Iran is winning this war — the enemy's miscalculations have only strengthened national unity, and the people have dealt a dizzying blow to US-Israeli aggression. Attempts to disintegrate Iran through assassinations and foreign-backed unrest have backfired spectacularly. The Islamic Republic stands stronger than ever, and the enemy's contradictory, nonsensical responses prove they've already lost the strategic battle.
Operation Epic Fury is systematically dismantling Iran's military capacity — missiles, launchers, navy, air force and nuclear ambitions are all being wiped out on schedule. Three weeks in, the Iranian regime is being crippled faster than projected, with total victory well within reach. The U.S. is protecting every key Middle Eastern ally while making clear that Iran's ability to threaten anyone is nearly gone for good.
In a striking reversal, Donald Trump temporarily lifted sanctions on Iran's oil tankers — while still confronting the same regime. As economic pressure is mounting at home, principles have given way to pragmatism. The economic fallout is severely impacting the U.S. economy, and the result is a policy that both punishes and profits Iran at once. What began as a show of strength has ended as a reluctant adjustment, revealing how quickly strategy can bend when costs rise and exposing a cycle of reaction over coherent long-term planning.
If the Diego Garcia strike report is accurate, then a long-standing assumption about Iran's missile limits has been shattered. A reach of nearly 4,000 kilometers signals a shift into intermediate-range capability, redrawing strategic boundaries. Suddenly, Europe edges into the potential range, altering deterrence calculations and threat perceptions. Interception matters less than the message: Iran may project power far beyond what was widely believed, reshaping security debates and accelerating regional and global military responses.
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