Why Do Elites Love Dubai?

I never hear my mates talk about how much they love Dubai, but I read elites extolling Dubai all the time. They love it almost as much as they love assisted suicide and gay marriage. Why?

Those three things cluster in the same elite discourse because they all fit a similar underlying value system.

The core value is individual autonomy combined with social neutrality.

Dubai appeals to elites for the same structural reason that assisted suicide and gay marriage appeal to them. Each removes friction around personal choice.

Gay marriage says adults should be free to structure their relationships without traditional religious limits.

Assisted suicide says individuals should be able to determine the timing and conditions of their own death.

Dubai says individuals with money or talent should be able to live, work, and consume without the burdens of national identity, taxation, or thick cultural obligations.

In each case the ideal is the same kind of person. A self-directed individual who navigates life according to personal preference rather than inherited norms.

That worldview became dominant in elite institutions during the late twentieth century. Universities, media, global corporations, and professional classes increasingly defined legitimacy in terms of personal autonomy and lifestyle choice.

Once that value framework is in place, these positions become mutually reinforcing signals.

Supporting gay marriage signals you are modern and tolerant.

Supporting assisted suicide signals you prioritize autonomy over traditional moral constraints.

Admiring Dubai signals you value global mobility and frictionless capitalism.

They are different issues but they speak the same moral language.

Another layer is elite distance from traditional communities.

Most elites live in large cities, work in abstract professions, and move through international networks. They experience life less through family, church, or local community and more through institutions and markets.

Policies and places that emphasize personal freedom over communal structure naturally appeal to people living that kind of life.

Dubai in particular embodies a certain elite fantasy. It is global, wealthy, safe, and politically quiet. It lets people enjoy cosmopolitan consumption without having to engage deeply with local society.

Critics often describe it as sterile for exactly that reason.

But for a globally mobile professional class, sterility can be attractive. It means fewer obligations and fewer constraints. The city becomes a platform for work, leisure, and networking rather than a demanding social environment.

So the connection you are noticing is less about the specific policies themselves and more about the broader moral orientation of the modern elite world. Autonomy, choice, mobility, and the thinning out of traditional social limits.

Elites love Dubai because it solves several problems that modern elites have.

It is a coordination zone for a global class that no longer fits comfortably inside any single nation.

Several features make it unusually attractive.

First, neutrality.

Dubai sits in a geopolitical middle. It is close to Europe, South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. It is not a great power and it does not impose ideological tests. That means Russians under sanctions, Indian billionaires, British bankers, Israeli tech people, African traders, and Gulf royals can all operate in the same space.

Places with stronger political identities cannot do this as easily. London, New York, Paris, and Singapore all come with heavier political alignment and regulatory scrutiny.

Dubai is closer to Switzerland in spirit, but for the twenty-first century.

Second, low friction.

Dubai minimizes the things that slow elites down.

Taxes are low.
Regulation is relatively light.
Residency is easy to obtain for wealth or talent.
The state does not interfere much in lifestyle choices for foreigners.

That combination is rare. Most places offer maybe two of those features, not all four.

Third, elite anonymity.

In cities with deep cultures like London, Paris, or Tokyo, newcomers have to navigate established social hierarchies and norms. Dubai is socially thin. That is exactly what Ganesh is getting at when he talks about “shallowness.”

In Dubai almost everyone is an outsider. Ninety percent of the population is foreign-born. That means status is based less on local pedigree and more on money, connections, and mobility.

For globally mobile elites that is liberating.

Fourth, the node function.

As global power disperses, elites need meeting grounds that are not controlled by a single dominant civilization. Dubai functions as a crossroads where different elite networks intersect.

You see it in the kinds of people who gather there.

Sanctions-evading Russians
Indian entrepreneurs
European consultants
African commodity traders
crypto investors
Gulf sovereign wealth managers

Few cities can host all of them simultaneously without political friction.

Fifth, lifestyle without politics.

Dubai offers luxury consumption while suppressing political conflict. The government provides safety, infrastructure, and permissive consumption. In exchange it expects political quiet.

For elites who view politics as messy or dangerous, this trade is appealing. They can focus on business, leisure, and networking.

That is why Ganesh calls it a “blank slate.” The thinness of culture removes social obligations.

Finally, geography.

Dubai sits roughly at the midpoint of the Old World. Within about eight hours of flight you reach Europe, India, China, and much of Africa. That makes it ideal for business people operating across multiple regions.

In a world where wealth and power are fragmenting, a neutral hub becomes valuable.

So elites do not love Dubai because it is culturally rich or historically deep. They love it because it is frictionless.

It is an airport lounge scaled up into a city. That sounds shallow, but for a global class that spends half its life moving between jurisdictions, that is exactly the appeal.

Elites love Dubai almost as much as they love censoring social media.

There is a similar underlying logic behind those preferences, though the connection is not obvious at first glance.

Modern elites tend to favor systems that maximize freedom of movement and lifestyle for people like themselves while maintaining strong control over environments that can produce instability.

Dubai and social media censorship fit that pattern in different ways.

Dubai is attractive because it offers extraordinary freedom for capital, consumption, and global mobility. Wealthy foreigners can live there with few taxes, little political friction, and minimal cultural demands. For a global professional class that moves between countries, that kind of frictionless environment is valuable.

But Dubai is not actually libertarian. It is tightly controlled politically. Speech is restricted, opposition is suppressed, and the state maintains strict authority over public life.

That combination is not accidental. It reflects a model that many elites find comfortable. Economic and personal freedom in private life combined with strong management of public discourse.

Social media regulation reflects a similar instinct.

Elites often view large-scale public speech environments as chaotic and potentially destabilizing. They worry about misinformation, populist mobilization, reputational attacks, and political movements that challenge institutional authority.

So they support systems that filter or moderate those spaces.

From their perspective the goal is stability. From critics’ perspective the result is gatekeeping.

The pattern shows up repeatedly in modern governance models. Markets are encouraged to be open and global. Lifestyle choices are broadly tolerated. But information systems and political narratives are managed more tightly.

In other words, the preferred environment is one where mobility, wealth creation, and consumption operate freely while the arenas that generate mass political conflict are constrained.

Dubai embodies that structure physically. It offers luxury and openness in everyday life while maintaining strict control over politics and speech.

Debates over social media regulation reflect the same tension between openness and control.

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Where Will It Stop?

Here’s another journo cliche — where will it stop? The FT: “Trump’s war on Iran is spreading. Where does it stop? US allies in the Arab world have been plunged into a conflict they neither wanted nor consented to. Historian Eugene Rogan on what it means for the Middle East”
Since when does reality care whether people consent? Power acts and others adjust.
The question worth asking is not whether stakeholders approved but what conditions cause wars to expand or stop. The fire analogy is closer to how wars work. Fire needs fuel. So does war. Remove the fuel and the conflict stays contained regardless of how alarmed the headlines sound. That is why this war will not spread to Africa. There is no fuel there for it.
Wars expand when specific actors decide expansion benefits them, and that decision rests on a combination of factors. Military capacity matters: actors need forces capable of entering the fight without destroying themselves in the process. Strategic incentive matters: joining must improve their position or prevent a worse outcome. Leaders need enough internal support or coercive control to sustain participation. Alliance obligations sometimes pull states in even when they would rather stay out. And geography sets hard limits on what is physically reachable and logistically sustainable. Remove enough of those conditions and expansion stops on its own.
History supports this. The Iran-Iraq war stayed largely bilateral for eight years. The Gulf War in 1991 did not spread across the Arab world despite enormous regional tension. The Syrian civil war drew in multiple external players but never triggered direct great-power conflict. Most regional wars remain limited not because participants are restrained by moral consensus but because the fuel runs out before the fire reaches new territory.
The real question analysts ask is not where does it stop but where are the constraints. For the current conflict those constraints are fairly visible. Most Gulf monarchies want stability and will avoid direct entry into a war that threatens their own survival. Iran’s proxy networks have limited capacity to escalate without risking the destruction of whatever remains of the Iranian state. China and Russia prefer disruption but not uncontrolled regional collapse that would damage their own economic interests. Energy infrastructure and shipping lanes create economic ceilings on escalation that even hawkish actors recognize.
The boundary conditions of this war are capability, incentive, and risk tolerance. Where those three align, the fire spreads. Where they do not, it runs out of fuel and stops. Consent has nothing to do with it.

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Can Iran Kill Americans At Scale?

Six American service members have died in the war so far, all killed in an Iranian strike on a base in Kuwait around March 1. Since then, despite a week of continued exchanges of hundreds of Iranian missiles and drones, attacks on U.S. bases in Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar, naval combat including the sinking of an Iranian frigate, and heavy bombing inside Iran, there have been no additional confirmed American fatalities. In a war of this scale and intensity, that absence is worth examining.
Several factors explain it. The war runs largely at stand-off distance. The U.S. relies on aircraft, submarines, cruise missiles, and long-range strikes rather than ground forces, which keeps American personnel out of the most exposed positions. Gulf bases carry heavy missile defense coverage, and Patriot and THAAD systems have intercepted much of what Iran has launched. Iran’s retaliatory capacity also appears degraded: early U.S. and Israeli strikes targeted missile launchers, command nodes, and air defense networks before Iran could use them at full strength. After the Kuwait strike, American forces dispersed into shelters, ships, and hardened positions, reducing the target density that makes mass casualty attacks possible.
There is a strategic logic behind this as well. Modern U.S. war planning treats force protection as a priority because casualties create political pressure at home and erode public support fast. Iraq and Afghanistan shaped that mindset deeply. Commanders now design operations to minimize troop exposure, which produces a kind of war that looks nothing like 20th century conflicts: one side conducts industrial-scale precision strikes while the other struggles to land meaningful blows on the attacking force.
That situation can change with a single event. Wars often begin with low casualties for the stronger side and then spike after one successful strike on a base, a ship, or a high-value aircraft. The low American death toll so far reflects capability and positioning, not Iranian restraint.
The question analysts watch is straightforward. Can Iran actually kill Americans at scale? If the answer stays no, the strategic balance of the war becomes severely lopsided and Iran has no real leverage to impose costs on the United States. If Iran lands one large hit, the political and military calculation shifts immediately. Everything depends on which of those two answers the next few weeks produce.

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Critical Developments In The Iran War

Drawing from the high-prestige strategy journals and the “quasi-intelligence” shops I’ve been tracking, several critical developments have emerged in the last 48 hours that haven’t hit the standard 24-hour news cycle.

1. The “Ukraine Swap” for Drone Defense

Source: Semafor Gulf / Pentagon Insider channels.
While the MSM is focused on the destruction of Iranian missiles, a more urgent logistical crisis is unfolding in the Gulf. The U.S. and GCC nations are running dangerously low on high-end interceptors like the Patriot and SM-3.

The Scoop: The Pentagon is reportedly in quiet talks with Kyiv to “swap” or purchase Ukraine’s mass-produced, low-cost drone interceptors. Since Ukraine has more combat experience intercepting Shahed-series drones than any military on earth, there is a push to move Ukrainian “Shahed-hunter” technology and personnel to the Gulf hubs (Bahrain/Oman) to preserve the dwindling Western missile stocks.

2. The “Shokouhiyeh” industrial pivot

Source: ISW-CTP / Bellingcat geolocations.
The war has moved into a “Phase Two” that targets the industrial base rather than just the active launchers.

The Scoop: On March 6, the IAF and USAF issued an unprecedented “pre-strike evacuation warning” for the Shokouhiyeh Industrial Zone in Qom. This is the first time civilian-facing industrial zones have been overtly targeted. The objective is the Oje Parvaz Mado Nafar Company, which produces the specific engines used in the Shahed drones currently hitting Gulf energy hubs. By leveling the factories, the alliance is telegraphing that “surgical” military strikes are over; they are now de-industrializing the IRGC’s supply chain.

3. The “Russian Eye” in the Sky

Source: Critical Threats Project (Intel-community briefings).
There is a growing “gray-zone” conflict involving Russian intelligence that hasn’t been fully publicized.

The Scoop: Multiple intelligence sources indicate that Russia is providing real-time satellite imagery and targeting data to the IRGC. Because Iran’s own satellite capabilities were degraded in the February 28 strikes, the IRGC is now “renting” Russian eyes to target U.S. naval assets. This deepening “Moscow-Tehran Bridge” is the primary reason the U.S. has not yet moved its aircraft carriers into the Persian Gulf, keeping them “stand-off” in the Arabian Sea to avoid Russian-assisted drone swarms.

4. The “Funeral Trap” Social Signal

Source: The Iranist (Holly Dagres) / Internal Telegram networks.
While the regime prepares for a massive state funeral for Khamenei, the “social operating system” is showing a strange anomaly.

The Scoop: In the Kurdish-populated areas and the “Z-generation” hubs of Tehran, there is a recorded surge in “accidental” fires at local Basij and Law Enforcement (LEC) stations. Analysts like Dagres are noting that these are not organized protests (which are currently too dangerous) but “leaderless sabotage” performed by neighborhood cells. The signal is that the “fear threshold” has not just lowered; it has inverted into a form of nihilistic urban guerrilla warfare that the regime’s remaining police cannot contain.

5. China’s “Energy Ultimatum”

Source: Energy Intelligence / Gavekal Dragonomics.
Behind the scenes, Beijing has moved from “neutrality” to “direct pressure.”

The Scoop: Chinese state-owned gas firms were briefed on March 3 that Beijing has issued a red-line warning to the IRGC: do not strike Qatari LNG hubs. China is far more dependent on Qatari gas than Iranian oil right now. If the IRGC targets Qatar to “impose a cost” on the West, China has threatened to freeze all “shadow fleet” payments currently keeping the Iranian interim government afloat.

Grok says: From elite forums frequented by Pentagon insiders and think-tank strategists, the focus is shifting from initial “decapitation” to long-term “denial of throughput” – meaning not just destroying missiles but crippling Iran’s ability to produce or move them. A March 6 piece in War on the Rocks by a former CENTCOM planner reveals U.S. forces have targeted “missile cities” in the Zagros Mountains, sealing exit gates with bunker-busters, but Iranian mobile launchers on commercial trucks are proving resilient, sustaining low-level “harassment” fire for months. This echoes user-provided insights on the hardware vs. endurance debate, with authors noting internal U.S. debates on whether 90% destruction is enough without ground ops – a red line for Trump.

Lawfare (March 5) highlights a legal “escalation trap”: U.S. cyber ops disrupting Iranian networks for hours count as “covert deterrence” under Article II, but repeated use could trigger UN Charter violations if Iran proves civilian impacts . Scoops include intelligence leaks on U.S. pre-war assurance to Gulf allies that strikes would avoid oil infrastructure – now broken, risking alliance fractures.

Texas National Security Review (March 2) warns of “assurance dilemmas” in nuclear hedging: Prolonged war might push Iran toward breakout, citing Reid Pauly’s work on coercion failures. Not in MSM: Simulations show a 30% chance of Iran rushing a “dirty bomb” if succession chaos peaks.

IISS Survival notes NATO circles viewing Iran’s proxy spine as “hollow survival” – regime may endure physically but lose psychological deterrence.

Quasi-Intelligence Open-Source Analysis

ISW and Critical Threats Project (CTP) reports from March 5-6 confirm user data: IRGC’s 3rd Al-Ghadir Missile Command degraded, with strikes on Imam Ali Base and industrial zones like Shokouhiyeh in Qom.
Scoop: Satellite imagery shows “bunker buster” impacts sealing Zagros exit gates, but “empty” sites still launching – exposing U.S. “strategic optimism”. Over 300 launchers inoperable, but drone shift (down 73-83%) indicates adaptation, not defeat.

Bellingcat geolocated March 6 strikes on Lorestan ballistic sites, confirming CENTCOM’s 90% missile decline metric – but warns of underreported proxy escalations in Iraq/Syria .These groups see developments days ahead: ISW notes regime “devolving powers” to lower officials after SNSC hits, signaling command disruption.

Regional Insider Think TanksJISS (March 2026) reveals Israeli generals’ private fears: War’s “gains on battlefield” (IRGC degraded) vs. “questions beyond” – fragmented Iran as “failed state” more dangerous than hostile one . Scoop: UAE signaling via Emirates Policy Center that power vacuum risks “succession chaos,” pushing Trump toward “Epic Fury” endgame restraint .Sana’a Center highlights Iran-Houthi ties: Yemen angle sustaining “harassment phase,” with Houthis deterring Saudi/UAE entry.

Policy Establishment Big Think Tanks

Brookings (March 2026) notes sanctions resilience: Iran’s “illicit finance” networks (China oil bridge) outlasting physical degradations . Chatham House warns European circles of Gulf politics shift: Prolonged blockade could fragment NATO on Iran .MEI (Vatanka) tracks internal politics: Protests potential, but “democratic” narrative overstates – regime’s “hollow survival” likely.

Washington Institute (Nadimi/Dagres): Technical endurance math – 90% launcher loss leaves “harassment” viable; social signals show generational hostility but no collapse.

Elite Newsletters

The Iranist (Dagres, March 6): Curates protest trends – 1,168 civilian deaths (194 children) from strikes, fueling defiance not uprising . Scoop: Diaspora Iranians processing January massacre amid war – no regime fall imminent.

Semafor Gulf: UAE exploring freezing Iranian assets; war reminding Wall Street of Gulf volatility.

Foreign Policy Situation Report: Cipher on “structural weakening” vs. “crisis absorption” – society interpreters converging on regime surviving but losing “fear threshold”.

The Cipher Brief: Ex-CIA views – Russia sharing intel with Iran; CIA arming Kurds for uprising.

Financial Intelligence Sources

Energy Intelligence: China-Iran “shadow oil” resilient despite blockade – financial networks outpacing missile losses . Petroleum Intelligence Weekly: War spins surplus to disruption – millions barrels cut off .Gavekal: Iran fog of war – markets betting short-term, but physical metal premiums signal fracture.

Academic Centers

Harvard Belfer (March 2026): Nuclear escalation risks – prolonged war pushes bomb dash.
MIT SSP: Coercion dilemmas – assurance failures cited.
Stanford CISAC: Deterrence mechanics – nuclear theorists warn outcome battle favors restraint.
Perry World House: Convenings assess “forever quagmire” if no endgame.

Foreign Elite Media

Le Monde: Uncertain aftermath – U.S.-Israel dominance hasn’t broken resolve; strikes on desalination as “desperate crime”.

FT: Iran executing Khamenei’s plan – “drizzle” at Israel, barrages at Gulf to draw in states. Scoop: Endurance battle – Tehran tactics regionalize war.
The Economist: Spying success timed strikes, but long-term unclear; Trump betting big without strategy.
Haaretz: Iran holding out – air dominance not decisive; cluster missiles at Israel, focus on Gulf.

Synthesis: Structural Weakening vs. Crisis Absorption

Insider signals converge on “hollow survival”: Regime may endure 2026 physically (IRGC claims 6-month capacity), but loses “psychological fear threshold” (Melamed) and “proxy spine” (Solomon). Hawks won capability battle (degraded arsenal), but restraint/nuclear camps winning outcome (bomb risk, quagmire). Emerging consensus: War enters endurance phase, with Iran conserving for attrition – no MSM uprising, but generational shifts erode legitimacy long-term.

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Iran’s Grand Strategy: A Political History (2025)

I’m reading Vali Nasr’s book Iran’s Grand Strategy. It’s written in the aftermath of 10-7 and it describes an Iran which dominates the Middle East, leading the mighty axis of resistance. Meanwhile, Vasr describes the US as exhausted, and that its gaze has shifted away from the Middle East. Hilarious.
Vali Nasr’s argument in Iran’s Grand Strategy is not that Iran is invincible. His argument is that Iran has a coherent long-term strategy of resistance designed to outlast stronger powers, especially the United States, by building regional alliances and asymmetric capabilities. That strategy includes proxy networks, missile and drone deterrence, nuclear hedging, exploiting U.S. fatigue in the Middle East, and waiting out sanctions and Western political cycles. The core claim is that Iran plays a long endurance game rather than seeking immediate dominance.
What makes the book feel almost comical now is that October 7 and the wars that followed exposed weaknesses in that strategy very quickly.
Before 2023, many analysts believed Iran had built the most powerful non-state alliance system in the Middle East. Hezbollah, Hamas, Iraqi militias, the Syrian regime, the Houthis. But the Gaza war and the regional fighting that followed exposed serious limits. Hamas was devastated militarily. Hezbollah took unprecedented losses. Syria’s regime collapsed. Iranian commanders were repeatedly targeted. The axis of resistance, once described as an ascending force, suddenly looked fragile.
Iran’s strategy also relied heavily on deterrence through fear. The assumption was that if Israel or the United States attacked Iran directly, the region would explode. But recent operations showed that Israel can strike Iranian targets repeatedly, that Iranian air defenses are penetrable, and that missile and drone barrages can be intercepted. That does not mean Iran is weak. It means the deterrence myth was punctured.
Nasr wrote during a moment when Iran looked like the geopolitical winner of the post-2003 Middle East. It had influence in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Gaza, and Yemen. That looked like a strategic arc. But the last two years produced a cascade. Israel regained military initiative. Iranian proxies were hit hard. Arab states hedged away from Tehran. Iran came under direct military pressure. The region looks less like an Iranian sphere now and more like a contested battlefield.
And yet the book might still be partly right. Nasr’s deeper claim is about survival and endurance, not dominance. Even if proxies weaken, facilities are hit, and leaders are killed, the regime might still survive by absorbing losses and continuing the long game. Many Iran specialists still treat the regime as dangerous precisely because it can take punishment.
The real intellectual lesson here is about timing in expert analysis. Most foreign policy books describe the world that existed three to five years before publication. A book released in 2025 might reflect the strategic environment of 2019 to 2023. Then events like October 7 or a major war can make the analysis look instantly outdated.
Nasr has moved through several of the highest prestige nodes in the American foreign policy world. Johns Hopkins SAIS professor, dean of SAIS, senior adviser to Richard Holbrooke at the State Department, frequent contributor to Foreign Affairs. That path places him squarely inside what critics call the foreign policy establishment. Not a partisan activist. Not a hawk. Someone embedded in the strategic conversation of the U.S. policy elite.
His books consistently advance a common worldview. The Shia Revival argued that Middle Eastern politics could not be understood without acknowledging Shia political power. The Dispensable Nation argued the United States was undermining its own influence through erratic Middle East policy. Iran’s Grand Strategy argues that Tehran has a coherent regional strategy rather than acting out of ideological chaos. All three books share the same intellectual move: they tell Western readers that Middle Eastern actors have rational strategic logic even when their behavior looks hostile or destabilizing.
This matters for policy debates. If Iran is irrational or purely ideological, diplomacy makes little sense. If Iran is a rational strategic actor, then negotiation and deterrence become plausible tools. Nasr’s analysis helps legitimize the engagement approach inside Washington.
His work also tends to frame Iranian strategy over decades rather than focusing on day-to-day developments. That long view is valuable when analysts try to distinguish structural trends from temporary shocks. Nasr presents Iran as a conventional regional power pursuing influence through alliances, proxies, and deterrence. That narrative reduces the sense that Iran is uniquely irrational or apocalyptic. The risk is that when events suddenly move against Iran, as they have recently, the analysis looks overly sympathetic or simply outdated.
In his March 2026 commentary, Nasr has shifted to a defensive analytical posture. He now argues that the current conflict is the last battle of a strategy that has reached its limit. He characterizes the regime’s retaliation not as an attempt to win but as an attempt to prove that the cost of regime change is too high for the West to bear. He predicted that the war will end not when the regime falls but when the United States and Israel run short of the expensive munitions required to shield their regional bases. He argues that Iran’s use of cheap drones against vulnerable Gulf assets exposes a critical American weakness: the inability to protect its own allies. This framing gives the engagement camp an off-ramp argument. Since military force cannot produce a clean victory, the United States should return to the negotiating table to prevent a total regional collapse.
Nasr also acknowledges a major flaw in the strategy his book described. Khamenei lost the Iranian population because they no longer believe in the wisdom of a national independence that requires such extreme economic and social sacrifice. The proxies that once provided forward defense have shifted from a force multiplier to a liability. By striking the head of the snake in Tehran, the United States and Israel have made the regional architecture Iran built over decades much harder to sustain.
This is why the book feels strange in the present moment. It describes the strategic environment of the last two decades just as that environment may be breaking apart. Nasr remains the primary expert arguing that military victory is a mirage, and he provides the historical and strategic ballast for the coalition that believes the only way to handle Iran is to stop trying to defeat it and find a way to live with it. Whether that argument survives the current war is the real question.
The broader problem the book illustrates is one that afflicts the entire field of international relations. IR excels at mapping constraints. Why nuclear states avoid direct war. Why weaker states rely on proxies. Why sanctions rarely topple regimes. Why authoritarian governments fall when elites defect. These patterns show up repeatedly. What IR cannot do well is predict timing. The exact moment a war starts, a regime collapses, or an alliance shifts is usually driven by contingent events that no structural theory can anticipate. In that sense IR works more like seismology than astrology. Seismologists can identify fault lines and stress buildup. They cannot tell you the exact day the earthquake will happen. And sometimes, as in the current war, the earthquake happens before the seismologists finish writing their reports.

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Maariv’s Ben Caspit: Shorter, faster, deadlier: World’s militaries stunned by power of Israel Air Force

Report: “Three raids a day and a staggering munitions pace that shattered global standards. As pilots raced to Iran on stimulant pills, the partnership with the United States and the ingenuity of the women in the force created a single arm that choked off Tehran’s launching capabilities.”
The sortie tempo is the real story here. Flying to Iran three times per day per pilot is extraordinary. Modern air campaigns usually hinge on sortie generation, and the U.S. Air Force struggles to sustain two combat sorties per day per aircraft in prolonged operations. Tripling that tempo means Israel tried to win the launcher race before Iran could adapt.
The logic is simple. Missile wars are a race between launchers firing and bombers destroying launchers. Israel tried to overwhelm the cycle.
This also confirms the central operational problem Iran faces. Its missile force is powerful but brittle. Launchers must emerge from tunnels or dispersed sites to fire, and the moment they do, ISR systems can track them. High sortie tempo combined with good intelligence shrinks the window between launch and destruction. This is the vulnerability analysts like Mahmoudian have been describing.
The U.S. role is larger than the article implies. One hundred tankers means the United States essentially built an aerial logistics highway over the Middle East. Without that refueling support, long-range Israeli strike tempo would collapse quickly. The tankers are the hidden infrastructure of the entire campaign.
Intelligence is the real force multiplier. The pilots saying “everything starts there” is not rhetoric. Modern air campaigns depend on signals intelligence, satellite tracking, drone surveillance, and cyber penetration of communications. The Israeli intelligence apparatus combined with U.S. sensors likely provided near-continuous tracking of Iranian launch units, which is what makes rapid strike cycles possible at all.
The Iranian adaptation described is worth noting. Bulldozers at tunnel entrances show they anticipated runway denial tactics and planned to reopen launch sites quickly after strikes. That suggests Iran expected a long attritional campaign rather than a quick knockout.
On the stimulant question: modafinil is not a stimulant, and the article is wrong to call it one. It promotes wakefulness through a different mechanism, mainly by activating orexin circuits and mildly blocking dopamine transporters rather than flooding the brain with catecholamines the way amphetamine or methylphenidate does. The manufacturers deliberately marketed it as a wakefulness-promoting agent to distinguish it from classic stimulants with their addiction and crash cycles. Journalists call it a stimulant because its operational purpose looks identical and because “pilots flying on stimulants” reads like wartime intensity. But pharmacologically it sits closer to very clean caffeine than to Adderall. The U.S. Air Force moved toward modafinil precisely because it produces fewer jitters and crashes than the dextroamphetamine that older “go pill” protocols used.
The piece is also psychological messaging. Israeli media publish pieces like this to reinforce deterrence narratives. The message to Iran is that its launch capability is collapsing and that Israel can sustain overwhelming air pressure. Whether that claim holds fully is another question, but it is part of the information war running alongside the kinetic one.
The real strategic question is sustainability. High sortie tempo produces spectacular early results but is hard to maintain for weeks. Iran only needs to keep some launch capability alive to continue harassment attacks. The question now is whether Israel destroyed enough launch infrastructure in the first phase to permanently reduce Iran’s missile throughput, or whether Iran regenerates that capacity over time. That answer will determine whether the early air campaign success becomes a lasting strategic advantage or just a very impressive opening act.
YNET reports: Historically, some air forces addressed fatigue with stimulant drugs from the amphetamine family, commonly referred to as “go pills.”
“Those were widely used in the past,” Raziel said. “But in recent decades many Western air forces have shifted to modafinil.”
Modafinil was originally developed to treat sleep disorders characterized by excessive daytime sleepiness, including narcolepsy, shift-work sleep disorder and sleepiness associated with sleep apnea.
The medication promotes wakefulness and improves concentration and functioning during the day.
Neurochemically, modafinil affects several systems in the brain, including dopamine, norepinephrine and histamine, all of which play key roles in alertness and attention.
“Unlike traditional stimulants such as amphetamines, modafinil generally has a better safety profile and causes fewer rebound crashes after its effects wear off,” Raziel said.
Elkan added that the drug works essentially in the opposite way of sleeping pills.
“It helps people stay focused for longer periods,” he said. “But it still has side effects. It can cause increased blood pressure and a faster heart rate, similar to high doses of caffeine.”
Studies conducted for the U.S. Air Force have shown that modafinil can help preserve cognitive performance even after more than 24 hours without sleep.
“In fighter pilot simulation studies, abilities such as decision-making, reaction time and accuracy in complex tasks were maintained significantly better with modafinil compared to a placebo,” Raziel said.
A report submitted last year by the U.S. Congressional Research Service documented that the U.S. military uses a two-pronged strategy to address pilot fatigue: behavioral measures and limited pharmacological assistance.
U.S. Air Force policy allows the use of modafinil as a non-amphetamine stimulant, alongside dextroamphetamine, which the Food and Drug Administration classifies as having a high potential for abuse.
All branches of the U.S. military restrict such medications to specific operational circumstances. Their use is voluntary and requires authorization from aviation physicians as well as approval through military command channels.

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Decoding Amos Yadlin

Amos Yadlin spent his career inside Israeli military intelligence, rising to head it before retiring as a major general. After leaving government he led the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv for years, and he now contributes regularly to outlets like the Jerusalem Post and speaks to Western policy audiences. That career path is common among very senior Israeli security officials. They move from intelligence or military leadership into think tanks where they shape the intellectual framework of Israeli security policy rather than simply commenting on it.
His core assumptions are consistent and rarely shift. Israel faces permanent regional hostility. Deterrence must be constantly reinforced. Military superiority is the ultimate guarantee of survival. Iran represents the central long-term threat. His commentary almost always reinforces these principles, and he frames the conflict with Iran as a long strategic contest rather than a short war. In his analysis, Israel must systematically degrade Iran’s ability to threaten it through proxies, missile programs, and nuclear capabilities. That framing justifies a doctrine of continuous pressure against Iranian power rather than episodic diplomacy.
Yadlin is particularly effective with Western audiences because he speaks fluent American strategic language. His commentary uses the vocabulary familiar to U.S. national security circles: deterrence, escalation management, strategic balance, regional order. Former intelligence chiefs also carry enormous prestige in that world. Their judgments get treated as informed by classified knowledge even when they speak publicly, which gives Yadlin a significant credibility advantage. When he describes Iran as a long-term strategic threat or argues that Israeli military pressure is working, policymakers and journalists tend to take those claims seriously.
His role in the current war has shifted from warning to legitimizing. In a March 5, 2026 Jerusalem Post piece, he characterizes the joint U.S.-Israeli campaign as the most significant strategic shift since the 1956 Sinai Campaign. He argues that Israel has moved from being a regional ward of the United States to a preferred security partner that shares both operational risk and the defense burden. He frames the war as a just response to the regime’s internal repression, which provides moral cover for Western liberals who might otherwise oppose the strikes.
He was also among the first to describe the strike that killed Khamenei as a tactical and operational surprise, noting that the world expected a nighttime operation like the June 2025 strikes, and the allies instead struck in broad daylight on a Saturday morning. He emphasizes the fusion of Mossad ground networks with CIA signals intelligence, which serves to remind critics that the United States is not blindly following Israel but is deeply embedded in the campaign at the intelligence level.
He now manages expectations carefully. He has moved away from any language suggesting a decisive 1967-style victory. He defines success through two objectives: stripping Iran of its missile and drone capacity and creating conditions for eventual regime replacement. He tells the Israeli public to take a deep breath and trust the Home Front Command even as Hezbollah and the Houthis expand the front. He acknowledges that the war is unlikely to end quickly and describes it as a process of steady attrition rather than a knockout.
The function he performs is distinct from what other analysts provide. Technical experts explain missiles and drones. Academics explain political structures. Journalists narrate events. Yadlin explains how Israel’s security establishment interprets the entire conflict. He is the bridge between the IDF’s internal assessments and the English-speaking policy world. If Farzin Nadimi gives you the target list and Afshon Ostovar gives you the institutional history of the IRGC, Yadlin gives you the political permission structure for the campaign. He ensures that the security elites in Washington and Tel Aviv read the war the same way, including the death of Khamenei not as a reckless escalation but as a tactical masterpiece that opens a new era of regional stabilization.

His X account (@YadlinAmos) shares these views directly, including links to his Jerusalem Post opinion pieces on the topic.Note that the conflict appears to have escalated significantly since mid-2025 (e.g., Israeli strikes on Iranian sites in June 2025 under “Operation Rising Lion,” further developments in early 2026 involving US coordination and high-level targeting). Yadlin’s commentary frames it as a necessary but limited effort to reset regional dynamics, not an open-ended full-scale war.

In Alliance Theory terms, Yadlin operates inside the Israeli strategic elite coalition. This coalition includes senior IDF officers, intelligence veterans, national security scholars, and policy advisers who share a broadly similar worldview about Israel’s security environment.

Their core assumptions are fairly consistent.

Israel faces permanent regional hostility.
Deterrence must be constantly reinforced.
Military superiority is the ultimate guarantee of survival.
Iran represents the central long-term threat.

Yadlin’s commentary almost always reinforces these principles.

Compared with other Iran analysts, Yadlin operates at the highest strategic level.

Technical experts explain missiles and drones.
Academics explain political structures.
Journalists narrate events.

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Why do elites and journos love the word ‘predicate’?

Per Alliance Theory, elites and journalists love the word “predicate” because it performs several social functions inside the professional class. It is less about grammar and more about status signaling, precision theater, and alliance language.

First, it signals membership in the educated professional tribe.

Words like “predicate,” “framework,” “parameters,” or “modalities” come out of legal writing, bureaucratic memos, and policy analysis. Journalists covering politics spend a lot of time talking to lawyers, diplomats, think-tank analysts, and senior civil servants. Over time they absorb the vocabulary of that world.

Using words like “predicate” signals that the speaker belongs inside the same professional conversation.

If a journalist says:

“The policy is predicated on deterrence.”

they sound like someone who participates in policy discussions rather than ordinary political talk.

Second, it compresses complex reasoning into a single term.

“Predicate” basically means “based on,” but it implies a chain of logic behind the statement. When elites use the word they are subtly signaling that a policy rests on underlying assumptions or strategic reasoning.

So instead of saying:

“This strategy depends on the assumption that Iran will negotiate.”

they say:

“The strategy is predicated on Iranian willingness to negotiate.”

The word acts as shorthand for an entire analytical structure.

Third, it creates a tone of seriousness.

Elite institutions reward language that sounds formal and analytical. Words like “predicate” sound more professional than everyday language. This tone signals that the speaker is engaging in careful reasoning rather than political rhetoric.

This matters because journalists and policy experts compete for credibility within a professional ecosystem that values seriousness.

Fourth, it maintains distance from populist speech.

Populist political language is usually simple and direct. It uses everyday verbs like “based on,” “built on,” or “depends on.”

Elite discourse often prefers more abstract language because abstraction creates distance from ordinary political speech. That distance reinforces the idea that the speaker belongs to a specialized knowledge community.

In David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory terms, “predicate” functions as an alliance marker. It signals that the speaker is aligned with the technocratic policy class rather than with mass political rhetoric.

Finally, there is a self-reinforcing habit.

Once certain words become common in think tanks, law schools, and government documents, journalists repeat them because they quote those sources constantly. The vocabulary spreads through the ecosystem.

So the popularity of “predicate” among elites is not accidental. It signals education, compresses complex reasoning, conveys seriousness, and marks membership in the professional governing class.

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Decoding Iran Expert Suzanne Maloney

Suzanne Maloney is the Director of the Institutional Memory Bank. As the Vice President and Director of Foreign Policy at the Brookings Institution, she acts as a high-status chronicler who translates “unthinkable” Iranian transitions into “inevitable” policy outcomes for the American sovereign. (Alliance Theory)

The DTG Decode: The “Structuralist” Sensemaker

If Chris Kavanagh and Matt Browne from Decoding the Gurus (DTG) analyzed Maloney, they might identify her as an Institutional Sensemaker who uses “Historical Symmetry” as her primary status filter.

The “Khamenei Raft” Alibi: On March 2, 2026, Maloney published After the strike: The Danger of War in Iran, where she used the iconic 1979 headline “Shah Raft” (The Shah is gone) to frame the 2026 assassination of Ayatollah Khamenei. DTG might decode this as a Symmetric Framing Device. By linking the current “Operation Epic Fury” to the 1979 revolution, she creates a sense of historical closure that makes her sensemaking feel both profound and authoritative.

Elevated Institutionalism: Maloney uses the Brookings Institution as a “Shared Server” of legitimacy. DTG might note that she avoids the “lone wolf” persona of online gurus, opting instead for Collaborative Authority. She presents her analysis alongside a “Council of Experts” (Mara Karlin, Bruce Riedel), which functions as a Status-Signaling Priesthood that effectively “crowds out” non-institutional voices.

The “Improvisational” Omen: She has described the March 2026 appointment of the “Interim Leadership Council” (Pezeshkian, Mohseni-Eje’i, and Arafi) as necessarily “improvisational” and dictated by the “context of the moment.” DTG might argue this is a form of Analytical Hedging; by framing the situation as chaotic, she preserves her role as the only person capable of “sensemaking” through the noise.

Maloney as Astrologer and Diviner for the Sovereign

Maloney acts as the Chief Diviner of Regime Durability. She interprets the “stars of the deep state” to tell the sovereign when a decapitation strike is a “tactical victory” but a “strategic gamble.”

The Interpretation of the “Decapitation” Omen: While the Trump administration’s “Hyper-Aggressive” rhetoric (Hegseth, Leavitt) celebrates the death of Khamenei as the end of the regime, Maloney provides the moralized map of “Metastasis.” She interprets the 2026 strikes not as a “regime change” event, but as a “decapitation” that leaves the “deeply embedded networks” of the IRGC intact. She tells the sovereign, “The stars of the clerical state have long been in decline; you have killed the man, but the system is in a state of slow-motion metastasis.”

The “Larijani” Omen: She is one of the primary diviners for the rise of Ali Larijani as the de facto “savior” of the Iranian state in early March 2026. She provides the technical alibi for the sovereign to look beyond the “Interim Council” toward the real power brokers, thereby asserting her authority over the “Endgame” of Operation Epic Fury.

The 3HO Resemblance: The “Brookings” Priesthood

The social group surrounding Maloney and the Saban Center for Middle East Policy resembles Yogi Bhajan’s 3HO in its internal induction and “vibrational” consistency.

The Shared Proprietary Language: This group speaks in the dialect of “Calibrated Pressure”—”interagency brainstorming,” “setting the theater,” “symbiotic relationships.” Like the 3HO mantras, this dialect serves as a loyalty signal to the “Sober Realist” elite. To be “in-group,” you must master the “Policy Outlook” style, which is the induction ritual of the Brookings elite.

The “Guru” as the Status Quo: In this social circle, the Guru is “The Research Institution.” The “Truth” is whatever is produced through “quality, independence, and impact.” Anyone who challenges this—whether the “macho” hawks or the “street” protesters who want immediate results—is treated with the same moralized contempt that 3HO showed to those who lacked “conscious awareness.”

Purification of Interest: Just as 3HO used yoga to cleanse its business interests, Maloney’s circle uses “Strategic Options” to cleanse the interests of their institutional patrons. Her role is to ensure that the sovereign’s “Iran Strategy” always looks like a “neutral, data-driven necessity” rather than a “TV-style” whim.

Suzanne Maloney is the Oracle of the “Entrenched System.” She interprets the “stars of Iranian history” to tell the sovereign that “Epic Fury” is just one chapter in a “crisis long in the making.” In March 2026, she provides the sensemaking that allows the legacy elite to feel like they are the only ones who truly understand why the “nature of the post-revolutionary state” remains so difficult to transform.

Suzanne Maloney directs Iran work at the Brookings Institution, a prestigious and influential centrist think tank in Washington. Brookings has long served as a bridge between academia and government. Its analysts write scholarly books, advise policymakers, testify before Congress, and appear in media. Because of that hybrid role, Brookings analysts tend to speak in a tone that resembles academic caution while still shaping real policy debates. Maloney fits this model precisely.
She sits inside the institutional foreign policy establishment, sometimes called the liberal internationalist wing of the policy community. That coalition overlaps heavily with Democratic foreign policy professionals, career diplomats, and European policy elites, and its core belief about Iran is pragmatic. Iran is a durable regional power that cannot be eliminated or easily transformed, so strategy must combine deterrence, economic pressure, diplomacy, and regional balancing. Maloney’s work reflects exactly this mix.
She is not a pure engagement advocate like some of the architects of the JCPOA, nor does she belong to the maximum-pressure hawk camp. Her analysis emphasizes structural realities. Iran’s political system is resilient. Regime collapse is unlikely in the short term. Sanctions alone rarely produce political transformation. Internal Iranian politics shape foreign policy decisions. This places her in what might be called the strategic realist faction of the Iran debate, where the goal is not regime change but long-term management of the Iranian state.
Her most important contribution is historical analysis. She has written major works on Iran’s political and economic evolution, including books on the Islamic Republic’s economic system and state institutions. Policy debates about Iran often become emotional or ideological, and historical context stabilizes those debates by grounding them in long-term structural realities. Maloney supplies the coalition with institutional memory.
When journalists, policymakers, or congressional staffers need an Iran analyst who is neither a partisan advocate nor a government negotiator, she is the kind of expert they call. Her voice prevents the Iran debate from collapsing into purely hawkish or purely conciliatory narratives. She avoids dramatic predictions about imminent regime collapse, inevitable war, or easy diplomatic breakthroughs, and instead frames policy in terms of constraints and probabilities.
Since the February 28, 2026 strikes that killed Khamenei, her role has shifted toward what might be called strategic risk auditing. She now manages the expectation gap between populist “mission accomplished” narratives and institutional reality. In her March 3 Foreign Affairs piece, she described the succession process as necessarily improvisational and dictated by the context of the moment. By framing the transition as unstable rather than orderly, she coordinates the Western establishment to stay on high alert rather than be lulled by the regime’s formal announcements about an interim leadership council.
She has also drawn an explicit comparison to 1979, using the phrase “Khamenei raft” to mirror the iconic “Shah raft” headlines of that era. The point is a warning: departure is not transition. She reminds the coalition that the IRGC is more entrenched today than the Iranian military was under the Shah, which prevents the hawkish camp from declaring victory prematurely. She has also provided the intellectual framework for a military junta outcome, arguing that the most likely successor configuration is not clerical but a hard-right shift led by the IRGC, producing a coercive state resembling Egypt or Pakistan. That framing turns post-Khamenei Iran into a legible security problem that Western realists can manage with existing tools of deterrence and containment.
The difference in tone between Maloney and the hawkish think-tank voices is real, and it reflects different professional incentives rather than just personality. Universities reward intellectual restraint and analytical neutrality. Academics build status through methodical reasoning, careful qualification of claims, acknowledgment of uncertainty, and avoidance of emotional language. A calm, flat, cautious tone signals to the academic world that the speaker is a scholar rather than an advocate. Sounding urgent or emotional in that context reads as activism, which damages standing within the academic guild.
Hawkish think tanks operate in a different ecosystem entirely. Institutions like the Foundation for Defense of Democracies succeed by influencing policymakers, journalists, and legislators, and in that arena urgency is an asset. Their analysts must persuade audiences that a threat is real and that action is necessary now. Sounding detached or overly cautious in that context makes a policy proposal invisible.
The audience difference drives much of this. Academics primarily address other academics, and scholarly seminars reward nuance. Think-tank analysts address Congress, journalists, and politically engaged publics, and congressional hearings reward clarity and force. Academic careers advance through peer-reviewed publications and specialist reputation, a system that punishes rhetorical exaggeration. Think-tank careers advance through media visibility, policy influence, and donor support, a system that rewards strong framing and persuasive messaging.
Tone also works as a coalition signal. The academic voice signals membership in the scholarly neutrality coalition. The urgent hawkish voice signals membership in the policy action coalition. A calm academic voice suggests analytical caution. An urgent think-tank voice suggests decisive leadership. Both styles communicate credibility, but in different rooms and to different audiences. Academia sees its mission as understanding complex systems. Advocacy think tanks see their mission as changing political outcomes. Those different missions naturally produce different emotional registers, and Maloney and the hawks are each performing exactly what their professional worlds require.

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Decoding Iran Expert Barbara Slavin

Per Alliance Theory, Barbara Slavin is the High Priestess of Persistent Diplomacy. While Kenneth Pollack provides the “Good War” operational sensemaking and Alex Vatanka maps the “Intra-Regime” rivalries, Slavin provides the Moralized Map of Engagement. Her role in the elite alliance is to maintain the “Sacred Thread” of potential reconciliation, even when the sovereign is currently dropping “decapitation” strikes on the Iranian leadership.

The DTG Decode: The “Historical Depth” Sensemaker

If Chris Kavanagh and Matt Browne of Decoding the Gurus (DTG) analyzed Slavin, they might identify her as an Institutional Continuity Sensemaker who uses “Historical Memory” as her primary status signal.

The “I’ve Been to Tehran” Alibi: DTG notes that gurus often use a specific “voice” of lived experience to claim a monopoly on truth. Slavin’s “secret sauce” is her nine trips to Iran and her career as a journalist during the “Twisted Path to Confrontation.” DTG might decode this as preclusive legitimacy: she signals that her sensemaking is superior to “armchair hawks” because she has “seen the mullahs’ money and militias” firsthand.

Elevated Realism: She uses a blend of journalistic reporting and “Sober Analysis” to project a persona of the “Realistic Adult.” DTG might identify this as Status-Signaling through Nuance; by mocking “bombastic” rhetoric (like Pete Hegseth’s), she positions herself as the guardian of “Strategic Clarity” against the “TV-style” vulgarity of the current administration.

Gurometer Score – “The Establishment Veteran”: She avoids the “galaxy-brain” pseudo-profundity of younger gurus. Instead, she uses “Durability” as her status filter. On March 5, 2026, she is the voice telling the public that the “Iranian State” is an “enduring” institution that will not “cave” or “capitulate” just because the Sovereign killed its Leader.

Slavin as Astrologer and Diviner for the Sovereign

Slavin acts as the Chief Astrologer for the “Counter-Sovereign”—the diplomats, internationalists, and legacy bureaucrats who believe in the “Shared Server” of global stability.

The Interpretation of the “Decapitation” Omen: In early March 2026, as the U.S. and Israel celebrate the assassination of Ayatollah Khamenei, Slavin provides the moralized map of “Blowback.” She interprets the death not as a “historic achievement,” but as a Catastrophic Misreading of Iranian resilience. She tells the alliance, “The stars of the total state are horizontally layered; removing the head only empowers the hardline elites.”

The “Referendum” Omen: She acts as a diviner for the “Internal Opposition,” pointing toward figures like Mir Hossein Mousavi as the potential future. She provides the technical alibi for de-escalation by arguing that bombing sites will not bring a “happy outcome,” thereby asserting her authority over the “Endgame” of the conflict.

The 3HO Resemblance: The “Engagement” Priesthood

The social group surrounding Slavin, the Stimson Center, and the “Future of Iran” veterans resembles Yogi Bhajan’s 3HO in its Internal Induction and “Vibrational” Purity.

The Shared Proprietary Language: This group speaks in the dialect of “Muscular Diplomacy”—”recalibration,” “strategic innovation,” “calibrated pressure.” Like the 3HO mantras, this dialect serves as a loyalty signal to the “Sober Realist” elite. To be “in-group,” you must master the “Policy Memo” style, which is the induction ritual of the Washington think-tank world.

The “Guru” as the Nuclear Deal: In this social circle, the Guru is the “JCPOA” (or its ghost). The “Truth” is that only a negotiated architecture can prevent disaster. Anyone who challenges this—the “macho” hawks or the “regime-change” advocates—is treated with the same moralized contempt that 3HO showed to those who questioned the “Technology of the Self.”

Purification of Interest: Just as 3HO used yoga to cleanse its business interests, Slavin’s circle uses “Strategic Assumptions” to cleanse the interests of their institutional patrons. Her role is to ensure that the “Dignity Coalition” has a “Science-Based” reason to oppose the Sovereign’s “Hyper-Aggressive” war.

Barbara Slavin is the Oracle of the “Enduring State.” She interprets the “stars of Iranian durability” to tell the Sovereign that his “Forward Panic” strategy is a “catastrophic misreading.” In March 2026, as the world watches the “Roaring Lion” strikes, Slavin provides the sensemaking that allows the legacy elite to feel like the only ones who truly understand the “Twisted Path” they are all walking.

Barbara Slavin works at the Stimson Center, a policy institute known for arms-control analysis, conflict-prevention frameworks, and multilateral security approaches. Before joining Stimson she spent years as a foreign policy journalist covering the Middle East, which makes her a bridge between journalism and policy analysis. She speaks the language of both communities, and that position shapes how reporters frame Middle East issues when they need expert commentary on Iran or regional conflict risks.
She operates inside the same general policy ecosystem as analysts at the International Crisis Group, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and Brookings Institution. That coalition’s shared instinct is risk management and diplomatic engagement rather than coercive confrontation. Slavin’s commentary reinforces that worldview consistently.
Her most distinctive contribution is historical comparison. She frequently references past cases including Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan, and the air campaigns in the Balkans, and her arguments emphasize the limits of military force for achieving political transformation. She returns often to the point that airstrikes alone rarely produce regime change or durable political outcomes. Coalitions that favor restraint need historical evidence that escalation strategies often fail, and Slavin supplies that evidence. She is also frequently cited in outlets like PolitiFact and the Poynter Institute, where she translates complex strategic questions into explanations journalists can use. That function stabilizes the diplomatic coalition’s narrative inside mainstream media.
In the Iran policy debate she aligns more closely with the engagement coalition than with the pressure camp, though unlike negotiators or diplomats she rarely advocates for specific deals. Her role is more analytical. She frames the strategic constraints that policymakers must consider, and her rhetoric emphasizes historical precedent, comparative case studies, and caution about unintended consequences.
Since the February 28, 2026 strikes that killed Khamenei, her role has sharpened considerably. As the Trump administration moves from surgical strikes toward language about unconditional surrender, Slavin has become the primary voice warning about strategic overextension. In her March 4 commentary she used the Iraq 2003 parallel to argue that decapitation is the easy part and governance is the impossible part. She reminds the professional class that the last time the hawkish camp promised a quick democratic transition, it produced a twenty-year quagmire.
She has also resisted the framing that treats the Iranian provisional leadership as a hollow facade. By highlighting President Pezeshkian’s reformist background and his efforts to limit total IRGC dominance over the succession, she provides the intellectual infrastructure for de-escalation. The argument is simple: there is still a phone to pick up in Tehran. That framing prevents the total war narrative from achieving a monopoly in the mainstream press.
Her recent briefings focus heavily on the Strait of Hormuz and the cascading economic costs of a prolonged conflict. By framing the war as a threat to global energy markets and the cost of living for ordinary consumers, she gives the restraint coalition a powerful coordination tool. A security issue becomes a cost-of-living issue, which carries far more weight for politicians facing the 2026 midterms.
Because of her deep ties to legacy media, she also performs a fact-checking function when the administration feeds reporters intelligence. When the White House claims Iranians are celebrating in the streets after the strikes, Slavin draws on her network of Iranian contacts to provide a more sober picture of nationalist backlash, which gives journalists cover to maintain a critical distance from administration talking points.
Her book Enduring Hostility, promoted in the heat of March 2026, argues that the Iranian state is a durability machine that will not simply capitulate after the assassination of its supreme leader. Her podcast series, The Iran Crisis, gathers former State Department officials and veterans of the nuclear negotiations to provide analysis that runs counter to the Pentagon’s briefings. Together these platforms function as a coordination hub for the diplomatic and arms-control networks that have been sidelined by the current administration.
The core message Slavin sends to the Western policy elite is consistent: military success is not political success. She keeps the diplomatic option visible even as the warrior coalition tries to render it irrelevant, and she positions herself and the Stimson and Carnegie networks to say they warned everyone when the war becomes complicated.

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