Missile sirens interrupt the writing. Shelters interrupt the sentences. History interrupts itself. On March 2, 2026, former Mossad official and security analyst offered what may become one of the most sobering assessments of this new and dangerous chapter in Middle Eastern warfare. What he described was not merely a military escalation. It was a collision of miscalculations—strategic, moral, and political. And perhaps, a war that nobody fully understands. The Illusion of Negotiation Just days before the bombs fell, there was still talk of diplomacy between Washington and Tehran. Even Alpher believed a US-Iran nuclear deal was more likely than war. He was wrong. Why? Because the perceptual gulf between Iran and the US-Israel axis was wider than anyone imagined. Iranian leaders—from Supreme Leader downward—reportedly gathered without serious precaution. The result: an opening strike that decapitated the regime’s top tier. Was this overconfidence? A misreading of President ’s...
If you enjoy glossy self-congratulation with your morning coffee, then Bret Stephens ’s latest ode to the “historic courage” of Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu is a must-read. In Stephens’s world, there’s something noble — nay, heroic — about a war that just so happened to result in the assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader, stoke regional fury, and trigger an open-ended U.S.–Israel military campaign. If you squint just right, there’s even jubilation on the streets of Iran — or at least that’s what the Wall Street Journal told him to believe. Stephens trots out the old interventionist playbook: villains defeated, freedom advanced, dictators trembling. Never mind that this war was launched without congressional authorization and in tension with international legal norms. Critics like the American Civil Liberties Union have called it unconstitutional; scholars like Kenneth Roth have labeled it illegal aggression. But dismiss such concerns — after all, the smoke of bo...