Policy

Why Trump is losing the war

By OWEN JONES

The US is losing its war against Iran. That’s what all the evidence is pointing towards.

Israel has a narrower strategic goal – leave Iran in violent chaos so that it’s permanently weakened and hobbled. That’s a plausible outcome, but it would be destabilising for the West’s Gulf allies and further associate US power with bloody turmoil.

But let’s go through why this is going so badly for the US.

No regime collapse

By assassinating the Supreme Leader, it’s clear that the US believed it had achieved regime decapitation. The system would come crashing down like a pack of cards, or so they thought. There would be defections by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and some sort of coup.

But there are no apparent cracks in the regime at all.

When asked about the timeline for the conflict, War Secretary Pete Hegseth said: “We could say four weeks, but it could be six, it could be eight, it could be three.”

Such a protracted conflict is clearly not what the US originally had in mind.

Yesterday, Donald Trump dismissed the exiled Crown Prince and son of the deposed Shah, Reza Pahlavi. That’s despite Pahlavi’s fanatical pro-US orientation, and his zealous support for bombing his country of birth.

Last July, Reza Pahlavi claimed that 50,000 officials from within Iran’s ruling government and military had contacted him to sign up to defect and collapse the regime. If that was true, do you think for a second that Trump wouldn’t be backing him?

Instead, Trump has proposed an equivalent of what happened in Venezuela. You take out the leader and replace them with someone from the government, in that case Delcy Rodríguez, and put a gun to their head and order them to do what the US and Israel wants.

But as a former Israeli intelligence officer, Danny Citrinowicz puts it, they have completely misunderstood Tehran’s strategy and calculations.

He says that Iran “will not relinquish its missile arsenal, nor will it forgo what it defines as its right to enrich uranium.” The only path to clear victory is regime change, and he says that “it is far from clear that Washington is willing to invest the resources and long-term commitment such an outcome would demand.”

No successor, he says, is likely to present surrender terms to the US, because “capitulation would mean the collapse of the very ideological foundation of the Islamic Republic. Any leader who emerges from within the system will be bound by the same core principles and strategic red lines.”.

So they will keep fighting, he predicts, believing that “time is on their side”. We’ll come to why they think that, but it’s worth noting the mass loyalist crowds that the Iranian regime has mobilised on the streets.

There’s still mass opposition to the regime, no doubt, but it enjoys far more support than Saddam Hussein, Colonel Gaddafi or the Taliban when the Iraq, Libyan and Afghan wars began.

From history, we know that foreign attacks on a country often rally support; they provoke a nationalist response.

It’s notable that the BBC is quoting residents in Tehran describing their horror at the US-Israeli attacks, saying things like: “Not happy anymore [at the possibility of regime change], no. Just tired. And confused as to what might happen.”

In these situations, when your nation is under attack, it becomes much easier for dissent to be seen as accomplices of the attackers – which is one major reason why aerial bombardment has never led to regime change.

Chaos in the Gulf

How about this in the Telegraph, which is a newspaper with a hard right pro-Israel orientation:

This article notes that many – but not all – Iranian ballistic missiles and drones have been intercepted but that’s only by burning through munitions stockpiles in Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain.

The Telegraph claims that:

Iran is believed to still have vast reserves of missiles despite attempts by US and Israeli forces to destroy launchers capable of deploying them.

The War Secretary, Pete Hegseth, today boasted that the number of Iranian missile and drone attacks had dramatically reduced. That’s down to US-Israeli attacks, he argues. That could be part of it, but there are other explanations. One US official suggests it could be that “Iran is holding back missiles so its operations can last longer”.

But each drone only costs between $20,000 and $50,000 to make, but a Patriot interceptor missile used to destroy just one costs $4 million. These Iranian drones can be launched from the back of a truck.

In other words, Iran could attack these Gulf countries on the cheap as they burn through air defence. These are states that marketed themselves as oases of calm and stability – allowing their economies to be boosted by rich Westerners.

Crucially, being US military allies was supposed to protect them. Instead, it’s made them targets.

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