The United States military achieved every objective it set when it went to war in Iraq in 2003. Decapitation: Saddam Hussein was captured, tried and hanged. Air dominance: total, within days. Regime collapse: The Iraqi government fell in 21 days.
Now, consider Iraq more than 20 years after the U.S.-Iraq war. Iraq is still an authoritarian state governed by political parties with deep institutional ties to Tehran. Iranian-backed militias operate openly on Iraqi soil–some holding official positions within the Iraqi state.
The country the U.S. spent US$2 trillion and 4,488 American lives to remake is, by any reasonable measure, within the sphere of Iran’s influence. There is a pattern to the U.S. military success across multiple cases. But the military outcome and the political outcome are almost never the same thing, and the gap between them is where wars fail.
Two and a half millennia ago, Thucydides recorded the Athenian empire at its most confident in his ‘History of the Peloponnesian War’: “The strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must.” Athens then destroyed Melos and launched the Sicily Expedition with overwhelming force and no coherent theory of governance for what came next.
The lesson, then and now, is not that empires cannot destroy. It’s that destruction and governance are entirely different enterprises. And confusing them is how empires exhaust themselves. The U.S. military can destroy the Iranian regime. The question that the Iraq precedent answers–with brutal clarity – is what fills the power vacuum when it does? The military and political ledger.
In April 2003, American L. Paul Bremer arrived in Baghdad as the head of the Coalition Provisional Authority, which served as a transitional government, and issued two orders that would define the next two decades. Order 1 dissolved the ruling Baath Party and removed all senior party members from their government positions, purging the administrative class that ran its ministries, hospitals and schools. Order 2 disbanded the Iraqi army, but did not disarm it. Approximately, 400,000 soldiers went home with their weapons and without their pay checks.
Washington had just handed the insurgency–the Sunni-led armed resistance that would turn into a decade-long war–its recruiting pool. The logic behind Bremer’s de-Baathification was intuitive: You cannot build a new Iraq with the people who built the old one. The logic was also catastrophic.
Political scientists have long observed that countries are held together not by ideology, but by organised coercion.
That is, by the bureaucratic machinery, institutional memory and trained professionals who keep the lights on and the water running. Destroy that machinery, and you do not have a clean slate. You have a collapsed state, and collapsed states do not stay empty of leadership.
They fill, and they fill with whoever has the most organisational capacity on the ground. Iran had been building that capacity in Iraq since the 1980s, cultivating Shia political networks, exile parties and militia groups during and after the Iran-Iraq War and beyond with the explicit goal of ensuring a post-
Saddam Iraq would never again threaten Iranian security. Tehran did not need to build infrastructure in Iraq after the U.S. invasion, because it had spent the previous two decades building it. When the old order collapsed, Iran’s networks were ready.
Also read: Beware of US pushing Iran to become a ‘failed state’
The opposition the U.S. had cultivated in Iraq–Ahmed Chalabi and the Iraqi National Congress–had Washington’s ear but no Iraqi constituency. They had not governed the country or built networks inside it. The lesson is that military success created the precise conditions for political catastrophe, and that chasm is where American strategy has gone to die–in Iraq and in Libya, where the Obama administration helped bring about regime change in 2011, but where political instability has endured since. And, perhaps, now in Iran. The vacuum is not neutral.
The fundamental misunderstanding at the heart of American regime-change strategy is the assumption that destroying the existing order creates space for something better. It does not.
It creates space for whoever is best organised, best armed and most willing to fill it. In Iraq, that was Iran. The question now is who fills it in Iran itself.
In Iran, the group that meets all three criteria – organised, armed and willing – is the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. The Revolutionary Guard is not simply a military institution. It controls an estimated 30 per cent to 40 per cent of the Iranian economy and runs construction conglomerates, telecommunications companies and petrochemical firms. And it has cultivated a parallel state infrastructure for decades.
Since Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s death at the start of the U.S.-Israeli bombing campaign, the Revolutionary Guard has taken effective control of decision-making. The succession confirmed it: Mojtaba Khamenei, with deep ties to the Revolutionary Guard, was named supreme leader on March 8, 2026. It’s a Revolutionary Guard-backed dynastic succession that represents maximum continuity with the old regime, not regime change.
You cannot dismantle the Revolutionary Guard without collapsing the economy, and a collapsed economy does not produce a transition government; it produces a failed state. Washington has already run that experiment in Libya. If the objective is regional stability, why has every round of strikes produced a wider regional war?
Washington has no answer to any of these questions – only a theory of destruction.