To change the Middle East after the Iran war, Washington must abandon hubris, rebuild Gulf trust, and accept that unilateralism has failed catastrophically.
Browsing: Iran
Even after crippling Iran’s military, the U.S. discovers that the limitations of hard power redefine navigation, alliances, and asymmetric warfare itself.
Global markets react as diplomatic channels signal a critical framework agreement between Washington and Tehran over regional security corridors.
This critical assessment details how the current White House administration fails to counter Tehran’s regional multi-theater asymmetric warfare strategy.
Trump’s missile diplomacy backfires catastrophically: bombing while negotiating peace fractures deterrence and hands Tehran exactly the leverage it needs.
Trump’s claims about ending the Iran war collapse under scrutiny. No verifiable MOU exists. Skepticism remains the only rational starting position.
Deconstructing the flaw in applying economic bargaining formulas to ideological regimes that derive their legitimacy from conflict rather than cooperation.
Nuclear deterrence failed in Ukraine, Israel, and South Asia. Cheap drones now defy the bomb. What replaces it?
A sophisticated approach to economic statecraft is crucial for US-Iran diplomacy, replacing absolute military coercion with structured market incentives.
From Hamas to Israel to Iran to Hezbollah to America — every single actor lost this war. No exceptions.
