I want to take you inside what’s really happening right now, because if you’re just watching headlines or scrolling social media, you’re getting fragments of a story that only makes sense when you step back and see the whole picture.
And the picture right now is this: we are winning the fight… but we may not yet know how to win the war.
That distinction matters more than most people realize.
A War That Looks One-Sided—At First
From where I’m sitting, looking at the operational updates coming out of the region, it’s hard to deny that the United States and its allies have achieved something remarkable in a very short amount of time, because in just a matter of weeks, we’ve systematically dismantled large portions of Iran’s ability to project power beyond its borders.
We’re talking about thousands upon thousands of strikes, carefully selected targets, and a level of coordination across air, land, sea, and even space that very few countries on earth could pull off, and the result of that effort is starting to show up in ways that are impossible to ignore.
Missile launches are decreasing, drone attacks are becoming less frequent, and even in places like Israel—where nightly alerts had become a grim routine—there are now stretches of quiet that would have seemed unimaginable not long ago.
From a purely tactical standpoint, this is what dominance looks like. But here’s the problem with that. Dominance doesn’t automatically translate into victory.
The Enemy Isn’t Just Targets—It’s a System
One of the biggest mistakes people make when they look at a conflict like this is assuming that if you destroy enough infrastructure, if you take out enough launchers, enough facilities, enough depots, eventually the whole thing just collapses on its own.
And sometimes that’s true. But not here. Because Iran isn’t just a collection of targets scattered across a map—it’s a layered system of power that doesn’t rely on any single node to survive, and the deeper you dig into how that system works, the more complicated the problem becomes.
At the top, you have the clerical leadership, the religious authority that shapes the ideology of the regime and maintains its grip on the population through a network that stretches across the entire country, and while we’ve taken out some of that leadership, there are thousands more who could step into those roles if needed.
Then you have the civilian government, which on paper is supposed to run the country but in reality often finds itself sidelined by forces it doesn’t fully control. And beneath all of that, you have the real engine of power—the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
The IRGC isn’t just a military force, and it’s important to understand that, because they don’t just fight wars, they control industries, they influence politics, and they operate as a kind of shadow government that can continue functioning even when the visible structures above them start to crack.
So when you hear that we’ve struck thousands of targets, understand that we’re hitting pieces of a system that was designed to absorb that kind of punishment and keep going.



