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War Diary Day 17: Middle East conflict hits decisive inflection point – World


War Diary Day 17: Middle East conflict hits decisive inflection point – World

What was initially framed in Washington and Tel Aviv as a rapid coercive campaign to force regime change in Tehran is increasingly showing the contours of what some strategists are already describing as a potential strategic defeat for the US.

The US-Israel war against Iran entered a decisive inflection point on Monday, the 17th day of fighting, as persistent restricted movement through the Strait of Hormuz and Israel’s large ground assault in southern Lebanon erased any remaining notion that the conflict would be a short one.

What was initially framed in Washington and Tel Aviv as a rapid coercive campaign to force regime change in Tehran is increasingly showing the contours of what some strategists are already describing as a potential strategic defeat for the US in terms of its inability to restore the pre-war regional order despite its overwhelming military force.

The argument from Washington is that the strait is a global economic lifeline and its closure cannot be tolerated. Yet the diplomatic push has yielded little.

European capitals, already facing interceptor shortages and domestic political sensitivities, have quietly signalled reluctance. Switzerland went a step further and declined US requests for overflight clearance. Meanwhile, a Terminal High Altitude Area Defence battery was quietly withdrawn from the region, and China has stepped up military activity around Taiwan.

The reluctance is rooted in grim ground realities where the operational environment is rapidly deteriorating. Insurance costs for tanker transits through Hormuz have surged more than fivefold, many insurers have withdrawn coverage altogether, and freight rates for supertankers have soared after Iran struck 18 vessels in or around the strait.

India, Turkey and China. In a notable development, a tanker crossed the strait with its automatic identification system signal fully active, suggesting it had obtained explicit clearance from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and signalling Tehran’s confidence in managing limited commercial traffic on its own terms.

The selective reopening reinforces the central dilemma facing Washington. Without broad international participation, sustained escort operations would expose US forces to Iran’s anti-ship ballistic missiles and drone swarms already targeting US facilities across the Middle East.

As per some reports, even USS Abraham Lincoln had to be repositioned because of harassment attacks by the Iranians. The Pentagon’s own force posture reflects strain, with minesweeping assets previously assigned to the Gulf reportedly redeployed to the Pacific. For now, the coalition Trump has sought remains largely notional.

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