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[🇧🇩] Iran Israel War: It's Impact On Bangladesh

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[🇧🇩] Iran Israel War: It's Impact On Bangladesh
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What will happen to the world and Bangladesh if the Strait of Hormuz gets shut down?

3 March 2026, 14:38 PM
Kawsar Uddin Mahmud

On February 28, 2026, as soon as the US and Israeli aircraft had struck the Iranian cities, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corp (IRGC) began reportedly broadcasting warnings that, “No ship is allowed to pass the Strait of Hormuz.” Tanker operators suspended transits. As of March 2, 2026, Brent crude, the global benchmark for oil prices, surged to a seven-month high, to around $82 per barrel. What those numbers exhibit is not merely an energy story but a question of geopolitical architecture and which economies absorb the shockwave when a global chokepoint carries roughly one-fifth of the world’s daily oil supply. The Strait of Hormuz has always been a point of vulnerability. The US-Iran war has altered it into a weapon now.

Approximately 20 million barrels of crude oil passed through Hormuz in 2024. Close to 27 percent of all global maritime petroleum trade passed through the strait in the first quarter of 2025. The strait is a critical, narrow chokepoint, with a 33-39 kilometers waterway between Oman and Iran. The most consequential chokepoint in the world has a shipping lane which is roughly 3 kilometers wide in either direction. Western planners long dismissed possibilities of a closure because Iran itself also exported roughly 1-1.7million barrels per day through the strait. However, that calculus collapsed the moment sustained bombardment targeted Iran’s nuclear sites, command infrastructure, and killed its supreme leader. A state fighting for survival retains little interest in preserving the global economic normalcy that the Strait of Hormuz holds.

Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, countries must allow “innocent passage” of foreign vessels through these territorial waters and must not impede “innocent” or “transit passage” through straits used for international navigation. While Iran signed this treaty in 1982, it hasn’t been ratified by the nation’s parliament. Therefore, threats of naval blockade from the Iranian parliament to fully shut off the strait is possible. Though it would undoubtedly be met with sharp condemnation from the West, particularly the US — Iranian political will is no longer in question.

What makes this moment categorically more perilous than prior Hormuz crises is the convergence of Iranian political anger with demonstrated military capacity. Bob McNally of Rapidan Energy Group noted that Iran holds large stockpiles of naval mines and short-range missiles which markets have consistently underpriced. The IRGC has already struck Qatar, Kuwait, the UAE, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Oman. A formal blockade on the strait may not even be necessary. Analysis by Wasel & Wasel observed, sustained pressure on insurers to abandon Hormuz coverage could achieve economically what a kinetic blockade cannot achieve militarily in the near term.

The global cost of a closed strait

A prolonged closure of the strait can be as three times more severe than the combined impact of the 1970 Arab oil embargo and the Iranian revolution. According to analysts, prolonged Hormuz closure might even provoke a recession. Saudi Arabia’s east-west pipeline to the Red Sea operates around a capacity of 5 million barrels a day. But this route cannot fully compensate for a Hormuz closure, and would create a vulnerability gap of 7 million barrels a day. The UAE’s alternative Habshan-Fujairah pipeline, handles only 1.5 to 1.8 million barrels per day. Data from Kpler recorded that approximately 13 to 14 million barrels per day of crude oil passed through the strait in 2025; only a marginal fraction of this volume can be rerouted through alternative pathways, leaving a vast majority of oil at risk during a shutdown.

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The Strait of Hormuz has always been a point of vulnerability. PHOTO:AFP

The LNG dimension hones the crisis further. Roughly 20 percent of global LNG exports transit Hormuz, predominantly from Qatar, the world’s largest exporter. For European wholesale gas prices, it could triple to $100 per megawatt hour were the strait to close entirely for approximately three months. Analysts warned that closing shipping in the Middle East and high gas prices resulting from this would be detrimental to inflation and have similar impacts to the economy during Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Analysts predict that Asia would be impacted most. China, India, Japan and South Korea accounted for a combined 69 percent intake of all crude oil and condensate flows through the strait last year. Though China does not disclose its exact figures of oil it imports from Iran, 40-50 percent of China’s imported oil comes from Gulf states, and nearly all of it flows through the Strait of Hormuz. Any possible closure would be shocking for China.

Ali Waez, International Crisis Group’s director of the Iran project, has argued that prices would not merely spike but gap violently upward on fear alone, with reverberations through financial conditions, inflation, and the fiscal positions of fragile economies in a matter of weeks.

Iran’s deterrence and the logic of asymmetric retaliation

Iran’s posture toward Hormuz is not reckless. It is the terminal expression of a deterrence strategy that has exhausted every other instrument. For four decades the Islamic Republic confronted sanctions, covert sabotage, the assassination of senior commanders, and episodic strikes without weaponising the one asymmetric capability that could impose prohibitive costs on its adversaries. The February 2026 campaign dissolved whatever residual strategic patience Tehran possessed.

However, Iran cannot defeat the joint US-Israeli force conventionally, nor reconstitute its nuclear programme. Whatever the missile and arsenal capacities, what grave coin it has left and can do is to make the global economy a battlefield. In this respect, Hormuz closure would give rise to gasoline price spikes corrosive to Trump’s domestic standing and confront Europe with a fresh energy shock. Iran’s leverage is not symmetry of force. It is the capacity to make the political sustainability of continued operations untenable in every capital dependent on Gulf energy.

It is true that self-destructive dimension is real. Iran’s own oil exports also transit the strait. Nevertheless, a state fighting for survival works out under a different cost-benefit framework than one managing routine deterrence. IRGC warnings are already deterring commercial traffic. And, each additional day of strikes against Iranian territory condenses the political cost of taking the final step.

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Tankers staying away from Strait of Hormuz amid Iran conflict. Photo: Reuters

Bangladesh on the fault line

Bangladesh is a net hydrocarbon importer with negligible domestic reserves. The country’s balance of payments is reliant on remittances. The export economy of Bangladesh is highly concentrated in one low-margin industry that is very vulnerable to fluctuations in freight costs. In the first nine months of fiscal year 2024-25 (July 2024 to March 2025), Bangladesh imported crude oil worth $515.6 million and refined petroleum products worth $3.57 billion. For the full fiscal year FY 2024-25, BPC lowered previous allocation for fuel imports, to approximately BDT 759.82 billion. According to expert Dr Ijaz Hossain, the Strait is a lifeline for Bangladesh’s energy supply. A prolonged geopolitical conflict could have spillover effects.

For example, if Brent reaches $100, the pressure on the current account would be grim. Although the gross forex reserve of Bangladesh is somewhat positive with around $33-35 billion, a continuous oil price surge against the matrix poses severe risks of a balance of payments crisis due to increased import costs and energy supply disruptions.

The remittance channel further heightens the risks. Bangladesh earned approximately $27 billion in remittances in 2024, overwhelmingly from workers in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, and Oman. A conflict destabilising Gulf labour markets or compelling mass worker returns would strip a macroeconomic buffer on which Bangladesh Bank depends to manage reserves and exchange rate stability. The Taka has already depreciated materially over two years; further reserve depletion advances the domestic cost of every import into an economy where inflation has crossed double digits. The garment sector, making 80 percent of export earnings, airs additional exposure through rising freight costs and insurance premiums as underwriters reprice Gulf transit risk. The Hormuz crisis is not Bangladesh’s war. But its consequences are bound to reach Dhaka if it goes into full closure.

Kawsar Uddin Mahmud is a Lecturer in the Department of International Relations, Netrokona University (NeU).​
 
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Protests against attacks on Iran continue
Staff Correspondent 04 March, 2026, 00:57

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The Jatiya Chhatra Shakti, student wing of the National Citizen Party, holds a protest rally, condemning the United States’ and Israel’s aggression on Iran and Palestine, in front of the Anti-Violence Raju Memorial Sculpture on the Dhaka University campus on Tuesday. | Focus Bangla photo

Different political parties in Bangladesh on Tuesday continued protesting at the joint attacks on Iran by United States and Israel.

At separate protest rallies in Dhaka, they called on the US and Israeli governments to stop their attacks on the Gulf state of Iran.

Revolutionary Workers Party of Bangladesh held a rally in front of the National Press Club where its general secretary Saiful Huq called on the US and Israeli governments to stop attacks on Iran immediately.

The attacks have proved that the US-Israeli governments are leading imperialist attacks, claiming to protect democracy, he said.

Central leader Akbar Khan called on the world community to stand beside Iran to compel the attackers to stop bombing the country.

The rally was followed by a protest procession that paraded different city roads.

Ganosamhati Andolan in a press statement condemned the attack and its executive coordinator Abul Hassan Rubel called on US and Israeli governments to stop the attacks.

Rashtra Sanskar Andolan president Hasnat Quaiyum criticised the foreign ministry of Bangladesh government for their failure to take strong steps against the attacks.

Jatiya Mukti Council coordinator Faiezul Hakim in a press statement opposed scheduled visit of US assistant foreign minister Paul Kapur in Bangladesh.

During the war against Iran, the people of Bangladesh would not accept such a visit of a US official in the country.

He called on the BNP government to postpone the unequal deals signed with the US by the interim government.

Communist Party of Bangladesh will hold a torch procession today from Purana Paltan demanding an end to the attacks on Iran.

The war launched by the US and Israel on Iran on Saturday has spread across the Gulf states with retaliatory strike from Tehran on the US bases in the region after its supreme leader leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in the joint attack.​
 
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Iran-Israel conflict: Looming threat to Bangladesh’s Middle East remittance lifeline

Mousumi Islam
Published: 03 Mar 2026, 04:28 PM

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As geopolitical tensions escalate in the Middle East, concerns are mounting over their potential ripple effects on remittance-dependent economies like Bangladesh. The direct confrontation between Iran and Israel, along with the involvement of the United States, has injected fresh uncertainty into global energy markets and regional economic stability. For Bangladesh -- where nearly 70% of remittances originate from Middle Eastern nations -- the stakes are particularly high.

With around six million Bangladeshi expatriates working across Gulf countries and remittance inflows reaching a record $32.8 billion in 2025, any prolonged instability could pose significant risks to foreign exchange reserves, labour markets, and overall economic growth.

While experts suggest that short-term disruptions may not immediately derail remittance flows, a prolonged conflict could reshape employment opportunities and financial stability for millions of families dependent on overseas income.

According to recent data from Bangladesh Bank, around 65-70% of Bangladesh’s total remittances come from Middle Eastern countries. From July to January of the current fiscal year, the top remittance-sending countries were: Saudi Arabia $3,014 million, United Arab Emirates $2,667 million, Oman $1,131 million, Kuwait $975 million, Qatar $878 million.

Currently, around six million Bangladeshi expatriates are living in the Middle East. In the wake of the recent conflict, casualties among Bangladeshi nationals have been reported in the UAE and Bahrain.

Due to partial or complete airspace closures, 74 flights were canceled over three days at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport in Dhaka, leaving thousands of expatriates in uncertainty. Many are unable to return to their workplaces after leave, while others face visa complications as their permits near expiration.

What are the risks if the war prolongs?

Analysts warn that if the conflict drags on, it could create multifaceted pressure on import-dependent and remittance-dependent economies like Bangladesh. Rising oil prices would increase import costs, affecting the broader economy. At the same time, deteriorating security conditions in Gulf countries could lead to the suspension of infrastructure projects, slower visa processing and recruitment, and contraction in employment opportunities.

Bangladesh’s labour market is heavily Middle East–centric. About 67% of total migrant workers go to Saudi Arabia. Qatar ranks second, followed by Kuwait, the UAE, and Jordan. Due to the war situation, nearly every Middle Eastern country now poses potential risks to Bangladesh’s overseas labour market.

According to the Bureau of Manpower, Employment and Training (BMET), 1,131,144 workers went abroad for employment in 2025. Of them, 754,369 (67%) workers went to Saudi Arabia.

Additionally, 107,596 went to Qatar, 42,241 to Kuwait, 13,752 to the UAE, and 12,301 to Jordan.

In the first two months of the current year, Saudi Arabia remained the top destination, with 108,919 workers migrating there. Singapore ranked second, followed by Qatar, Kuwait, Jordan, the UAE, and Iraq.

Bangladesh Bank's spokesman Arief Hossain Khan said, “It has only been three or four days since the war, so the impact is not yet clear. However, if the war is prolonged and expatriates lose their jobs, there will be a big impact on remittances.”

Professor Mustafizur Rahman is a Distinguished Fellow at the Centre for Policy Dialogue (CPD) said, “The situation is worrying. The duration of the conflict will determine how much damage will be done to the economy. If the current war spreads across the Middle East, there is a risk that remittance flows will decrease. This could have a profound impact on the Bangladeshi economy and the lives of ordinary people."

Limited direct trade, greater indirect risks

Bangladesh’s direct trade with Iran is relatively small, with bilateral trade slightly exceeding $10 million. In fiscal year 2024–25, Bangladesh exported goods worth $10.9 million to Iran, mainly jute yarn and ready-made garments. Imports from Iran remain minimal, largely due to banking complications stemming from sanctions.

However, despite limited direct trade, indirect impacts could be significant-particularly through rising oil prices, increased shipping costs, and pressure on foreign exchange reserves.

Need for alternative labour markets and preparedness

Experts believe that a short-term conflict may not severely affect the labour market; reconstruction efforts could even increase demand for workers. However, a prolonged war could trigger large-scale employment disruptions, prompting many expatriates to return home.

Former World Bank lead economist Zahid Hussain told the Daily Sun that if the war remains short-lived -- ending within two weeks -- the labour market impact may be minimal, and reconstruction could boost labor demand. But if it becomes prolonged, there will be significant negative consequences: fear, uncertainty, and loss of jobs. Many expatriates may seek to return home.

He emphasised that the government should prepare contingency plans in advance, including strategies for repatriating workers if the conflict becomes long-term.

He further noted that Bangladesh’s overseas labour force largely consists of unskilled and semi-skilled workers, whose demand is mostly limited to Middle Eastern countries. In contrast, countries like Japan and European nations seek skilled workers. Significant investment in skill development would be necessary for Bangladesh to diversify its labour markets and reduce dependence on a single region.​
 
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Protracted war can weaken Bangladesh’s economy

Experts say country’s energy security, exports, overseas jobs can be on the line

Refayet Ullah Mirdha

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Smoke rises in the sky after blasts were heard in Manama, Bahrain. Photo: AFP

The US-Iran war is poised to increase the prices of imported petroleum products, LNG and disrupt the supply chain of industrial raw materials.

“Bangladesh is always a victim of geo-political tension as the country is an importing nation,” said Harun-Ur-Rashid, chairman of Bangladesh Container Shipping Association.

The overall macroeconomic stability may be affected, said Masrur Reaz, chairman of Policy Exchange, Bangladesh.

Firstly, both the price and supply of energy will be unstable for Bangladesh if the war continues, as the Middle East is the main import source for Bangladesh.

Such a situation will create a burden on the balance of payment and foreign exchange reserves.

Secondly, the main shipping artery of goods between Asia and Europe and partly the US, the Suez Canal, is very close to Iran and the war may affect the transportation of Bangladesh’s exports to Europe and the US, he said.

Thirdly, Middle Eastern countries are the main labour market for Bangladesh and the long-term war may discourage them from recruiting more labour, Reaz added.

Since the local energy security plan has not been functioning well, the country is mainly dependent on the import of energy, said Mohammed Amirul Haque, managing director of Delta LPG and president of the LPG Operators Association of Bangladesh.

Any long-term war in the Middle East will invariably have a bad impact on the oil price, transportation of the LPG and availability of the LPG in the international markets, he said.

“If the war continues, we will be in a vulnerable situation,” he added.

Long-term war will affect the shipping of goods from Bangladesh as the country has already reduced the shipping of goods through the Red Sea due to the Houthi attack earlier, Rashid said.

If Russia and China get involved in this war, the shipping of goods will suffer a lot, he added.

“Of course, we will have to face the impacts of the war, as we are an exporting country, especially the garment exporters,” said Mahmud Hasan Khan, president of Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA).

For instance, the war will cut the budget of consumers as they will spend less on items such as garments.

Secondly, the oil price hike will increase the cost of production in the domestic markets, as Bangladesh is an energy-importing nation.

Thirdly, if the local exporters have to choose an alternative route for carrying goods to Europe and the US because of the war, the whole trade will be affected severely, he said.

Bangladeshi garment exporters thought that the Ukraine war will be over within two weeks, but the war has been going on for four years now.

So, if the US-Iran war continues for long, the export markets of Kuwait, Iraq, Iran, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern countries may be affected severely, he added.

Bangladesh exported goods worth $10.9 million, mainly garment and pharmaceuticals, to Iran’s $65 billion-market in fiscal 2024-25, according to data from the commerce ministry.​
 
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