For years, US policy has demonstrated near-automatic
alignment with Israel’s security doctrine. Strong diplomatic cover and
sustained military support during regional crises created a strategic
environment in which Israeli planners could reasonably assume American backing
in the event of wider confrontation. When Israeli strikes expanded toward Iran
in mid-2025, that assumption appeared to hold. The United States did not
restrain the escalation; it became a direct participant.
The recent Senate briefing by Secretary of State Marco Rubio
and senior defense officials has done little to clarify the strategic endgame.
Lawmakers from both parties emerged expressing uncertainty about objectives,
timelines, and even the possibility of deploying ground troops. Concerns over
drone defenses, casualties, and munitions stockpiles further suggest that the
conflict may be broader and more prolonged than initially presented.
This pattern evokes uncomfortable historical parallels with
the Iraq War — a campaign launched with confidence but sustained amid shifting
justifications and unclear exit strategies. No two conflicts are identical, yet
the strategic risks of escalation without defined political outcomes remain
constant.
To be clear, Iran’s regional posture and missile
capabilities are not trivial matters. Nor can Israel’s security anxieties be
dismissed. However, the responsibility of a global power extends beyond
alliance solidarity. It requires independent assessment of costs, consequences,
and long-term regional stability.
If Israeli action triggered the sequence of escalation and
the United States entered primarily to preserve alliance credibility, then
Washington must ask whether it is shaping events — or being shaped by them.
Strategic partnerships are assets, but they should not become conduits for
unintended wars.
At stake is not merely battlefield success, but America’s
claim to strategic autonomy. In geopolitics, perception often hardens into
reality. The longer this war continues without clearly articulated objectives,
the louder the question will grow: who truly set this course?





