By Malik Mukhtar There are moments in history when wars are not lost on the battlefield—but in the minds of those who plan them. The ongoing confrontation between Israel and Iran increasingly appears to be one of those moments. What began as a bold promise of decisive victory—of regime change in Tehran and the birth of a “New Middle East”—is now revealing something far more dangerous: a war built on miscalculation, sustained by political illusion, and unraveling under the weight of reality. At the center of this critique stands , whose analysis exposes a troubling truth: this is not simply a failure of intelligence. It is a failure of leadership. 1. The Illusion of Control: When Leadership Overrides Reality Alpher raises a critical question: Was the problem bad intelligence—or bad leadership? His answer is devastating. The assumption that Iran could be destabilized internally—triggered by protests and aided by foreign air power—was never grounded in reality. The comparison t...
In Washington’s increasingly surreal theater of war planning, it has apparently fallen to the administration’s AI Czar , , to point out what should have been obvious before the first missile was launched: wars have consequences. Not small ones. Not manageable ones. But the sort that can end civilizations. Sacks recently delivered what might be described as the most unsettling moment of honesty to emerge from the current U.S.–Iran confrontation. His warning was simple: if the conflict continues to escalate, Israel could face a scenario where its conventional defenses—systems like and —are eventually overwhelmed by Iran’s massive missile salvos. At that point, he suggested, the unthinkable could become “logical.” A nuclear weapon. Not as policy. Not as strategy. But as the final act of desperation when the illusion of control collapses. For critics who spent years celebrating the technological miracle of missile defense, this was awkward. After all, the public narrative...