Shortly before the war with Iran began, I wrote that the seeming complacency among government officials and financial market participants was based on two assumptions which I argued were unlikely to turn out to be true: 1) President Donald Trump would make a last-minute deal with the Iranians and declare victory and 2) even if Trump didn't make such a deal, the Iranians would not do all the things which they threatened to do if attacked.
Here we are three weeks into the conflict between the United States and Israel and Iran. There was, of course, no last-minute deal and the Iranians have done exactly what they threatened to do. Here is what I reported before the war were Iran's threats:
Those threats include attacking U.S. bases in the region, attacking any country that assists the U.S. and Israeli war effort, attacking U.S. naval vessels, and, most important, closing the Strait of Hormuz through which passes 20 percent of the world's exported oil and liquefied natural gas.