Another day, another crisis. As the drums of war beat louder against Iran, the British public is left to count the cost before a single shot is fired. The latest sabre-rattling from Washington has sent oil prices into a frenzy, and your household bills are already feeling the sting.
It is a tragically predictable cycle: geopolitical tension in the Middle East leads to a spike in energy costs, which in turn squeezes the already strained budgets of British families. The irony is almost too much to bear. We have spent years lecturing the public about energy independence and green transitions, yet we remain hopelessly tethered to the whims of petrostates and American foreign policy.
The average dual-fuel bill now threatens to surpass the grim landmarks we saw in 2022, and the government’s response is typical: a mix of platitudes and temporary fixes. Meanwhile, the intellectual class wrings its hands over the moral implications of intervention while ignoring the immediate material consequences for those who cannot afford to heat their homes. This is not new.
We have seen this before, in the run-up to the Iraq War, when the warning signs were ignored and the bills piled up. The difference now is that the public is poorer, the debt is higher, and the patience for foreign adventurism has worn thin. If the architects of this new cold war with Iran think they can shield the British people from its costs, they are deluded.
The shockwaves are already here, in the form of higher fuel bills, rising transport costs, and the creeping inflation that will follow. The question is not whether a war will happen, but whether our leaders have the courage to tell the truth about what it will cost. Do not hold your breath.








