The Perils of a Power Vacuum in Iran
Surgical strikes removed Iran's key leaders, raising nuclear material security risks amid power vacuum; armed citizenry seen as crucial safeguard by advocacy groups.
6 Articles
6 Articles
The Perils of a Power Vacuum in Iran
The US sees regimes it can strike and concludes that striking them resolves the dangers they pose. But eliminating a visible adversary does not neutralize the underlying threat; it merely transforms that threat into something elusive, decentralized, unaccountable, and impossible to negotiate with or monitor.
Eliminating the Iranian regime does not end the threat; it transforms it into opaque and decentralized chaos. History in Iraq and Libya shows that it cannot be negotiated with a power vacuum. Read more
10:56 The US assumes that by attacking regimes, it also eliminates the threat they pose. But eliminating a visible adversary doesn't neutralize the underlying threat.
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