US cheerleading of Israel's attacks on Iran risks a wider regional conflict. Image: YouTube Screengrab

The eruption of war between Israel and Iran is no longer a hypothetical flashpoint—it is a live, unfolding campaign whose implications could shake the foundations of the international order and move the world closer to World War III.

More worrying than the precision of the Israeli strikes is the exuberant endorsement they have received from the United States. Washington, under the Trump administration’s second term, appears not merely supportive but almost intoxicated by Israel’s early military successes.

In doing so, the United States risks accelerating a conflict that could spiral beyond containment with long-term consequences for the Middle East and the wider international system.

What was initially sold to the world as a narrow preemptive strike against Iran’s nuclear infrastructure has been rapidly reframed—mostly by Israeli and U.S. officials—as the first stage of a broader strategic takedown. The language from Washington has become celebratory, even triumphalist.

American defense officials have praised the “surgical precision” of Israeli operations, lauding the effectiveness of cyberwarfare and air dominance in taking down Iran’s air defense systems. Behind the scenes, it is clear that US logistical support—intelligence sharing, satellite coverage, and mid-air refueling—has been essential to the success of Israel’s campaign.

Two US aircraft carriers—the USS Gerald R. Ford and USS Theodore Roosevelt—now patrol the Arabian Gulf, not simply to deter Iranian retaliation, but to demonstrate the American imprimatur on Israel’s escalation.

Therein lies the danger: Washington has moved from tacit support to strategic infatuation. The language of deterrence has been replaced by the logic of regime degradation. The tactical euphoria within the US national security establishment—particularly among hardliners and Trump loyalists—is pushing the conflict away from proportionality and toward maximalism.

There are already murmurs of a “three-phase doctrine,” aimed first at blinding Iran’s surveillance systems, then destroying its nuclear facilities, and finally dismantling its conventional military capabilities and command structures.

This shift is not occurring in a vacuum. Israel’s leadership has long viewed Iran as an existential threat, and the opportunity to degrade Tehran’s deterrent capabilities—particularly in light of the October 7 attacks and subsequent regional tensions—has presented itself with strategic clarity.

But it is America’s uncritical embrace of this campaign that is turning an already dangerous conflict into a potentially catastrophic overreach. The US is not just enabling Israel; it is emboldening it. What should have remained a limited strike is evolving into a doctrine of total war.

Meanwhile, Iran’s ability to absorb pressure is being dangerously underestimated. While its traditional proxy network—Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis—has been weakened through sustained military pressure, this does not equate to strategic collapse.

Hamas has been battered in Gaza and has lost significant leadership, while Hezbollah faces constraints from Lebanon’s economic and political decay, and the Houthis are operating under constant threat of Western preemptive strikes.

Yet Iran, a state with decades of experience under sanctions, internal suppression, and international isolation, is no stranger to endurance warfare. It has built redundancy into its security architecture, cultivated asymmetric retaliatory capabilities across the region, and maintained domestic cohesion even amid hardship.

The belief, especially in Washington, that sustained bombardment will produce internal dissent or collapse within the Islamic Republic is not only naive—it is historically disproven. If anything, foreign aggression often strengthens the ideological cohesion of its ruling elite.

Moreover, should Iran fall into greater chaos, the likely outcome will not be regime change with Western-friendly overtones, but fragmentation, insurgency and the emergence of more radical, uncontrollable actors—much like post-invasion Iraq or Libya.

Equally troubling is the global perception of this unfolding campaign. Germany, having historically aligned itself with Israel for obvious historical reasons, has expressed full support. The United Kingdom and Italy have also shown quiet approval. But others within the G7—such as Japan and France—are growing increasingly uneasy.

Their silence may stem from diplomatic caution, but their hesitation reflects deeper concerns about the legality, proportionality, and wisdom of such an escalation. France’s Macron has emphasized the importance of returning to diplomatic avenues, even if his remarks have been quickly drowned out by Washington’s rhetoric.

Across the Global South, the reaction is even more pronounced. Within ASEAN, the African Union, and Latin American capitals, the war is viewed as a unilateral venture—another instance of Western military force bypassing international norms.

The absence of a United Nations mandate, or even an attempt at multilateral conflict resolution, reinforces the perception that global security is increasingly shaped by power, not principle. The rhetoric of democracy and international law rings hollow when overwhelming force is deployed without broad-based legitimacy.

This moment reflects a wider crisis in global governance. With the UN sidelined and the G7 increasingly aligned with Israeli and American imperatives, institutions designed to prevent exactly this kind of escalation are proving impotent.

Worse, the United States appears to have abandoned even the veneer of strategic caution. In a domestic climate where “winning” matters more than wisdom, and where foreign policy is often framed in transactional or electoral terms, the allure of quick military success is proving irresistible.

Yet history is filled with examples of early triumphs that led to strategic ruin. The U.S. celebrated the fall of Baghdad in 2003, only to be mired in a decades-long insurgency that cost hundreds of thousands of lives and drained American credibility.

Israel itself knows that the initial success of its 1982 Lebanon invasion quickly devolved into a quagmire that reshaped its military doctrine for years to come.

In today’s rapidly evolving scenario, the consequences of overreach could be far greater. The regional order, already fragile from the Abraham Accords to the Iran-Saudi détente, may unravel entirely. The risks to maritime trade, oil infrastructure, and regional stability are not abstract—they are immediate.

A wider war involving Syria, Iraq, and possibly even Afghanistan would be difficult to contain. And while Iran does not yet possess nuclear weapons, its pathway to acquiring them would almost certainly accelerate if its leadership feels the only way to survive is through deterrence by annihilation.

Ultimately, the United States must reconsider its role not as a cheerleader but as a stabilizer. Fawning over Israel’s military effectiveness may generate short-term geopolitical leverage, but it undermines long-term strategic prudence. The goal cannot simply be Iran’s military humiliation; it must be the preservation of a global order that avoids perpetual war.

If the G7 allows Washington to continue down this path unchecked, then the next chapter of this conflict may be written not in Tel Aviv or Tehran but in the ashes of another failed war birthed by hubris and cheered on by those too enamored with victory to question its price.

Phar Kim Beng, PhD, is professor of ASEAN Studies at the International Islamic University Malaysia. He was formerly head teaching fellow at Harvard University and a Cambridge Commonwealth Scholar.

Phar Kim Beng (PhD) is professor of ASEAN Studies at the International Islamic University of Malaysia and senior research fellow at the Asia Europe Institute in University of Malaya

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42 Comments

  1. This poor soul has no comprehensive depth in the matters in which he speaks. This lack of depth is demonstrated via the plethora of stock schlock posturing and oversimplified historical examples.

  2. The supposed threat to maritime trade. Iran’s command over the Strait of Hormuz was never feasible with US forces in the vicinity. They are so weak now that any attempt to close the strait would be suicide. They should have applied the majority of their resources to air defence, but didn’t have the wits to see it.

  3. Bombing everywhere. And winning nowhere. Its the best gods “chosen” can do. Considering their god is a bit of a psychopath himself. Angry and jealous god.

  4. No change of empire has ever happened without a major war. Too much egos at stake to accept the inevitable hence why it’s easier to cause chaos as a distraction. Interesting to see if humanity has evolved and will be able to establish peace, China and Russia are trying hard.

    1. Oh yes the Thucydides’ Trap, a term popularized by American political scientist Graham T. Allison to describe an apparent tendency towards war between a declining and ascending States!
      Apart from Sparta/Athens maybe you’d like to elaborate. England to the US in 1930, or France to England in 1750?
      it’s a nonsense

  5. This is called multipolarity, pal. Uncle Sam went America First pretty much like you demanded. But I am sure it will be selling weapons to every side of every conflict soon. Get used to it and be glad. You are totally free and independent now.
    I don’t really see China and Russia riding to the rescue. Do you, brick-lovers?

    1. Bric or dumb as a brick ? It is so funny how folks like Rules put their trust in a bunch of countries who have nothing in common, except a dislike of the USA.
      Recently a Brasilian state took BYD to court for human trafficking. Yes, their own people from China; they brought them to Brasil and treated them like slaves.

    2. This is not multipolarity…..this is the USA trying to prevent multipolarity, riding against the tide in the usual form.

  6. We live in a world in which avoiding violence, avoiding escalation, avoiding war is The Goal. Nothing else matters. Then you wake up in the morning, and – how did North Korea go nuclear? Or, to go back a couple of generations- we let Hitler do what?!

    The US has become weak-willed, largely due to experience in Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan. This creates the risk of taking non-involvement a tad too far, and waking up one morning with “We let these Islamist extremists do what?!”

    1. You should stop drinking Captain America koolaid. The US is the evil empire and has a hand in prolonging, if not provoking, most major conflicts in the world today. When they fight back, they call it “terrorism”. When they behave like terrorists they call it “liberation”. One man’s terrorist is another man’s freedom fighter in the end. And the world’s biggest “consumers” of fake Islamic terrorism are Western intelligence agencies. They love it.

        1. Most of you have no coherent answers to me holding up the mirror to your own governments and their dead end foreign policy

          1. Quos Deus vult perdere, prius dementat.
            We have a slight woke madness which is coming to an end, Rules and the Mohammedans have a deeper problem.

      1. The West is so bad, millions want to live here.
        I like Trumps idea of checking fb and posts of potential students. They ought to do the same with every mohammedan in the West.
        If they hate it so much, leave !

        1. The “West” is so good that it genocided 100 million natives in North America, countless millions in Australia, and many more in African during the colonial era. Westerners/white people should apologise to the entire planet for their crimes against non-white people.

          1. A Chinese keeps blabbing about the 100 million indigenous people. 100 million indigenous people? LOL. I didn’t know North America was so “overpopulated.” LOL.
            According to the Houston Holocaust Museum: “When European settlers arrived in the Americas, historians estimated that over 10 million indigenous people lived there.”
            According to Wiki:
            – The Great Leap is said to have resulted in 15 to 55 million deaths in mainland China between 1959 and 1961.
            – The Cultural Revolution was marked by violence and chaos in Chinese society. Estimates of the death t0ll vary widely, typically between 1 and 2 million.
            So, Mao and his hangmen killed more Chinese than even the fascist Japanese.
            Exaggeration is an innate trait of the Chinese. You love to point your bloody fingers at others, forgetting that you yourself are standing on a mountain of dead Chinese. LOL.

          2. Joe- in the interests of accuracy, many of the red indians were killed by each other or introduced diseases.
            Since Spanish Flu, the Black Death and latterly Wuflu also came from China, ie the death toll that the Tiddly Winks has inflicted on the world is alot higher than the Great Leap Forward.

          3. BigRooster, thanks. Just like the Spanish Flu, to which Native Americans had no immunity and died—just like the Wuhan vir-us. As Trump called it, this engineered vir-us originated in the Wuhan lab in China and continues to rampage worldwide.

          4. RayRee- and Squints should apologise for wanting to migrate to the West and enjoying the fruits of this disposition.

  7. No, Mr. Phar Kim Beng. It’s easier to talk about a better strategy in hindsight. Iran was friendlier to the world under the Shah than Iran was under the Ayatollah. The West (especially France) criticized the Shah’s regime and supported the exiled Ayatollah until he overthrew the Shah and, with his religious fanaticism, became increasingly hostile toward the West. Iranian hostility toward Israel reflects the personal hostility of the Ayatollah and his successor rather than that of the Iranian people and that leads to the current catastrophe. I’m no fan of Israel, but it’s a harsh reality that Israel exists and possesses nuclear weapons. Lamenting accomplishes nothing.
    The West, especially France, was gravely mistaken about the good Ayatollah, and Iran is ruled by a fanatical theocracy. Should Israel wait for its downfall at the hands of the Ayatollah? No one can predict what might happen to Israel, and thus to the world, if the religious Ayatollah possesses nuclear weapons. Can you do that, Mr. Phar Kim Beng?

    1. Something else to bear in mind, the opposition to the Shah was from the religious and the left. The left thought the clerics were simpletons and could be easily manipulated. They were very wrong.
      The US/West preferred clerics to a left sympathetic to Moskau.

    2. The CIA played a role in the 1953 Iranian coup d’état, which led to the overthrow of Iran’s democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh. This operation, known as “Operation Ajax” in the West, involved the CIA and British intelligence services, and it resulted in the restoration of the Shah’s rule.

  8. Israel is getting a pounding it has never gotten before. Tel Aviv stock exchange has been hit. It has been revealed that the IDF is using military bases in hospitals. Israelis are fleeing to Cyprus and Egypt. It looks like getting Gazafied is not much fun, especially if you are on the recieving end. They are feeling a bit like Palestine now. I wonder how that “invincibility” illusion feels now. They wanted war. They got war.

    1. At least get your facts straight. Hospitals are hospitals- except in Gaza, where in fact military bases are built inside and underneath them. Israelis are lining up to fly back home to Israel. The Tel Aviv Stock exchange indices have been rising over the past week. And guess what- war now is better than getting nuked in a month or a year.

      1. That argument of Iran being unhinged ready to nuke Israel is just hasbara nonsense. Nuclear monopoly and blackmail gives them a sense of impunity.

          1. LOL. I need to know if you are a fanatical Muslim or not, because all your comments are becoming increasingly religious and fanatical, like the Afghans or Pakistanis.

      2. US intelligence knows that Iran has no nuclear weapons program. It is all lies from the lie factory, which is Israel. Iran supports a treaty declaring the Middle East to be a nuclear weapons-free zone, but the US opposes it because Israel would need to give up its nuclear weapons.

    2. The new Leader of the Revolutionary Guards has his name on a Israeli smart bomb – Mustafa Shiite.

    3. frankly the destruction and casualties are way under expectations and inconsequental to their war effort. Considering its just 8 days Iran seems to be “on its knees” with even worse to come. Just recall the damage, destruction and casualties in France pre & post D- Day, the Blitz over Britain, and not forgetting the wars (inc civil) involving Iraq Ira,; the Gulf, Lebanon, Syria & Yemen. This should put the current situation in Israel in proper accurate perspective and not typical Voice of Cairo (May 1967) into perspective