US launches new wave of strikes against Iran aimed at โdegradingโ military
The United States has announced another round of early-morning strikes on Iran, as the two sides continue to exchange attacks over questions of control in the Strait of Hormuz. On Sunday, US Central
The United States has announced another round of early-morning strikes on Iran, as the two sides continue to exchange attacks over questions of contro
Read Full Story at Al Jazeera โWhy This Matters
The latest U.S. strikes against Iran mark a significant escalation in the shadow war over regional maritime security, signaling Washingtonโs intent to enforce a deterrent posture rather than tolerate proxy attacks on shipping lanes. Beyond the immediate military calculus, these actions could reshape Iranโs calculus in future negotiations, forcing a reckoning over whether Tehran can sustain its hybrid warfare strategy without triggering a direct, sustained response.
Background Context
For years, Iran has relied on asymmetric tacticsโdrone strikes, missile attacks, and militia proxiesโto project power while avoiding full-scale confrontation with superior U.S. forces. The Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for 20% of global oil, has been a flashpoint since the 1980s, when Iran mined the waters during its war with Iraq. Todayโs strikes follow a pattern of tit-for-tat violence, but the U.S. has now raised the stakes by explicitly targeting Iranโs own military infrastructure, not just its proxies.
What Happens Next
Iranโs response will determine whether this escalation spirals into a broader conflict or remains contained. Tehran may seek to retaliate through proxies in Iraq or Yemen to avoid direct confrontation, but a miscalculation could draw the U.S. into a prolonged campaign. Meanwhile, regional allies like Saudi Arabia and the UAE will be watching closely, weighing whether to adjust their own security postures in response.
Bigger Picture
This latest round of strikes underscores a growing trend of direct U.S.-Iran military confrontation, blurring the lines between covert operations and overt action. As Iranโs nuclear program advances and its regional influence expands, Washington appears increasingly willing to use force to curb Tehranโs aggressionโsignaling a potential shift from deterrence to rollback. The question now is whether Iran will de-escalate or double down, risking a conflict that neither side can fully control.

