state of permacrisis. The term, once confined to academic think tanks, now pulses through the cables of Whitehall. British diplomacy has flickered to high alert, monitoring a situation that threatens to unravel decades of fragile stability.
Bowen’s analysis cuts through the noise. He argues that Trump’s transactional approach to foreign policy, combined with Netanyahu’s own survival instincts, creates a feedback loop of escalation. Each move, each tweet, each settlement expansion becomes a variable in an unstable algorithm. The result is not a single conflict but a prolonged state of friction, where peace becomes a legacy software no one can run.
The user experience of this crisis is already being felt on the ground. In Gaza, the West Bank, and across the Gulf, societies are bracing for a new normal. The British Foreign Office has activated its crisis response protocols, drawing on lessons from the Iraq inquiry and the Arab Spring. There is a sense that the diplomatic architecture, built on the pillars of Oslo and Camp David, is now showing structural cracks.
What does a permacrisis look like in practice? It is not a war with clear battle lines, but a series of chronic, low-grade conflicts that erode trust and drain resources. It is the kind of scenario that keeps quantum computing experts awake at night, because the variables become too complex to model. For the average citizen, it means a constant background hum of uncertainty, interrupted by spikes of violence that demand attention but never resolve.
British diplomacy, traditionally the mediator in the region, now finds itself in a delicate balancing act. London must maintain the special relationship with Washington while not alienating European partners who view the Trump-Netanyahu axis with alarm. The Foreign Secretary has been in constant contact with counterparts in Cairo, Riyadh, and Amman, seeking a circuit breaker. But the digital sovereignty of Middle Eastern states complicates things. Encryption, social media manipulation, and cyber warfare are now tools of statecraft, making old-school shuttle diplomacy feel like sending a telegram in the age of fibre optics.
Bowen’s warning is not just a critique of two individuals. It is a commentary on the systemic failure of the international community to adapt to a multipolar world. The old power structures, where the US and UK could impose order, are obsolete. Now, every action triggers a reaction through networks of proxies, militias, and online outrage. The permacrisis is a feature of this new system, not a bug.
As I write this, the servers of the Foreign Office are processing data from sources ranging from satellite imagery to WhatsApp intercepts. The AI models are running simulations, but they keep hitting the same dead end: without a genuine commitment to two-state solution, the cycle continues. Trump’s peace plan, touted as the deal of the century, now looks like a beta test that crashed at launch.
For British diplomacy, high alert means heightened risk but also opportunity. London can leverage its intelligence relationships, its cultural ties, and its diaspora networks to create off-ramps. It can push for a ceasefire that holds longer than a news cycle. But it requires a level of coordination that nation states have historically failed to achieve.
The permacrisis is not inevitable. Bowen’s warning is a call to action, a diagnosis before the system fails entirely. The question is whether the leaders involved have the vision to rewrite the code of Middle Eastern politics, or whether they will let the bugs cascade into a system-wide failure. British diplomacy is on high alert, watching the screen, waiting to see if anyone hits the reset button.












