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The Trump Card in the Iran War


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Let's narrow this hot war down to the following three cold basics:


? No one is a free actor.

? Everyone has a part to play.

? Israel is the trump card.


The current escalation in the Middle East has shattered the illusion of independent statecraft. As the United States and Israel carry out their joint operation, the Gulf region has devolved into a tightly synchronized theater where every move is dictated by a rigid web of alliances, historical grievances, and economic desperation.


No One is a Free Actor


In this conflict, "freedom of action" is a relic of the past. Even the most powerful players find their hands tied by the choices of their partners and the inertia of their own strategies.


The United States, despite President Trump's campaign promises to end "forever wars," finds itself deeply entrenched in a campaign for Iranian regime change. U.S. policy is bound by the need to keep Iran nuclear-free first and foremost. To regulate the Strait of Hormuz traffic is practically a means to regulate Iran's income. This sounds like gunboat diplomacy because it truly is. That being said, Washington is not choosing this war so much as it is being sucked into it.


Meanwhile, Iran is no longer a monolith. Following the assassination of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, the emerging "ruling triumvirate" and the succession of Mojtaba Khamenei suggest a regime fighting for basic survival. Their actions are limited to asymmetric strikes via the "Axis of Resistance" to deter total collapse. They are "free" only to choose the method of their own defense.


Everyone Has a Part to Play


This is a global theater of a regional conflict where every actor has been assigned a role. The proxies, namely Hezbollah and the Houthis, have activated their scripts to stretch Western defenses thin, or so they think.


Xi's China acts as the director in the wings, tethered by 4,200 miles of supply lines. As the world's largest oil importer, Beijing's Achilles heel is the Strait of Hormuz. Xi plays a double game: publicly posing as a "responsible" mediator while privately providing the "financial oxygen" through Iranian oil purchases. By allowing the BeiDou satellite system to aid proxy situational awareness, China ensures the conflict drains U.S. resources without derailing its own long-term hegemony. President Trump knows that, needless to say.


Putin's Russia serves as the "backstage partner," viewing the Middle East as a vital secondary front to its war in Ukraine. While Moscow avoids direct military intervention to preserve its "delicate balancing act" with Israel, it provides Iran with critical intelligence on U.S. warship locations and advanced drone tactics. For the Kremlin, every Patriot missile fired in the Gulf is one fewer available for Kyiv, turning Middle Eastern instability into a financial windfall as oil prices hit $100 per barrel. Unlike the dragon, the polar bear enjoys the Gulf showdown, or so it thinks.


Israel is the Trump Card


Ultimately, Israel remains the decisive element, the trump card, that can either stabilize the region through overwhelming force or ignite a wider global conflagration.


Israel has moved toward a "consensus on security" that prioritizes the total dismantling of threats before they can rearm. Ranked among the top 15 global military powers, Jerusalem is able to conduct high-intensity strikes by dropping 1,200 bombs in the first 24 hours, thus setting the pace for the entire war. By the way, did I mention Israel's nuclear status?


The "Trump Card" nature of Israel lies in its unique position: it is the only actor willing to take the risks the United States avoids. While Washington calculates the cost of escalation, Jerusalem calculates the cost of existence. This makes Israel the factor that can force the hand of the U.S., provoke the collapse of Tehran, or compel Beijing and Moscow to finally step out from the wings and into the direct line of fire. Astutely, Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu lets President Trump have all the limelight, wink wink.


Conclusion 


As of March 11, 2026, the question is no longer if the war will expand, but who can withstand the pain the longest. The interconnectedness of modern warfare means that a missile launched from the Middle East is felt in the refineries of Shanghai and the trenches of Donbas. In a world where no one is a free actor, the script is written, and the trump card has been played. All that remains is the final act.


The denouement, anyone?



Author: renqiulan 


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