Insurers on alert as US stages biggest Middle East buildup since Iraq invasion

Largest US military buildup in Middle East since 2003 forces insurers to reassess exposures

Insurers on alert as US stages biggest Middle East buildup since Iraq invasion

Insurance News

By Matthew Sellers

Global insurers and reinsurers are closely monitoring a rapid US military buildup in the Middle East, described by media reports as the largest deployment of American air power to the region since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, amid rising fears of strikes against Iran and potential regional escalation.

According to multiple reports, the US has sent dozens of additional aircraft – including F‑16, F‑22 and F‑35 fighter jets – alongside multiple aircraft carriers, creating the capability for a sustained air campaign rather than a limited, one‑off strike. Long‑range bombers such as B‑2s could be launched directly from the US or from bases such as Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, reports said.

The deployment comes as President Donald Trump weighs military options against Iran following what Washington views as a deadly crackdown on anti‑regime protests last month. Media reports say US military planners could be ready to launch attacks as early as this weekend, although no final decision has been taken.

Senior US officials have reportedly briefed the president on options ranging from targeted strikes against nuclear and missile facilities to broader operations aimed at regime leadership and regional proxy networks. Analysts quoted in the coverage suggest the sheer scale of the buildup is intended to signal that “Trump is not messing around with the use of force,” and could be calibrated to push Tehran toward concessions at the negotiating table.

At the same time, diplomacy is continuing. Reports say US and Iranian officials held indirect talks in Geneva this week, agreeing a set of broad “guiding principles” but leaving key issues unresolved. White House officials have stressed that diplomacy remains the preferred path, while repeatedly underlining that military action remains on the table.

Iran, for its part, is accelerating efforts to harden key sites against potential attack. Satellite imagery reviewed by nuclear and defence analysts and cited in media reports shows the construction of reinforced concrete shields over sensitive facilities, including the Taleghan 2 site near Parchin, and significant fortification work at the Isfahan nuclear complex and locations near Natanz. Tunnel entrances have reportedly been backfilled with soil, and missile bases around Shiraz and Qom are being rebuilt after earlier strikes.

Experts quoted in those reports warn that the engineering work could make any future air campaign more complex and prolonged, with one analyst saying the changes “may soon become a fully unrecognisable bunker, providing significant protection from aerial strikes.”

For insurers, the combination of large‑scale US deployments, explicit strike planning and Iranian fortification efforts is sharpening focus on a wide range of covers:

  • War and political violence covers for energy, infrastructure and commercial property in the Gulf and wider region, which could be exposed to direct strikes, missile retaliation or civil unrest.
  • Marine war risk for vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz and adjacent waterways, given Iran’s longstanding threat to target shipping or attempt to disrupt oil flows if attacked.
  • Aviation hull and liability policies for airlines operating in, to or over the region, where rerouting, airspace closures or miscalculation risks could rise sharply if tensions spill over.
  • Trade credit and political risk covers for corporates with exposure to Iran and neighbouring markets, as the threat of new sanctions, asset freezes or business interruption increases.

Reinsurers will be assessing the potential for an accumulation of losses across multiple treaty and facultative programs in the event of a broader confrontation, particularly if fighting extends beyond a short, surgical campaign. The fact that the current buildup is explicitly described as enabling a “much longer campaign” than past limited strikes is likely to figure prominently in those scenarios.

Specialty markets are already contending with heightened geopolitical risk from conflicts elsewhere. A new, major Middle East crisis involving US and Iranian forces – and possibly drawing in regional actors – would add another complex layer to underwriting assumptions on frequency and severity of political violence and war‑related claims.

For now, insurers are in a holding pattern as they watch for concrete signals from Washington and Tehran. But with media reports characterising the current deployment as the most substantial US force in the region in more than two decades, underwriters across war, energy, marine, aviation and political risk lines are being forced to revisit their worst‑case scenarios – and to prepare for a rapid shift from heightened tension to active conflict.

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