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EU scrambles to contain energy costs from war in Middle East
AP World News1 days ago
Threat Score
35/100
Summary
Netherland's Prime Minister Rob Jetten arrives for the EU summit at the European Council building in Brussels, Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Geert Vanden Wijngaert)2026-03-19T08:33:18Z
BRUSSELS (AP) — Leaders from across the European Union are meeting Thursday to grapple with rising oil and gas prices caused by the war raging across key energy producers and shipping lanes in the Middle East.Many of those leaders have deflected entreaties by U.S. President Donald Trump to send military assets to secure the Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway for the global flow of oil, gas and fertilizer. Rising energy prices because of the war and fears in Europe of a new refugee crisis have pushed leaders to make the Middle East a priority at the summit.“We are very worried about the energy crisis,” said Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever ahead of the European Council summit of 27 leaders of European Union nations. He said that energy prices were too high before the war, but that the conflict “created another spike.”“If that becomes structural, we’re in deep trouble,” he said. “At a European level, some measures can be taken to address the problem of the high energy prices.”
The European Commission has told leaders it has a mix of financial instruments that member nations could deploy to lower energy prices, which will be up for discussion. No single policy will likely work to blunt the economic shocks from the war across the bloc’s myriad markets from Romania to Ireland.
European leaders have struggled to take a firm stance on the fighting in Iran and Lebanon. While they have been critical of the Iranian government, they have not provided military support.
“This is a war that was started by the United States and Israel against Iran on reasons that I can understand because the Iranian regime is brutal not only for its own people, but also for the broader region and a security threat for Europe,” said Dutch Prime Minister Rob Jetten.“But it’s not a war that we are part of,”
AI Assessment
This article signals significant second-order escalation effects from the ongoing Middle East war, especially through energy market disruption and insecurity around the Strait of Hormuz. While it does not describe a new military strike, it confirms that the conflict is materially affecting European strategic decision-making, raising economic pressure, maritime security concerns, and refugee-risk calculations.
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Identified Entities
Countries & Regions
European UnionNetherlandsEuropean CouncilUnited StatesStrait of HormuzMiddle EastEurope
Weapons & Military
military assets
Threat Indicators
military action
nuclear threat
cyber warfare
terrorism
Key Phrases
"The article reflects direct spillover from the escalating Middle East war into European energy security and economic stability.""The Strait of Hormuz is identified as a critical chokepoint, and concern over securing it indicates elevated maritime conflict risk.""EU reluctance to deploy military assets suggests alliance strain or limited appetite for direct involvement despite rising strategic costs.""Rising oil and gas prices show the conflict is affecting global markets beyond the battlefield, increasing systemic international impact.""European concern over a potential new refugee crisis indicates broader humanitarian and political destabilization risks."

