he recent conflict in the Middle East is often portrayed as a regional crisis centered on Israel, Iran and the United States. However, such a view is increasingly inadequate. What is unfolding today is not simply friction between regional actors but a manifestation of a deeper transformation in the international system.
The Middle East has become one of several interconnected arenas in an era of broader systemic competition involving major powers, emerging technologies, economic coercion, maritime security and competing visions of global order.
For Indonesia, the significance of this transformation extends far beyond the immediate violence in Gaza, Lebanon, Syria or the Persian Gulf. The real issue is that the geopolitical boundaries separating the Middle East and the Indo-Pacific are blurring.
In the 21st century, conflicts do not remain confined by geography. Instead, they travel rapidly through energy markets, digital networks, maritime trade routes, supply chains, financial systems and strategic calculations. A disruption in the Strait of Hormuz directly drives inflation in Southeast Asia, just as escalation involving Iran influences US military deployments in the Pacific and cyber operations launched in one theater threaten critical infrastructure in another.
We are entering a new geopolitical era. The post-Cold War assumption that economic interdependence would gradually reduce strategic rivalry has collapsed.
For more than three decades, globalization fostered expectations that commerce, investment and technological integration would generate convergence among major powers. Instead, interdependence itself has become a source of competition.
Supply chains are weaponized for leverage, semiconductors and rare earth minerals have become vital strategic assets and artificial intelligence, data and cyberspace have mutated into contested domains of state power. The international system is moving decisively away from the logic of globalization and toward the logic of strategic competition.
