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The Islamabad talks may produce a document, but they will not produce a different Iran. Trump knows this well
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The sense of unease accompanying the war’s impressive achievements stems from the impression that the long-awaited change in Iran was within reach, yet the ceasefire pushed it further away and helped the regime rise from the ropes. Israel must now push for two critical decisions: No easing of economic sanctions on Iran, and no restrictions on Israel’s freedom of action.
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As Europe shrugs off the Iranian threat, the old fantasy that aggression can be contained without confrontation is proving dangerous once again.
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Iran’s regime believes time is working against Trump more than against itself, and therefore prefers to continue the war of attrition and pay in cash to secure gains down the road. To prevent that, Trump must take decisive steps he has so far avoided, including destroying Iran’s national infrastructure.
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The core mistake of the axis narrative is its linearity. It assumes that friendship with A requires enmity towards B. In contemporary geopolitics, this logic has long been obsolete. The Iran war confirmed it once more: there is no zero-sum game here.
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Gulf rulers’ main concern is that the US and Israel could stop the war without finishing the job. In that case, the Iranian regime would recover, work to shield itself from future attacks and settle scores with everyone who helped strike it.
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The expectation that regime change in Iran would automatically yield a fundamentally more moderate and less hostile foreign policy appears, at the very least, highly questionable.
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Allies in name only: Bonn, London, Ottawa, and Paris. Their neutrality in the great struggle against Iran is collusion with the enemy.
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As Israel and the United States undertake operations of unprecedented scale against Iran, with a regional war now underway and global implications mounting, many critics are asking why this is …
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The overthrow of the Islamic regime must remain the central strategic goal in Israel’s historic struggle against Iran. In any reality where the regime remains in power, it will seek to rehabilitate its offensive capabilities and the “Axis of Resistance,” and once again advance, at the opportune moment, the vision of Israel’s destruction.