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There is a moment in every great geopolitical confrontation when the outcome becomes structurally inevitable — long before anyone is willing to announce it.

Rome understood this when Germanic tribes stopped retreating. Britain understood it in 1947, standing in Delhi with empty hands. America understood it somewhere between Fallujah and Kandahar, though it took another decade of bleeding to say so publicly.

We are living inside one of those moments right now, and almost nobody in the rooms where decisions get made will admit it.

Iran has won. Not on the battlefield so much as strategically. And the proof is not found in missile counts or casualty figures — it’s found in the singular, undeniable fact that both Washington and Tel Aviv are more afraid of what Tehran does next than of anything Iran has already done.

That fear is rational. Understanding why it’s rational requires setting aside the comfortable theater of press conferences and congressional hearings, and looking at what has actually been constructed over the past four decades.

Architecture of patience

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps did not spend 20 years building an army. It built something far more dangerous: an architecture of distributed, self-replicating network of proxies, tunnel systems, drone factories, missile stockpiles and intelligence assets stretching from Beirut to Sanaa. And it was built not by reactive improvisation, but by design.

Game theorists call it second-mover advantage. Most conventional military thinking obsesses over the first strike — the shock, the dominance, the psychological impact of hitting first. America has perfected this via its “shock and awe” campaigns of precision bombing and decapitation strikes. It’s a brilliant playbook against an enemy that fights by the same rulebook.

Iran, however, never agreed to that rulebook. Instead, Iran studied the one lesson that Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan screamed at anyone willing to listen: America wins battles but loses wars.

Firepower decides battles, but will decides wars. And a nation fighting for its survival generates a depth of will that a nation fighting for its credibility simply cannot match. That asymmetry — quiet, structural, almost invisible in a single news cycle — is the engine driving everything in the Iran war.

Collapse of Israeli deterrence

Consider what Israeli deterrence actually rests upon. For decades, the architecture was elegant: strike us, and the cost will exceed any conceivable gain.

It worked magnificently against Egypt in 1973, against conventional adversaries with fixed addresses and governments that needed to keep their wobbly economies intact. Deterrence is a transaction. It requires the other party to have something they desperately fear losing.

But what do you threaten to destroy when the entity has no single neck to collar? When Hezbollah loses a commander, the command disperses.

When Hamas loses a tunnel, three more are dug. When Iranian assets in Syria are struck, they move. Israel has been bombing the same supply lines for 15 years, but the lines still run.

That is not a military failure — it’s a conceptual one. The deterrence model was built for a world that Iran methodically dismantled.

The threshold doctrine

And then there is the nuclear question, which the Western press routinely reduces to a binary — does Iran have the bomb or not — when the actual strategic reality is considerably more sophisticated than that.

Iran does not need the bomb – it needs the threshold. North Korea understood this. Pakistan understood it. Israel has quietly practiced it for 50 years without ever officially declaring its arsenal.

The doctrine is called calculated ambiguity, and its logic is brutal in its simplicity: a state that might have nuclear capability is more strategically paralyzing than a state that definitively has it.

Once you cross the threshold openly, the deterrence math reasserts itself and everyone knows the rules. A state existing permanently at 90% capability forces its adversaries into frozen uncertainty — wondering whether to strike, whether they are already too late or whether confrontation itself could trigger the very outcome they fear.

Uncertainty is Iran’s most powerful weapon precisely because it costs nothing to maintain and everything to respond to. This is why regime change remains structurally off the table, though no American official will say so clearly.

What was done to Saddam Hussein’s Iraq cannot easily be repeated against a nuclear threshold state. Nor can the Libyan model that removed Muammar Gaddafi be replicated under such conditions.

There has never been a successful regime change achieved from the air alone — not once in the history of modern warfare. The only path runs through ground troops, and the prospect of infantry operations against a state weeks from nuclear capability produces something in Washington’s war rooms that functions very much like operational terror.

The Hormuz lever

The Strait of Hormuz deserves more serious treatment than it typically receives. Twenty percent of global oilsupply moves through a waterway, at its narrowest, 39 kilometers wide. Iran does not need to close it. Closure would be an act of war with immediate, unified international response.

Instead, Iran only needs to make it unreliable, jacking up insurance premiums that make commercial passage unviable. A tanker struck every few weeks has the desired effect: quiet, deniable and economically catastrophic — and perfectly calibrated to fracture the coalition supposedly united against Tehran.

 The Gulf states, Japan, South Korea and Germany — their opposition to Iran evaporates the moment the economic pain becomes personal. Iran has done that arithmetic carefully and knows the numbers better than Washington’s strategists do.

History is unambiguous about what happens when empires reach the limit of their effective power. They don’t accept stalemate — stalemate is psychologically and politically unbearable for ruling classes that have built entire identities around dominance. Rather, they escalate by reaching for the next instrument of force, not because escalation constitutes a strategy, but because it delays the moment of reckoning.

Every additional airstrike, every new sanction, every assassination that fails to produce submission functions not as pressure but as accelerant — hardening Iranian resolve, legitimizing the program in the eyes of the Iranian public and recruiting the next generation of fighters with grievances now written into lived experience.

Iran has survived 45 years of sanctions, isolation, assassination and bombardment and the regime is still there. That single data point contains more strategic information than 1,000 intelligence briefings.

Patience, in Persian strategic culture, is not so much temperamental as it is doctrinal. And history — genuinely, consistently and without exception — bends toward the patient.

M A Hossain is a senior journalist and international affairs analyst, based in Bangladesh.

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