by- Rick Wagner
The complaint circulating in parts of the commentariat is that no one quite knows what the objective in Iran is. The strikes, we’re told, look improvised, perhaps reckless, and dangerously unclear. That criticism is fashionable, but it mistakes the nature of the problem.
The strategic issue is not mysterious. For forty-five years the Iranian regime has functioned as the Middle East’s primary exporter of instability—arming proxies, threatening shipping lanes, harassing neighbors, and working steadily toward nuclear capability. If that machinery has now been badly damaged, the real danger lies not in acting but in stopping halfway.
History’s lesson is painfully consistent: unfinished wars breed larger ones.
At the same time, air power alone rarely settles political conflicts. Bombs can destroy facilities, ships, and airfields, but they do not dismantle the internal architecture of a revolutionary regime. Iran’s real control mechanisms—the Revolutionary Guard networks, the intelligence organs, the patronage structures, and the militias—are rooted in institutions and neighborhoods. Those have to be dug out, not merely cratered from thirty thousand feet.
Nor is there currently a coherent internal resistance waiting to take over the job. The regime has spent decades making sure of that.
What makes sense, therefore, is not an American attempt to occupy or rebuild Persia. That would repeat the most expensive mistakes of the last generation. What does make sense is a regional coalition—Israel and the Gulf states in particular—finishing the dismantling of the regime’s capacity to menace the region.
Those governments understand the threat intimately because they live with it.
There is also a certain comic quality to the sudden outbreak of strategic fainting in Western commentary. The same analysts who spent years warning about Iranian aggression now seem startled that someone has taken steps to weaken it.
But geopolitics is not a debating society. Sometimes the unpleasant business must simply be completed—and preferably by the neighbors who have the greatest stake in the outcome.







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