2026 Iran War Strategy and Analysis

FairAndUnbiased

Brigadier
Registered Member
Let's see what Iran can do within these 2 weeks vs. what the US and Israel can do within 2 weeks. I'm going to assume the worst case.

US/Israel:

1. most of their airframes will be coming up on overhaul schedules at just around this time, which is why their strike rates had been dropping. This gives them a chance to maintain their airframes.

2. they've expended much of their standoff munitions. these cannot be replenished within 2 weeks, but stores can be redistributed.

3. they can move the Bush CBG and Boxer ARG into theater while finishing repairs on the Ford and allow the Ford sailors some leave to recuperate.

Iran:

1. they can clear rubble around tunnel entrances within 48 hours.

2. they can produce maybe ~20 Shahed drones per day, ~1 MRBM per day.

3. they can buy simple stuff to replace what they had, no time to integrate totally new equipment.

If the war restarts at the 15 day mark, here's my estimate of what can be usefully done by both sides:

US/Israel: +1 CBG, +1 ARG, refresh all airframe maintenance hours.

Iran: +300 Shaheds, +10 MRBMs, +whatever they can buy that's shippable in 2 weeks, refresh all mountain tunnels.
 

Sinnavuuty

Captain
Registered Member
If Iran takes a ceasefire, there better be 800 trains/ship-loads of Chinese shit they're ready to unload and assemble into a new missile fleet. This would only work if they are ready to vastly out-build and out-restock the US/Israel. I'm leaning towards no ceasefire as well. Iranians should be conditioned by now; everytime they accept a deal for peace, they are betrayed but when they fight without negotiating, they achieve world-shocking results that stun the enemy into asking for ceasefire.
Iran accepted. A defeat for Iran to have accepted the ceasefire and reopened the strait.
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
Iran accepted. A defeat for Iran to have accepted the ceasefire and reopened the strait.

Only if the ceasefire holds and develops into a permanent peace on current terms, which seems extremely unlikely. And even then Iran can close the strait again basically any time it wants.

At present, this just look like what it is, a very brief pause for both sides to catch their breath and gather their strength for round 2. In which case this ceasefire will be far more beneficial for Iran if they can obtain significant foreign supplies. This could really be turning into America’s SMO.
 

Blitzo

General
Staff member
Super Moderator
Registered Member
Comrade mod, since we know you're not in North America, I wonder how much do you know about dear leader here?

He is kind of funny.

The stories from mainstream media, alleges President Trump does not read the intel briefings provided to him. He gets bored.

Seeing that, the White House staff would present the briefings verbally, but the president was not receptive to that, so that stopped.

So the White House staff, reduced those briefings about the world, such stuff that dear leader should be aware about, so dear leader would read that single page, but in a couple of days did not read that one page briefing anymore.

As time went on, dear leader would basically receive all his information about the world by watching Fox News. That was all President Trump did, watch Faux News for his intel.

It got so bad, that the yes men were plotting to plant news stories or people in a Faux News broadcast in order to reach the president.

So when the thread is speculating on how Trump is considering the 10 point plan, that is really neither here nor there.

Well, yes my point is that he and his team in general are incompetent.

All that matters is the war is over.

:D

The shooting has stopped for now, but once Trump realizes what he has actually agreed with, I suspect we are going to see him react poorly.
 

Puss in Boots

Junior Member
Registered Member
The most perplexing aspect of the ceasefire is why Iran suddenly became willing to negotiate.

The United States would certainly not agree to Iran's demands, nor would Iran naively believe that the United States would accept them. So what led them to this sudden consensus?
 

PandaAI

Junior Member
Registered Member
The most perplexing aspect of the ceasefire is why Iran suddenly became willing to negotiate.

The United States would certainly not agree to Iran's demands, nor would Iran naively believe that the United States would accept them. So what led them to this sudden consensus?

Maybe Trump is talking to the reformists (Zarif, Rouhani). Many in Iran are blaming the reformists. I don’t think any reformist has been assassinated.

 

Serb

Senior Member
Registered Member
The most perplexing aspect of the ceasefire is why Iran suddenly became willing to negotiate.

The United States would certainly not agree to Iran's demands, nor would Iran naively believe that the United States would accept them. So what led them to this sudden consensus?

I thought about it more deeply. It could be pressure from Pakistan, along with other struggling regional states and Global South countries, that want a solution before this spirals even further.

And there is another angle. If the US goes rogue again after this, Iran would have even more room to retaliate, politically and diplomatically.

More importantly, this already helps normalize Iran’s 10-point demands.

Trump may not truly accept them this time, and this may still be half farce, half ploy, but the important thing is that those terms are now out in the open, being discussed, and treated as a legitimate basis for talks.

That matters a lot for the next round, especially if there is a failed ground invasion one or two months from now and the US comes out of it even more battered than it is now.

At that point, Washington might be forced to accept much more of it for real.

This pause could also help Iran itself. Technically, once the war began, they never really had breathing room. They were hit by surprise, their command and governing structures were forced into immediate crisis mode, and everything was happening at once.

A ceasefire gives them space to regroup, reorganize, disseminate what they learned, and think through even stronger countermeasures.

And Hormuz is still the key point. It will not reopen in the old sense. As Araghchi hinted, what remains is not free passage as before the war, but this same tollbooth transit under IRGC control, perhaps only slightly intensified.

The biggest risk I see is the domestic reaction, because parts of society are more hardline and may not like any pause. But if it is packaged as a victory, and especially if Iran retaliates sufficiently on any breaches, then I do not think the reaction would be overwhelmingly negative.

In fact, it may even help socially. It gives both the state and ordinary citizens some breathing space and further normalization of the war.

So overall, the main reason people thought a ceasefire was impossible, by this point, including me, was that it appeared that there was no chance in hell that Trump would already move toward something resembling Iran’s maximalist 10-point framework so early in the war.

But that is exactly what seems to have happened, even if only in a fake, partial, or tactical way for now.

And that, more than anything else, is probably why Iran agreed to this ceasefire.
 
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Anlsvrthng

Captain
Registered Member
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If anyone check the news it is quite obvious the banking and financing industry started to squeeze hard due to the Iranian sanctions (I mean, the closure of the strait and strikes against CCG and Israeli oil and other indsutrial assets )

PProbably the banker families pain level reached the level when they had to stop Trump, becasue no other option left.

Lets be happy : )

However, most likelly there is a 2008 level of recession is in the play, or the 1930 still.

There is a high chance the banker families and oligarch detected it earlier than enyone else, and stomp on the break in panic.
 

magmunta

Junior Member
Registered Member
Of course, this was stated by others before me. But let me repeat it again. 9th point of the purported ceasefire asserts that the USA withdraws all its military from the middle east. That won't happen, period. What could may very well happen, though, is the American and Israeli air forces get required maintenance, supplies and strike again with greater Force. Iran has lost and pathetically calls it a victory. They should have done a preemptive strike 2 months ago to level the situation. But I think Iranian establishment is so infiltrated by the American and Israeli Intel agencies that Iran can't make a decision which limits powers of the USA and Israel. How has the new president survived the assassinations when he was walking freely in Tehran and all others sitting, hiding in bunkers got busted? Iran has failed in counterintelligence business. Objectively speaking, Iran should have taken care of the counterintelligence affairs years ago. They didn't, so they pay a heavy price now. I am personally on the American and Israeli side. So, Iranian defeat is ok with me. I just hate higher oil prices.
 
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