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- DefconWarningSystem
This is The DEFCON Warning System. Alert status for 1 PM UTC, Monday, 13th July 2026:
Condition Green – DEFCON 5.
There are currently no imminent nuclear threats at this time.
Iran ceasefire collapses, but nuclear danger remains indirect
The most serious deterioration this week occurred in the Gulf. The interim United States–Iran arrangement has given way to renewed attacks on commercial shipping, sustained American strikes on Iran and Iranian retaliation against countries hosting United States forces.
This increases the danger of a wider conventional war and weakens the diplomatic route for containing Iran’s nuclear programme. It does not, however, amount to evidence that a nuclear attack is imminent. Iran has not formally withdrawn from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, satellite activity does not prove that enrichment or weapons production has resumed, and none of the developments reviewed here includes observed preparations for nuclear use.
The more credible nuclear danger is a developing chain of decisions: Iran may conclude that only a nuclear deterrent can prevent future attacks; the United States or Israel may respond with further pre-emptive action; and other regional governments may reconsider their own long-term nuclear options.
Hormuz attacks restart the cycle of retaliation
On 6th and 7th July, three commercial vessels were struck by Iran while travelling through or near the Strait of Hormuz. The United States responded militarily.
U.S. Central Command said that its first renewed operation struck more than 80 targets, including Iranian air-defence systems, command networks, coastal radar, anti-ship missile capabilities and more than 60 Revolutionary Guard small boats. Iran then attacked Kuwait and Bahrain, both of which host United States military facilities. By the weekend, Central Command said it had struck more than 300 Iranian targets over three nights. American attacks continued on Iranian air defences, missile and drone facilities, coastal radar and naval assets.
Iran expanded its response beyond Kuwait and Bahrain. Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and Oman also reported or responded to Iranian missile or drone attacks. The wider geographic range increases the chance that an interception failure, significant civilian casualties or deaths among United States personnel could trigger a substantially larger response.
Iran announced the closure of the strait again over the weekend after firing on vessels it said were using unauthorised routes. Its newly created Persian Gulf Strait Authority said permits would resume when stability returned. The United States said Iran did not control the strait and that an expanded southern route near Oman remained available, although commercial traffic was sharply reduced. Both countries are now publicly asserting authority over the waterway.
The president of the United States said he considered the ceasefire “over”, but neither side has completely closed the diplomatic channel. Iran’s foreign minister travelled to Oman to discuss maritime arrangements, while United States officials continued to leave open the possibility of talks. This is therefore a collapse in restraint rather than a conclusive end to diplomacy.
Strategically, Hormuz is no longer only a shipping dispute. Iran regards control of passage as its strongest surviving leverage, while the United States regards unrestricted navigation as non-negotiable. Each side can therefore interpret restraint by the other as recognition of its claim. That makes limited strikes less likely to settle the dispute and more likely to produce another round of escalation.
NPT threat is serious, but not yet state policy
A spokesperson for the Iranian parliament’s National Security Commission said retaliatory options included withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, a change in Iran’s nuclear doctrine and possible action against the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait. This was a significant statement, but it was not a formal government decision or notice of withdrawal. The NPT threat was one of several options publicly raised after the American strikes.
The spokesperson did not define a change in nuclear doctrine. In this context, it could include abandoning Iran’s declared opposition to developing nuclear weapons, but no such change has been formally adopted as state policy.
Under Article X of the NPT, a country must give the other treaty parties and the United Nations Security Council three months’ notice, together with an explanation of the extraordinary events it says have jeopardised its supreme interests. Iran has not taken that step.
Nevertheless, a formal withdrawal would be one of the clearest possible signals that Iran was moving away from nuclear restraint. It would not instantly give Iran a weapon, but it would seek to remove an important legal and political barrier, deepen uncertainty over nuclear material and shorten the time available for other countries to judge Iranian intentions. In wartime, that uncertainty could itself encourage pre-emptive strikes.
For now, the statement is best assessed as both coercive leverage and a warning of a possible policy path. Treating it as an accomplished decision would overstate the evidence; dismissing it as empty rhetoric would ignore the direction of debate inside Iran.
Iran also has the option to develop nuclear weapons clandestinely without formally declaring its withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Condition Green – DEFCON 5.
There are currently no imminent nuclear threats at this time.
Iran ceasefire collapses, but nuclear danger remains indirect
The most serious deterioration this week occurred in the Gulf. The interim United States–Iran arrangement has given way to renewed attacks on commercial shipping, sustained American strikes on Iran and Iranian retaliation against countries hosting United States forces.
This increases the danger of a wider conventional war and weakens the diplomatic route for containing Iran’s nuclear programme. It does not, however, amount to evidence that a nuclear attack is imminent. Iran has not formally withdrawn from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, satellite activity does not prove that enrichment or weapons production has resumed, and none of the developments reviewed here includes observed preparations for nuclear use.
The more credible nuclear danger is a developing chain of decisions: Iran may conclude that only a nuclear deterrent can prevent future attacks; the United States or Israel may respond with further pre-emptive action; and other regional governments may reconsider their own long-term nuclear options.
Hormuz attacks restart the cycle of retaliation
On 6th and 7th July, three commercial vessels were struck by Iran while travelling through or near the Strait of Hormuz. The United States responded militarily.
U.S. Central Command said that its first renewed operation struck more than 80 targets, including Iranian air-defence systems, command networks, coastal radar, anti-ship missile capabilities and more than 60 Revolutionary Guard small boats. Iran then attacked Kuwait and Bahrain, both of which host United States military facilities. By the weekend, Central Command said it had struck more than 300 Iranian targets over three nights. American attacks continued on Iranian air defences, missile and drone facilities, coastal radar and naval assets.
Iran expanded its response beyond Kuwait and Bahrain. Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and Oman also reported or responded to Iranian missile or drone attacks. The wider geographic range increases the chance that an interception failure, significant civilian casualties or deaths among United States personnel could trigger a substantially larger response.
Iran announced the closure of the strait again over the weekend after firing on vessels it said were using unauthorised routes. Its newly created Persian Gulf Strait Authority said permits would resume when stability returned. The United States said Iran did not control the strait and that an expanded southern route near Oman remained available, although commercial traffic was sharply reduced. Both countries are now publicly asserting authority over the waterway.
The president of the United States said he considered the ceasefire “over”, but neither side has completely closed the diplomatic channel. Iran’s foreign minister travelled to Oman to discuss maritime arrangements, while United States officials continued to leave open the possibility of talks. This is therefore a collapse in restraint rather than a conclusive end to diplomacy.
Strategically, Hormuz is no longer only a shipping dispute. Iran regards control of passage as its strongest surviving leverage, while the United States regards unrestricted navigation as non-negotiable. Each side can therefore interpret restraint by the other as recognition of its claim. That makes limited strikes less likely to settle the dispute and more likely to produce another round of escalation.
NPT threat is serious, but not yet state policy
A spokesperson for the Iranian parliament’s National Security Commission said retaliatory options included withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, a change in Iran’s nuclear doctrine and possible action against the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait. This was a significant statement, but it was not a formal government decision or notice of withdrawal. The NPT threat was one of several options publicly raised after the American strikes.
The spokesperson did not define a change in nuclear doctrine. In this context, it could include abandoning Iran’s declared opposition to developing nuclear weapons, but no such change has been formally adopted as state policy.
Under Article X of the NPT, a country must give the other treaty parties and the United Nations Security Council three months’ notice, together with an explanation of the extraordinary events it says have jeopardised its supreme interests. Iran has not taken that step.
Nevertheless, a formal withdrawal would be one of the clearest possible signals that Iran was moving away from nuclear restraint. It would not instantly give Iran a weapon, but it would seek to remove an important legal and political barrier, deepen uncertainty over nuclear material and shorten the time available for other countries to judge Iranian intentions. In wartime, that uncertainty could itself encourage pre-emptive strikes.
For now, the statement is best assessed as both coercive leverage and a warning of a possible policy path. Treating it as an accomplished decision would overstate the evidence; dismissing it as empty rhetoric would ignore the direction of debate inside Iran.
Iran also has the option to develop nuclear weapons clandestinely without formally declaring its withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
