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The likeliest outcome of the US–Israeli war on Iran is not a clean victory for anyone but a grinding, partial, and mutually costly “non‑defeat.” It will leave Iran battered yet intact, the US and Israel strategically weakened, the Gulf and global economy scarred, and the world nudged further into a fragmented, more authoritarian multipolar order. This essay is part of a larger exploration of managed collapse—how late‑imperial wars, techno‑financial extraction, and apocalyptic nationalism fuse into a single operating system that would rather burn the world than relinquish control—and it reads the Iran war not as an exception to that trajectory, but as one of its clearest expressions. The opening weeks of the conflict have already set this pattern. Coordinated US–Israeli air and missile strikes have killed senior Iranian figures, including the supreme leader, and hit Revolutionary Guard bases, nuclear and missile infrastructure, and power and communications networks across multiple cities. Iran has responded with dense salvos of missiles and drones against US bases, Israeli targets, and Gulf capitals, along with attacks on oil facilities, ports, airports, and cloud infrastructure. Commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has effectively halted, insurance markets are in crisis, and rerouted vessels add time and cost by circling Africa. Both sides talk as if decisive outcomes are within reach—Washington and Tel Aviv hinting at the permanent defanging or even collapse of the Islamic Republic, Tehran promising to drive the US out of the region—but the balance of capabilities and constraints points toward something far messier and more symmetrical in its damage.

Air power can devastate, but it is unlikely to decapitate the Islamic Republic. Iran’s state is not a single man or building; it is a dense security apparatus with the IRGC, Basij militias, intelligence organs, and overlapping clerical and political structures that have operated under war and sanctions for decades. Removing a supreme leader and blowing up ministries and headquarters is a heavy blow, but the most probable internal result is not liberalization or collapse; it is consolidation. A harder, more openly militarized regime—a Revolutionary Guard–dominated junta, or some hybrid with clerical cover—will likely emerge, claiming legitimacy from survival under fire and from the blood price paid by the population. In that configuration, rival factions within the elite will have fewer incentives to compromise and more reasons to purge critics, blame internal enemies, and tighten ideological control. The war will give the state a simple story: foreign crusaders tried to destroy us, we survived, and anyone who now questions the line is a traitor. For ordinary Iranians, that translates into more repression, not less. From the US and Israeli perspective, this is already a strategic failure: enormous violence expended, yet the core regime endures and in some respects becomes more rigid and hostile.

Tehran’s external strategy is not to contest US conventional dominance head‑on, but to bleed the periphery and raise the cost of US presence to intolerable levels. Iran and its allied militias are using large numbers of relatively cheap drones and missiles—some costing tens of thousands of dollars—to force the US and its partners to expend interceptors that cost hundreds of thousands or millions apiece. Each wave of Iranian drones and rockets obliges Gulf air defenses and US ships to fire off expensive munitions; even when interception rates are high, the financial asymmetry is ruinous over time. The math is stark: a drone that costs a family home can force defenders to launch interceptors priced like a luxury yacht. Stockpiles of Patriots, SM‑series missiles, and other high‑end weapons are finite and slow to replace; American and Israeli air‑ and missile‑defense capacity has already been strained across multiple theatres. The US industrial base can ramp up production, but adding new lines, training workers, and retooling plants takes years. Every missile fired at a Shahed over Kuwait is one that cannot be sent to another contested theater. Iran does not need to “win” in a conventional sense here. It simply needs to avoid being destroyed while proving that US and allied forces cannot defend themselves and Gulf infrastructure indefinitely without unsustainable expense and diversion of resources.

By choking Hormuz and expanding the target set beyond bases to include oil, LNG, fertilizer, container shipping, and data centers, Iran is weaponizing the geography at the heart of the global economy. The Strait of Hormuz still carries a very large share of the world’s seaborne oil and LNG exports. When commercial shipping through that narrow channel is halted or radically reduced, tankers queue, insurers raise or withdraw coverage, and vessels are rerouted via the Cape of Good Hope, adding weeks of sailing and substantial cost. Those shocks feed directly into global energy prices, already volatile in a warming world. They also ripple into petrochemicals and nitrogen fertilizer: the Gulf region is home to some of the world’s largest fertilizer plants, and Hormuz handles roughly one‑third of global fertilizer nutrient trade and about half of globally traded sulfur, a key input for phosphate fertilizer. There is no global strategic fertilizer reserve to smooth such a break. If these flows are disrupted long enough, farmers half a world away may find inputs unaffordable or unavailable, with reduced harvests showing up months later as higher food prices and shortages. Within the Gulf, the same ports and shipping lanes bring in an overwhelming share of food and consumer goods; the monarchies of the GCC import most of what they eat. Supermarket shelves are only a few weeks of shipping away from being bare if those arteries remain cut.

Layered onto this is the vulnerability of Gulf cities’ water and power systems. Desalination plants—energy‑hungry factories that turn seawater into drinking water—provide the vast majority of municipal supply in several Gulf states, with estimates of 70 to 90 percent dependence in some cases. They are large, immobile industrial complexes, often clustered along the coast in known locations. A handful of well‑placed missiles or drones, or even cyber‑physical attacks, could take key facilities offline for days or weeks. Engineers and disaster‑risk experts have long warned that a determined adversary could, in effect, put millions of people on a countdown to dehydration: without desalination, distribution systems and household tanks drain quickly, and there are no major rivers to fall back on. Power plants feeding those desalination systems and the massive cooling needs of Gulf megacities are also obvious targets. The same is true of the huge data centers that American and global cloud providers have been building in the UAE and other Gulf states, attracted by cheap energy and friendly regulation; some have already experienced disruptions from attacks on regional power and network infrastructure. In threatening oil, gas, fertilizers, food imports, water, power, and data, Iran is not just striking its enemies; it is reaching into the nervous and circulatory systems of a world economy that has made itself dependent on fragile, geographically concentrated assets.

Against this, the United States retains immense latent advantages. Its economy is far larger than Iran’s; its technological base is deeper; its alliance network and global basing give it options Tehran can only dream of. But its war machine was optimized for short, high‑intensity campaigns designed to shock and deter, not for protracted attritional defense against swarms of cheap systems in a theater saturated with fragile, high‑value infrastructure. Sustaining current operations for months or years would require not only money but political willingness to accept rising costs, stretched stockpiles, and the diversion of attention and materiel from other priorities like Asia or domestic renewal. At home, the war lands on a society already weary of Iraq and Afghanistan, anxious about inflation and inequality, and deeply polarized. Even without mass US casualties, a conflict that manifests as higher prices, cyber scares, intermittent base attacks, and a general sense of permanent emergency is unlikely to be popular indefinitely. Congress will intermittently balk at supplemental spending, and factions will leverage the war to press inward‑facing cultural and political agendas. In Israel, the war compounds the trauma of Gaza and earlier conflicts, deepens domestic divisions over the direction of the state, and accelerates diplomatic isolation. In Iran, it reinforces a siege mentality that legitimizes harsher domestic control while rationalizing more aggressive external behavior.

The nightmare escalation path would be a large‑scale ground invasion of Iran. Historically, regime change by air alone has almost never succeeded; Iraq, Libya, and Serbia all required some combination of ground forces, extensive proxy use, or prolonged sanctions and isolation to produce limited and unstable political shifts. Iran is bigger, more populous, more mountainous, and more cohesive than Iraq was in 2003. Its IRGC and allied militias are trained for asymmetrical defense and insurgency. A land campaign would likely require multiple axes—amphibious operations from the Gulf, pushes from the west via Iraq, and extensive airborne moves—supported by massive logistics over long distances under constant missile and drone fire. The risk of heavy casualties and long‑term quagmire would be extreme, and many US officers and analysts know it. Yet the pressures in that direction are real. Gulf rulers and Israeli leaders, facing continued strikes on their cities and infrastructures, will demand a more “decisive” solution if the conflict drags. US political elites who have sold this war as the moment to “solve” Iran once and for all may find it hard to back down openly and accept a stalemate. The sunk‑cost logic of empire—having already paid so much, you cannot stop short—will tempt some toward escalation. If Washington were to cross that line, it might achieve more extensive destruction in Iran, but at the cost of a generational occupation dilemma, enormous bloodshed, and a further plunge in global standing. In that sense, the very pursuit of victory would lock in a long strategic loss.

Even if ground invasion is avoided and the war remains an air‑and‑proxy contest, the geopolitical and economic map will not snap back to its prewar shape. The aura of unchallengeable US deterrence has already been punctured by visible failures of interception, base evacuations, and the sheer inability to keep Gulf airspace and shipping fully secure. Allies and partners, from Europe to Asia to the smaller Gulf monarchies, are watching closely. For many, this war confirms that American power remains formidable but is no longer singularly stabilizing or reliably wise. They will hedge accordingly: deepening deals with China and Russia, building out their own defense industries, exploring alternative payment systems and currencies, and quietly lowering their exposure to US sanctions risk. The conflict accelerates a transition already underway, from a US‑centered unipolar order to a messy, contested multipolarity in which Washington’s tools of influence—sanctions, security guarantees, control over financial plumbing—still matter but no longer dominate unchallenged. Iran, for its part, will likely emerge more dependent on and integrated with other revisionist powers, more committed to drones, missiles, and proxy networks, and more convinced that only such tools keep it alive.

Domestically, the war will push all involved societies toward greater securitization. In the United States, wartime emergency measures—expanded surveillance authorities, broader definitions of “extremism,” harsher penalties for leaks and protests—will find new justifications and institutional footholds. Some of these will be rolled back on paper as the war cools, but many will remain embedded in practice. In Israel and Iran, already heavily militarized politics will harden further, with dissent more easily framed as disloyalty in a time of existential struggle. The same is true, to lesser degrees, in Gulf states that will use the crisis to crack down on restive populations and labor forces under the pretext of security. These shifts do not just constrain individuals; they shape the future of governance itself, making it more normal to treat citizens as potential threats to be monitored and managed. That is exactly the kind of juridical‑security operating system I have been tracking: an order in which states and their corporate partners reserve ever greater discretion to act in the name of “stability” while insulating themselves from accountability.

Seen from the vantage point of civilizational collapse, this war is less an aberration than an expression of the underlying trajectory. A high‑energy, fossil‑driven industrial civilization that has overshot planetary boundaries is desperately trying to hold onto the foundations it built itself on: oil, gas, global shipping, synthetic fertilizers, and cloud infrastructure powered by cheap hydrocarbons. The US–Iran conflict is, at base, a struggle over those foundations—a fight over who controls which valves and straits, which grids and nodes, in a context where the overall system is becoming less stable and more ecologically untenable. Rather than treating this fragility as a warning to decarbonize and localize, major powers are doubling down on militarizing chokepoints and hardening vulnerable infrastructure. Money and engineering talent that could have gone into redesigning food systems, water use, and energy grids for a hotter, more volatile world are instead poured into missile defenses, hardened bunkers, and redundant data centers in new but equally exposed locations. Every barrel burned to move a carrier group through a contested strait, every gigawatt devoted to training larger AI models in the desert, extends the life of the old model at the cost of making its eventual breakdown sharper.

The war also intertwines with the spiritual and narrative aspects of collapse. Inside the US military and political class, apocalyptic and civilizational rhetoric has been steadily normalized, framing geopolitical contests as struggles for the survival of “the West” or “Judeo‑Christian civilization.” That layer of meaning offers purpose to soldiers and citizens asked to risk their lives or livelihoods in wars whose material logic is abstract, technocratic, and troubling. It recodes structural decline and geopolitical overreach as prophecy fulfilled: rising seas, economic turmoil, and global unrest become signs that the timetable is advancing as promised. In Iran, a different eschatology frames resistance to the “Great Satan” and its allies as part of a sacred history leading toward eventual redemption. Both sides, in different idioms, mobilize myths that make sacrifice and destruction endurable, even desirable, in service of a larger story. In that sense, the war is not just about pipelines and ports; it is also about whose vision of the end of the world will be allowed to define meaning as the old order frays.

Ultimately, how the US–Israeli war on Iran “plays out” is inseparable from how modern industrial civilization plays out. A likely military and political path—no decisive victory, enduring damage, intensified multipolarity, expanded security states, normalized economic shocks—maps neatly onto the picture of managed decline I have been studying. The war hastens a world where energy is more tightly securitized, trade more militarized, rights more contingent, and futures more unequal. It does not by itself bring the system down; it teaches those who rule it how to keep riding it as it sinks, shifting burdens downward and outward. In that sense, the most honest description of the war’s likely end is neither triumph nor apocalypse, but another turn of the ratchet in a civilization that is losing without admitting it. It is fighting over the control panel of a machine that is burning itself out, and arguing over whose gods and laws will bless the ride down.