The primary miscalculation lies in a fatal, outdated belief
that modern asymmetric warfare can be won purely through kinetic superiority.
While waves of airstrikes successfully degraded conventional military
infrastructure, they completely failed to account for Iran’s ultimate economic
equalizer: its chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz. By throttling one-fifth of
the world’s energy supplies, Tehran triggered devastating geoeconomic shocks
that rapidly rippled across global markets—sending international oil prices
soaring and destabilizing regional financial hubs like the Pakistan Stock
Exchange (PSX).
Instead of isolating Iran, the conflict has backfired
spectacularly on the domestic front. Skyrocketing gasoline prices and dipping
approval ratings ahead of the crucial mid-term elections have severely
compromised the Trump administration’s political leverage. Tehran, acutely
aware of this vulnerability, recognizes that it does not need to achieve
military parity; it merely needs to survive the onslaught to outlast the
political timeline of its adversary.
Now, more than six weeks into an uneasy ceasefire, the
sudden diplomatic push from Washington reveals an act of political desperation,
not a pursuit of peace. The intensifying pressure to force Tehran into a
ceasefire under Trump’s strict, maximalist conditions is a classic
"ceasefire trap." It is a calculated, coercive maneuver designed to
retroactively manufacture a paper victory out of a stalemated conflict on the
ground.
As noted by regional analysts and highlighted in recent
reporting by Reuters, a war designed to be a short-term romp has evolved
into a long-term strategic failure. Forced capitulation on paper cannot mask
the reality that Iran's core command structures, proxy networks, and buried
uranium stockpiles remain entirely intact.
Rather than doubling down on a broken strategy or masking
defeat with coercive diplomacy, it is time for the United States to mend its
severe strategic mistake. Overwhelming military power is no longer enough to
dictate the terms of global order, and continuing this entanglement will only
deepen the damage to American credibility abroad.
