
President Trump has now raised the stakes dramatically in the Iran war. He says there will be no deal with Iran except “unconditional surrender”, followed by the installation of new leadership and a Western backed rebuilding of the country. That is regime change. In practical terms, that means the United States has now gone all in. Once a war is framed around surrender and rebuilding another country, it stops being a short operation and starts looking like Iraq or Afghanistan. Wars that begin with airstrikes often turn into occupations, reconstruction projects, and decades long commitments and eventually a huge loss. Trump’s message suggests exactly that path. First defeat Iran. Then pick new leaders. Then rebuild the country. That is a blueprint for the United States being deeply involved inside Iran for many years, possibly decades. The uncomfortable reality is that Iran is a country of around 90 million people, with a large military, regional proxies, and a long history of resisting foreign intervention. Wars against countries that size rarely end quickly. If Washington is talking about surrender and rebuilding, the real question may no longer be how long this war lasts. It may be whether the United States has just signed up to be entangled in Iran for the next 20 years.
























