Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Director of the US National Counterterrorism Center resigned because Trump started the war against Iran on behalf of Israel


From the FB page of:


BREAKING: Retired U.S. Army Brigadier General Steve Anderson gives Trump NIGHTMARE news after his top counterterrorism official resigned over the Iran War by predicting many more resignations to come.
The flood gates are about to burst...
"I think that this is absolutely significant," Anderson said of the departure of Joe Kent, the Director of the National Counterterrorism Center.
"I mean, think about the anguish that he went through to do this, to make this resignation," said Anderson. "This is an insider, this is a MAGA guy through and through. And this is a tremendous blow to President Trump. But it took an incredible amount of political courage for him to make the stand that he has made."
Kent announced his resignation earlier today in a letter to Trump in which he stated that he "cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran." He said that Iran "posed no imminent threat" to the United States and the war was started on behalf of Israel and "its powerful American lobby." He added that he "cannot support sending the next generation off to fight and die in a war that serves no benefit to the American people nor justifies the cost of American lives."
General Anderson made it clear that while he doesn't agree with Kent's broader politics since he's a part of MAGA, he respects his courage.
"I don't agree with his positions. I don't agree with a lot of things he's done in the background, but I respect him for his service to our nation, losing his wife as he did and for his ability to make a political stand here of the highest order," said Anderson. "I'm very, very proud that he has chosen to do this."
Kent is an Army Ranger combat veteran and a former CIA officer who lost his wife to a suicide bombing in Syria.
"And I hope that this leads to other resignations, because this war is not going well," continued Anderson. "It's only getting worse, and I think that Joe Kent, by recognizing that there was no imminent threat, in actually putting that in writing and resigning as he did, is a tremendous, tremendous blow to the Trump administration."
Let's hope that Anderson's wishes come to fruition. More Trump officials need to resign in protest because this war is an historic atrocity. Trump is mass murdering men, women, and children on behalf of a foreign nation in an illegal war that does nothing to make America safer or more prosperous. Remaining silent right now, or continuing to serve this president, constitutes a grave crime.
Please like and share to demand more resignations!






Even Dr M is welcome to rejoin Umno, says Ahmad Maslan


FMT:

Even Dr M is welcome to rejoin Umno, says Ahmad Maslan

The Umno Supreme Council member says the party is taking a ‘forgive and forget’ approach


Ahmad Maslan (left) said even if Dr Mahathir Mohamad were to submit an application, it would be deliberated by Umno’s Supreme Council.



PETALING JAYA: Umno is open to readmitting any former member who wishes to return to the party, including prominent figures like its former president Dr Mahathir Mohamad, says Supreme Council member Ahmad Maslan.

Ahmad said anyone could apply to rejoin Umno and its top leadership would consider all applications, adding that the party was taking a “forgive and forget” approach.

He said even if Mahathir were to submit an application, it would be deliberated by the Supreme Council, Harian Metro reported.


“Umno’s doors are always open. If there is an application, we will discuss it and make a collective decision,” he said when met at an iftar event with the public works department and the Construction Industry Development Board (CIDB) in Kuching.

He added that several categories of applicants are being considered for readmission, including those who faced disciplinary action, those who left voluntarily, and those seeking to join the party’s cause for the first time.

Mahathir joined Umno in the 1940s and became Kedah Umno chairman in 1959. He was sacked from the party by then prime minister Tunku Abdul Rahman, but later rejoined Umno and was elected as one of its vice-presidents in 1975. In 1981, he became the party’s president, a post he held for over 22 years.

In May 2008, he quit Umno in protest of the administration of his successor, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi. He joined the party again before quitting for the second time in 2016 in protest of the administration of prime minister Najib Razak.

Mahathir then led Bersatu, Pejuang and the Gerakan Tanah Air coalition, before establishing a “Malay secretariat committee” in June 2025, in an effort to advocate for Malay interests under one “big umbrella”.

Earlier this month, Umno president Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said the party’s doors were “unconditionally” open to former members, and that “all past mistakes and differences would be forgiven” in the spirit of Ramadan.

He said the Rumah Bangsa task force, chaired by party vice-president Khaled Nordin, would coordinate the re-entry process for former members wishing to return.

Ex-Umno Youth chief Khairy Jamaluddin has applied to rejoin the party, while former vice-president Hishammuddin Hussein has formally requested that his suspension be lifted.


***


He will if guaranteed the No 1 position for either himself or his son 😂😂😂 Dirgahayu Tun 👏👏👏



Trump declared total victory against Iran for the 10th time in 11 days


From the FB page of:

😂😂😂

...and now an address from the President of The United States.




"Fellow Americans I am proud to update you on how we are totally winning this war in Iran against the 'deranged scumbags' that we must help towards democracy, freedom and the orderly transfer of oil reserves to Haliburton and Chevron.
We are winning in such a bigly way that I am here to declare total victory for the 10th time in 11 days - we have decimated Iran, killing 2,600 civilians, bombing primary schools, medical facilities and civilian infrastructure - it is now up to the Iranian people to overthrow their government in gratitude. We have done all we can.
We are in total control of the air, sea and land which is why our aircraft carriers have been able to tactically withdraw to Oman and the Red Sea, its a lot easier to operate a 1,000km from Iran and they can do nothing to stop us.
We can re-open the Strait of Hormuz whenever we want, which is why it remains closed. Not a single tanker has been hit near Hormuz because nobody goes through, which shows how safe it is.
Many nations are flocking to join my flotilla of peace that will unblock the Strait of Hormuz with zero ships pledged so far, I won't visit China if they don't send ships and I know they are very upset about that.
NATO says they won't send any ships and very bad things are going to happen to them if they don't do what I want, there is no point in a defensive alliance if they don't follow my orders and join all my totally legal and defensive wars. I am going to invade Canada and Greenland anyway after this totally legal defensive war is over because I have always said NATO is a one way street.
The price of oil is falling rapidly down to $106 a barrel from $100 and is set to fall further to $120 or even $200. The oil terminal of Fujairah is not an fire again as you can see from the picture below, all of these reports of Iranian missiles and drone strikes are just FAKE NEWS published by the hard left corrupt media...
...so we are going to withdraw broadcasting licences from media companies that don't act in the public interest, the public interest being whatever I say it is, further strengthening the American democracy that we must spread to other countries whether they want it or not.
Our glorious military will soon move on to more success in Cuba and my beautiful SAVE bill will help to set the result of future elections in advance, also in the public interest.
Pete Hegseth is recovering well after my lego model of the USS Gerald R Ford aircraft carrier and other toys hit him on the head, he really is a great guy.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER!!!





Amid escalating Middle East tensions, a poignant note from Iran’s alleged fallen leader





Amid escalating Middle East tensions, a poignant note from Iran’s alleged fallen leader



Tehran has not confirmed security chief Ali Larijani’s death, nor did the post address the claim. — AFP pic

Tuesday, 17 Mar 2026 7:13 PM MYT


TEHRAN, March 17 — The official social media profiles of Iran’s security chief Ali Larijani posted a handwritten note today, shortly after Israel said it had killed him.

Tehran has not confirmed Larijani’s death, nor did the post address the claim.

The social media post was a tribute to the 84 Iranian sailors who were killed when their frigate was sunk by a US submarine in the Indian Ocean earlier this month.

The note, which did not include the date it was written, was published on Larijani’s accounts on X and Telegram.


“The martyrdom of the brave men of the Navy of the Army of the Islamic Republic aboard the Dena is part of the sacrifices of the valiant nation that has emerged at this juncture of struggle against international oppressors,” said Larijani’s note, which was written in black ink.


The mariners were killed when the IRIS Dena was torpedoed on March 4 just off the coast of Sri Lanka, in an incident that extended the Middle East war to the Indian Ocean.

“Their memory will always remain in the heart of the Iranian nation, and these martyrdoms will strengthen the foundations of the Army of the Islamic Republic for years within the structure of the armed forces,” it added.


Iran has been at war with Israel and the United States since February 28, when they launched strikes that killed the Islamic Republic’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, triggering a conflict that spread across the Middle East.

Khamenei’s killing was confirmed by Iran hours after Israel and the United States announced it. — AFP

French General: Joining Trump's Iran war akin to "buying cheap tickets for the Titanic" after it already hit the iceberg


From the FB page of:

The Other 98%
·


snetooprdS92g10921mafuh05lha31m6001i97cf4u1mu3u2992h389f3hl4 ·


French General Michel Yakovleff just compared joining Trump's Iran war to "buying cheap tickets for the Titanic" after it already hit the iceberg. And then it got even worse for Trump.

Yakovleff is no random talking head. He's a three-star general, former commander of the legendary French Foreign Legion, and held senior positions within NATO itself. He is one of the most respected military voices in France and regularly weighs in on matters of international security.

So when he was asked about Trump's desperate pleas for Europe to join his Iran catastrophe, his answer carried serious weight.

He didn't mince words. He laid out five distinct reasons why every European nation should flatly refuse. And each one is more damaging than the last.

First, Trump doesn't understand how NATO actually works. You don't get to launch your own unilateral bombing campaign and then invite allies to run a separate operation underneath you. That's not how alliances function.

If Trump wants NATO involved, NATO takes command. One operation, one flag, one chain of command. "I don't think he understood that," Yakovleff said. That alone is a devastating indictment of a man who claims to be the greatest dealmaker on earth
.
Second, nobody knows what the actual strategic goals are. Beyond forcing open the Strait of Hormuz, what is the endgame? Regime change? Containment? A negotiated settlement? Trump hasn't said. He apparently can't say, because he doesn't know himself.

Third, and this one is particularly brutal, you can't coordinate a multinational military campaign through tweets that change every two minutes. If allied nations are going to put their soldiers in harm's way, they need explicit, written objectives from the United States. As Yakovleff put it, "It's going to be necessary for Trump himself to know what he wants." The quiet contempt in that sentence could strip paint off a wall.

Fourth, there is the fundamental issue of trust. Trump has abandoned allies before and everyone knows he would do it again without hesitation the moment it became politically useful. The Kurds know it. The Afghans know it. Europe knows it. "He would let us down whenever it suited him," the general said. Why would any nation put troops on the line for a leader with that track record?

And fifth, the knockout punch. Yakovleff cited a principle he said he learned at the U.S. Army War College: "You don't reinforce failure. You move on. You find something else." A decorated French general is using American military doctrine, taught in American war colleges, to explain to the world why following this American president into battle would be strategic malpractice.

The global response has been just as damning. Japan said no. Australia said no. The United Kingdom said no. The European Union said no. Meanwhile, Iranian missiles and drones have made the Strait of Hormuz so dangerous that insurance companies won't cover oil tankers passing through it.

Twenty percent of the world's petroleum normally flows through that strait. Oil prices are skyrocketing and consumers everywhere are feeling it.

Trump started this. He escalated it. He isolated America from its allies in the process.




Out of the country, out of court: No-show Tamim Dahri delays sacrilege charge to May 17, whereabouts unconfirmed





Out of the country, out of court: No-show Tamim Dahri delays sacrilege charge to May 17, whereabouts unconfirmed



Activist Tamim Dahri Abdul Razak is believed to be in Riyadh on the day he was supposed to attend court in Langkawi to be charged with sacrilege; the magistrate has set May 17, 2026 as the new date for his case. — Reuters pic

Tuesday, 17 Mar 2026 6:26 PM MYT


ALOR SETAR, March 17 — Activist Tamim Dahri Abdul Razak failed to turn up at the Magistrate’s Court in Langkawi today where he was to be charged with defiling an object sacred to Hindus.

Kedah Director of Prosecutions Khairul Anuar Abdul Halim said more time was needed to secure the 34-year-old, who is currently believed to be out of the country, national news agency Bernama reported.

“He did not appear today to be charged under Section 295 of the Penal Code, so we are requesting a new date for the mention of the case on May 17,” Khairul was quoted as saying.

During proceedings before Magistrate Hemy Annerina Haja Mydin, the court was told that Tamim had been traced to Riyadh, having travelled via Bangkok International Airport in Thailand.


However, no official documentation was available to confirm the information.

Inspector-General of Police Mohd Khalid Ismail said investigations into Tamim were linked to the alleged act of damaging a soolam, a sacred symbol in Hinduism, at the former site of the Sri Maha Muniswarar Temple in Langkawi.

He said Tamim is expected to be charged under Section 295 of the Penal Code, which pertains to damaging or desecrating objects held sacred by any religious group with the intent to insult religion.


***


Bloke could be anywhere in Malaysia and the police still won't be able to locate him, just like Gandhi's ex


F-22, F-35 Stealth Jets Pound Iran, Strategic Bombers Rain Hell– Despite Massive Air Superiority, Why Toppling Tehran is Not Easy





F-22, F-35 Stealth Jets Pound Iran, Strategic Bombers Rain Hell– Despite Massive Air Superiority, Why Toppling Tehran is Not Easy: OPED


By EurAsian Times Desk
-March 17, 2026

OPED by Air Vice Marshal (R) Prashant Mohan



The war in West Asia is being fought with overwhelming reliance on airpower by both sides; the US-Israeli side using expensive warplanes like F-35s, F-22s, F-15s, F-16s, F-18s, strategic bombers like B-1, B-2, and B-52, and other aircraft, while the Iranian side relying on “cheaper” drones and missiles.

The images of cratered facilities, plumes of thick black smoke, unclassified videos of precision strikes, and damaged infrastructure are all being routinely seen on all news channels. These are released by both sides to reinforce the enemy’s continued destruction and to prove their own dominance in the war.

President Trump directly addressed the Iranian people after the completion of the first wave of strikes on 28 Feb 2026. He said, “Proud people of Iran, I say tonight that the hour of your freedom is at hand…when we are finished, take over your government. It will be yours to take. This will be probably your only chance for generations.”

To the American people, while addressing a rally in Kentucky on 11 Feb 2026, he claimed, “we have won”, “it was over in the first hour.” Subsequently, in the same address, he said the campaign would continue, as “we got to finish the ​job.” This juxtaposition raises an obvious question. If victory has already been achieved on the first day itself, why is the war continuing into the third week now? To me, the answer to that question lies at the heart of this continuing conflict.

The answer lies in the deeper ambiguity that often accompanies modern air campaigns. Tactical success, the destruction of military targets, degradation of infrastructure, and the disruption of command-and-control networks can be, relatively speaking, measured very quickly.

Political victory, on the other hand, for which the war is being fought, is far more difficult to define. When a leader says, “we got the finish the job” the natural question the springs to mind is, what exactly is meant by ‘finish the job’.


Is it the destruction of military capability? Is it the dismantling of strategic programmes? Is it decapitating the leadership? Most of these have already been achieved in Iran. So, why continue with the war? Or is it the far more difficult objective of forcing a change in political behaviour?

These questions demand an honest inquiry. This is also a never-ending debate in military strategy circles – what can airpower achieve, but more importantly, what are its limitations?


The Promise of Airpower

Airpower has always generated great expectations as an instrument of military power due to its characteristics of flexibility, mobility, reach, versatility, flexibility, speed, reach, responsiveness, trans-domain operational capability, and precision application.

From the early theorists of strategic bombing in the 20th century to the contemporary advocates of precision warfare, airpower has often been seen as the tool that could fundamentally reshape the conduct of war. The logic is compelling.

Aircraft, missiles, and now drones allow the military to strike deep into enemy territory, regardless of terrain or obstacles, without waiting for the slow and costly advance of surface forces. Remember the days of snail mail, and the picture gets clearer.


Airpower can destroy critical infrastructure, strategic targets, military bases, logistics hubs, and command-and-control networks with remarkable speed and surprise; this allows countries to impose punishment while keeping their own casualties relatively low.

Modern technology has reinforced this perception. Precision-guided munitions, satellite navigation, advanced surveillance systems, and stand-off weapons have dramatically improved the accuracy and effectiveness of aerial strikes.

Political leaders and military planners today often assume that any major conflict will begin with a decisive air campaign to establish air superiority and neutralise the adversary’s critical assets. President Trump too echoed this sentiment when he stated that the “our forces have the capability to strike precisely and effectively.”


Statements like these reflect a widely held belief that technological superiority can deliver rapid and decisive results. Modern wars have helped reinforce this perception. Airpower has repeatedly demonstrated its ability to quickly and accurately destroy a large number of targets. It therefore came as no surprise that the current West Asian war began with a heavy reliance on airpower.


The US and Israel possess overwhelming technological superiority in surveillance, targeting, and precision strike capabilities. Their strategy naturally emphasises the destruction of military infrastructure, missile sites, and command-and-control networks through sustained aerial strikes. From a purely operational perspective, this approach has clear advantages.

Airpower can rapidly degrade critical capabilities and disrupt an adversary’s ability to coordinate military operations. It can impose high economic and military costs while limiting ground troops’ exposure. The US has until now reported a loss of only 11 combatants in 15 days, during the course of this war.

Having said this, it is also pertinent to note that a study of past wars shows that wars are not decided by technology and airpower alone; war is merely the continuation of policy by other means. Wars are not limited to a contest of military capabilities; ultimately, they are a contest of political will. And this is where the limitations of airpower begin to emerge.
The Limitations of Airpower

History is proof that airpower, despite its overwhelming destructive capability, has rarely delivered decisive political outcomes on its own. Vietnam and Afghanistan are two prime examples of the enormous role played by airpower, and yet the end state desired at the end of the conflict was never achieved.

The US became involved in the Vietnam War with the aim of stopping the spread of communism. It possessed overwhelming aerial and economic power.

The US undertook massive bombing campaigns and destroyed many of the North Vietnamese supply routes, infrastructure, and military facilities. Vast quantities of ordnance were dropped over the course of the war. Yet despite the scale of destruction inflicted from the air, the campaign failed to break the political will and resolve of the North Vietnamese forces.

Eventually, after the pullout of US forces from the region, the North Vietnamese were able to conquer the South and unify the country. The American strategic aim of stopping the spread of communism failed, despite winning most tactical battles with airpower.

A similar pattern emerged in Afghanistan. In response to the terrorist attacks on the US on 11 Sep 2001, popularly known as the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the US declared a global war on terrorism on 14 Sep 2001 – the target being the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, and networks like Al Qaeda that had a haven there. It successfully overthrew the Taliban regime by December 2001; airpower played an important role in supporting special forces and Afghan militias in the initial stages.

For nearly two decades, the coalition forces dominated the skies, possessing unmatched surveillance and strike capabilities. However, once the conflict transitioned into an insurgency, the effectiveness of airpower declined after the initial success, as insurgent groups avoided large concentrations of troops, blended into the local population, and operated through decentralised networks.

Taliban positions were repeatedly targeted from the air, and their networks disrupted. Yet the movement’s political resolve remained intact, outlasting that of the far more powerful coalition aligned against it. After nearly two decades of fighting the Taliban regime, the US finally handed over power to the Taliban and withdrew.


US President Donald Trump (R) and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands as they arrive to speak to journalists during a joint press conference at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Florida, on December 29, 2025. US President Donald Trump hosted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Florida on December 29 for crucial talks on moving to the next stage of the fragile Gaza truce plan.

The two leaders also discussed Iran, with Trump saying that if Tehran rebuilt its nuclear facilities the United States would “knock them down.” (Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP)


Beyond the Battlefield

Seventeen days into this war, even though the U.S. President declared victory on day one, it’s worth asking if there are deeper issues beyond the fighting and daily reports.

The situation prompts a closer and more thoughtful examination of the war’s underlying dynamics. It is essential to move beyond immediate military engagements and public messaging to explore the broader strategic, political, and ideological dimensions shaping the direction and ultimate outcomes of this conflict.


Political & Ideological Foundations

Understanding the current conflict in West Asia demands looking past the images and narratives of live battles. Instead, it requires an examination of the political and ideological foundations of the Iranian state, which play a crucial role in shaping the wider context of the war.

Iran is one of the old civilisations that has outlasted many changes to its political system. The modern Iranian state emerged from one of the most consequential political revolutions of the twentieth century. In the last days of March 1979, following the overthrow of the Shah, Iranians voted in a national referendum to determine the future character of their country.

98.2% of the voters supported the creation of an Islamic Republic under the leadership of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who had just returned from exile. In Dec 1979, a new constitution was approved through another national referendum.

This referendum institutionalised the principle of Velayat-e-Faqih, the guardianship of the Islamic jurist, in the constitution, placing ultimate political authority in the hands of the Supreme Leader. This was not an ordinary change of the political system.

The Constitution was consciously constructed, with the approval of the people, as an ideological state rooted in political theology. Over time, institutions and structures were created to reinforce this identity; religious seminaries, political organisations, security institutions, and governance structures evolved within this ideological framework.

Following the death of Ayatollah Khomeini in 1989, Ali Khamenei assumed the position of Supreme Leader, the Rahbar. He continued in this role for nearly 37 years, during which time the religious, military, and political institutions became deeply embedded within the Iranian society and governance.

This ideological architecture needs to be factored in when assessing the ongoing war, as a state built explicitly around a revolutionary and ideological worldview may prove far more resilient to external pressure than conventional strategic calculations might suggest.


Capability Vs Political Will


The deeper limitation of airpower lies in a fundamental distinction in strategic theory and its practical application; the difference between destroying capability and breaking of the political will that was the primary reason for the initiation of the war. Airpower excels at the former task; it can destroy military capabilities and assets, degrade the infrastructure that sustains them, and disrupt command-and-control networks, striking deep strategic targets with exemplary efficiency.

It can weaken an adversary’s operational capacity and impose severe economic costs. What it cannot do is to compel an adversary to abandon its political objectives, especially if they are deeply rooted in identity, ideology, or regime survival. In conflicts where one or more of these are perceived to be at stake, societies have often demonstrated a remarkable degree of resilience.

Populations endure extreme hardships; governments absorb punishment and, with the help of political ideology, adapt to resist and eventually overcome external pressures imposed by military force.

In such circumstances, airpower and the broader military campaign may weaken an adversary but rarely produce the desired decisive political outcomes. The present war in West Asia appears increasingly likely to move in precisely this direction.


A handout picture provided by the Iranian Army office on December 31, 2022, shows Iranian troops during a military drill in Makran beach on the Gulf of Oman, near the Hormuz Strait. (Photo by Iranian Army office / AFP) / === RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – MANDATORY CREDIT “AFP PHOTO / HO / IRANIAN ARMY OFFICE” – NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS – DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS ===


Iran: An Asymmetric Response


The military balance in the present conflict is highly uneven, with the US-Israel possessing overwhelming superiority in airpower, intelligence, and precision strike capabilities.

Iran cannot match this huge technological advantage in a conventional confrontation. Its air force is limited, and its air defence networks are degraded to an extent that the US-Israeli assets are comfortable switching from the expensive long-range standoff weapons employed in the opening phase of the war to relatively less expensive close-in weapons. Iran lacks this freedom due to technological inferiority.

They have thus long invested in strategies designed to offset these conventional disadvantages in the employment of airpower; rather than attempting to match their adversary’s aircraft-for-aircraft, they have focused on asymmetric capabilities, comprising ballistic missiles, drones, dispersed & mobile launch platforms, and proxy networks.

One of the most striking features of this war has been this asymmetric response. It shows that relatively low-cost drones and missiles can impose significant operational pressures even on technologically superior adversaries.

The hits on many of the targets in Israel, the Gulf states with US bases, and others in the region that have a US presence, and the shipping that Iran considers in service of powers allied with the US or Israel, are proof.

Even if these low-cost drones and missiles are intercepted, they compel the defender to expend far more expensive air defence systems in response. Similarly, dispersed and mobile launch systems and hardened or underground facilities reduce the vulnerability of military infrastructure to air strikes.

Even when individual facilities are destroyed, the broader network can continue to function. The result of all this is a strategic dynamic in which technological superiority and heavy destruction have not necessarily produced a quick or decisive victory, as hoped before the war’s initiation or in its opening phase.

Instead, the war risks evolving into a contest of endurance and attrition, in which time always favours the weaker but ideologically driven side.


The Escalatory Logic of Airpower

Airpower carries an inherent escalatory dynamic because of its speed, flexibility, accuracy, lethality, and ability to target tactical, operational, and strategic-level targets simultaneously, using the same assets.

Aerial strikes can be conducted rapidly and repeatedly. This generally creates pressure for retaliation and counterretaliation. Each wave of attacks invites a response, and this cycle of escalation can become difficult to control.

In the present conflict, this pattern is already visible. Initial strikes targeting military facilities have been followed by attacks on broader infrastructure and strategic supply networks. Even as the campaign has expanded, the political messaging by the leadership on both sides continues to emphasise resolve.

The US President threatened that if Iran chose to respond, “they should know we have options they have not yet seen.” Newly appointed Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei’s first statement issued on 12 Mar 2026 also showed resolve to continue fighting, wherein he threatened to open new fronts of war across the region, with particular emphasis on blocking the Strait of Hormuz.

He also specifically referenced the Islamic Republic’s proxy forces in Iraq, Yemen, and Lebanon. He called for revenge against Israel and the US and endorsed the continuation of attacks against neighbouring countries that are hosting American and Israeli “financial and military” systems.


Impact on Critical Infrastructure

When armed conflicts escalate beyond conventional military targets and begin to directly impact critical infrastructure essential for everyday human life, the consequences become far more severe and far-reaching. This includes vital sectors such as banking systems, energy production, storage, and transportation networks, as well as facilities crucial for survival, like desalination plants that provide clean water.

The deliberate or collateral targeting of these systems can trigger humanitarian crises by disrupting access to essential services, undermining economic stability, and threatening the basic needs of civilian populations.

Furthermore, such actions can significantly alter the geopolitical dynamics of a conflict, rapidly broadening both its scope and nature, as the struggle shifts from the battlefield to include the survival and well-being of entire societies.


Airpower as Facilitator, Not Decider

None of the above can be interpreted as diminishing the importance of airpower; airpower remains one of the most potent and effective tools available to modern militaries. It can degrade/ destroy capabilities, disrupt command-and-control structures, and impose enormous costs on adversaries.

It can shape the battlefield and create the conditions for other forms of military action to operate on the surface/ ground. However, history suggests that airpower rarely decides wars on its own.

Instead, it functions most effectively as part of a broader strategy that combines multiple instruments of state power – diplomacy, economic pressure, information campaigns, and ground/ surface operations. In other words, airpower often facilitates outcomes beyond the realm of military application in a conventional war. It will not be able to ensure victory under such conditions.


Implications for the War in West Asia


The war in West Asia now appears to be entering a phase where these strategic realities are becoming increasingly relevant. Airpower will remain central to the military strategy of the US and Israel because their technological advantages ensure it continues to shape the battlefield.

Yet the resilience of Iran’s ideological capabilities suggests that the conflict may not produce quick or decisive results. Instead, it could evolve into a prolonged contest in which each side seeks to impose costs, even while avoiding full-scale escalation. Such conflicts often produce uncertain outcomes.

Military superiority in one domain does not automatically translate into strategic success if the adversary retains the political will and asymmetric tools to continue resisting, which is the present state of this war.

In addition, the US Constitution divides war powers between Congress and the President. Only Congress can declare war and appropriate military funding, yet the President is the Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces.

This is interpreted by the legislature and the executive in their own way, leading to ambiguity. The War Powers Resolution of 1973, after the Vietnam War, “is a congressional resolution designed to limit the US President’s ability to initiate or escalate military actions abroad.”

Further, it stipulates that the president must notify Congress within 48 hours of military action and prohibits armed forces from remaining more than 60 (+30) days. This is one check-and-balance looming for the US over the next 1.5 months.


Conclusion

Airpower remains one of the most powerful instruments of modern military power in general, and warfare, in particular. It offers flexibility, mobility, speed, precision, and the ability to strike deep with devastating effect.

Political leaders understandably emphasise this power. As the US President declared while addressing the nation, “America has the most capable military in the world.” That statement is indeed true. Yet history suggests that even the most powerful militaries must confront the enduring limits of force.

Airpower can destroy/ degrade military capabilities, disable infrastructure, disrupt command-and-control networks, and impose high costs; it can provide air superiority, shape the battlefield, and influence the course of a conflict.

However, wars driven by ideology, identity, and political resolve rarely end successfully. In such cases, airpower may facilitate outcomes, as it has done in this case. It may not be able to deliver victory, even after prolonging the war.

Is it time to consider alternative tools of statecraft to help restore peace in the region? Genuine dialogue and diplomacy, whether channelled through multilateral institutions such as the United Nations or facilitated discreetly by countries trusted by both parties, offer possible paths forward. Nations like Oman, Egypt, and India are well-positioned to serve as intermediaries due to their credibility and relationships with both sides.

The central question remains whether the parties involved are willing to embrace these diplomatic avenues or if they still believe that persisting with the conflict will ultimately lead to victory.

The outcome is uncertain; only time will reveal which approach resonates most with the stakeholders. Meanwhile, the ongoing war continues to drive significant geopolitical changes worldwide, affecting energy resources, international trade, supply chain stability, and tightening financial conditions.


Air Vice Marshal (R) Prashant Mohan, a fighter pilot, superannuated from IAF on 31 Mar 25. A Qualified Flying Instructor commanded a frontline fighter squadron and two frontline fighter bases. The Air Officer was India’s Defence and Air Attaché to the UK from May 19 to Oct 22.