US and Iran exchange strikes raising fears of wider conflict
The escalation of military strikes between the US and Iran risks a wider conflict and affects regional stability and international security.
The policy takes effect on Monday. For the people it affects, Monday will begin with the specific, hollow ache of a stomach that has not known fullness for three days, and the sharp, metallic taste of fear that sits at the back of the throat. The distance between the press release announcing a “limited strike” and the sensation of concrete dust coating the lungs of a man hiding in a basement is the distance this analysis attempts to close.
There are thousands of civilians in Tehran and the surrounding provinces who live under the shadow of radar installations and drone sites, their safety contingent on the precision of foreign munitions and the restraint of their own government. There are military personnel stationed at bases in Kuwait who face the threat of retaliatory strikes, their lives held in the balance of diplomatic failures. The Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols exist to prevent this specific calculus of suffering, to ensure that even in the heat of conflict, the wounded are treated, the civilians are spared, and the means of warfare are limited. Is it being followed? The answer, as it has been since Solferino, is that the rules are present on paper but absent in practice, leaving a vacuum filled only by the immediate, brutal arithmetic of escalation.
It is proposed, with the utmost reason, that the current cycle of reciprocal aerial bombardment between the United States and Iran be formalized into a standardized, quarterly exchange of kinetic assets, thereby replacing the chaotic unpredictability of geopolitical escalation with the orderly efficiency of scheduled conflict. The committee has calculated the savings.
The present arrangement, wherein one party strikes a radar installation in the desert and the other responds by targeting an air base in Kuwait, is fraught with administrative inefficiency. It lacks the precision of a well-managed ledger. We observe a pattern of tit-for-tat violence that is neither decisive nor economically rational. The United States seeks to degrade capabilities; Iran seeks to demonstrate resolve. Both parties expend vast sums on munitions, intelligence, and diplomatic theater, only to return to the status quo ante, with the added burden of heightened anxiety and the risk of accidental wider war. This is poor management. It is the equivalent of two merchants standing in the street, throwing coins at each other’s heads, claiming that the noise proves their financial solvency.
This is what democratic societies do to themselves when the desire for security eclipses the capacity for self-governance, leaving the citizenry to watch, with a mixture of relief and terror, as the administrative state assumes the role of protector against dangers it has itself helped to cultivate. The recent exchange of fire between the United States and Iran - strikes on radar sites in the desert, retaliatory missiles against a base in Kuwait - is not merely a geopolitical incident. It is a sociological symptom. It reveals the hollowing out of the civic soul in an age where the government is expected to manage the world’s chaos while the citizens are expected to manage only their own private anxieties.
The public wants a decisive blow, a thunderclap that will settle the matter of Iran once and for all, which is precisely why the matter will remain unsettled, festering in the warm, humid air of geopolitical ambiguity. The American populace, in its infinite and unexamined wisdom, believes that war is a transaction like buying a loaf of bread: you pay the price, you receive the goods, and if the bread is stale, you complain to the manager. It does not occur to the median voter, that blessed creature of the Booboisie, that war is not a transaction but a contagion, a chaotic spillage of violence that respects no borders, no treaties, and certainly no editorial calendars. The enthusiasm for the bombing of radar sites in Iran is not born of strategic clarity; it is born of a profound, almost religious, desire for the illusion of control. The people want to believe that their government is a surgeon, precise and clean, rather than what it actually is: a clumsy butcher swinging a sledgehammer in a china shop, hoping that the noise will drown out the sound of the breaking.
The official framing is a cycle of defensive retaliation and the preservation of international security. The structural reading - stripped of the decoration - is a contest of power asymmetry where the stronger party seeks to degrade the weaker party’s capacity for surveillance and strike, while the weaker party seeks to demonstrate that the cost of dominance exceeds its utility. The distance between these two descriptions is the analytical territory.
Thucydides
The official framing is a contest between the moral imperative of humanitarian restraint and the chaotic folly of public enthusiasm for decisive force. The structural reading - stripped of the decoration - is a calculation of deterrence thresholds and the management of escalation risks in a multipolar environment. The distance between these two descriptions is the analytical territory.
The humanitarian interlocutor argues that the Geneva Conventions and the principle of distinction are the correct lenses through which to view the conflict, asserting that the vacuum left by their absence is filled only by the brutal arithmetic of escalation. This is a partial truth, but it misidentifies the cause. The humanitarian framework treats the rules of war as a constraint on state behavior, whereas the structural reality is that states observe these rules only when they align with their interest in maintaining legitimacy or avoiding reciprocal devastation. The suffering of civilians in Tehran and the peril of personnel in Kuwait are not accidents of a moral vacuum; they are the inevitable byproducts of a power asymmetry being tested. The humanitarian argument is noble, but it is a post-hoc justification for a desire to limit damage, not a driver of the conflict itself. States do not bomb because they lack morality; they bomb because they perceive a strategic necessity, and they limit the scope of that bombing because they fear the political and military costs of total war. The humanitarian lens is a diagnostic tool for the aftermath, not a predictive model for the cause.
The libertarian interlocutor offers a more penetrating critique of the domestic political machinery, describing the public’s desire for a “decisive blow” as a transactional delusion and the state as a “clumsy butcher.” This observation is structurally sound. The public’s demand for closure is a form of honor-driven pressure, a desire for the state to project strength and resolve. However, the libertarian error lies in attributing the state’s actions to this domestic pressure or to incompetence. The state is not a butcher swinging a sledgehammer in a china shop; it is a calculator assessing the cost of inaction against the cost of action. The “chaotic spillage of violence” is not a failure of control but a feature of the structural instability inherent in the region. The United States strikes radar sites not to satisfy the public’s appetite for a thunderclap, but to signal capability and deter further Iranian expansion. Iran retaliates not out of chaotic impulse, but to restore its honor and demonstrate that it cannot be dominated without cost. The libertarian sees chaos; the structural analyst sees a rigid, predictable logic of deterrence and counter-deterrence.
The divergence between these frameworks and the structural record is fundamental. The humanitarian framework seeks to impose a moral order on a realm where power is the arbiter. It assumes that if the rules were simply followed, the suffering would cease. This is a misdiagnosis. The rules are followed only when the structural incentives align with compliance. When the incentive is to degrade an adversary’s capacity to strike, the rule of distinction is weighed against the military advantage, and the balance shifts. The suffering is not a bug in the system; it is the friction of the system operating.
The libertarian framework correctly identifies the disconnect between public perception and strategic reality, but it fails to recognize that the state’s actions are rational within the context of interstate competition. The “illusion of control” is not an illusion; it is the necessary fiction that allows the state to act without domestic paralysis. The state must appear decisive to maintain alliance cohesion and deterrence credibility. The “clumsy butcher” is, in fact, a precise instrument of statecraft, calibrated to inflict enough pain to deter, but not enough to provoke a general war. The libertarian’s disdain for the state’s competence is a form of moral decoration, masking the reality that the state is acting exactly as a rational actor in an anarchic system must act.
The recurrence check confirms this pattern. In the Peloponnesian War, the Athenians did not destroy Melos because they were cruel or because the public demanded a decisive blow. They destroyed Melos because Melos’ neutrality was a structural threat to Athenian hegemony. The Melians appealed to justice and the gods; the Athenians responded with the reality of power. The outcome was determined not by the moral weight of the Melian argument, but by the asymmetry of naval power. Today, the United States and Iran are engaged in a similar dynamic. The humanitarian concerns are the modern equivalent of the Melian appeal to justice. The libertarian critique is the modern equivalent of the Athenian public’s demand for glory. The structural cause remains the same: the management of power asymmetry through calibrated violence.
The clinical record shows that the bombing of radar sites and the subsequent attack on the Kuwait base were not deviations from a moral norm, but steps in a logical sequence of deterrence. The humanitarian cost is real, but it is a consequence of the structure, not a failure of morality. The libertarian’s anger at the state’s “clumsiness” is misplaced; the state is acting with precision, but the precision is directed at strategic targets, not at satisfying the public’s desire for a clean, transactional resolution. War is not a transaction, as the libertarian notes, but it is also not a contagion of chaos. It is a structured interaction between states, governed by the laws of interest, fear, and honor. To view it otherwise is to decorate the record with moral or sentimental language, obscuring the structural causes that drive the behavior. The suffering is the price of the structure. To ignore the structure is to invite greater suffering, for one cannot manage a cause one has misidentified.
Henri Dunant
The realist argues that the destruction of radar sites and the subsequent strike on a base in Kuwait are merely the mechanical operation of a structure, devoid of moral content. He claims these are rational acts of war, the application of superior firepower to reduce an enemy’s capacity to observe and react. I concede that the geopolitical architecture he describes is real. The tension between a regional power seeking asymmetric leverage and a global hegemon seeking containment is a structural fact of the modern Middle East. To deny this dynamic is to ignore the history of the region.
However, to describe these acts as “devoid of moral content” is to ignore the specific, countable suffering that results from them. The realist’s framework treats the battlefield as an abstract chessboard where pieces are moved to optimize strategic position. My framework treats the battlefield as a site of human vulnerability where the movement of pieces results in broken bodies, displaced families, and the collapse of medical infrastructure. When a radar site is struck, it is not merely a sensor that goes dark; it is a facility that may house civilian technicians, or whose destruction releases hazardous materials, or whose proximity to residential areas endangers non-combatants. When a base in Kuwait is targeted, the question is not whether the strike was strategically rational for Tehran, but whether the strike respected the distinction between combatants and civilians, and whether the wounded on both sides received care.
The libertarian opponent offers a more visceral critique, describing the public’s desire for a “decisive blow” as a contagion of violence and the government as a “clumsy butcher swinging a sledgehammer in a china shop.” I agree with his assessment of the public’s misunderstanding of war. The populace often views conflict as a transaction, expecting clean results from inherently messy and destructive processes. This illusion of control is dangerous because it lowers the threshold for engagement and raises the expectation for total victory, which rarely exists in asymmetric conflicts.
Yet, the libertarian’s solution is implicit withdrawal or cynicism, which leaves the wounded without protection. If we accept that war is a “chaotic spillage of violence that respects no borders,” then we have abandoned the very project that has saved millions of lives since Solferino. The chaos is real, but it is not inevitable. It is mitigated by rules. The Geneva Conventions are not naive fantasies; they are the only barrier between total barbarism and constrained conflict. To dismiss them because they are imperfect is to throw out the lifeboat because it has a leak.
The divergence between my position and these opponents lies in the definition of “rationality.” For the realist, rationality is strategic efficiency. For the libertarian, rationality is perhaps the avoidance of state violence altogether. For me, rationality is the minimization of unnecessary suffering through institutional constraint. The realist asks, “Did the strike achieve its military objective?” I ask, “Did the strike violate the principle of distinction? Were the wounded collected and cared for? Was the medical infrastructure protected?”
Consider the strike on the Iranian radar sites. Under the laws of armed conflict, specifically Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions, attacks must be directed only at military objectives. If the radar site was a legitimate military target, the strike is lawful. However, the principle of proportionality requires that the anticipated civilian harm not be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated. The realist ignores this calculation entirely. He sees only the military advantage. I must see the civilian cost. If the strike caused significant collateral damage to nearby civilian infrastructure or resulted in civilian casualties that were disproportionate to the tactical gain, then the act was not merely “rational” in a strategic sense; it was a violation of international humanitarian law.
the response from Iran against the base in Kuwait raises questions of compliance with the laws of neutrality and the protection of diplomatic or military installations. The base in Kuwait is on the territory of a third state. The attack implicates Kuwait’s sovereignty and the safety of personnel stationed there. The humanitarian question is not whether Iran had a grievance, but whether the method of response respected the protections afforded to non-combatants and the infrastructure of a neutral host.
The libertarian’s metaphor of the “butcher in a china shop” is apt in describing the brutality of modern warfare, but it is incomplete. It suggests that the only alternative to the butcher is silence. I argue that the alternative is the surgeon. The surgeon does not prevent the injury, but he limits the damage, treats the wound, and prevents infection. The institutions of humanitarian law are the surgeons of war. They do not stop the conflict, but they ensure that the conflict does not become a slaughterhouse.
The realist’s error is in believing that morality is irrelevant to strategy. History shows that violations of humanitarian law erode legitimacy, fuel resentment, and prolong conflicts. The libertarian’s error is in believing that the absence of state action leads to peace. In the absence of rules, the strong prey on the weak without constraint. The presence of rules, even when violated, provides a standard against which violations can be measured, documented, and condemned.
We must count the cost. How many civilians were in the vicinity of the radar sites? Were they warned? How many wounded were there in Kuwait, and did they receive medical care regardless of nationality? These are not abstract questions. They are the specific obligations of the parties involved. The realist sees a power balance. The libertarian sees a spectacle. I see a failure of institutional capacity to protect the vulnerable. The rules exist. The question is whether they are being followed, and if not, what mechanisms exist to hold the violators accountable. Pity is not a program, but the documentation of suffering is the first step toward accountability. Without it, we are left with the realist’s cold calculus and the libertarian’s despair, neither of which saves a single life.
The Verdict
Where They Agree
All three positions, despite their profound differences, share a foundational rejection of the official narrative that state violence is a clean, precise instrument wielded for the stated moral or strategic purpose. Thucydides dismisses the rhetoric of “defending allies” and “deterring aggression” as a mask for the mechanical operation of power asymmetry. Henri Dunant argues that the “strategic narrative” is the “wrong lens” that obscures the “humanitarian cost audit.” H.L. Mencken scorns the “language of kindergarten ethics” used to sell a “pantomime” to the public. This shared skepticism reveals that the debate is not between a believer in official stories and its critics, but between three different critiques of those stories. None of them accept the state’s account of its own motives at face value; they merely disagree on what the underlying driver truly is - structural interest, institutional failure, or democratic vanity.
they concur that the outcomes of such military exchanges are often indecisive and perpetuate a cycle of managed conflict. Thucydides concludes the result is a “stalemate of violence” and a “temporary de-escalation followed by a return to the status quo.” Dunant observes that without rules, the result is a “vacuum filled only by the immediate, brutal arithmetic of escalation.” Mencken declares that “war does not end. It merely pauses.” This agreement is significant because it suggests that regardless of the analytical framework applied - realist, humanitarian, or libertarian - the observable outcome is the same: a persistent, low-grade conflict that satisfies no ultimate political objective but is simply perpetuated.
Where They Fundamentally Disagree
The primary function of the state in conflict separates the debaters at the most fundamental level. For Thucydides, the state is a rational calculator in an anarchic system, and its function is to preserve its structural position through acts of “calibrated violence” that are “devoid of moral content.” The empirical question here is whether state actions can be accurately modeled as a coldly rational pursuit of interest; the normative question is whether this is an acceptable or accurate description of state function. For Dunant, the state’s function is to be constrained by institutional rules, and its failure to do so represents a catastrophic operational and moral breakdown. The empirical question is whether adherence to these rules demonstrably reduces suffering; the normative question is whether states should be bound by such rules irrespective of strategic advantage. For Mencken, the state’s function is to perform theater for a deluded public, and its actions are those of a “clumsy butcher” driven by domestic political vanity rather than strategic necessity. The empirical question is whether public opinion is a primary driver of specific military actions; the normative question is whether democratic processes inevitably corrupt statecraft into a bloody spectacle.
The nature and utility of international humanitarian law constitutes a second irreducible fault line. Dunant’s framework treats the Geneva Conventions as a functional, if fragile, “structural barrier” and “operational constraint” whose violation is a specific, countable failure. The empirical dispute is whether these rules have a measurable effect in limiting suffering in modern conflict; the normative dispute is whether they represent a moral obligation that transcends strategic interest. Both Thucydides and Mencken treat these rules as functionally irrelevant, but for different reasons. Thucydides sees them as a “post-hoc justification” that states observe only when aligned with interests of “legitimacy,” making them an effect, not a cause, of state behavior. Mencken dismisses them as “convenient fictions” and “aspirational poetry” invented to soothe consciences, arguing they are irrelevant to the political calculus of leaders who are “trying to win the game.” For them, the rules are decoration, not architecture.
Hidden Assumptions
- Thucydides: Assumes that the primary audience for state action is other states within the international system, and that domestic public opinion is a secondary consideration to be managed rather than a primary driver. If this is false - if public demand for action is a genuine causal factor in initiating strikes - then his model of the state as a purely external-facing calculator becomes less tenable.
- Thucydides: Assumes that all state actors possess a high degree of strategic rationality and competence in executing acts of calibrated violence. If this is false, and state action is frequently driven by bureaucratic inertia, poor intelligence, or simple error, then his description of violence as a “precise instrument” becomes a significant overstatement.
- Henri Dunant: Assumes that the presence of a ratified legal framework creates a measurable obligation for state compliance, and that violations are a choice against a known standard. If this is false, and the frameworks are so vague or contested that states can plausibly claim compliance in nearly any circumstance, then the framework itself may be too weak to serve as the operational constraint he envisions.
- Henri Dunant: Assumes that the institutional mechanisms for monitoring compliance (e.g., the ICRC) can operate with sufficient access and neutrality to make an accurate “humanitarian cost audit.” If these institutions are systematically blocked or manipulated by belligerents, then the entire project of documentation and accountability collapses, leaving his framework with no mechanism for enforcement.
- H. L. Mencken: Assumes that the “democratic vanity” of the public is the central cause of the state’s behavior, and that state action is primarily a performance for this domestic audience. If this is false, and state action is often taken despite public opposition or ignorance, then his core critique of democracy as the engine of conflict loses its force.
- H. L. Mencken: Assumes that the military-industrial complex and political class are the direct beneficiaries of this cycle of violence. If this is false, and these groups are also subject to the same structural pressures and miscalculations as other actors, then his argument that the conflict is a conscious “performance” for gain becomes a conspiracy theory rather than an analysis.
Confidence vs Evidence
- Thucydides: His claim that state violence is “devoid of moral content” and purely a function of structural interest is tagged with but relies on a philosophical assertion about the irrelevance of morality in international relations, which is contested by entire schools of thought (e.g., liberal institutionalism) and is inherently unprovable.
- Thucydides: His claim that the US strike was a “rational act of war” and “calibrated to inflict enough pain to deter, but not enough to provoke a general war” is tagged with but is an inference about strategic intent. Without access to the actual decision-making calculus and intelligence assessments, this confidence is based on a theoretical model of state behavior, not empirical evidence of this specific event.
- Henri Dunant: His claim that “institutions constrain violence more effectively than moral appeals” is tagged with [ABSOLUTE CONFIDENCE] based on the historical example of Solferino. While the founding of the Red Cross is a powerful example, extrapolating this to claim absolute efficacy for all institutions in constraining all modern state actors is a significant overreach given the widespread and documented violations of international humanitarian law in contemporary conflicts.
What This Means For You
When reading about such military exchanges, your most critical question should be: what is the actual, observable outcome? Did the strike achieve a concrete military objective that degraded a specific capability for a measurable duration, or was it primarily a symbolic act? This question helps cut through the moral and strategic decoration applied by all sides. Be deeply suspicious of any coverage that focuses exclusively on intent and rhetoric without providing this data. To evaluate the humanitarian lens, demand reporting on the specific mechanisms of compliance: were warnings given? What are the verified casualty figures for combatants and non-combatants? Is there independent confirmation of who controls the terrain around the targets? To change your mind on the realist perspective, you would need evidence that a state consistently acted against its clear strategic interest for a purely moral reason. The single most important piece of data to demand from any coverage is a battle damage assessment (BDA) that is independent of the belligerent governments.