Lessons from the Iran War of 2026 were drawn before the U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding (MOU) shifted the war to negotiating tables for now.
This is an interesting article:
While the Iran war is currently on hold, the race to study and apply its lessons has only just begun.
Distilled into three main points, the war demonstrated that the U.S. military is a) now proficient, though not exceptional, at drone defense; b) able to conduct prolonged, highly effective air campaigns in challenging environments; and c) more adaptable and lethal when fully leveraging partners.
I quibble at the prologue. The Iran War was not on hold when the article was published before the MOU. The war was waged more quietly but potentially more lethally to the mullah regime.
But the military lessons are correct. Contrary to the accusations, America did prepare for the Iranian drone threat. We had sent new counter-drone weapons to CENTCOM on land and afloat. We didn't send enough. But we were able to power through that mistake and continue the air assault.
Yes, our air campaign was quite impressive. But air campaigns aren't all powerful. They can kill people and break things in a safer form of a March through Georgia.
And yes, we are more effective with allies. Israel was important and validates our national security strategy of urging allies to be partners and not dependents. And don't forget the allied bases to operate from in the area and to get to the theater of war.
I drew a few early lessons in this essay, on counter-UAV defenses, ground forces, and sea control.
Fighting wars with allies is frustrating. But ask Iran if fighting almost entirely alone is a freeing experience.
NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here.
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