that sounds like a load of hooey. Islamic Republic seems to be making plenty of geopolitical decisions even if the US doesn’t like them. https://t.co/gLzzjNboCC
— Laura Rozen (@lrozen) March 2, 2026
Further Evidence of a Misreading of the Iranian System
— Danny (Dennis) Citrinowicz ,داني سيترينوفيتش (@citrinowicz) March 2, 2026
Recent statements coming out of Washington reinforce a troubling possibility: that key elements within the administration fundamentally misunderstand how the Iranian system operates.
It is true that ideology is central to… https://t.co/1xAqjk6b9p
Further Evidence of a Misreading of the Iranian SystemIt’s just magical thinking. Or magical non-thinking.
Recent statements coming out of Washington reinforce a troubling possibility: that key elements within the administration fundamentally misunderstand how the Iranian system operates.
It is true that ideology is central to the Islamic Republic. But ideology has never operated in isolation from regime survival. Iran’s Supreme Leader, despite his rigid public posture — consistently made pragmatic decisions when regime preservation was at stake.
The 2015 nuclear agreement is a case in point. Khamenei, who routinely described the United States as the “Great Satan,” nonetheless authorized direct negotiations with Washington when sanctions pressure threatened economic and political stability. That decision was not ideological moderation — it was strategic calculation.
Even after the U.S. withdrawal from the JCPOA, the killing of Qassem Soleimani the "lost son" of Khamenei(an important move that significantly undermine the axis) and allowed Israeli strikes on nuclear infrastructure during negotiations, Khamenei still permitted indirect and, at times, direct engagement with U.S. officials.
The pattern was clear: confrontation and negotiation were tools, not contradictions.
It is also worth recalling that in 2003 Iran halted aspects of its military nuclear program amid fears of potential U.S. invasion following the Iraq War. That decision reflected cost-benefit analysis, not ideological transformation.
These are not historical footnotes. They matter because they demonstrate that the Iranian leadership — even at its most ideologically rigid — has historically behaved as a rational, survival-driven actor.
If current U.S. strategy assumes that the regime will either capitulate under pressure or fracture internally in predictable ways, that assumption rests on a questionable analytical foundation.
The present Iranian leadership is unlikely to surrender or voluntarily dismantle its strategic programs. On the contrary, it may conclude that expanding missile capabilities and advancing toward nuclear threshold status — or beyond — is the most reliable way to deter future attacks and ensure regime continuity.
Equally concerning is the apparent expectation in some policy circles that the IRGC might splinter or “raise its hands” under pressure. The Guard Corps is not merely a military institution; it is an ideological, economic, and political pillar of the state. Betting on rapid institutional defection reflects limited appreciation of its embeddedness within the system.
Even regime change, should it occur, would not automatically resolve the nuclear issue. Iran’s nuclear program did not begin with the Islamic Republic; it began under the Shah. The technological base, scientific infrastructure, and national framing of nuclear capability as a sovereign right predate the current regime.
There are strategic challenges that cannot be resolved through kinetic means alone. More importantly, Iran retains the indigenous capacity to rebuild critical elements of its program under a wide range of future political scenarios.
The United States possesses extraordinary analytical expertise on Iran — across academia, intelligence, and policy institutions. It is essential that decision-makers fully integrate that expertise. Strategic miscalculation rooted in incomplete understanding could lock Washington into an escalation path built on flawed assumptions.
Or rather, Trump is mired in Vietnam with the “silent majority.” Only this time it’s LBJ and McNamara, and the conviction that “American military superiority” would lead to victory over the “little brown men in black pajamas.” “Waist deep in the Big Muddy, and the big fool says ‘Move on.’ ” (Sorry, Lemire. It’s got bugger all to do with “idealism.” In fact, idealism” was the magical thinking of “American military superiority.”) Even the WSJ is more clear-eyed than that:“Trump’s hubris resembles that of the neocons—like them, he believes in American supremacy and is fascinated by the overwhelming power of the U.S. military—but he shares none of their idealism. His only commitment is to himself” https://t.co/BKZ3zG1ih3
— Jonathan Lemire (@JonLemire) March 3, 2026
2/ "Some lawmakers and U.S. officials say Iran was nowhere near capable of building a nuclear weapon, even if Tehran seeks one. They also say there is NO EVIDENCE to support Trump’s claim that Iran could rapidly develop a missile capable of striking the U.S."
— Ryan Goodman (@rgoodlaw) March 3, 2026
4/ "On Iran’s nuclear ambitions, Trump officials also offered public assertions that differed from the consensus among other countries and independent experts, and didn’t share intelligence with lawmakers to bolster their claims."
— Ryan Goodman (@rgoodlaw) March 3, 2026
Considering who's in charge:Read this. pic.twitter.com/j19QemSc8N
— Don Winslow (@donwinslow) March 3, 2026
The service members who were killed were working out of a trailer even as Iran fired ballistic missiles and drones all across the Middle East. Stunning planning failure and clearly Hegseth lied when he called it a "fortified" facility. https://t.co/eP1DcjhOsK
— Tommy Vietor (@TVietor08) March 3, 2026
New: The strike yesterday in Kuwait that has now claimed the lives of six US service members was a direct hit on a makeshift operations center — in what was described as a triple wide trailer — at the port of Shuaiba, a source familiar said. The strike came so quickly there were…
— Haley Britzky (@halbritz) March 2, 2026
New: The strike yesterday in Kuwait that has now claimed the lives of six US service members was a direct hit on a makeshift operations center — in what was described as a triple wide trailer — at the port of Shuaiba, a source familiar said. The strike came so quickly there were no sirens or warning to allow troops to evacuate to a bunker ahead of time.
Thinking of them and their loved ones.
I remember when Bush-Cheney went into Iraq believing they'd welcome the invaders as passively as if they had no minds or wills of their own wondering how much American racism had cost us in moral credibility, blood and treasury. I think that since the end of the 19th century it's cost us a lot, including as Mark Twain prophesied, our democracy.
ReplyDeleteRachel Maddow's list of how under Patel and Noem America's informed national security infrastructure has been gutted, including the guy who got fired or giving his bosses cybertruck the finger, should become a classic in analysis of the price we're paying. I wonder if A. G. Sulzberger figures the price is worth it for his paper to get an interview with the president.