The 12-Day War With Iran: Too Short
Yes, Iran took a hammering by any measure. But wait a while. The Iranian regime just might claim it absorbed all the blows Israel and the Americans could deliver – and was not defeated. After all, it's still in power – and it still has the secret police and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to keep itself in power.
The attacks sorely embarrassed Iran's rulers. How else to describe killing Iran's top military leaders and nuclear experts and hitting targets at will – capped off by the B2 attacks on the nuclear sites?
It embarrassed, but maybe didn't humiliate – or at least not enough, and especially in the eyes of the Iranian citizenry.
Attacks, for example, might have targeted every IRGC facility and key node of regime coercive power –secret police, paramilitaries and intelligence services – and thuse demonstrated impotency enough to make people less afraid of the regime.
The White House's ceasefire announcement of a“12-day war” that achieved its limited objective of destroying Iran's nuclear infrastructure brought to mind President George H.W. Bush's halting of the Gulf War too soon in 1991.
It was declared a tidy “100-hour“ ground war. But it allowed Saddam Hussein to retain power and keep most of his military – which he promptly used to slaughter the Marsh Arabs and Kurds who had revolted with US encouragement,
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