Rick Wagner-
For roughly thirty years, Washington has repeated the same line about Iran with the solemn confidence of a man promising he’ll start his diet on Monday.
Iran cannot have nuclear weapons.
Presidents said it. Congress said it. Diplomats said it between rounds of sanctions, negotiations, and conferences in agreeable European capitals where everyone nods gravely over coffee and drafts statements about “the path forward.”
Meanwhile, the clerics in Tehran kept building.
Since the 1979 revolution, the Islamic Republic has pursued a fairly straightforward strategy: work toward nuclear capability, build a large ballistic missile arsenal, and surround Israel with a constellation of proxy militias—Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza, Shiite militias in Iraq, Houthis in Yemen.
A kind of geopolitical franchise model: the brand originates in Tehran, but the rockets are delivered locally.
Washington’s answer for most of that time was diplomacy. Sanctions here, negotiations there, culminating in the 2015 nuclear deal—the theory being that enough monitoring, inspections, and multilateral paperwork might slow Iran’s march toward a bomb.
The theory was elegant.
Reality was less cooperative.
Iran negotiated while continuing to advance its nuclear capability, which is the diplomatic equivalent of agreeing to discuss vegetarianism while quietly expanding the cattle ranch.
Earlier this year, talks finally collapsed after Iran refused limits on ballistic missiles, uranium enrichment infrastructure, or its proxy network. Reports circulating among negotiators suggested Tehran already possessed enough enriched uranium for roughly eleven nuclear weapons.
At that point the conversation stopped being theoretical.
Israel launched Operation Rising Lion, striking Iranian nuclear facilities. The United States followed with limited attacks under Operation Midnight Hammer.
What began as targeted strikes has now turned into the largest military confrontation in the Middle East in decades.
The most consequential moment came early: Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, killed during the opening phase of the campaign. Removing the central authority of a theocratic regime tends to produce administrative turbulence.
More than two thousand targets have reportedly been hit across Iran. Missile forces degraded. Naval assets damaged.
But wars rarely stay confined to the tidy plans that launch them.
Missiles have struck Israeli cities. Hezbollah is engaged from Lebanon. Iranian drones and missiles have hit Gulf states, and shipping through the Strait of Hormuz has become considerably more exciting than the global energy market prefers.
In Washington, the argument has already begun—whether this operation prevents a nuclear Iran or risks a wider regional war.
H. L. Mencken once observed that the urge to save humanity is often a cover for the urge to rule it. In Washington, the urge to explain a war sometimes arrives before anyone has decided how to finish one.
Three questions now matter.
Does the Iranian regime survive the loss of its supreme leader?
Do Iran’s proxy forces escalate across Lebanon, Iraq, and Yemen?
And how long does the United States remain involved?
For decades American policy toward Iran revolved around containment and negotiation.
Now we’re somewhere else entirely.




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