By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
For decades, the
United States and Iran have carefully avoided crossing a dangerous red line
into a direct military confrontation.
One American
president after another held back from deploying their military might against
the Islamic Republic for fear of sinking the US into potentially the most
perilous Middle East war of all.
Now, the
commander-in-chief, who promised to be a president of peace, has crossed this
Rubicon with direct military strikes on Tehran's nuclear sites – the most
consequential move yet in the second term of a president who has prided himself
on breaking all the old rules.
It's an unprecedented
moment provoking alarm in capitals around the world.
Iran's next move
could be even more momentous. It's 86-year-old supreme leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, now reported to be sheltering in a bunker, has spent nearly four
decades cautiously playing a long game against his most powerful enemy to
protect his most important asset – the Islamic Republic.
If Trump does too
little, he will lose face; if he does too much, he could lose everything.
"Khamenei's next
moves will be the most consequential not just for his survival but for how he
will go down in history," says Sanam Vakil, director of the Middle East
and North Africa program at think tank Chatham House.
"His poisoned
chalice is potentially more potent than the one Khomeini drank in 1988,"
she continues, referring to the reluctant decision of Iran's first
revolutionary leader to bitterly accept a ceasefire in the devastating
Iran-Iraq war.

"This is not a war Iran wants."
In the past ten days,
intense Israeli strikes have inflicted more damage on Iran's chain of command
and military hardware than its eight-year war with Iraq, which still casts a
long shadow across Iranian society.
Israeli attacks have
eliminated many in the top ranks of Iran's security forces, along with leading
nuclear scientists. America's entry into this conflict has now ratcheted up the
pressure.
The Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), founded in the aftermath of Iran's 1979 revolution, is defiantly warning of
retaliation against the US that would leave it with "lasting regret".
But behind a sharp
war of words lie urgent calculations to avoid calamitous miscalculation.
"This is not a
war Iran wants," says Hamidreza Aziz, of the Middle East Council on Global
Affairs. "But we're already seeing arguments by regime supporters that,
regardless of the extent of actual damage the US might have inflicted, the image
of Iran as a strong country [and] as a regional power, has been shaken so
dramatically [that] it requires a response."

Smoke can seen in Tel Aviv
during a missile attack on 22 June
Every response
is risky, however. A
direct attack on one of about 20 US bases in the Middle East, or any of the
more than 40,000 American troops, would likely trigger major US retaliation.
Closing the Strait of
Hormuz, the strategic waterway for a fifth of global oil traffic, could also
backfire by upsetting Arab allies in the region, as well as China, the main
customer of Iran's own oil. Western naval powers could also be drawn in to protect
this major "choke point" and avert significant economic shocks.
And what Iran had
regarded as its "forward defense," its network of proxies and
partners across the region have all been weakened or wiped out by Israeli
assaults and assassinations during the last 20 months of war.
It's not clear if an
acceptable threshold exists for Iran to be seen to return fire without
provoking America's wrath, which would allow both sides to pull back from the
brink.
This tortuous
relationship was tested at least once before. Five years ago, when President
Trump ordered the assassination of IRGC commander Qasem
Soleimani with a drone strike in Baghdad, many feared it would spark a
vicious spiral. But Iran telegraphed its counter attack through Iraqi
officials, targeting sections of US bases which avoided killing US personnel or
causing significant damage.
But this moment is of far greater magnitude.
"The US, not Iran, betrayed diplomacy"
President Trump, who
had repeatedly expressed his preference to "do a deal with Iran"
rather than "bombing the hell out of it" now seems to be firmly in
Israel's corner. He described Iran as the "bully of the Middle East,"
bent on building a nuclear bomb – a conclusion not shared by previous US
intelligence assessments.
Intelligence teams
are now analysing in detail the results of what the
Pentagon says was the "largest B-2 operational strike in US history".
It inflicted "extremely severe damage and destruction" to Iran's main
nuclear sites at Natanz, Isfahan, and Fordo.
Only "bunker-busting"
bombs could
penetrate the Fordo facility, buried deep in a mountain.

Satellite imagery over the Fordo nuclear site after
the US strikes
President Trump is
now urging Iran to "come to peace".
But Iran now views
the US's diplomatic path as surrender, too. In Geneva on Friday, where Foreign
Minister Abbas Araghchi met his European counterparts, a tough message was
conveyed that Washington expected Tehran to reduce its nuclear enrichment to
zero.
It's a demand Iran
rejects as a violation of its sovereign right to enrich uranium as part of a
civilian nuclear program.
It now considers
President Trump's diplomatic effort, including five rounds of mainly indirect
talks conducted by his special envoy Steve Witkoff, to be an elaborate
deception.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi at a press
conference after US forces struck three key Iranian sites
Israel unleashed its
military campaign two days before the sixth round of negotiations in Muscat.
The US entered the war two days after President Trump said he wanted to allow a
two-week window to give diplomacy a chance.
Now it says it won't
return to the negotiating table while Israeli and American bombs are still
falling.
"It was not
Iran, but the US, who betrayed diplomacy," Araghchi told a news conference
in Istanbul. During this, he met with foreign ministers of the 57-member
Organization of Islamic Conference who condemned "the aggression of Israel"
and expressed their "great concern regarding this dangerous
escalation".
Iran has also tried
to highlight an onslaught against its territory, which violates the UN Charter
as well as warnings from the International Atomic Energy Agency that nuclear
facilities should never be attacked, "whatever the context or circumstances".

President Trump will be pulled in one direction by
Israel's Prime Minister Netanyahu, but he comes under other pressure at home
European leaders are
also calling for an urgent de-escalation and a path to curb Iran's nuclear
program through mediation, not missiles.
But they also
reiterate that Iran cannot be allowed to acquire a nuclear bomb. They regard
Tehran's 60% enrichment of uranium, within easy range of 90% weapons grade, as
an ominous indication of its intentions.
Iran is likely to
underplay the damage to its sites and insist its nuclear program has survived
these unprecedented attacks.
The US may exaggerate
the damage, so Trump can claim military victory without getting dragged into
further strikes.

A billboard in Tel Aviv thanking Trump, amid conflict
with Iran
President Trump will
be pulled in one direction by Israel's Prime Minister Netanyahu, whose own
formidable forces will continue attacking Iran to inflict even more damage,
triggering yet more Iranian salvos.
But the US leader is
also coming under pressure at home from lawmakers who say he acted without
congressional authorization, and supporters who believe he has broken his
promise to keep America out of lengthy wars.
And this moment is
widely expected to concentrate the minds of Iran's hardline decision-makers on
how to restore deterrence as they try to avoid being targeted themselves.
This is the great
irony. Although Trump has sought to eliminate the nuclear threat from Iran, he
has now made it far more likely that Iran becomes a nuclear state.
The Israeli military
attacked the entrance of Iran’s notorious Evin prison on Monday, according to
Israel’s defense minister and Iranian state news, in its latest salvo on the
capital, Tehran.
An enormous, black
cloud can be seen engulfing a doorway to Evin prison, in footage published by
Iran’s state broadcaster IRIB and geolocated by CNN. The video shows the
“moment the entrance gate of the prison “was targeted,” IRIB news said.
Israeli Defense
Minister Israel Katz confirmed in a statement that Evin had been targeted,
alongside several other sites, including the flagship building of the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and the Basij headquarters (a paramilitary
wing of the IRGC).
Synopsis

Iran-Israel conflict
enters 11th day:
Both countries have
continued to trade strikes. Israel’s defense minister said it launched an
attack on “the
heart of Tehran,” while
several waves of Iranian missile attacks were reported in Israel.
Iran vows
response: Iranian military officials and members of parliament vowed that
the US will pay a price for its strikes on Iran’s nuclear sites. Meanwhile, US
President Donald Trump alluded to the possibility of regime change in Iran in a
social media post Sunday. There has been no word yet from Iran’s Supreme
Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei.
Damage
assessment: The US bombing likely caused “very
significant damage” to
the underground parts of Iran’s Fordow nuclear site, the UN’s nuclear watchdog
said Monday.
Both countries have
continued to trade strikes. Israel’s defense minister said it launched an
attack on “the
heart of Tehran,” while
several waves of Iranian missile attacks were reported in Israel.Both
countries have continued to trade strikes. Israel’s defense minister said it
launched an attack on “the heart of
Tehran,” while several
waves of Iranian missile attacks were reported in Israel.
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