The Unbelievable Madness of Our War With Iran
Last year, I warned about the possibility that Israel
might drag the United States into a regional conflict. What’s happening now is
worse than I could have ever imagined.
March 10, 2026
https://archive.ph/viP73#selection-599.0-611.14
I wrote in July 2024 about my fear that, emboldened by
unconditional U.S. support, Israel might launch a full-scale war against
Hezbollah in Lebanon that could drag in the United States. Clearly, I failed to
comprehend the scope of Netanyahu’s and Trump’s barbaric ambitions.
I was right about one thing: Israel did invade Lebanon on October 1, 2024, only four days
after assassinating Hezbollah’s Hassan Nasrallah, and 12 days after
triggering the pager explosions that killed 42 and maimed almost 3,000. While the two countries agreed to a ceasefire eight
weeks later, Israel routinely violated it and faced no consequences. And yet
the Israeli invasion and continued bombardment of Lebanon now seem relatively
inconsequential when compared to the regional conflagration Israel and the U.S.
have ignited by attacking Iran.
Within the first day, the United States and Israel
conducted approximately 900 airstrikes, killing hundreds of civilians. The strikes targeted
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, whose martyrdom sparked riots among Shia
communities in Bahrain, Yemen, Iraq, and Pakistan. Iran selected his son,
Mojtaba Khamenei, as the country’s new supreme leader. While Khamenei Sr. had
issued a fatwa, or religious ruling, in 2003 against the production of nuclear weapons,
analysts fear that Mojtaba will impose no such restrictions.
Iran retaliated within hours, launching missiles at
Israel and at U.S. military facilities in Bahrain, the UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, and
Saudi Arabia. Within the first few days, Iran also hit Oman, the Azerbaijani enclave of Nakhchivan, a British base in Cyprus. Turkey intercepted two Iranian
missiles. Although the Houthi movement in Yemen had not yet joined after the
first week, Iran-backed militias in Iraq fired missiles and drones at Israel and
at U.S. bases in Jordan.
Meanwhile, in addition to launching thousands of
airstrikes against Iran, Israel again invaded Lebanon, prompting French
President Emmanuel Macron to increase military aid to the Lebanese army, which did
nothing to slow Israel’s blitz over Beirut. Israel continued its bombing
campaign in Iran, evidently using AI to select such targets as a public park because
it was named “Police Park.” No one checked that it had no relation to the
police, indicating a lack of human oversight.
The number of countries actively or potentially
involved in hostilities is growing, with no sign of concern from Israel or the
U.S. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian announced that Iran would stop attacking the Gulf
Cooperation Council states unless attacks were launched from their
territory. Soon after, Israel attacked a desalination facility and struck 30 oil storage tanks, derailing the possible
reduction in hostilities with the GCC. Residents of Tehran captured videos
of the apocalyptic aftermath: massive black clouds and fires burning
uncontrollably, followed by a black rain of oil. Targeting oil and water
facilities marked an escalation that the Gulf states in particular wish to
avoid; in the GCC, 100 million people depend on desalinated water.
Although air defenses have deflected most Iranian
projectiles, the Gulf countries’ image of peaceful luxury—an image purchased
with hundreds of billions of dollars of U.S. weapons—has been
shattered. Gulf states are furious with Trump for sacrificing their safety
and economic viability for a war that will result either in complete chaos in
Iran that could destabilize the entire region or the survival of a regime that
is even more hostile, paranoid, and determined to go nuclear.
Emirati billionaire Khalaf Al Habtoor channeled the
frustration of many in a post on X aimed at South Carolina Senator Lindsey
Graham, a close ally of Netanyahu, who has pushed for years for the U.S. to
attack Iran. Habtoor wrote, “I say to him clearly: We know full well why we are
under attack, and we also know who dragged the entire region into this
dangerous escalation without consulting those he calls his ‘allies’ in the
region.” The post was later removed. Although they previously welcomed
Trump’s presidency, the GCC states are learning the wisdom of Henry Kissinger’s
observation, “To be an enemy of America is dangerous, but to be a friend is
fatal.”
Leaders around the world appear to be struggling to
respond to an American administration that is no longer constrained by
pretending to care about human lives, the law, or the cost of its hubris. In
Europe, only Spain refused to allow the U.S. to use its bases to attack Iran,
while France, Switzerland, and Slovenia condemned Trump’s attacks as a
violation of international law, as did Russia, China, Chile, Venezuela, and
Pakistan. And yet as the price of fuel and food begins to climb, the rest of
the world will experience the consequences of failing to hold Israel
accountable for its flagrant violations of international law. Israeli impunity,
combined with America’s campaign to destroy institutions like the International
Criminal Court that could hold Israelis or Americans accountable for war crimes
in Palestine or Iran, threaten to destroy the system that prevented a third
world war for over eight decades.
Those who are suffering most are the thousands of
innocent people inside Iran. The savagery of the American attack became almost
immediately apparent when its initial wave of airstrikes targeted a girls’
elementary school. Three separate precision munitions hit the school,
indicating that it was attacked intentionally. Given that the school had been a
separate civilian facility for a decade, the notion that the missiles were actually intended
for the nearby IRGC facility strains credibility.
Instead, this appeared to indicate that the U.S. had
adopted Israel’s Dahiyah
doctrine, named for a
Beirut suburb that Israel completely flattened during the 2006 war. IDF
Commander Gadi Eisenkot articulated the doctrine as follows: “We will wield
disproportionate power and cause immense damage and destruction.” What he
described is antithetical to international law, where the principle of
proportionality is foundational. Israel has long demonstrated its contempt for
international law.
Now self-styled Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has
eagerly followed suit, declaring that the U.S. military would no longer be
governed by “stupid rules of engagement.” Hegseth seems to believe that if
the U.S. had been willing to kill more civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan, the
U.S. might have won. Yet it was the civilian toll of the U.S. War in
Afghanistan that drove the population to support the return of the
Taliban rather than suffer the violence of ongoing American occupation.
America’s toll on the civilian population of Afghanistan and Iraq pales in
comparison to Israel’s genocidal assault on Gaza, which Hegseth appears
impatient to emulate.
Americans are generally insulated from the tragic
human toll of their government’s military interventions abroad; instead, the
cost will be felt at the gas pump or perhaps the Republicans’ electoral chances
in the upcoming midterms. Not in the loss of a child, a grandparent, a newborn
baby to indiscriminate and inescapable violence.
And yet some Americans may pay the ultimate price, as
speculation swirls about what was once considered unthinkable: a U.S. ground
invasion. The majority of Americans already oppose Trump’s war on Iran; no
modern U.S. president has started a war with so little public support. If Trump sends U.S. troops into
Iran, the results would be catastrophic—for Iranians, for the region, and
for American soldiers.
Many veterans of the so-called “war on terror” have
viscerally rejected the possibility of yet another unnecessary war in the
Middle East, a sentiment embodied in horrifying footage shot of a protest in a Senate committee hearing.
Security officers and a senator drag a uniformed Marine out of the room so
violently that they break his arm. Just before you hear his bones snap, he
shouts, “No one wants to fight for Israel!”
The fears I expressed 20 months ago now seem almost
quaint, in the face of what Trump and Netanyahu have unleashed.
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