Analysis of the 2026 US-Israel war against Iran. How American military power failed, Tehran's resilience, and the global implications for Taiwan and Ukraine.
Here's something that would have seemed unthinkable just three months ago: the United States is bleeding through billions of dollars, watching its military credibility crumble, and finding itself trapped in a conflict it can't dominate, can't escape, and can't afford. Almost three months into what was supposed to be a swift, decisive campaign against Iran, the situation tells a story that no one in Washington or Tel Aviv wants to admit out loud.
The strikes that were supposed to bring Tehran to its knees have instead produced something far more dangerous a protracted standoff with no exit strategy, no clear victory conditions, and a price tag that reads like science fiction. Trump administration officials spoke of "decapitation strikes" and "crippling blows" in the opening days. Now, those same officials find themselves calculating how much longer the American treasury can sustain a war that reshapes nothing while eroding everything.
And the most damning part? Tehran hasn't budged. Not an inch. Not a single concession. Instead, they've shown a kind of stubborn resilience that caught everyone off guard, and they've reminded the world that superpower doesn't mean invulnerable.


