The Machine War (US/Israeli War on Iran, Day 12 – March 11th 2026)

Following on from last week’s post, I want to thrash out from uncertain evidence where things stand in the war as of today. Day 12 is a landmark because twelve days was the length of last year’s June conflict between the same antagonists. The day has come and gone with only the most unconvincing signals from the US president that there might be some dim prospect of a peace deal. But as I said last time, the basic strategic situation is: it’s the Iranian side who get to say when the war ends.

But it may be the end of the beginning. I think we are getting on towards the end of the first phase of the war, a machine war mostly of missiles, bombs and drones. The main questions in this first phase of the war are: what do the Iranians do when they run out of missiles? What do the US and Israelis do when they run out of interceptors? And who runs out first? A missile-interceptor gap in favour of Iran would mean a sudden ramping-up of damage to Israel, Gulf oil infrastructure and US bases. A gap in favour of the US means Iran’s chief offensive weapon is spent.

Where are we now?

Where do things stand right now in relation to this question? Almost nobody who knows anything valuable has any incentive to tell the truth. Here I will sum up the contradictory stuff I’ve read from various more or less non-credible sources.

  • That there are x5 fewer missiles than expected because Iran has lost so many launchers to air strikes.
  • That the US is pulling military hardware out of places like Korea and Ukraine to throw it into the Iran situation.
  • That the rate of Iranian missile fire has slowed a great deal since the start of the war.
  • That in comparison with last year’s 12-day war, fewer Iranian missiles are being launched – but they are causing more damage with the population of Tel Aviv being forced to run in and out of bunkers all the time.
  • That the Iranians are tricking enemy pilots by literally painting warplanes on runways.
  • That Tel Aviv is being hit really hard in the last four days, that the “Iron Dome” is breaking.
  • That US/Israeli planes are swarming the exits to Iranian bunkers, blowing up anything that pokes its head outside.
  • That civilian life in the Gulf has returned a good deal of the way to normal.
  • That Iran has pivoted to blowing up oil facilities in the Gulf.
  • That these attacks on oil facilities are not Iranian at all, but Israeli false flag operations (If the Gulf countries choose to do a deal with Iran in the future, they can all pretend to believe this).
  • That Iran is still holding back its biggest missiles.
  • That Iran can churn out Shahed drones at several times the rate that they are destroyed, and that these drones can do enough damage to make a big difference in the war.
  • That Iran can fight on at a fraction of the financial cost that the war is imposing on the US.
  • That the US side are not actually worried about running out of interceptors, only about leaving Ukraine exposed by overcommitting to Israel and the Gulf.
  • The US has not lost vessels. But that could be because their navy is hanging back and not committing itself to combat.
  • That the entire Iranian navy and air force have been destroyed, and 80% of air defences destroyed.
  • That 17 US installations in the Middle East have been damaged.
A Shahed drone shot down in Ukraine. Image courtesy of Npu.gov.ua

All of the above cannot be true. But some of it is. We have to use our own judgement. It appears to me that while the balance of fatalities is massively against Iran, the war is proving to be a massive logistical, political and economic challenge for the US.

What do we know for sure?

The outstanding fact of the war is that there has been a slaughter of civilians in Iran and Lebanon. Next in significance is the blockade of the Straits of Hormuz, the mere warning of which has led to economic turmoil around the world. Moving on from warnings, today three ships were hit by Iranian weapons in the straits.

Incentives to de-escalate are not there. An initiative by the Iranian president to mend fences with the Gulf States was blocked by the military, with strikes continuing, for example on a desalination plant in Bahrain the very next day. Yesterday I saw multiple headlines about Trump saying peace was coming very soon, and I just find it both funny and irritating that there are still journalists hanging on every word out of Trump, as if this is a man who weighs his words for even a second before vomiting them up, or stays true to them afterwards.

The US/Israeli bombardment, with its toll in civilian lives, can carry on for, in effect, as long as the US population will continue to pay for it and to tolerate it morally. But Iran will run out of missiles or of launching capacity sooner than it runs out of resolve. From a two-sided air war it will become a one-sided bombing campaign like what the US did in Korea and Vietnam (without unseating a regime). The 12-day duration of last year’s war could indicate that this first phase, this machine war, might be reaching its limits. But assuming the two sides are better-prepared this time, it could go on for another week or two.

At the end of that period, a missile-interceptor gap in Iran’s favour would mean an episode of more serious damage being inflicted on US bases and on Israel. Such a ‘Tet Offensive’ moment, especially so soon after the outbreak of war, could have a huge effect on public opinion and mood. A missile-interceptor gap in favour of the US would, on the other hand, settle the air war into a one-sided conflict until such time as the Iranians can restore capacity – if they can restore capacity at all under such pressure.

Next post I intend to explore what a second phase of this war might look like, assuming that the first is coming to an end. To finish today, a note on the Iranian regime.

Iran: strengths and weaknesses of the regime

I said last week that Trump, Hegseth, Miller et al are fools. The Iranian leadership, on the other hand, are reactionary and ruthless, but they are not fools. Unlike the American and the Israeli leaders, they cannot afford to be fools. The Islamic Republic is deeply imbedded in society through a nearly fifty-year history. Iran’s strategic doctrine of distributed “mosaic” resistance and multiple designated successors for every position is an impressive response to the last quarter-century of a US and Israeli doctrine of blitzkrieg and assassination. In the future, the current war could be written up as an epic of resistance that could supply the clerical regime with a whole new legitimizing narrative that it can spin decades of mileage out of.

For what it’s worth, I don’t support the Islamic Republic regime – and I think any regime that Trump might install (or Biden, Obama, Bush or Lincoln, while we’re at it) would be a lot worse. A new regime emerging in a genuine way, from a popular uprising such as the Women, Life, Freedom movement, or from Iranian labour, would be a different story. To me this is a very simple point. It’s not complicated at all. Some people insist that any criticism of Trump’s idiotic war is a defence of the clerics. On the other hand I’ve noticed a semi-ironic identification with the Iranian regime from people who are simply relieved to see some powerful entity standing up to the US and Israel at long last.

Even taking into account the rounding effects of irony, I think this is unwise. Already the clerical regime is directing its propaganda appeal to the anti-Israel layers of MAGA more so than the progressive anti-war left.

Anyway, I don’t feel any need to wring my hands, accompanying any remarks with a token condemnation of the Iranian government for the sole purpose of covering my arse. That’s not why I’m writing this. But a relevant point, for my purposes, is to look at how the nature of the Islamic Republic might inhibit its ability to fight imperialism. On Drop Site News a week ago I heard an Iranian official using this war as a retrospective justification for the killing of thousands of protesters by the government in January in operations that were extraordinary in scale and ferocity. On the contrary, there must be severe confusion and demoralisation in the armed forces and among the public following the winter bloodshed. This kind of war demands the full mobilisation not only of the armed forces but of all of society.

I’m going to leave that point very general because of weaknesses in my knowledge of Iranian culture and politics. But as a general rule the nature of a regime has profound effects on how it fights a war. We can’t put the clerical authoritarian regime in a box and forget about it for military purposes. It will tell.

Israel invades Lebanon. But the headlines tell a different story…

I love it when a news site makes their headline ten words longer than it needs to be, just to shoehorn in some way to frame the story in a politically agreeable way. Take this headline from the front page of the Guardian’s website:

Israel ‘will do whatever it takes to avoid 7 October-style attack’ as it launches Lebanon ground raids

Sunday September 30th

The Israeli leaders are stating their intention of invading Lebanon with sweeping war aims. But we are supposed to go along with the fiction that it’s just ‘ground raids,’ like it would be totally irresponsible to say any more than that for now. That armoured brigade and airborne division massing on the border might turn around and go home any minute now.

To really plumb the depths of that headline, imagine if the Guardian had framed the October 7th 2023 attacks as

Gaza ‘will do whatever it takes to avoid Cast Lead-style attack‘ as it launches Israel ground raids

Israel must be portrayed as the victim. That’s why even in a headline, which is supposed to be brief and to the point, the purely hypothetical attack is mentioned before the actual real attack.

So moving on two days and reading the headlines from October 2nd 2024, we can easily imagine western politicians and journalists sighing with relief and leaning back in their chairs.

US THREATENS ‘SEVERE’ RESPONSE AS IRAN ATTACKS ISRAEL

Daily Express, front page, 2 October 2024

We are back on safe territory. The Iranian government is doing a mostly symbolic and nearly ineffectual thing that it did before a few months ago. Now Israel can once again be portrayed as the victim without any need for suspicious convoluted headlines.

But what is ‘severe’ in this context? What could be more severe than what the US has been helping the Israeli state to do for the last year? 40,000 dead, at least. Millions forcibly displaced and the ‘safe zones’ bombed. Millions starved. Journalists and doctors and aid workers killed in their hundreds. Ambulances bombed and shelled. Every hospital and university in the Gaza strip, destroyed. Tens of thousands imprisoned without trial, many beaten, tortured and sexually assaulted. And this hellfire has been raging for a year now with no end in sight.

IRAN MISSILE ATTACK ON ISRAEL SPARKS FEARS OF NEW WAR

Independent (UK), front page, 2 October 2024

‘Fears of new war’ are prominent in my mind too right now. But you know, the pager attacks, the assassination of Nasrallah, the bombing and the invasion were the main cues there, just for me personally. Didn’t Israel bomb Yemen just the other day? How many people did they kill – was it more or less than the one poor soul who was killed by the Iranian missiles?

ISRAEL VOWS TO RETALIATE AFTER IRAN LAUNCHES MISSILE ATTACK

The Guardian, front page, 2 October 2024

It’s jarring to see these papers rewriting history in front of our eyes. Maybe they want Wikipedia in ten years time to say that Iran started the war by launching that missile attack.

Even after the slaughter in Gaza and onslaught on the West Bank over the last year, it is still somehow possible for me to be surprised and horrified at the actions of the Israeli government. After all it has done and is still doing in Gaza and the West Bank, the Israeli state is taking the show on the road. They want an all-out regional war. Until the pager attacks, I didn’t see it. Now I see it more clearly every day. They are hell-bent on raising the stakes.

Maybe they want to grab whatever land they can and kill whoever they want to kill while the going is good. Maybe they want to drag the US in even more than they already are. I don’t know. Usually I can assess the motivations behind why states do what they do. But this is just wild. The stated war aim (ending all capacity for Hezbollah to launch rockets into northern Israel) is not achievable. But it is a blank cheque for the IDF to go in and cause as much havoc as Netanyahu wants, for as long as Netanyahu wants.

By the way, I’m not going to take up 100 of these 1000 words issuing the mandatory disclaimers. You can assume I don’t support the state which killed Jina Amini and which executed hundreds for protesting her death. Let’s move on, without wasting any more of your time and mine, and look at another headline.

US would not support Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear sites, says Biden

https://www.theguardian.com/europe, headline, 02 Oct 2024, 22:55

Well, that’s a relief. Because Iran doesn’t even have nuclear weapons. You know which country does? Israel. 88 of them. Even in the headlines about who they are not bombing yet, the unspoken assumption is that the country without nukes represents a greater nuclear threat than the one with them.

Evacuation

In these headlines there is not a hint of the horror of the war that is now starting in Lebanon, not a suggestion of the responsibility of the Israeli government. We hear of Israel evacuating villages. Phrases like ‘evacuation orders’ and ‘evacuation notices’ make it all seem formal and inevitable, as if they are helping people escape from a chemical spill or a flood. Telling people that if they don’t abandon their homes you will probably kill them is not an ‘evacuation.’ What these journalists are doing is like giving credit to a hurricane for the efforts of disaster relief workers.

Rockets

Ten times per article we are told that 60,000 civilians had to flee from northern Israel due to Hezbollah rockets. We are not told that 100,000 Lebanese civilians had to evacuate from southern Lebanon due to Israeli bombardment. That was, as of last month. Now there are one million displaced. It is presented to the world as an urgent question – what should be done about Hezbollah rockets (not Israeli bombs)? How are those Israeli civilians (not those Lebanese civilians) going to return home?

And of course, Israel could have stopped waging a one-sided war on civilians in Gaza, and thereby stopped the Hezbollah rockets, any day out of the last 360+. That offer has been on the table the whole time.

Proxies

These articles go out of their way to remind us that Iran-backed Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran, is an Iran-controlled Iranian proxy in the region. They would do better to manage expectations about the coming war. Hezbollah is indeed backed by Iran, but it is also a massive political and military force with a lot of popular support in Lebanon. It’s difficult to see Israel winning. But just as the invasion is a ‘ground raid,’ Hezbollah is spoken of as if it’s just some guerrilla camp or terror network.

The right to defend itself

All my life we’ve been hearing that Israel has a right to defend itself, or even ‘herself.’ This was an infuriating and stupid line even before 2023, when somehow the balance of fatalities in the Israel-Palestine ‘conflict’ was always at least 10:1; when any visitor to the West Bank could see that an apartheid system is in force there; when, every four or five years, the IDF would ‘mow the lawn’ by killing a few thousand Gazans.

But the last year has been a horrible revelation. Somehow, things have gotten so much worse. And now Netanyahu wants to bring all this to Lebanon.

And Keir Starmer and Kemala Harris are standing up in front of the world and saying with straight faces that Israel has a right to defend itself. They’re still saying it, like nothing has happened, like that phrase has any meaning at all in this context.

Sometimes I wonder what atrocity Israel has to commit before the Americans feel obliged to stop giving them bombs. What would it take? But at moments like these I only wonder, what would it take before people like Starmer and Harris retire that self-defence line and think of some new hypocritical and stupid formula.

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