By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Introduction
Explosions have been
reported in multiple Iranian cities, including the capital Tehran, after Israel
and the US launched strikes Saturday morning. The US military is planning for several days of attacks.
Earlier, US President
Donald Trump on Friday (Feb 27) called Iranians “very difficult” and “very
dangerous” amid rising military tensions in the Middle East. The US president’s
remarks come a day after Tehran and Washington held indirect talks in Geneva,
which Iran described as “most intense so far”. However, the discussions failed
to yield any breakthrough despite making “significant progress”. Oman has said
that both sides have planned to engage in a more “detailed” manner with the
next round of talks expected next week in Vienna.
Yet the Islamic
Republic of Iran is, quite possibly, at its weakest point since its founding, in 1979. In June, Israeli and U.S. attacks
destroyed its uranium enrichment capacity and many of its air defense systems.
In December and January, the country experienced the most widespread domestic
uprising since the birth of the Islamic Republic. Throughout, it has faced
spiraling economic and environmental crises that it cannot fix. None of these
events has knocked out the Islamic Republic. But there is no doubt it is down.
Now, U.S.
President Donald Trump is threatening to
attack the country. He has made it clear he has little tolerance for the
regime’s efforts to rebuild its nuclear program or the extraordinarily brutal
way it cracked down on protests. “If Iran violently kills peaceful protesters,
which is their custom, the United States of America will come to their rescue,”
he said last month. “We are locked and loaded and ready to go.” The president
has since amassed U.S. air and naval assets in the region, and he is
considering a variety of strike options.
But that doesn’t mean
major attacks are guaranteed. In fact, thus far, the administration’s decisions
raise more questions than they answer about what Washington aims to achieve and
how. Right now, Trump is practicing gunboat diplomacy, hoping that the threat
of force will coerce the Islamic Republic into making a nuclear deal better
than the one he left in 2018. If that fails, he is mulling decapitation
operations or limited strikes in order to get the regime to bend.
It is easy to see why
the Trump administration is prioritizing diplomacy and limited strikes. The
Islamic Republic may be weak, but it is still lethal and capable of harming
U.S. forces and civilian targets throughout its region. The president,
meanwhile, has repeatedly proved reluctant to start a protracted military
campaign. But the reality is that after decades of trying and failing to change
Tehran’s behavior with sanctions, sabotage, and, more recently, one-off
strikes, the time has come to go big. The regime is simply too ideological to
be cowed by a few rounds of bombing. The Iranian people, meanwhile, have made
it more than clear that they are ready to transform their country. The United
States can and should help them by using its military power to neutralize the
Islamic Republic’s military capabilities and degrade its repressive domestic
apparatus.
Such measures could
inspire the masses of Iranians who took to the streets in December and January
to do so again. Just this week, Iran witnessed smaller-scale campus
protests, showing that animosity against the regime very much remains. If regular
protests resume, American military power could level the playing field between
the street and the state, giving the country’s demonstrators a chance to
succeed.
Underneath Protester in Iran Hold Image of Reza Pahlavi

Deal Or No Deal
The Trump
administration may have threatened Iran with major
military action. But there are reasons to think that, for now at least, it
might have other ideas. For starters, the president’s comments on Iran this
year have oscillated between threats of war and the imperative of a nuclear
agreement. “Hopefully Iran will quickly ‘Come to the Table’ and negotiate a
fair and equitable deal,” Trump wrote on Truth Social in late January. “I would
rather have a Deal than not but, if we don’t make a Deal, it will be a very bad
day for that Country,” he posted a month later. During the February 24 State of
the Union address, Trump declared that although his “preference is to solve
this problem through diplomacy,” he would “never allow the number one state
sponsor of terror … to have a nuclear weapon.”
Tehran claims the two
sides have made progress in their talks. But thus far, Iranian officials have,
expectedly, refused to give up core elements of their nuclear program, so there
is reason to think that Trump will be compelled to attack - even as the two
countries continue to negotiate indirectly. If past is prologue, he will keep
such action short and sharp. In his first term, for example, the president
ordered the assassination of Qasem Soleimani, a
prominent commander in Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), with a
drone strike in January 2020. In June 2025, he directed the use of massive
ordnance penetrator bombs against Iranian enrichment facilities. And the recent
extraction of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro from Caracas by U.S.
military forces took place in the span of one evening. Notably, Trump has cited
the Maduro operation while threatening Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
“Like with Venezuela,” the president said in a Truth Social post describing
Washington’s naval buildup around Iran, the U.S. military is “ready, willing,
and able to rapidly fulfill its mission, with speed and violence, if
necessary.”
But a quick,
one-and-done operation is extremely unlikely to down this regime, even if it
succeeds in killing Khamenei. The Islamic Republic may have once been a sultanistic state built on the personal cult of its
founding supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. But over the last three
decades, Khamenei (Khomeini’s successor) has institutionalized his rule and his
regime both by empowering loyalists throughout a considerably larger state
bureaucracy and by supporting competing power centers. As a result, the Islamic
Republic looks more like a series of pillars than it does a pyramid, with a
powerful deep state made up of security officials with their own vested
interests in maintaining the regime.
Seen in this light,
many of the leaders and veterans of the IRGC are less Khamenei’s subordinates
than his partners. Indeed, it is unclear to what extent the 86-year-old
Khamenei is actually running the regime day-to-day.
The Islamic Republic, for example, made remarkably quick military decisions
during the 12-day war with Israel in June, when Khamenei was likely in a bunker
and, according to a New York Times report, not using
electronic communications. It did so even after many senior IRGC officers were
killed in just one night by Israeli attacks.
The Venezuela model,
in other words, will not work in Iran. In fact, a singular and spectacular
strike on Khamenei might have the opposite of its intended effect. Rather than
fostering division and thus jeopardizing the regime, remaining officials would be
more likely to close ranks, at least initially. They would keep the system
running and try to seek revenge.
Going Big
To some analysts, the
fact that limited strikes will fail is reason enough to think twice about
employing the military. Because an attack by the United States on Iran could
result in unexpectedly deadly retaliation - and a much longer and potentially
damaging conflict. Unless Iran is bluffing, this analysis is correct. But it is
not a compelling reason to avoid using the military. Iran is the world’s
foremost state sponsor of terrorism, one of the most outright anti-American
governments in the world, and the country with the largest ballistic missile
arsenal in the Middle East. Nearly a half-century of experience has shown that
the Islamic Republic will not meaningfully moderate any of this behavior or
treat its citizens any better. Washington now has a historic opportunity to
bring down the regime, and it cannot pass it up out of fear. Indeed, the fact
that Iran would almost certainly escalate in response to a limited U.S. strike
is all the more reason to go big from the beginning
and avoid settling into the kind of gradual escalation that turns wars into
quagmires. Washington cannot let Tehran dictate the pace or terms of the
conflict.
None of this means that
the United States needs to launch a massive ground invasion and
single-handedly topple the regime. In fact, part of why Washington should
strike now is that Iran’s own people are prepared to do much of the work
themselves. For the past decade, while the United States has treated “regime
change” as a pejorative term, unarmed Iranians have increasingly taken to the
streets to seek systemic change in what has become a national uprising. Today, it is clear that Iranians are willing to make tremendous
sacrifices to get rid of their leaders. That is why the regime had to kill at
least 30,000 people, according to the estimates of human rights groups, to put
down the most recent protests, and why some Iranians
have nonetheless continued to demonstrate in the weeks since. Iranians
therefore do not need U.S. troops to march into Tehran. What they need is for
the American military to weaken the regime enough for them to succeed.
Trump can start by
having the U.S. intelligence community carry out covert operations designed to
pave the way for kinetic activity. Intelligence operatives, for instance,
should surge secure communications technology, including satellite Internet
devices, into the country so that Iranians can still have Internet access even
if their government cuts off domestic service. The administration should also
authorize information operations aimed at undermining the resolve and cohesion
of Iran’s security forces. Finally, the administration should direct the
intelligence community to identify and help Iranian security forces that are
willing to defect.
Then, the United
States can proceed with airstrikes. It should begin by suppressing and
destroying the regime’s air defenses to gain aerial superiority. Doing so
shouldn’t be all that complicated, given Israel’s success in knocking them out
in past rounds of fighting. But there are platforms the Israelis did not
suppress or destroy, and others that Iran has repaired. Afterward, Washington
should move against the long pole in the tent of Tehran’s deterrence: its
formidable ballistic missile arsenal. Iran can use these weapons to complicate
the United States’ approach by inflicting damage on military assets, regional
energy infrastructure, maritime shipping, and even on civilian targets in
Israel. Rather than wait for Iran to launch large volleys of these projectiles
in hopes of overwhelming U.S. and allied defenses, Washington must collapse the
network of subterranean bases where medium- and short-range ballistic missiles
are kept, which Iranian officials have long hailed as “missile cities.”
Tehran2026.html To be clear, the United States and, potentially, its
partners will sustain losses from Iranian missiles. But by preemptively
striking and destroying these bases, Washington can help limit the damage from
any Iranian counterattack. If Tehran disperses its mobile launchers after
bringing them above ground, the United States should dedicate real-time
intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance assets to identify their
locations and strike them, as Israel did during its 12-day war. (Israeli
estimates claim that the country’s attacks on these launchers reduced the
regime’s firing capacity by at least 33 percent.) From there, the United States
can handicap Iran’s future missile capacity by targeting production facilities,
which open-source intelligence suggests are located in
or near the cities of Isfahan, Khojir, Parchin,
Semnan, and Shahroud.
Degrading Iran’s
missile infrastructure will do more than make it easier for Washington to
conduct the rest of its military campaign. It could also help ordinary
Iranians. Drastic as it might seem, some regime supporters have floated using
missiles against Iran’s own people. Likewise, if the Islamic Republic’s missile
and nuclear infrastructure is destroyed and its contents entombed, the regime’s
representatives will have less leverage when negotiating with U.S. officials or
protesters over a political transition. For that reason, the United States
would be wise to attack Iran’s remaining nuclear sites, especially as the
regime is moving to harden or rebuild them.

Paving the Way
Still, hitting Iran’s
missile and nuclear program is unlikely to help Iranian demonstrators in the
near term. To do that, Washington should also target the regime’s political
institutions and security installations, both as a means of inspiring protesters
and to make it harder for the Islamic Republic to coordinate and effectively
suppress demonstrations.
Some American
analysts might object to targeting Iran’s political institutions as a violation
of the country’s sovereignty. But Iranians would likely welcome such a
campaign. The country’s people are highly nationalistic, but they are
nonetheless looking abroad for help in their fight against the regime. During
the latest round of protests, for example, Iranians made English-language
videos describing their plight. Others named streets in Trump’s honor, in hopes
of getting the president’s attention. When Trump subsequently promised that
help “is on the way,” he raised their expectations and likely fostered
continued protests. As one demonstrator told The Wall
Street Journal in a text message, “We’re all staring at the sky,
hoping Trump will bomb us, just to destroy Khamenei and his regime.”
Trump failed Iranians
then. But he can correct course now. He could begin to help them by striking
state institutions that have ordered or supported the crackdown on Iranians
such as the office of the supreme leader, the Ministry of Intelligence, the IRGC
counterintelligence directorate, as well as institutions enabled the regime to
shut off the Internet. Washington should also use overt and covert means to
blind, impede, and militarily pick apart Iran’s wartime command-and-control
structures - including those on the supreme national security council, the
defense council, and the armed forces’ general staff. The United States could
then move to targeting bases and command centers housing other parts of the
IRGC, the Basij paramilitary (whose members patrol Iran’s streets and put down
protests), and the so-called special units of the country’s law-enforcement
forces, who handle crowd suppression. Finally, if Washington
determines that Iran’s proxy foreign militias are entering the country to
slaughter demonstrators - as appeared to happen during the last round of
protests - it should not hesitate to use force against them. These militias,
after all, are already designated by the U.S. State Department as foreign
terrorist organizations and already have the blood of Americans and U.S. allies
on their hands.
Such actions will
probably eliminate many key regime officials, including even Khamenei. In
striking this wide variety of targets, the United States would show Iranians
that it wants to change Iran for the better, not just limit the damage the
regime can do to foreign adversaries. Washington should hit these sites even if
key officials and leaders are not there. Doing so will still reduce the
regime’s repressive capacity, impede continuity of government operations, and
send a strong signal that can motivate the Iranian people.
As it carries out
strikes, the United States will need to reduce the regime’s capabilities all across the country, not just in Tehran. That means U.S.
officials should target every IRGC and Basij provincial command and battalion
headquarters, as well as the command centers belonging to Iranian police
forces. Doing so would inspire further protests while making it harder for the
regime to suppress them. Nothing is likely to galvanize Iranian protesters more
than seeing local security forces come under attack.
Finally, the United
States must be prepared to use not just bombers and advanced fighter jets but
lower- and slower-flying drones and aircraft, which could provide close air
support to crowds squaring off against regime militants. Such attacks would
help the United States take out mid- and lower-level commanders, drilling down
on the chain of command of Iran’s security forces. It might also prompt these
officials to retreat. As rank-and-file Iranian forces begin worrying about
their survival, their instinct for self-preservation might kick in and override
lingering loyalty to their units and commanders. Iran’s security services, in
turn, might finally fracture.
This fracturing would
be the key to how Iranians finish off the regime. As the Islamic Republic’s
forces are sandwiched between U.S. airstrikes and popular pressure, they will
have every incentive to either lay down their weapons or flip and join with the
protesters. In the latter case, they might bring their guns with them,
transferring coercive power to the street. Both outcomes could embolden
demonstrators to press their advantage. They might take over police stations
and occupy government and municipal buildings. With the security forces out of
their way or actively helping them, protesters could seize state television,
radio, and other communications platforms and broadcast the end of the Islamic
Republic. Such an outcome would have parallels to the 1979 revolution: the
Islamic Republic celebrates February 11 as “Islamic Revolutionary Victory Day”
because it is the day when the Iranian armed forces declared their neutrality,
effectively abandoning the existing government and handing the country over to
its revolutionary masses.
The collapse of the
Islamic Republic would, of course, be turbulent. Many analysts fear that Iran
would simply get a new strongman, possibly someone who rises
up from the ashes of the IRGC. But that is far from foreordained. Newly
empowered protesters could use their new platforms to call for the country’s
large civilian bureaucracy to keep working in order to
maintain government functions. They might also bring in Iran’s exiled
opposition leaders, who have been planning for and could help lead a transition.
For Washington to eschew military options out of fear of instability would thus
be to make the perfect the enemy of the good. The real source of
destabilization in and around Iran, after all, is not the prospect of regime
change. It is the Islamic Republic itself.
One Way Out
When Trump was asked
about what an acceptable “endgame” with Iran would be, he replied: “to win.”
After decades of Iran’s unabated anti-Americanism and hostility, it should be
clear to all that winning means toppling the Islamic Republic. The regime is the
arsonist behind many of the Middle East’s fires and a terror to its own
citizens. Washington should employ sustained military force to break it and
thus pave the way for the Iranians to take back their country.
That doesn’t mean
helping take down the Islamic Republic will be easy. The United States will run
into significant challenges. It will encounter unknown variables, including the
resilience of Iranian security services when facing American firepower and the
Trump administration’s own risk tolerance once it encounters difficulty. But at
this point, bold action is the only way to break the current dynamic. The
United States has both the capacity and the capability to weaken the Iranian
government while mitigating the resulting dangers. The Iranian people have the
drive and determination needed to finish off the regime. Together, the two have
everything they need to win and make a new Iran.
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