The United States (US) and Israel launched the 28 Feb 2026 pre-emptive strikes with
a familiar, modern fallacy that speed, precision, and superior force could
deliver a definitive war and provide a strategic exit to ending it on a victorious
note, quickly. The opening strikes targeted Iran’s command-and-control centres and key
leadership figures; the logic of these strikes was the expectation that decapitation
of the top leadership would translate into a systemic collapse, and regime
change achieved, quickly. President Trump expected the local population to rise
in revolt against the regime on his exhortations. With this in mind, he addressed
"the great, proud people of Iran". He said, "I say tonight that the hour of your
freedom is at hand". He went on to add that "When we are finished,
take over your government. It will be yours to take. This will be probably your
only chance for generations".
This expectation did not materialise. The Trump administration had miscalculated
the resilience of the deeply entrenched Iranian regime, with its legitimacy
based on theology.
Instead, the conflict has evolved into a far more complex and
historically recognisable pattern: a prolonged contest between military
superiority, adaptation by the adversary in the form of asymmetric warfare, and strategic endurance. Twenty days into the
war, the outcome now, it seems, is shaped less by what is destroyed and more by
who can sustain the consequences of not winning.
From Shock to Systemic Conflict
The initial phase saw coordinated US-Israeli strikes aimed at degrading Iran’s military and command structures. The logic was straightforward; to disrupt, degrade, coerce, and compel. But Iran’s ideologically driven institutional framework and mosaic security apparatus was, as witnessed, configured to absorb the shock of ‘decapitation of the top leadership’ through decentralisation of command, and still continuing to function. Rather than mirroring the escalation symmetrically, Tehran shifted the battlefield horizontally, towards energy infrastructure and maritime "choke points." The effects were immediate, and global. With Brent crude surging toward $120/barrel in March, the war’s impact has moved from the deserts of the Levant to the gas pumps around the globe, and the American homeland too.
Israel, for its part, has expanded its target set; moving from immediate military threats to infrastructure with long-term economic significance and towards terror assets in Lebanon. This reflects a broader, more desperate objective: not merely deterrence, but the sustained weakening of Iran’s regional position before the political window for high-intensity operations closes. Its attack on a desalination plant and the South Pars gas field in Iran were beyond the US target list, as President clearly made known after each of these events.
The Present: A War Defined by Time
The conflict today sits in a tense, but destructive and bloody equilibrium. Israel retains tactical military superiority. The United States remains the decisive external actor. Yet neither has translated battlefield advantage into strategic closure. Iran, despite sustained pressure on its viable targets and top leadership losses, continues to function, retaliate, and shape the environment. All of this with limited, and reducing firepower.
The reason lies in a fundamental asymmetry of action based not on power, but of time.
Iran is stretching time by employing low-cost, asymmetric, and globally disruptive tactics. Tehran is aiming to stretch the conflict to raise the "external cost" for its adversaries. They are not fighting for a battlefield win, which is not possible under the circumstances. Instead, they are fighting for endurance; bear the pain and continue being counted as a significant adversary, and as a significant actor in the region.
The United States is losing time as the present-day Washington has a narrowing political window. Rising inflation, elevated prices at the gas stations, rising mortgage rates and increased market volatility are now slowly transforming a distant war into a primary domestic crisis.
Israel is borrowing time, as its war and strategic endurance are ‘tightly woven’ around the continued US diplomatic and logistical support. Israel possesses immense professional military equipment, expertise, and assets, but it is consuming munitions and political capital at an unsustainable "burn rate". This ‘high burn rate’ war is sustained by Israel, as the US is supporting its timeline.
Three Objectives, One Conflict
The war persists because the participants are pursuing fundamentally
different end states, which cannot be reconciled by firepower alone.
The United States appears to be fighting to end the war on
"acceptable terms", of balancing global credibility with the urgent need
for a domestic economic exit.
Israel fights to end the threat decisively, driven by a perception of
existential risk and the need to restore a deterrence that was shattered on 07
Oct 2023, and tested further in 2026.
Iran is fighting to ensure that the war cannot end without its recognition as an indispensable regional power. For Tehran, survival is victory.
The Limits of Endurance
Yet time, while asymmetric, is not cost-free. Iran’s strategy of endurance is inflicting deep internal scars. Economic strain and infrastructure damage remain real constraints, even if the regime remains cohesive. Israel, while operating within a US-dependent framework, continues to impose meaningful costs that may eventually degrade Iran’s ability to project power for a generation.
However, the United States faces the most immediate "hard" constraint. If energy prices remain elevated, the political necessity of an exit will eventually override the strategic necessity of a total victory.
Conclusion: Who Wins the Peace?
The trajectory of this conflict is unlikely to culminate in a "signed surrender", or a clean victory. Instead, it points towards a managed de-escalation driven by accumulated cost rather than battlefield success.
In this outcome, the metrics of victory will shift. Israel may retain military superiority but without fully eliminating the "ghost" of the Iranian threat. The United States may preserve its posture but with a clearer recognition of the limits of coercive force in a multipolar energy market.
This brings us to the central paradox that is clearly emerging now - Tehran is not trying to win the war; it is trying to win the peace that follows it. By enduring, by shaping the global consequences of the conflict, and by forcing its adversaries into a compressed timeline, Iran is positioning itself not as a defeated actor, but as an unavoidable one in the region. It is aiming to shape its own destiny as a proud and resilient civilisational state, and as a significant player in a region; a region that controls over 21% of the oil and 40% of the natural gas reserves that are critical for global energy security.
Thus, to my mind, the decisive question is not who can strike harder, but who can shape the moment when this war stops. On that question, the advantage lies with the side that chose time, not the one that expended the most precise and superior firepower. How we get to that 'moment' is the million dollar question? Any ideas?

Comments
This too in the Middle East is going to prove the same. One should never forget the history of a Nation vis-a-vis one's own before embarking on an offensive campaign against the other.