By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Why Escalation Favors Iran
The first hours of
Operation Epic Fury - the joint U.S.-Israeli military offensive against Iran, launched
on February 28 - demonstrated the extraordinary reach of modern precision
warfare. U.S. and Israeli strikes killed Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, along with senior commanders of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
and key intelligence officials, in what Washington and Jerusalem described as a
decisive blow intended to cripple Tehran’s command structure and destabilize
the regime.
Yet within hours, any
hope that the precise decapitation strikes would limit the scope of the war was
dashed. Iran launched hundreds of ballistic missiles and drones not only at
Israel but also across the Gulf. Air raid sirens sounded in Tel Aviv and Haifa.
Missiles slammed into interceptors over Doha and Abu Dhabi. At Al Udeid Air
Base, in Qatar - the forward headquarters of U.S. Central Command - personnel
took shelter as interceptors streaked overhead. Air defenses flashed into
action at U.S. bases at Al Dhafra in the United Arab Emirates and Ali Al Salem
in Kuwait. Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia reported incoming drones.
Near the U.S. Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain, naval forces were placed on
heightened alert.
The Iranian response
has had enormous ramifications for the Gulf, killing civilians, shuttering
airports, threatening shipping and oil exports, and tarnishing the region’s
image of stability and safety. An iconic hotel on the waterfront in Dubai
caught fire after debris from an intercepted drone fell into its upper floors.
Kuwaiti authorities reported damage near civilian airport facilities. According
to news reports, several tankers have been struck near the Strait of Hormuz,
prompting a spike in insurance premiums for shipping through the Gulf. Soon
after the conflict erupted, oil futures jumped sharply as traders priced in the
risk of sustained disruption to one of the world’s most critical energy
chokepoints.
Iran’s strikes cannot
be dismissed as acts of scattered retaliation, the flailing lashing out of a
dying regime. Rather, they represent a strategy of horizontal escalation, a bid
to transform the stakes of a conflict by widening its scope and extending its
duration. Such a strategy allows a weaker combatant to alter the calculus of a
more powerful foe. And it has worked in the past, to the detriment of the
United States. In Vietnam and Serbia, U.S. adversaries responded to
overwhelming displays of American airpower with horizontal escalation,
eventually leading to American defeat, in the former case, and, in the latter,
frustrating U.S. war aims and spurring the worst episode of ethnic cleansing in
Europe since World War II. Decapitation strikes, in particular, create powerful
incentives for horizontal escalation: when a regime survives the loss of its
leader, it must demonstrate resilience quickly by widening the conflict.
Although the United States has hugely battered Iran, it must reckon with the
implications of Iran’s response. Otherwise, it will find itself losing control
of the war it started.

Far Horizons
Horizontal escalation
occurs when a state widens the geographic and political scope of a conflict
rather than intensifying it vertically in a single theater. It is especially
appealing as a strategy for the weaker parties in a military contest. Instead of
trying to defeat a stronger adversary head-on, the weaker side multiplies
arenas of risk - drawing additional states, economic sectors, and domestic
publics into the remit of the conflict. Iran cannot defeat the United States or
Israel in a conventional military contest. It does not need to. Its objective
is to gain greater political leverage.
The strategy of
horizontal escalation follows a recognizable pattern. First, Iran has
demonstrated resilience. U.S. decapitation strikes intended to paralyze the
Iranian military. By launching large-scale retaliation within hours of losing
the supreme leader and many senior commanders, Tehran signaled continuity of
command and operational capacity.
Second, Iran has
widened the conflict well beyond Iranian territory, effecting what scholars
call “multiplication of exposure.” Rather than confining retaliation to just
Israel, Iran struck or aimed at targets in at least nine countries, most
hosting U.S. forces: Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Greece, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar,
Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. The message was unmistakable: those
countries that host American forces would face severe consequences and the war
that Israel and the United States started will spread.
Third, Iran has
politicized the conflict through its strikes. Iran’s retaliation has resulted
in the closure of airports, the burning of commercial property, the killing of
foreign workers, and the disruption of energy and insurance markets. Gulf
leaders have been forced to reassure foreign investors and tourists. The war
has migrated into boardrooms and parliamentary chambers. In the United States,
the widening scope of the war has alarmed members of Congress. Numerous actors
have now entered the conflict, each pursuing distinct interests, none fully
coordinated, and all capable of altering the trajectory of escalation beyond
Washington’s control.
The final dimension
of Iran’s strategy is time. The longer multiple states feel pressure, the more
that politics both within and among regional states can intensify the conflict.
Without a version of NATO in the Middle East or a single American general effectively
running the military operation for all the countries targeted by Iran, there is
a high risk of wires getting crossed. U.S. officials have, for instance,
floated the idea of stoking an ethnic rebellion in Kurdish parts of Iran to
help target the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. But that might provoke
responses from Iraq, Syria, and Turkey, countries that would not welcome a
powerful Kurdish insurgency in the region. The recent downing of three U.S.
jets in a friendly-fire incident over Kuwait also illustrates the logistical
and coordination problems that bedevil any attempt to fend off Iran’s
escalation in the Gulf.
Iran’s foreign
ministry reinforced this logic publicly, framing the missile barrages as
legitimate responses against all “hostile forces” in the region. The phrasing
has widened responsibility for the attack on Iran beyond Israel and the United
States to encompass the broader U.S.-aligned order in the Gulf. Although
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian has apologized to Gulf neighbors for the
attacks, the installation of a new supreme leader aligned closely with the
Revolutionary Guard suggests that such gestures are tactical rather than a
signal that Tehran intends to abandon its strategy of horizontal escalation.
Fundamentally, Iran’s horizontal escalation is a political strategy. It plays
directly to the audience that Iran seeks to persuade: the Muslim populations
across the region that may not be ideologically aligned with Iran but are
generally poorly disposed toward Israel.

A Thunderous Surprise
Operation Epic Fury
is certainly not the first time that the United States has acted out of the
belief that overwhelming airpower can compel rapid political collapse. The U.S.
war in Vietnam exposed the limits of this assumption.
By 1967, the United
States had dropped three times more tonnage worth of bombs on North Vietnam
than it had used in World War II. Operation Rolling Thunder, launched in 1965,
was designed to break Hanoi’s will and destroy its capacity to wage war. Washington
possessed tremendous air superiority and apparent escalation dominance, meaning
that North Vietnam could not hope to match the United States blow for blow as
Washington ramped up the conflict. By the fall of 1967, U.S. airpower had
devastated the crucial communication, military, and industrial centers and
arteries on which North Vietnamese military power was thought to rest.
But just a few months
later, in January 1968, North Vietnamese and Vietcong forces launched
coordinated attacks on more than 100 cities and towns across South Vietnam.
They breached the U.S. embassy compound in Saigon. They fought for weeks in
Hue. They struck provincial capitals simultaneously. Although the offensive was
costly for communist forces, it shattered the perception that a South
Vietnamese and American victory was near.
President Lyndon
Johnson soon announced that he would not seek reelection. Public confidence in
the prosecution of the war eroded. The war’s political trajectory shifted, even
as American firepower remained dominant.
The lesson was not
that bombing failed tactically. It was that Hanoi escalated horizontally,
widening the conflict beyond rural battlefields into South Vietnam’s cities and
political nerve centers, transforming a military contest into nationwide
political upheaval, and reshaping domestic calculations in Washington. In
Vietnam, the United States never lost a battle - but it still lost a war.

When Precision Misses the Mark
Three decades later,
NATO relied on a different theory of airpower in the Kosovo conflict. Operation
Allied Force, in 1999 - originally planned as a three-day air campaign to hit
51 targets in and around the Serbian capital, Belgrade - emphasized precision
strikes against Serbian military assets and leadership targets. Western leaders
expected a swift, successful campaign. The regime would weaken, if not
collapse. Bombs even fell on the residence of Serbian President Slobodan
Milosevic.
Instead, Belgrade
ordered 30,000 Serbian troops to sweep into Kosovo, forcing upward of a million
Kosovar Albanian civilians, half the province’s population, from the territory.
That exodus strained European governments and tested the cohesion
of the NATO alliance. The United States and NATO lacked the large tactical
airpower, much less the ground forces, to put a stop to the devastating ethnic
cleansing. For weeks, as Serbian forces drove civilians from Kosovo, NATO
debated escalation options. It ultimately mobilized nearly 40,000 ground troops
for a major offensive to take Kosovo. Only at this point - and only after 78
days of sustained crisis, diplomatic pressure from Russia (a long-standing
Serbian ally), and the threat of NATO invasion - did Milosevic concede.
Kosovo ended
successfully for NATO - but not quickly, and not just through the use of
precision strikes. Political endurance and alliance management proved decisive.
Across both cases - the mass bombardment of Vietnam and the precision strikes
upon Serbia - airpower shocked and disrupted, but it did not automatically
determine political outcomes. Adversaries widened the conflict’s scope or
prolonged it by adopting horizontal escalation. Iran now appears to be applying
that lesson to the Gulf.

Tehran’s Means and Ends
Iran’s retaliation
has clear political objectives. First, Tehran wants to puncture perceptions of
the Gulf’s invulnerability. Cities such as Dubai and Doha market themselves to
the world as secure hubs of finance, tourism, and logistics. When missile alerts
interrupt operations at Dubai International Airport - one of the busiest in the
world - the reputational cost is far greater than whatever physical damage Iran
inflicts. The reported deaths of foreign workers in the United Arab Emirates
underscore that civilians are no longer safe in Gulf states. The spectacle of
interceptors exploding in the skies above these entrepots may make investors
skittish.
Second, Iran has
raised the political cost for Gulf countries of hosting U.S. forces. By
striking near American bases at Al Udeid, Al Dhafra, and Prince Sultan, Tehran
signaled that alignment with Washington entails exposure to attack. Gulf
leaders must balance alliance commitments against domestic and economic
stability.
Third, Tehran is
shaping a narrative about the regional order. By portraying its actions as
resistance to a U.S.-Israeli campaign aimed at regional dominance, Iran seeks
to drive a wedge between the Gulf country leaders and their publics - a wedge
that could grow depending on how long the conflict persists.
Fourth, Iran is
leveraging economic chokepoints. Roughly a fifth of global oil shipments
transit the Strait of Hormuz. Early shipping data suggests traffic through the
strait has fallen by about 75 percent since the war began. Even a partial form
of lasting disruption - through missile strikes, naval incidents, or rising
insurance costs - produces immediate global ripple effects, fueling concerns
about inflation and domestic political pressure in the United States and
Europe. None of these objectives require battlefield victories. They just
require Iran’s endurance.

The Toll of Time
Horizontal escalation
is not simply about hitting a wider array of targets. Its stronger effect is to
change how a foe perceives risks. In a short war, risk is measured in sorties
and intercept rates. In a prolonged conflict, risks extend to the political
sphere. A protracted conflict forces difficult choices.
If this war drags on,
Gulf governments that have quietly expanded security cooperation with Israel
may have to make that alignment more visible. That clarity is dangerous. Arab
publics remain deeply opposed to Israel’s aggressive military posture in the region.
The longer the conflict continues, the harder it becomes for rulers to sustain
that partnership with Israel without sacrificing legitimacy at home. Horizontal
escalation presses on the soft seams between governments and their societies.
A protracted war
would also reshape American politics. A sudden decapitation strike can
galvanize support behind the U.S. president, at least temporarily - although
polling suggests that most Americans are already opposed to the war even just
one week in. A grinding regional war marked by energy price spikes, U.S.
casualties, and uncertain objectives will cause disquiet at home. Sizable
elements of President Donald Trump’s political coalition
have been wary of Middle Eastern entanglements and have accused U.S.
leaders of simply following Israel’s lead. The longer U.S. military operations
continue, the more fractures could widen within Trump’s own base.
Transatlantic strains
may follow. European governments are acutely exposed to energy volatility and
migration pressures. If Washington escalates while European capitals want to
rein in the conflict, the two sides could diverge as Europeans try to keep themselves
at arm’s length from the war. As Kosovo demonstrated, alliance unity requires
constant political management. The United States would find the challenges of
sustained bombing immense if European states decided to constrain use of their
territory for logistics and tanker refueling flights. The United Kingdom is
already uncomfortable about the long-standing policy of American military
aircraft conducting operations from the British possession of Diego Garcia. In
exchange for European support in its campaign against Iran, Washington may have
to commit more to for European military objectives in Ukraine - at the risk of
further irking the president’s MAGA base.
Finally, prolonging
the war multiplies asymmetric threats. An extended conflict in the Gulf would
likely see the involvement of nonstate actors, especially if U.S. ground forces
got involved in even a limited fashion. New and existing militant groups seeking
to exploit regional anger may target leaders visibly aligned with U.S.
operations. What began as interstate missile exchanges could evolve into a
wider tableau of violence and upheaval.

The Strategic Fork
If Iran’s strategy is
to widen and politicize the conflict, the United States faces a choice. One
path is doubling down: the United States could ramp up its airpower campaign by
bringing additional air assets into the fight to suppress Iranian launch capabilities
and create the conditions for extending aerial control over the skies and
surveillance on the ground. As with the imposition of no-fly zones against Iraq
in the 1990s, doubling down to reestablish escalation dominance and control can
be tantamount to a strategy of permanent aggressive military containment and
control over Iranian airspace, one that could last for years. The adoption of
precisely this extended aerial control and surveillance approach with Iraq in
the 1990s only set the stage for the 2003 U.S. ground invasion. Permanent
aerial occupation does not lead to political control, and without greater
political control, Iran will continue to pose a plausible threat to U.S.
interests - especially since its nuclear program persists in some form or
another. In this way, an ostensibly restrained policy could actually
precipitate greater commitment.
The alternative is
ending the military commitment: Washington could declare that objectives have
been “met” and stand down its tremendous air and naval forces assembled near
Iran. In the short term, the Trump administration would face the intense
political criticism that it may have left the job unfinished. This policy,
however, would allow the administration to move on to other issues, such as
addressing economic needs at home, and limit the political blowback of its
decision to attack Iran.
Trump is thus on the
horns of a dilemma, having to judge whether Washington should deal with short
but limited political costs now or more protracted and more uncertain political
costs later. There is no golden off-ramp, one that increases the
political benefits for Washington. Every option now carries political costs and
risks; the initial strike may have solved a tactical problem, but it created a
strategic one. Given these realities, the wisest choice may well be for the
United States to accept a limited loss now rather than risk compounding losses
later.
The strikes that have
killed Iran’s leadership demonstrated tactical mastery. Tactical mastery,
however, is not strategy. Iran’s retaliation - geographically broad,
economically disruptive, and politically calibrated - aims to reshape the
conflict’s structure. By widening the theater and prolonging the war, Tehran is
shifting the contest from a battle of military capabilities to one of political
endurance.
As in Vietnam, the
United States may win most engagements. As in Serbia, it may ultimately prevail
after sustained pressure. But in both cases, the decisive arena was not the
initial shock of airpower. It was the politics of an expanding war.
The decisive phase of
this war began not with the first strike but with the regional crisis that
followed - air defenses activated across multiple capitals, airports suspended,
markets jolted, and alliance politics strained. Whether this conflict is merely
a contained episode or it becomes a prolonged strategic setback for the United
States will depend not on the next volley of missiles but on whether Washington
recognizes the enemy’s unfolding strategy - and responds with one of equal
clarity.
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