The longer the conflict with Iran drags on, the more difficult it becomes to accept Washington's claim that it genuinely seeks peace. Months after the ceasefire announcement, the region continues to witness periodic escalation, suggesting that the United States and Israel are still pursuing objectives that remain unfulfilled.
If the war
were truly about eliminating an immediate threat, it should have ended by now.
Instead, the persistence of tensions indicates that broader geopolitical
ambitions remain at play.
First,
despite years of sanctions, diplomatic isolation, and military pressure, Iran's
status as a regional power remains largely intact. Far from being marginalized,
Tehran continues to exert influence across the Middle East. This outcome falls
well short of what United States and Israel had hoped to achieve.
Second, the
US has failed in securing a major diplomatic breakthrough by bringing Saudi
Arabia fully into the Abraham Accords framework. The ongoing conflict has made
such an objective increasingly difficult, exposing the limitations of American
diplomacy in the region.
Third,
expectations of regime change in Tehran have once again proven unrealistic.
Iranian institutions remain functional, and the leadership has survived a
campaign designed to weaken its authority and legitimacy.
Fourth,
despite repeated military operations, neither Iran's nuclear capabilities nor
its missile program appears to have been decisively neutralized. The enormous
costs incurred have not delivered the strategic victory that was promised.
Meanwhile,
Israel has also struggled to achieve one of its key security objectives: the
complete elimination of Hezbollah's military and political influence in
Lebanon. The group's continued presence remains a source of concern for Israeli
policymakers.
These
shortcomings help explain why pressure persists against any settlement that
does not fully satisfy American and Israeli demands. Iran is expected to make
concessions, yet there is little willingness to discuss lifting decades-old
sanctions or compensating Tehran for infrastructure damaged during the
conflict.
The reality
is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore. The war continues because its
principal architects have not achieved their desired outcomes. Until Washington
and Tel Aviv recognize the limits of military coercion and accept a genuinely
negotiated settlement, the ceasefire will remain little more than a pause in a
conflict that neither side has truly left behind.






