Start with the claim of “victory.” Wars are not won by
declaration. If anything, the gap between stated objectives and actual outcomes
after US-Israeli strikes on Iran underscores a harsher truth: overwhelming
power no longer guarantees decisive results. The superpower looks less
triumphant and more constrained.
The blockade argument is equally flawed. Closing the Strait
of Hormuz for months is not a show of strength—it is an invitation to
escalation. Iran retains the means to retaliate asymmetrically, while Gulf
states would be unwilling passengers in a conflict that directly threatens
their economic lifelines. What begins as pressure quickly mutates into regional
instability.
Then comes the oil calculus. Squeezing Iranian exports may
sound tactically appealing, but it is strategically self-defeating. The
immediate consequence would be tighter supply, higher prices, and global
economic stress. Washington’s Arab partners, far from benefiting, would absorb
the shock. Punishing Iran ends up punishing the system.
Most unrealistic, however, is the expectation of Iran’s
unconditional surrender. Tehran’s track record suggests the opposite: pressure
entrenches resistance. Escalation does not compel compliance; it erodes space
for negotiation.
The underlying problem is not intent but misreading
leverage. Coercion without credible endgames risks exposing limits rather than
enforcing outcomes. Each additional threat weakens, rather than strengthens,
the credibility of US strategy.
A sustainable path demands restraint, not
bravado—consolidating ceasefire arrangements, reopening diplomatic channels,
and allowing all sides a face-saving exit. Power, when detached from realism,
ceases to be power at all; it becomes noise with consequences.






