America, Israel, and associated powers are winning the military campaign against Iran. Western opinion is skewed by American domestic politics. Yet allied victory of some sort is likely. What form is acceptable in the short run remains unclear.
I've covered the Iran War of 2026* in two essays (here and here) plus numerous smaller posts in Weekend Data Dumps and in my Substack Notes.
We
are clearly winning the military campaign so far. Talk of Iran really
winning because they are enduring the ass-kicking is weird but common. Not that
Iran hasn't hurt us or our allies with their (weakened)
military. Enemies do that. War isn't target practice with a nice little
bonus in your paycheck the next month.
And now, increased
emphasis is on securing the Strait of Hormuz enough to allow oil exports
to resume. Was this a failure in the initial plan? Or was it considered
too much of a warning to Iran to see escort and counter-mine assets
gathered? Perhaps the need to take out the leadership in a fleeting
moment accelerated the start of the campaign. Perhaps we knew the world
would survive a few weeks without the exports in order to gain surprise.
I can't know what the thinking was.
As I noted in that first linked essay, Trump succinctly stated our objectives when he addressed remarks to the Iranian people:
When we are finished, take over your government. It will be yours to
take. This will be probably your only chance for generations.
Opposition
to the U.S. president contorts much of the war analysis. And a fixation
on having THE PLAN spelled out to the final victory as if that is wise in an ongoing war--or
even relevant when no plan survives contact with the enemy--is not new.
Plans are a framework that must be flexible in the face of reality. And
the president described that flexibility if you'd accept that rather
than insisting on seeing the operational orders.
Preventing Iran
from getting nukes is the obvious military and political objective.
Overthrowing the mullah regime is the ideal political outcome to do
that. And destroying Iran's conventional military and weakening its
internal security apparatus is currently the main effort by volume. This both
reduces the mullah ability to harm and intimidate neighbors for years;
and increases the ability of internal actors (many of the people and
hopefully defecting security forces) to drive from power the mullah
regime and their Revolutionary Guard base of power.
So far it
doesn't seem as if the internal security forces are sufficiently
weakened. Yet I assume Israel has the uprising portfolio in the campaign. I
have no idea where they are in that effort. They aren't saying.
You can
see the divisions between America and Israel from presidential
statements and allied target focus. Israel is first up in Iran's nuclear
crosshairs and so is obviously more committed to regime change than America.
America as a global power has broader concerns and doesn't want a long war in this narrow theater. So America and Israel approach even the same war we are jointly fighting with very different perspectives.
So if
Iranians can't rise up successfully now, America will finish its military campaign and pocket the relatively inexpensive
narrow military win that knocks down Iran's conventional and nuclear
capabilities. And Iranians will have lost their best shot at freedom
"for generations." Then American and Israeli plans will need to be
adjusted for the long run.
UPDATE (19MAR26): I don't think this threat by the president to let others worry about keeping the Strait of Hormuz open is serious literally (tip to Instapundit).
Our advantage in not relying on Persian Gulf energy directly is a wartime--as in The Big One--advantage. That's why the Strategic Petroleum Reserve was established. It was to buy time for our military to regain access to foreign oil if we went to war with the USSR. It is easy to forget that when it is now used to lower gasoline prices.
Keep in mind that fact when you hear America is not reliant on Persian Gulf energy. In peacetime America is absolutely reliant on Persian Gulf indirectly. Our allies and trading partners rely on that energy. And our economy and prosperity relies on trade with them.
Further, the Gulf allies we are now getting more cooperation from in the Iran War of 2026 rely on oil exports. If we were really going to leave the Strait of Hormuz for someone else, we'd be given a week to evacuate our bases in the Gulf and the Gulf Arab states would cut a deal with the mullahs for peace.
Just saying. The president's statement was commentary on our allies' unwillingness and/or inability to send warships to the Gulf to assist us in a war that benefits them and us (remember the possibility of mullah nukes?)--and hopefully the Iranian people, too.
UPDATE (19MAR26): The U.S. may send additional ground forces to CENTCOM to expand options. With Marines on the way by sea, Army Rangers and a brigade of the 101st Airborne Division could be useful for taking Iran's island bases in the Gulf.
UPDATE (19MAR26): Not nearly as bad as I feared. And Iraq's government doesn't seem in any hurry to stop us from hitting back: "Iranian-backed Iraqi militias continued to launch drone attacks targeting US forces and interests in Iraq." Also, ISW provides updates on the war.
UPDATE (19MAR26): Are Japan and some of the NATO European states edging toward contributing to Strait of Hormuz security?
*And really, this is a campaign in the
47-year war since the Iran Revolution and their invasion of our Tehran Embassy and subsequent lengthy hostage crisis. But it is common to call any upsurge in organized violence a
"war." So I usually do. But it isn't really that. Although the difference is indistinguishable to those fighting and paying the price for fighting.
NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.
NOTE: You may also like to read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved. Go ahead and subscribe to it. It's the right thing to do!
NOTE: Image adjusted from WorldAtlas.com