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One Month at War With Iran — Can Washington define victory?
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One Month at War With Iran — Can Washington define victory?

Jimmie Dempsey
Last updated: April 1, 2026 9:35 am
Jimmie Dempsey Published April 1, 2026
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Wars are not defined by the tonnage of munitions expended or ships sunk. They are defined by whether military force serves a coherent political objective. One month into Operation Epic Fury, that principle remains unlearned.

On February 28, U.S. and Israeli forces launched the largest American military action in the Middle East since Iraq. Iran’s navy has been gutted, its air defenses wrecked, and its missile production disrupted. The administration is tallying strikes and sunken ships the way commanders in Vietnam tallied body counts. Those metrics told then-President Lyndon B. Johnson nothing about whether he was winning. They tell us nothing now.

The Military Picture

Iran is still fighting. Despite losing over 150 naval vessels and its supreme leader in the opening strikes, the regime did not fracture. Mojtaba Khamenei was installed as the Supreme Leader within days. This past week, the IRGC’s navy commander was killed in a U.S. strike. No succession crisis followed. U.S. intelligence assessments confirmed the regime remains “intact but largely degraded.” Degraded is not defeated.

Iran entered this war already financially broken. It is still fighting. A regime that keeps fighting after its financial system has already collapsed will not be stopped by economic pressure alone.

DEFIANT IRAN VOWS TO FIGHT ‘UNTIL COMPLETE VICTORY,’ DESPITE HEAVY MILITARY LOSSES

The escalation is accelerating. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth declared last week that Operation Epic Fury “is not an endless war”—and that same day, the Pentagon ordered 2,000 paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division to the theater, joining two Marine Expeditionary Units already en route. The 82nd is the Army’s forced-entry division. Its primary mission under active planning appears to be the seizure of Kharg Island, Iran’s primary oil export hub. No one has publicly articulated the exit strategy.

The munitions math is brutal. The first six days cost at least $11.3 billion in weapons alone. The U.S. builds only 96 THAAD interceptors per year; a quarter of the entire stockpile was consumed in last year’s 12-day campaign. Iran produces over one hundred ballistic missiles per month. We build six or seven interceptors in the same period. Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned before the war that a protracted campaign would drain stockpiles critical to deterring China. A war that cannot be sustained arithmetically cannot be won strategically.

IRAN’S REMAINING WEAPONS: HOW TEHRAN CAN STILL DISRUPT THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ

Economic Damage

The Strait of Hormuz carries 20 percent of the world’s oil supply. Its near-closure since February 28 has produced the largest energy disruption since the 1970s. Goldman Sachs modeled that oil averaging $110 per barrel for one month raises U.S. inflation to 3.3% and trims GDP growth to 2.1%. Brent crude hit $126 at its peak.

More consequential, and less reported, helium. Iran’s strikes on Qatar’s Ras Laffan facility—the world’s largest LNG plant—halted helium production and inflicted damage that will take years to repair. 

Qatar supplies a third of the world’s helium. It is an irreplaceable input in semiconductor fabrication, space systems, and medical imaging. Without it, chip production stops. There is no synthetic substitute. This war has threatened the physical supply chain that underlies every advanced technology the U.S. economy and military depend on.

THE WAR HITS HOME: WHY FINANCIAL PAIN AND ECONOMIC UNCERTAINTY THREATEN TRUMP’S DRIVE TO TOPPLE IRAN’S REGIME

And here is the fact the administration is not leading with: Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent disclosed this past week that Iran’s financial system collapsed in December 2025—the product of a maximum-pressure campaign launched a full year before Operation Epic Fury. 

Iran entered this war already financially broken. It is still fighting. A regime that keeps fighting after its financial system has already collapsed will not be stopped by economic pressure alone.

The Political Failure

There is no defined end state. Secretary of State Rubio declared every military objective is “being effectuated.” Those are kinetic metrics. They say nothing about what political condition the United States intends to produce or how it will know when the war is over. 

Secretary Hegseth summarized U.S. strategy as “negotiating with bombs.” That is Clausewitz inverted. Clausewitz said war is the continuation of politics by other means. Hegseth’s formulation makes the bombs the diplomacy. That is not a strategy. That is a war without a political objective.

TRUMP LASHES OUT AT ‘SICK’ IRANIAN LEADERS, CONFIRMS ESTIMATED TIMELINE FOR ENDING WAR

Tehran has rejected the U.S. 15-point ceasefire plan and issued a five-point counteroffer demanding Iranian sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz. Iran’s foreign minister stated his government is not engaged in talks and does not plan on any negotiations. Before the war began, Iranian negotiators told Special Envoy Witkoff directly that “they would not give up diplomatically what we could not win militarily.” They meant it.

And here is what President Trump has not internalized: He is misreading the enemy. The Iranian mullahcracy does not operate on transactional logic. It operates on theology. 

The IRGC understands this war through the prism of Mahdism—the Twelver Shia doctrine that their messiah, the Hidden Imam, will return at the end of days, and that confrontation with the U.S. and Israel is not merely geopolitical but sacred.

Radical clerics within the IRGC view their hostility toward the U.S. as preparing the conditions for the Mahdi’s return—a religious obligation, not a negotiating position. A regime built on that ideology does not fold because it has been struck hard. It folds when its internal legitimacy collapses or its physical structures are dismantled. 

One regional analyst warned that if pushed to the brink, Iran’s leadership would sooner “burn everything” than accept terms it views as surrendering God’s work.

INSIDE IRAN’S MILITARY: MISSILES, MILITIAS AND A FORCE BUILT FOR SURVIVAL

Neither collapse nor dismantlement has happened.

Trump appears to be making strategy up as he goes. And none of his advisors appear willing to tell him he has misread the enemy. That is the most dangerous gap in the room.

The Bottom Line

One month in, the record is clear. Iran’s military has been degraded. The regime endures. The Strait remains contested. The ceasefire has been rejected. Thousands more troops are moving toward the theater. Munitions are burning faster than the industrial base can replace them. 

Standing on the South Lawn last week, Trump declared that from a military standpoint, Iran is “finished”—while Iran was actively blocking the Strait behind him. 

CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION

Meanwhile, lawmakers who sat through a classified House Armed Services Committee briefing came out with a different assessment: “There was no plan, no strategy, no end game shared.” That is not a strategy. That is drift with a confident tone.

Sir Alex Younger, former chief of MI6, assessed this past week that Iran has seized the strategic initiative and the conflict is shifting toward a contest of endurance. Tactical success has not produced strategic clarity.

Wars do not end when you run out of targets. They end when you define success. 

One month in, that definition is still missing.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM ROBERT MAGINNIS

Read the full article here

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