(By Khalid Masood)
“The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting.”
— Sun Tzu, The Art of War
The modern landscape of geopolitical conflict is undergoing a stark transformation. What began as a regional confrontation involving Israel, Iran, and proxy networks has evolved into a strategic stress test for the global order. The United States and Israel entered this phase with overwhelming military confidence, operating under the assumption that kinetic superiority would yield a swift, decisive political outcome. Weeks later, that assumption is being challenged by a harder reality: military dominance does not automatically translate into strategic resolution.
This is no longer merely a question of who strikes harder. It has become a contest of endurance—a war of attrition where the primary battlefield is not defined by coordinates on a map, but by economic resilience, political will, and the capacity to absorb pain. As the conflict drags on, the metrics of victory are shifting. The central question is no longer about territorial gain or infrastructure destroyed, but about who calculates smarter, who sustains longer, and who blinks first.
The Limits of Coercive Power
Historical precedents, from Vietnam to Afghanistan, suggest that military superiority often encounters diminishing returns when faced with an adversary willing to absorb significant damage in exchange for strategic survival. The current confrontation mirrors this dynamic. While US and Israeli forces have demonstrated the capability to strike deep inside Iran, targeting critical infrastructure, these actions have not broken Iran’s will. In modern asymmetric warfare, the destruction of physical assets is less decisive than the preservation of political resolve.
Iran’s response indicates a shift from reactive defense to proactive escalation. Rather than bending under pressure, Tehran is leveraging the conflict to consolidate domestic unity and strengthen regional alliances. The signal regarding a potential exit from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) is not merely symbolic rhetoric; it is a calculated strategic threat. It signals to adversaries that further coercion will result in the abandonment of restraint entirely. This changes the rules of engagement, moving the goalposts from containment to existential deterrence. Iran is not negotiating from a position of weakness, but from defiance, understanding that time is a resource its adversaries possess in shorter supply.
“In war, the way is to avoid what is strong and to strike at what is weak.”
— Sun Tzu
Iran’s asymmetric strategy embodies this principle—avoiding direct confrontation while exploiting vulnerabilities in supply chains, energy markets, and political cohesion.
Table 1: Strategic Positioning of Key Actors
| Actor | Primary Objective | Key Strength | Critical Vulnerability | Time Horizon |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | Deter Iranian nuclear advancement; maintain regional stability | Overwhelming military superiority; global alliance network | Domestic political divisions; economic sensitivity to oil prices | Short-term (electoral cycles) |
| Iran | Regime survival; regional influence; nuclear latency | Strategic depth; proxy networks; tolerance for economic pain | Economic isolation; internal dissent; infrastructure vulnerabilities | Long-term (generational) |
| Israel | Existential security; prevention of Iranian nuclear capability | Technological superiority; intelligence capabilities; US backing | Geographic vulnerability; multi-front threat environment | Medium-term (security imperatives) |
| Pakistan | Regional stability; border security; diplomatic relevance | Strategic location; relationships with multiple actors; nuclear deterrent | Economic constraints; internal security challenges; balancing act | Medium-term (stability-focused) |
Source: Strategic analysis based on observable policy positions and expert assessments
Iran’s Strategic Calculus: Time as a Weapon
Tehran’s strategy relies on a fundamental asymmetry: the cost of war is higher for the United States than for Iran. Every passing day of conflict imposes distinct burdens on Washington that do not equally apply to Tehran. Iran has endured isolation and sanctions for decades; its economy and political structure are already hardened against external pressure. Conversely, the US operates within a political cycle sensitive to public opinion and economic stability.
Iran’s leadership understands that Western democracies are vulnerable to fatigue. By preparing for a prolonged conflict, Iran aims to outlast the political will of its opponents. The threat to exit the NPT serves as a lever to keep adversaries cautious, while regional proxies ensure that the cost of conflict is distributed across multiple fronts. This approach allows Iran to absorb damage today to reshape the regional balance tomorrow. Their message is clear: they can suffer longer than the West can sustain.
“The most dangerous strategic error is to confuse the means with the end.”
— B.H. Liddell Hart, British Military Strategist
Washington’s focus on military means risks obscuring the political end state—a pattern visible in previous conflicts where tactical victories failed to produce strategic success.
The Economic Battlefield: Interdependence as Vulnerability
The real terrain of this conflict lies in the global economy. The Middle East remains the artery of global energy supply, and any disruption here sends shockwaves through Washington and European capitals far more quickly than through Tehran. Global oil routes are under tangible threat, from the Strait of Hormuz to the Red Sea. Even the perception of instability drives up insurance costs for shipping, delays supply chains, and spikes energy prices.
These dynamics create immediate pressure on Western economies. Inflation pressures are rising, and financial markets are reacting nervously to the prospect of prolonged instability. This economic vulnerability is compounded by public anger, which is building not only in the Global South but within Western societies themselves. As fuel prices rise and economic uncertainty grows, the domestic political cost of maintaining a high-intensity posture increases. For the US, the battlefield extends to the gas pump and the stock market, where endurance is measured in economic stability rather than missile intercepts.
Table 2: Economic Impact Indicators
| Indicator | Pre-Conflict Baseline | Current Status | Projected Trend | Primary Affected Regions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brent Crude Oil | $75-85/barrel | $95-110/barrel | Upward pressure if conflict expands | Global, especially Europe & Asia |
| Strait of Hormuz Traffic | 21M barrels/day | Reduced by 15-20% | Further reductions possible | Global energy markets |
| Regional Insurance Premiums | Standard rates | 300-500% increase | Continuing elevation | Shipping & logistics sectors |
| US Inflation Rate | 3.2% | 4.1-4.5% | Upward pressure from energy | United States, EU |
| Iranian Rial Exchange Rate | 50,000/USD | 75,000+/USD | Continued depreciation | Iran (partially insulated) |
| Defense Spending (US) | $886B annually | +$50-80B emergency requests | Significant increase likely | US federal budget |
Note: Figures are illustrative based on conflict escalation scenarios. Actual data varies by source and timing.
Table 3: Cost Imposition Asymmetry
| Cost Category | United States | Iran | Strategic Implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Daily Military Operations | $50-100 million | $5-15 million | US faces higher fiscal burden |
| Economic Sanctions Impact | Minimal direct cost | Significant but adapted | Iran has developed resilience mechanisms |
| Domestic Political Cost | High (protests, divisions) | Moderate (controlled media) | US more vulnerable to public opinion |
| Alliance Management | Complex coordination | Proxy network leverage | Iran benefits from lower coordination costs |
| Infrastructure Damage | Minimal homeland impact | Significant but dispersed | Iran’s decentralized assets reduce vulnerability |
Washington’s Strategic Trap
The United States finds itself in a precarious position, trapped between two unappealing options. The first option is to exit the conflict and declare victory. However, without a clear change in Iran’s behavior or strategic posture, this would resemble a strategic retreat dressed up as success, potentially undermining US credibility globally.
The second option is to double down,—escalate, intensify, and expand the military footprint. This path risks dragging the US into a deeper, costlier war that could involve regional actors directly, collapse oil markets, and ignite domestic political chaos. Internal fractures are already widening. Millions protesting across American cities signal a warning that public consent for prolonged engagement is not infinite. Even within traditional pro-Israel circles, cracks are appearing as the risks of regional conflagration become clearer. There is no clean exit for Washington, only varying degrees of damage control. This is how great powers begin to feel the weight of overreach: not in a single defeat, but in the gradual erosion of options.
“Empires do not die from external blows alone. They collapse when the cost of maintaining power exceeds the value of the power itself.”
— Paul Kennedy, Historian (adapted from “The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers”)
Table 4: US Strategic Options Assessment
| Option | Description | Benefits | Risks | Probability of Success |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Negotiated De-escalation | Diplomatic off-ramp with face-saving measures | Reduces economic costs; lowers escalation risk | Perceived as weakness; emboldens adversaries | Moderate (requires mutual concessions) |
| Limited Sustained Pressure | Maintain current posture without expansion | Preserves credibility; avoids major war | Prolongs costs; no clear resolution | Low-Moderate (status quo trap) |
| Major Escalation | Significant military expansion; regime change objective | Potential decisive outcome | Regional war; economic crisis; domestic backlash | Low (high risk, uncertain reward) |
| Regional Burden-Sharing | Shift primary responsibility to regional allies | Reduces US costs; maintains engagement | Allies may lack capability; loss of control | Moderate (depends on partner capacity) |
The Diplomatic Wildcard: Pakistan’s Emergent Role
Amidst this volatility, a shift in diplomatic gravity is occurring. Pakistan, historically often viewed on the sidelines of Middle Eastern power struggles, has quietly moved to the center of diplomatic activity. Islamabad has begun hosting key regional players, opening channels, and positioning itself as a facilitator rather than a partisan actor. This is not accidental; it is a strategic calculation that in chaos, influence is created.
Pakistan understands the region’s complexities, maintaining relationships with both Gulf Arab states and Iran, while managing a delicate balance with the United States and China. By positioning itself as a neutral broker, Islamabad aims to stabilize its own western border while gaining diplomatic capital. However, this role is fraught with risk. Facilitating dialogue in such a volatile environment is akin to walking a tightrope over a battlefield. One misstep, one miscalculation, or one false-flag operation could collapse the mediation effort.
There are forces that benefit from prolonging this conflict, and sabotage is not just a possibility—it is a probability. Whether through proxy attacks, misinformation campaigns, or calculated escalations, spoilers exist on all sides. Yet, Pakistan’s willingness to step into this void suggests a recognition that regional stability is indispensable to its own security. If successful, this diplomatic push could reshape future alignments, offering a non-Western pathway to de-escalation.
“Neutrality is not the absence of interest, but the presence of opportunity.”
— Regional Diplomatic Analyst
Pakistan’s mediation role exemplifies this principle—leveraging its position between competing powers to create diplomatic space where none previously existed.
Table 5: Pakistan’s Diplomatic Assets and Challenges
| Asset | Strategic Value | Limitation |
|---|---|---|
| Relationship with Iran | Direct channel to Tehran; shared border interests | Limited economic leverage; historical tensions |
| Gulf State Ties | Access to Saudi Arabia, UAE; financial relationships | Pressure to align with Gulf positions |
| US Partnership | Communication channel to Washington; military cooperation | Domestic anti-US sentiment; trust deficits |
| China Alliance | Strategic backing; economic support (CPEC) | China’s own regional calculations may differ |
| Nuclear Status | Deterrent credibility; regional weight | Non-proliferation concerns limit diplomatic space |
| Economic Constraints | — | Limited resources for sustained diplomatic engagement |
Escalation Scenarios: Miscalculation and Fragility
Despite diplomatic efforts, the risk of unintended escalation remains high. The region is saturated with armed proxies, cyber capabilities, and intelligence agencies operating in the shadows. The potential for a localized action to trigger a broader confrontation is significant. A proxy attack on a shipping vessel, a cyber intrusion into critical infrastructure, or a misinterpreted military movement could spiral beyond control.
Furthermore, the information warfare surrounding the conflict complicates decision-making. Misinformation can harden public opinion, limit leadership flexibility, and create pressure for retaliatory strikes based on incomplete data. In this environment, the “black swan” factor—an unforeseen trigger—looms large. Strategic stability depends on communication channels remaining open, yet the very nature of the conflict encourages their closure.
Table 6: Escalation Scenario Matrix
| Scenario | Trigger Event | Likelihood | Potential Impact | De-escalation Pathway |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maritime Incident | Attack on commercial vessel in Hormuz | High | Oil price spike; naval confrontation | Third-party mediation; face-saving measures |
| Proxy Escalation | Major attack on US/Israeli assets | Moderate-High | Retaliatory strikes; cycle of violence | Back-channel negotiations; calibrated response |
| Nuclear Threshold | Iran announces NPT withdrawal | Moderate | Global non-proliferation crisis; regional arms race | Emergency P5+1 talks; security guarantees |
| Cyber Attack | Critical infrastructure breach | High | Economic disruption; attribution crisis | Cyber norms dialogue; mutual restraint |
| Direct Confrontation | US-Iran military clash | Low-Moderate | Full-scale regional war | Great power intervention; UN Security Council |
Conclusion: Redefining Victory in a War of Endurance
Where does this leave the global order? Iran is not backing down; it is hardening. Israel is not pausing; it is intensifying. The United States is not winning; it is recalculating. The global economy is not stable; it is trembling. And regional players, like Pakistan, are stepping into roles that could redefine future alignments.
This confrontation underscores a critical lesson for the 21st century: victory is not declared on the battlefield alone. It is decided in the moment when one side realizes it cannot continue. It is determined by economic resilience, political cohesion, and the ability to maintain strategic patience. Right now, that moment of realization has not arrived for any major actor, but it is getting closer.
“Victory belongs to the most persevering.”
— Napoleon Bonaparte
Yet perseverance without strategy is merely endurance without purpose. The question is not simply who can last longest, but who can convert endurance into advantage.
As the conflict evolves, the focus must shift from kinetic outcomes to strategic stamina. The nation that can endure the economic pressure, maintain domestic unity, and navigate the diplomatic tightrope will ultimately define the terms of the peace. Until then, the world watches a dangerous calculus unfold, where the cost of victory may exceed the value of the prize.







