The First Non Human Economy Is Being Built by AI
The next phase of artificial intelligence may not be about automation but economics. AI agents are beginning to earn, spend, hire, and transact, creating the foundations of a machine economy.
The next phase of artificial intelligence may not be about automation but economics. AI agents are beginning to earn, spend, hire, and transact, creating the foundations of a machine economy.
Iran’s missile campaign may be targeting something far more important than airbases or cities. Radar stations across the Gulf form the sensor architecture that guides American and allied missile defences. As those radars disappear, warning times shrink, interceptor efficiency falls, and a wider strategy begins to emerge.
Israel’s most serious conflict is no longer only external. Beneath the war and political turmoil lies a deeper struggle over the character of the state itself: a clash between an institutional Israel built on courts, military professionalism, and a secular civic elite, and a rising nationalist project that seeks to subordinate those institutions to majoritarian Jewish sovereignty.
For decades Germany’s industrial success rested on a quiet geopolitical formula: cheap Russian energy, global export markets, and American security guarantees. As those pillars fracture in a multipolar world, Berlin is discovering that economic strength without strategy leaves a nation dangerously exposed.
Artificial intelligence companies once promised to slow development if systems became dangerous. In 2026 even the most safety focused AI lab admitted it could not pause while competitors raced ahead, revealing the reality of the global AI arms race.
Iran does not need to defeat the United States or Israel quickly. Its strategy appears to be something colder: sustain missile and drone attacks long enough to exhaust interceptor stockpiles, stretch defensive systems across the Gulf, and turn the Strait of Hormuz into an economic lever that transmits the war through energy prices, shipping insurance and global supply chains.
A deeper look at the war with Iran suggests the conflict may be driven less by nuclear fears than by a struggle over oil, currency power, and the financial architecture that has underpinned the global economy since the 1970s.
The sinking of the Iranian frigate Dena off Sri Lanka has raised allegations that the attacking submarine violated the Geneva Conventions by failing to rescue survivors. Yet Article 18 imposes a conditional obligation. In submarine warfare, the duty to rescue exists only where operational circumstances permit.
Day five of the war with Iran shows the conflict expanding beyond the opening strikes into a regional systems confrontation. Missile exchanges, tanker attacks, insurance market panic and rising energy prices now reveal how the war is spreading through the Gulf and into the global economy.
What began as a decapitation strike against Iran has, by the fifth day, expanded into a regional confrontation touching US bases, Gulf monarchies, Israel’s northern front, and global energy routes. The structure of the conflict now points less toward a short campaign than toward a prolonged war of missiles, endurance, and industrial capacity.
If the war fails to eliminate Iran’s missile and drone capability, Israel faces the outcome it has warned about for decades: an enduring existential threat. Under those conditions, when conventional war fails to remove the danger, the question of nuclear escalation enters the strategic calculation.
Energy markets have already repriced risk as conflict disrupts Gulf oil and LNG flows. If instability around the Strait of Hormuz persists beyond a fortnight, Europe could face a renewed inflation surge that spreads from power bills to wages and growth.
The conflict with Iran has done what decades of geopolitical tension could not: turn the Strait of Hormuz into a commercial dead end. With war risk insurance withdrawn and premiums spiking, tankers and LNG carriers are stranded, energy markets are rattled and fertiliser flows are tightening a supply shock likely to ripple from fuel to food.
The assassination of Iranian leadership during active negotiation for the second time in six months has transformed a limited military gamble into a structural crisis of trust, widening the conflict beyond the battlefield and undermining the credibility of diplomacy itself.
An evidence-based analysis of missile inventories, interceptor burn rates, production capacity, and cost exchange ratios to assess whether the United States and Israel or Iran would exhaust missile capabilities first in a prolonged conflict.
The war in the Gulf is no longer a scenario to be modelled. It is underway, and its first strategic theatre is not only the battlefield but the Strait of Hormuz. As tankers hesitate and insurers recalculate risk, oil markets are repricing in real time. The conflict has moved from missiles to markets, from deterrence theory to inflation data. The question is no longer whether disruption will occur. It is how far the economic shock will travel.
Israel launched roughly 200 aircraft in the opening wave. The USS Abraham Lincoln pulled back 800 kilometres from the Strait of Hormuz while three Arleigh Burke destroyers remained inside the Gulf to defend Bahrain and regional bases. With Iranian ballistic missiles still launching and interceptor stocks reportedly thin, the conflict may hinge not on shock, but on whether this first cycle imposes enough cost to prevent the next.
The United States has crossed a threshold no previous administration dared approach. By killing Iran’s Supreme Leader, Washington has not merely eliminated a political adversary. It has struck at the sacred constitutional core of the Islamic Republic, transforming a strategic conflict into a struggle framed in martyrdom, honour, and obligation. The consequences are unlikely to remain contained within Iran’s borders.
Washington may win the opening exchanges against Iran, but the structural balance of this conflict tells a darker story. Industrial limits, energy vulnerability in the Gulf, and the logic of attrition suggest that this war will not be short, and it will not be easily controlled. The danger is not immediate defeat, but prolonged erosion that leaves America weaker than when it began.
In the early hours before dawn, United States and Israeli forces struck deep inside Iran in what Tehran sources describe as an attempt to decapitate the country’s leadership. Explosions tore through areas linked to the supreme leadership and security command in Tehran, and within hours Iran unleashed ballistic missiles and drones toward Israel and US bases across the Gulf, igniting the most dangerous regional confrontation in years and sending shockwaves through global energy markets.
Europe’s defence surge is not just a military response. It is a structural reallocation of capital away from productivity and energy competitiveness toward deterrence. As American burden shifting accelerates and energy differentials persist, the real question is whether Europe can finance autonomy without eroding the economic base that sustains it.
The USS Gerald R. Ford has entered the Eastern Mediterranean, shifting deterrence into a confined missile environment where endurance , not the opening strike, will determine escalation.
In July 2025, Sanseito jumped from one seat to fifteen on a Japanese First message. In November 2025, Tokyo’s Taiwan language triggered a sharp response from Beijing. These are not separate dramas. They are the same structural pressure showing up at home and abroad.
Three strikes in June 2025, a renewed zero enrichment demand in Washington, and open warnings from Tehran about American bases in the Gulf have shifted the Iran confrontation from negotiation to operational risk, with the Strait of Hormuz emerging as the decisive economic fault line.
Artificial intelligence is no longer a classroom accessory — it is beginning to restructure schooling itself. From private mastery-based models in the United States to state-mandated AI literacy in China and cautious integration in Russia, education systems are entering a global redesign phase whose consequences remain uncertain.
For more than forty years, the Chinese economy has sustained growth, industrial upgrading, and social stability under a system Western economics said could not function. It was not just cheap labour, exports, or repression. It was an institutional invention that fused markets with state power. The uncomfortable question is no longer why the Chinese economy rose, but why prevailing theory still cannot explain it.
This is the second article in a series examining why artificial intelligence can raise productivity without raising living standards. While the first piece focused on how AI increases output per hour, this follow-up explains why Britain’s economic structure absorbs those gains instead of translating them into broader prosperity.
The United States has quietly assembled the operational architecture required for sustained air operations against Iran. Refuelling aircraft, carrier positioning, heavy lift throughput and missile defence shifts suggest that feasibility has risen, even if intent remains political.