Trump’s Iran
Policy Reconsidered
From “Eternal
War Management” to Strategic De-Escalation
The
current Iran war has exposed a deeper strategic failure in American Middle East
policy.
For
decades, Washington approached the region through a relatively stable formula:
·
protect Israel militarily,
·
isolate or weaken Iran,
·
contain regional escalation,
·
and postpone the Palestinian
issue indefinitely.
But
this framework is increasingly collapsing under its own contradictions.
The
result has not been stability. It has been a self-reinforcing escalation cycle:
·
Israeli securitization fuels
regional resistance,
·
regional resistance reinforces
Israeli existential fear,
·
and American unconditional
alignment locks all sides into permanent confrontation.
The
tragedy is symmetrical.
On
one side, Iran-backed maximalist resistance movements helped strengthen
Israel’s fortress-state psychology by reinforcing the perception of permanent
existential siege. Repeated escalation empowered hardline Israeli politics,
weakened moderates, and normalized militarized governance.
On
the other side, the United States and parts of Europe enabled the continuation
of occupation, exclusion, and indefinite conflict-management by shielding
Israel from meaningful strategic pressure.
The
result is not peace, but what might be called an “eternal war equilibrium”:
·
manageable instability,
·
recurring regional wars,
·
expanding militarization,
·
and growing radicalization
across generations.
If
Washington truly wants long-term regional stability, then the current Iran war
should not merely trigger another escalation cycle. It should trigger a
strategic reassessment.
1. The
First U.S. Policy Shift: End Unconditional Strategic Alignment
Under a de-escalation framework, the United States would still
guarantee Israel’s survival against annihilation-level threats.
But it would distinguish between:
- protecting
Israel’s existence, and
- supporting
indefinite escalation dynamics.
That means:
·
defensive support for Israel:
yes;
·
unconditional support for
regional escalation: no;
·
permanent
occupation-management: no;
·
annexation drift: no;
·
endless postponement of
Palestinian sovereignty: no.
This would represent the decisive break with the old paradigm.
The strategic insight is simple: A permanently securitized Israel
cannot produce long-term regional stabilization.
As long as Israeli politics remain organized around existential
fear, militarized responses will dominate diplomacy. But existential fear
itself is continuously reinforced by regional maximalist confrontation.
The goal therefore becomes: reducing the political dominance of fear
on all sides.
2. Iran
Policy Would Shift from “Regime Destruction” to “Containment Through
De-Escalation”
The traditional logic behind Iran policy has often assumed that
sufficient military, economic, and covert pressure could eventually break
Iranian regional influence.
But the historical outcome has frequently been the opposite:
·
sanctions hardened Iranian
securitization,
·
external pressure strengthened
hardline factions,
·
and regional proxy structures
became more deeply embedded.
Under the de-escalation logic developed in the two base articles,
Washington would conclude that attempting to permanently humiliate or destroy
Iran’s coercive capacity may actually reproduce the ideological conditions that
sustain confrontation.
That does not mean trusting Iran. It means recognizing the limits of
coercion.
U.S. policy would therefore pivot toward:
·
verifiable nuclear limits,
·
missile-range agreements,
·
phased sanctions relief,
·
maritime security arrangements,
·
regional non-aggression
frameworks,
·
and reduction of proxy
escalation.
The objective would not be friendship. It would be managed strategic
coexistence.
This mirrors the broader insight emerging from the
Israeli-Palestinian file: second-best coexistence may be more realistic than
permanent attempts at decisive victory.
3.
Palestine Would Move from “Secondary Issue” to Strategic Core
The current regional order treats Palestine as a humanitarian issue
to be managed later.
But strategically, it sits near the center of the escalation system.
Iran’s regional legitimacy depends heavily on the claim that only
“resistance” confronts Palestinian dispossession. As long as Palestinian
statelessness continues indefinitely, Iran and allied movements retain a
powerful ideological mobilization narrative.
Under a revised strategy, Washington would therefore treat
Palestinian political resolution not as charity, but as strategic de-escalation
infrastructure.
That means pushing for:
·
a credible political horizon
for Palestinian sovereignty,
·
reconstruction under
Arab/international supervision,
·
settlement constraints,
·
Palestinian institutional
reform,
·
security guarantees for Israel,
·
and reciprocal Arab recognition
of Israel within such a framework.
This would simultaneously pressure both poles of the conflict:
·
Iran-backed maximalists would
lose part of their ideological legitimacy,
·
while Israel would face
pressure to move beyond permanent occupation-management.
4.
Regional Normalization Would Become Conditional
The Abraham Accords framework partially stabilized relations between
Israel and Arab states, but it also reinforced the perception that Palestinian
statehood could be indefinitely bypassed.
That assumption is increasingly unstable.
Under a de-escalation strategy, normalization would continue — but
on different terms.
Instead of: “Israel-Arab alignment against Iran while Palestine is
postponed,”
the framework becomes: “regional integration in exchange for
Palestinian political progress, Israeli security guarantees, and regional
de-escalation.”
This creates reciprocal obligations:
·
Arab and Muslim states accept
Israel’s permanence,
·
Israel accepts that Palestinian
sovereignty cannot remain permanently deferred,
·
and Iran loses part of the
regional environment that sustains perpetual confrontation.
5. Strategic
Pragmatism Toward China
A de-escalation framework would also produce a more pragmatic
American approach toward Chinese involvement in Gulf stability.
China has:
·
energy dependence on Gulf
stability,
·
economic leverage with Iran,
·
and strong incentives to
prevent regional collapse.
Washington would still compete with Beijing globally. But in this
file, China could function as a useful pressure channel rather than
automatically being treated as a geopolitical defeat.
This is especially relevant for:
·
maritime security,
·
sanctions coordination,
·
energy-flow guarantees,
·
and reconstruction incentives.
The objective becomes stabilization through overlapping interests,
not ideological bloc purity.
6. The Real Strategic
Pivot
The current model can be summarized as:
“Protect Israel, isolate Iran, manage Palestine later.”
The revised model becomes:
“Protect Israel, constrain Iran, end permanent Palestinian
statelessness, and reduce the ideological fuel of endless war.”
That is the deeper strategic shift implied by the two base articles.
It tells Iran-backed maximalists: Permanent confrontation
strengthens the fortress-state you oppose.
And it tells Israel and the West: Unconditional alignment without
political resolution sustains the very escalation system you seek to contain.
Conclusion
The
current Iran war should not be viewed as an isolated confrontation. It is the
regional expression of a larger unresolved system.
For
decades, all major actors operated inside a logic of managed escalation:
·
Israel pursued security through
overwhelming military superiority,
·
Iran and allied movements
pursued resistance through permanent confrontation,
·
and the United States attempted
to stabilize the region while postponing the Palestinian question indefinitely.
But
this model increasingly reproduces the very instability it claims to contain.
The
central strategic insight emerging from this reality is uncomfortable for all
sides: Neither maximalist resistance nor unconditional alignment has produced
sustainable peace.
Permanent
confrontation strengthened Israel’s fortress-state psychology. Permanent
occupation and exclusion strengthened regional resistance narratives. Each
side’s strategy helped reproduce the other.
The
alternative is not idealism or naïve reconciliation. It is strategic
de-escalation built around second-best coexistence.
That
means:
·
protecting Israel without
enabling endless escalation,
·
constraining Iran without
pursuing permanent humiliation,
·
and treating Palestinian
sovereignty not as a symbolic afterthought, but as essential regional
stabilization infrastructure.
This
would not immediately solve the Middle East conflict. But it could begin
shifting the region away from an eternal war equilibrium toward a more
sustainable balance based on coexistence, containment, and gradual political
evolution.
The
real question is no longer whether military escalation can continue. It clearly
can.
The
real question is whether the United States is finally prepared to pursue a
strategy designed not merely to manage the conflict indefinitely — but to
reduce the forces that continuously regenerate it.
Further Reading - On
the Israel-Palestine Conflict:
The
Achievable Road to Real Peace: The West Accepting its Origin-of-Conflict
Culpability


