I am not a military person, but I have studied history and here is my thoughts on the war with Iran.
Introduction
Throughout human history, warfare has continually evolved. Every generation of conflict has forced nations to adapt their military strategies, technologies, and political objectives. From the guerrilla tactics of the American Revolution to the jungle warfare of Vietnam, from insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan to modern drone and cyber warfare, the battlefield is constantly changing. Nations that fail to recognize these transformations often discover too late that military superiority alone does not guarantee victory.
The current conflict involving Iran, Israel, and the United States may represent another major transition like warfare. While the United States and Israel possess overwhelming conventional military superiority, Iran has adapted its strategy around asymmetrical warfare, decentralized operations, economic disruption, and attrition. This raises serious questions about what constitutes victory in modern war and whether traditional military doctrines are sufficient for the conflicts of the twenty-first century.
This study examines the evolution of warfare, analyzes historical conflicts that transformed military doctrine, explores the strategic realities surrounding Iran, and considers the moral and spiritual lessons history repeatedly teaches concerning pride, power, and human conflict.
I. The Historical Evolution of Warfare
Warfare has never remained static. New technologies, political realities, geography, economics, and human ingenuity continually reshape how wars are fought.
Ancient and Medieval Warfare
Ancient warfare often depended upon:
- mass infantry formations,
- cavalry dominance,
- siege warfare,
- and direct battlefield confrontation.
Empires such as Rome succeeded through discipline, engineering, logistics, and organized military structure. However, even Rome struggled against decentralized tribal warfare in regions like Germania, where traditional battlefield superiority proved less effective against dispersed resistance.
Medieval warfare introduced:
- castles and fortified cities,
- mounted knights,
- longbows,
- and eventually gunpowder weapons.
The emergence of firearms gradually weakened traditional feudal military systems and centralized military power within nation-states.
II. Transformative Wars in Modern History
The American Revolution (1775–1783)
The American Revolution transformed warfare by demonstrating that irregular forces could defeat a global empire.
Britain possessed:
- the world’s strongest navy,
- professional armies,
- superior logistics,
- and colonial dominance.
Yet colonial militias and Continental forces adapted through:
- guerrilla tactics,
- local knowledge,
- mobility,
- and prolonged resistance.
The conflict demonstrated that:
- Political endurance matters,
- popular support matters,
- And conventional superiority alone does not guarantee victory.
The war also highlighted the growing importance of ideological motivation and decentralized resistance movements.
The Vietnam War (1955–1975)
The Vietnam War fundamentally altered military thinking in the twentieth century.
The United States possessed:
- overwhelming air superiority,
- advanced technology,
- massive firepower,
- and superior conventional military capabilities.
However, North Vietnam and the Viet Cong adapted through:
- guerrilla warfare,
- tunnel systems,
- decentralized operations,
- attrition strategies,
- and political endurance.
The United States won most conventional engagements but failed to achieve a decisive political victory.
Vietnam demonstrated:
- wars are political as well as military,
- technological superiority cannot break determined insurgencies alone,
- Public opinion can become a decisive battlefield.
Iraq War (2003–2011)
The Iraq War initially appeared to confirm American military dominance. Baghdad fell rapidly under the “shock and awe” campaign.
However, insurgency warfare quickly emerged:
- roadside bombs (IEDs),
- urban warfare,
- sectarian militias,
- decentralized attacks,
- and prolonged instability.
American forces adapted through counterinsurgency doctrine, intelligence integration, and local alliances, yet the conflict revealed how quickly modern armies can become entangled in long-term asymmetric warfare.
Afghanistan War (2001–2021)
The Afghanistan War became America’s longest war.
Despite overwhelming military superiority, the Taliban survived through:
- rural sanctuary,
- tribal networks,
- decentralized leadership,
- ideological persistence,
- and patience.
The conflict revealed the limitations of nation-building efforts and demonstrated again that strategic endurance often outweighs battlefield losses.
The Taliban ultimately regained control after two decades of conflict, reinforcing historical lessons about occupation warfare and insurgent resilience.
III. The Modern Conflict with Iran
Iran’s Strategic Position
Iran recognizes that it cannot defeat the United States or Israel conventionally. Instead, it has developed strategies designed to offset technological disadvantages.
Iran’s military doctrine emphasizes:
- missile saturation,
- drone warfare,
- decentralized command structures,
- proxy networks,
- cyber warfare,
- naval disruption,
- and economic pressure.
This approach is often described as asymmetric warfare.
IV. Forms of Modern Warfare
Attrition Warfare
Attrition warfare seeks to wear down an opponent through prolonged losses rather than immediate battlefield victory.
Examples:
- World War I trench warfare,
- the Iran-Iraq War,
- Vietnam,
- Ukraine,
- and modern drone conflicts.
Iran appears to believe it can impose:
- financial costs,
- political fatigue,
- and strategic uncertainty
- upon its adversaries over time.
Drone Warfare
Drone warfare has revolutionized modern combat.
Advantages include:
- low production cost,
- remote operation,
- precision targeting,
- swarm attacks,
- and reduced personnel risk.
Cheap drones can now threaten:
- tanks,
- warships,
- infrastructure,
- and advanced air defense systems.
This creates an enormous economic imbalance:
- Inexpensive drones force the use of costly interceptors and defense systems.
Decentralized Warfare
Decentralized warfare disperses military assets and command structures across multiple smaller units.
Benefits include:
- survivability,
- flexibility,
- reduced vulnerability to air strikes,
- and operational continuity.
Iran has invested heavily in underground facilities, mobile launch systems, and distributed military infrastructure.
Economic Warfare
Economic warfare targets:
- sanctions,
- trade routes,
- financial systems,
- energy markets,
- and supply chains.
Iran has long operated under sanctions and developed methods to endure economic isolation.
Control or disruption of the Strait of Hormuz remains one of Iran’s major strategic tools, given its importance to global oil transportation.
V. Intelligence Assessments and Iran’s Remaining Capabilities
Military analysts generally agree that Iran has suffered significant damage to its infrastructure and missile systems. However, many assessments also indicate:
- Iran retains substantial missile capability,
- Drone production continues,
- decentralized launch systems survive,
- And underground facilities remain difficult to destroy completely.
This suggests the conflict may evolve into a prolonged strategic contest rather than a short conventional war.
VI. Political Objectives and the Problem of Victory
Modern wars increasingly reveal a distinction between:
- tactical victory,
- operational success,
- and strategic victory.
A nation may:
- destroy military targets,
- dominate battlefields,
- and inflict severe losses,
- while still failing to achieve long-term political objectives.
This was true in:
- Vietnam,
- Iraq,
- Afghanistan,
- and potentially in conflicts involving Iran.
The central question becomes:
What does “victory” actually mean?
Destroying infrastructure is not always equivalent to breaking national will or achieving lasting political stability.
VII. Sanctions and Iran’s Endurance
Iran has endured decades of sanctions and economic pressure.
This has forced Iran to:
- develop domestic military production,
- adapt to isolation,
- create alternative trade networks,
- and prepare for long-term economic hardship.
While sanctions weaken economies, they do not always produce political collapse. In some cases, sanctions may strengthen nationalist resolve and encourage military adaptation.
VIII. Pride, Military Superiority, and Historical Lessons
History repeatedly demonstrates the dangers of national pride and assumptions of invincibility.
Examples include:
- Rome,
- Napoleonic France,
- Nazi Germany,
- the Soviet Union,
- and various modern superpowers.
Military superiority often creates overconfidence. Nations may underestimate:
- local resistance,
- cultural realities,
- ideological commitment,
- or adaptive warfare.
Technological dominance can produce the illusion that wars will remain short and controllable.
History repeatedly proves otherwise.
IX. Biblical and Ethical Reflections
Scripture consistently warns against pride, arrogance, and misplaced trust in military power.
Psalm 20:7 states:
“Some trust in chariots, and some in horses: but we will remember the name of the LORD our God.”
Proverbs 16:18 warns:
“Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall.”
Throughout biblical history:
- powerful empires rose,
- trusted in military strength,
- and ultimately fell.
The ethical dimension of warfare also raises profound questions:
- Can military dominance produce peace?
- Does technological superiority justify escalation?
- How should nations balance security with justice?
- What are the moral limits of warfare?
These questions remain deeply relevant today.
X. Conclusion
The conflict involving Iran may represent another major transformation in the evolution of warfare.
Like the American Revolution, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan, this conflict demonstrates that:
- Conventional superiority alone does not guarantee a decisive victory,
- adaptive warfare changes battlefields,
- and political outcomes matter as much as military engagements.
Iran’s strategy appears focused not on conventional conquest but on endurance, attrition, decentralization, and economic disruption.
This creates a difficult reality for the United States and Israel:
They may achieve overwhelming tactical success while still struggling to secure lasting strategic victory.
Modern warfare increasingly rewards:
- adaptability,
- resilience,
- economic endurance,
- technological innovation,
- and decentralized operations.
History teaches that nations that fail to recognize the changing realities of warfare often pay a heavy price.
It also teaches that pride, overconfidence, and trust in military power alone can blind nations to deeper truths about human conflict, political limits, and moral responsibility.
The lessons of history remain as relevant today as ever:
wars evolve, empires change, and human pride continues to challenge the wisdom of restraint.