Trump’s war has destroyed the illusion of US military supremacy
Story by Trita Parsi
The war in Ukraine shattered a core assumption about
great-power dominance: that size and military strength are enough to impose
one’s will. Ukraine showed otherwise. With the right strategy,
geography and resolve, a weaker state can survive and blunt – and in key
respects even defeat – a much larger and stronger adversary.
The US now faces an uncomfortable parallel. The war
with Iran is exposing similar limits to American power.
For decades, US grand strategy has rested on the
belief that America’s unmatched military capabilities enabled it to uphold
global stability and shape outcomes across entire regions.
After the failures in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the mess in Iran, many Americans have reached a
stark conclusion: the cost of that primacy is no longer sustainable, and no
longer serves their interests.
A strategy that depends on military dominance
everywhere, at all times, inevitably means being at war somewhere, all the
time.
America’s endless wars are not an accident, they are
the product of this approach. And if there is one rare point of agreement in an
increasingly divided country, it is this: Americans are
tired of war.
Yet, despite a war-weary public, mounting economic
strain and politicians who promise to end endless wars, inertia – and powerful
economic interests tied to war – have mostly kept this approach intact.
The question now being asked is whether Trump’s
debacle in Iran will finally break this pattern. Early signs suggest its
repercussions may exceed even those of George W Bush’s war of choice in Iraq.
The US actually won the Iraq war in under three weeks. Its military dominance was
never in doubt. But it lost the peace, failing to stabilise the country once
the insurgency took hold.
In Iran, however, the US hasn’t even won the military
phase of the conflict, despite facing a far weaker conventional force.
Iran has leveraged geography and asymmetric tactics to
blunt American power and inflict a strategic setback. Even more striking, early
claims that US air strikes had significantly degraded Iran’s drone and missile
capabilities now appear overstated.
The lesson is clear: control of the skies does not
guarantee control of outcomes, and without the will to deploy ground forces –
and without the ability to translate airpower into decisive results – US
military hegemony begins to look increasingly hollow.
Meanwhile, as some experts have pointed out, even though the Iraq war ultimately failed, it did
achieve its immediate goal: overthrowing the regime of Saddam Hussein. In Iran,
the opposite appears to have happened. Rather than damaging the regime, the war
has likely strengthened it and reinforced hard-line control, at a time when it
was looking weakened by domestic protests.
Stephen Walt, a Harvard professor, notes that while
the Iraq war destabilised the region, its global repercussions were relatively
contained. It did not trigger an oil crisis, widespread food shortages or major
supply chain disruptions. Iran, by contrast, has already sent energy markets
into turmoil, driving oil and gas prices to record highs and triggering energy
emergencies in multiple countries.
It may also have fundamentally reshaped the
geopolitical landscape of the Persian Gulf for years to come.
Military primacy for the US was always a choice, not a
necessity. The Iran war suggests it may no longer even be a viable one. A
strategy built on escalation dominance falters when escalation itself becomes
too risky to use. One that relies on decisive victories breaks down when
enemies can consistently push for stalemates.
What emerges instead is arguably a different kind of
global order: one not defined by dominance but by mutual denial. In this world,
great powers cannot simply impose their will, and smaller states can resist
them at tolerable costs. The result is not chaos, but constraint.
The most likely outcome of the current US-Iran
stand-off is neither a deal nor a return to active war, but a prolonged, uneasy
equilibrium. That, too, is a sign of the times.
The Trump White House may walk away from negotiations,
but it is unlikely to re-enter a full-scale war. Not because the US lacks the
capability, but because it lacks the strategic freedom to use it.
For countries that largely depend on US protection,
this should be a wake-up call.
This does not mean alliances will collapse, but it
does mean they will change. Countries will hedge more, diversify their security
relationships and place greater emphasis on regional balances of power rather
than reliance on a single guarantor.
In that sense, Iran is not a rupture so much as a
speeding up of a trend already well underway.
Iraq and Afghanistan exposed the limits of Western
occupation and regime change. Ukraine exposed the vulnerability of large
conventional forces. Iran now exposes the limits of military coercion itself.
As my colleague Monica Toft argues, other smaller
powers don’t need a vital waterway like the Strait of Hormuz to effectively
constrain a superpower the way Iran has done. The shaping of terrain and
geography – like in Ukraine – is sufficient. In short: Iran’s strategy is
replicable elsewhere.
These conflicts, taken together, point to a more
multipolar world – not because new great powers have risen but because existing
ones can no longer dominate as they once did.
The danger for the US is not irrelevance. It’s that it
continues to pursue a strategy designed for a world that no longer exists. The
same is true for countries, like the UK, that have largely chosen to rely on
American military dominance. American hegemony promised control, but the Iran
war revealed the limitations of American power.
In the gap between promise and reality lies the likely
end of an era. The winners will ultimately be those who
adjust.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario