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Will There Be War?

Will There Be War?
Maulana Najeebul Hasan Zaidi
مولانا نجیب الحسن زیدی
Maulana Najeebul Hasan Zaidi

In the current phase of international politics, relations between Iran and the United States stand at an extremely sensitive and delicate crossroads. Given the shifting strategic landscape of the Middle East and the unwavering resolve of the "Axis of Resistance"—following their continuous sacrifices and increasingly mysterious activity regarding future planning—the situation is critical.

This is further compounded by imperialist attempts to hijack the wave of public anger in Iran arising from recent bloody protests and economic hardship. Despite these instigations, the Islamic Republic of Iran has remained as immovable as an iron wall, causing the U.S. to face repeated setbacks. This friction has given rise to a pivotal question: will the conflict transition from the diplomatic and economic spheres into a prominent military dimension?

Three Likely Scenarios

This analysis examines which military path the U.S. is most likely to pursue:

  1. Limited Action: Targeted strikes or localized operations.
  2. Psychological Pressure: Coercive diplomacy and threats to incite internal collapse.
  3. Full-Scale Military Conflict: Comprehensive conventional warfare.

Two Schools of Thought

Current analytical estimates regarding future U.S. behavior are divided into two main camps:

1. The Psychological Warfare Perspective

This view holds that a broad military attack is unlikely. Instead, current movements are seen as a "gradual siege" designed to neutralize Iran so the Axis of Resistance can be targeted in isolation. The U.S. may create a diversion—focusing the threat on Iran while actually launching assaults on resistance fronts in Iraq and Lebanon. By besieging Iran indirectly, the U.S. aims to prevent it from aiding its allies.

2. The Military Escalation Perspective

This camp believes an attack is entirely possible, ranging from a "limited strike" to a "classical wide-scale war." Proponents argue that the scale of American military positioning suggests these activities are not merely psychological, even if the "starting gun" for a comprehensive operation has not yet been fired.

The "Limited Strike" Hypotheses

If the U.S. chooses a limited engagement, it generally falls into three categories:

  • Effective Limited Strike: Targeted assassinations of key figures or specific security operations.
  • Symbolic Limited Strike: Operations aimed at "saving face" and increasing political leverage.
  • Dangerous Limited Strike: Naval skirmishes or the seizure of sensitive geographical locations.

The common logic here is the American hope that Iran will either not respond or provide a weak response. However, Iran’s explicit declaration that any aggression will meet a broad response makes this a high-risk gamble for Washington.

The "Iraq Model" vs. Iranian Reality

Some analysts suggest the U.S. is following an "operational chain" similar to the Iraq Model: a limited clash followed by total attrition, economic pressure, and eventually, forced disarmament.

Strategic Note: Comparing Iran to Ba'athist Iraq is a grave error. The fundamental differences in Iran’s political structure, social capital, strategic depth, and regional power arrangements make the Iraq Model inapplicable and dangerous to implement.

The Real Threat: The "Iranian Social Code"

The most significant danger is not a traditional war, but a conflict designed based on the "Iranian Social Code." This involves a "surprise invasion" or a "decapitation strike" while the target is lulled into negligence. To counter this, three elements are essential:

  • A. Intelligence: Acquisition of accurate and reliable data.
  • B. Coordination: Connecting disparate dots—such as simultaneous naval, air, and ground threats—into a unified defense strategy.
  • C. Analytical Agility: Constant circulation of information to prevent decision-making paralysis.
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