
We Need to Finish the Job in Iran
Satisfaction because the raids, particularly against the nuclear-weapons program, may have achieved what decades of illusion, naïveté, misguided diplomacy and inadequate economic sanctions failed to achieve, and frustration because the strikes were terminated early and unnecessarily.
It remains to be seen if Washington has learned enough of a lesson to complete the destruction of Iran's nuclear infrastructure, by military means if necessary. As on many previous occasions, Iran has announced that it will cease cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency, demonstrating that there is currently no serious chance of a satisfactory diplomatic solution.
The early signs are mixed and opaque. Much depends on the stability of the ayatollahs' regime and its internal divisions, and whether Iran's population will publicly express its discontent.
Unfortunately, the opposition in Iran, while national in scope, is not well organized, and the regime's potential for brutal repression has been repeatedly demonstrated. Much also depends on whether America's leaders have the necessary resolve, focus and persistence — a matter in considerable doubt.
The Middle East has changed significantly since Iranian proxies enacted on Oct. 7, 2023, the culmination of the Islamic republic's 'Ring of Fire' strategy — surrounding Israel with enemies, including Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas and Islamic Jihad in Gaza and foreign militias in Syria. Along almost every important strategic dimension, Iran is today far weaker, and Israel (and the United States) far stronger.
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