airstrikes
-
Hormuz Isn’t the Point

A controlled crisis in Hormuz could deepen East Asia’s dependence on U.S.-aligned energy flows much as Europe was severed from cheap Russian supply On 28 February 2026, United States and Israeli forces launched nearly nine hundred airstrikes against Iran within twelve hours, killing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, destroying nuclear facilities and missile infrastructure, and triggering… Continue reading
-
System Disruption as Strategy: Trump’s Infrastructure Warfare on Iran

The Evolution of Targeting in the Iran Campaign From Military Objectives to Civil Networks A strike on the B1 Bridge along the Tehran-Karaj northern bypass marks a documented expansion of targeting into civilian infrastructure with no established military function. The structure formed part of a major urban transport project designed to ease congestion across a… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Financial markets, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, iran, israel, NATO, politics, warAdditional Protocol I, airstrikes, civilian infrastructure, conflict analysis, distinction principle, economic pressure, education systems, energy systems, Geneva Conventions, Gulf States, infrastructure warfare, international humanitarian law, iran, israel, Karaj, kinetic operations, legal exposure, medical networks, Middle East security, military targeting, national security, proportionality, resilience analysis, state capacity, strategic escalation, Syrian Civil War, systemic degradation, Tehran, transport infrastructure, war crimes risk

