Tuesday, March 10, 2026

The Ayatollahs’ Escape Plan: Why Iran’s Houthis Are Sitting Out a War That Could Decapitate Tehran

 


Iran’s surviving rulers may already be planning their escape. The Houthis’ silence screams the truth: Yemen could become the regime’s last bunker if U.S. and Israeli bombs finish Tehran.

War reveals strange silences. In the middle of this raging U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict, one silence is louder than the explosions over Tehran. The Houthis of Yemen—the same militia that once launched missiles into Saudi cities, seized ships in the Red Sea, and bragged about fighting America and Israel—have suddenly gone quiet. No thunder from Sana’a. No fireworks over the Bab el-Mandeb strait. No bold speeches about martyrdom.

And when a gang known for theatrical violence suddenly goes silent, I start asking questions.

The answer is ugly, cynical, and brutally practical. Iran’s ruling hardliners—those clerics and generals who built a regional network of militias stretching from Lebanon to Iraq to Yemen—are holding the Houthis back. They are keeping that card un-played for a very simple reason. If the regime collapses in Tehran, Yemen may become their escape hatch.

That may sound like a conspiracy whispered in smoky intelligence rooms, but the logic is cold and straightforward. When the house is on fire, the smart thief already knows which window he will jump through.

Right now, Iran’s house is burning.

Israeli and American air power has smashed much of Iran’s air-defense network. Israeli and American pilots are flying deep inside Iranian airspace like they own it. Major-General Tomer Bar, commander of the Israeli Air Force, even climbed into an F-15 himself and joined a strike mission over Iran on March 6, 2026. Senior generals rarely do that. They usually command from bunkers, not cockpits. But Bar wanted to taste the moment. Israeli pilots have trained for this war for more than 20 years, preparing to hit Iran’s nuclear program. Now they are finally doing it—and they are doing it alongside the world’s most powerful air force.

The opening strikes of the war on February 28 delivered a shock that still echoes through the Middle East. According to confirmed reports, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, was killed during the early phase of the bombing campaign. That alone would send any regime into panic mode. Remove the ideological center of the Islamic Republic and suddenly the entire power structure begins wobbling like a drunk on a tightrope.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard still controls weapons, prisons, and militias. But power without stability is just organized fear. And fear makes men plan their escape routes.

The Houthis fit that plan perfectly.

To understand why, you have to understand what Yemen has become during the past decade. Since the civil war began in 2014, the Houthi movement—officially called Ansar Allah—has evolved from a tribal insurgency into a hardened proxy of Iran. Tehran has armed them with ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, drones, and military advisers. United Nations investigations have repeatedly documented Iranian weapons shipments to Yemen despite international embargoes. Those weapons changed the balance of power. By 2021 the Houthis controlled roughly 70 percent of Yemen’s population and the capital city, Sana’a.

But Yemen offers something even more valuable than a militia army.

It offers geography.

The country sits on the southern edge of the Arabian Peninsula, overlooking the Bab el-Mandeb strait—a chokepoint through which nearly 6 million barrels of oil pass every day according to energy market data. Ships traveling between Europe and Asia must pass through that narrow gate between Yemen and Djibouti. Whoever controls that coastline holds a knife against global trade.

Iran understood that years ago. That is why it invested heavily in the Houthis.

Yet that same geography makes Yemen a perfect refuge if Iran’s leaders suddenly need somewhere to disappear.

Think about the alternatives. Syria once served as Iran’s forward base in the region, but that country is shattered after more than a decade of civil war. Lebanon hosts Hizbullah, Iran’s most powerful proxy, but Lebanon is politically fragile and closely watched by Israel. Iraq has Shiite militias loyal to Tehran, but American intelligence operates everywhere inside that country.

Yemen, by contrast, is chaos. The central government barely exists. Militias run cities. Tribes run mountains. Foreign intelligence agencies have limited reach there. For men who might soon be running from a collapsing regime, Yemen looks less like a battlefield and more like a bunker.

That explains the Houthis’ strange silence.

Historically, the group has never hesitated to jump into regional conflicts on Iran’s behalf. During the Saudi-led intervention in Yemen between 2015 and 2022, the Houthis launched hundreds of missile and drone attacks across the Saudi border. In September 2019, a sophisticated drone and cruise-missile strike crippled Saudi Arabia’s Abqaiq oil processing facility, temporarily knocking out roughly 5 percent of global oil supply. American intelligence concluded that Iran planned the operation and that Houthi territory helped facilitate it.

These are not timid fighters. These are men who proudly chant “Death to America, Death to Israel” in public rallies. So why are they missing from the battlefield now, while Israeli jets hammer Iran itself? Because Tehran told them to stay quiet.

Opening a second front from Yemen would be easy. The Houthis already possess Iranian-supplied drones and missiles capable of reaching Israel or attacking American naval vessels in the Red Sea. They have used such weapons repeatedly against Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Their forces also control long stretches of coastline along the Red Sea shipping lanes.

If Iran ordered it, the Houthis could create instant chaos. Tankers would flee the Bab el-Mandeb strait. Oil prices would spike overnight. Insurance rates for shipping would explode. Global markets would panic.

But Iran is not giving that order.

That restraint tells us something important. Tehran is thinking beyond the battlefield. The regime’s hardliners are calculating survival. And survival sometimes means keeping one last safe house untouched.

The Iranian leadership knows this war may end badly for them. Israeli and American planners have already destroyed large portions of Iran’s air-defense grid, allowing repeated bombing runs deep inside the country. The United States has deployed aerial refueling tankers to support long-range Israeli missions. Together the two air forces are systematically dismantling Iran’s military infrastructure.

Even Israel’s prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, has begun speaking openly about regime change. His message is blunt. Israel wants to create conditions that allow the Iranian people to overthrow their rulers.  President Donald Trump, by contrast, appears more cautious. His public statements swing between declaring victory and hinting that the war is still unfinished. But one thing is clear: Iran’s leadership now faces a future it cannot fully control.

And when dictators lose control, they start packing bags.

History offers plenty of examples. Uganda’s Idi Amin fled to Saudi Arabia in 1979 after his regime collapsed. Haiti’s Jean-Claude Duvalier escaped to France in 1986. Liberia’s Charles Taylor ran to Nigeria in 2003 before eventually being captured and tried for war crimes.

Authoritarian rulers rarely plan heroic last stands. They plan exits. Iran’s clerical elite is no different. Many of them have spent decades building offshore financial networks and political alliances across the Middle East. The Houthis—loyal, armed, and already dependent on Tehran—offer a natural sanctuary if the Islamic Republic falls.

Which brings us back to that eerie silence from Yemen. The Houthis are not absent because they are weak. They are absent because they are being preserved. Tehran is keeping them intact like a lifeboat tied to the side of a sinking ship.

When a gambler hides his last chip, you know the game is turning ugly.

Right now, bombs are falling over Iran. Israeli pilots are flying missions they trained for their entire careers. American planners are calculating oil markets and geopolitical leverage. Netanyahu wants regime change. Trump seems focused on controlling energy flows and strategic outcomes.

But somewhere far to the south, in the mountains of Yemen, a militia waits. They are quiet now. Too quiet. And in war, silence usually means someone is preparing for the worst.

 

On a different but equally important note, readers who enjoy thoughtful analysis may also find the titles in my  “Brief Book Series” worth exploring. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

 

War at the Pump: How the U.S.–Israel–Iran War Is Squeezing America’s Drivers

 


War in the Persian Gulf is quietly detonating at American gas pumps. Oil supply is choking, prices are exploding, and drivers—especially Uber and ride-share workers—are bleeding cash while politicians promise everything is ‘under control.

Lately I have found myself standing at gas stations longer than usual, staring at the digital numbers flashing above the pumps like a warning sign. Those numbers tell a story that many Americans are beginning to feel in their wallets. The ongoing war involving the United States, Israel, and Iran is pushing oil markets into turbulence, and the shockwaves are landing directly on American drivers, especially the people who rely on their cars to make a living.

When oil sneezes, gasoline catches a cold. That is not poetic exaggeration. It is basic economics.

The current war has already shaken the global oil system. Brent crude, the international benchmark for oil prices, surged to about $82 per barrel after rising 13% within days of major military strikes involving the United States and Israel against Iranian targets. At one point prices surged even higher, briefly touching $119 per barrel before falling back into the $80 range. That kind of volatility is rare and dangerous. The last time oil prices moved that violently in such a short period was during the early months of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, when global energy markets went into panic mode.

What makes the present crisis particularly dangerous is geography. Iran sits beside the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway that carries roughly 20% of the world’s seaborne oil shipments. That single passage moves millions of barrels of crude every day from the Persian Gulf to global markets. When tensions rise in that region, the oil market reacts immediately because traders know that a single missile, drone strike, or naval blockade could choke the flow of energy to the entire world.

Right now that threat is no longer theoretical.

Energy analysts report that about 6.7 million barrels per day of oil production across the Middle East have already been shut in as a result of the conflict. That equals roughly 6% of global oil supply temporarily removed from the market. Refineries in Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates have halted operations as a precaution. Qatar has declared force majeure on some natural gas shipments. Tankers moving through the Persian Gulf face rising insurance costs, while some ships have already turned around rather than risk entering what looks increasingly like a war zone.

The consequences travel fast.

According to data from AAA, the average price of gasoline in the United States rose to $3.539 per gallon in early March 2026. Just one month earlier the national average was $2.921 per gallon. That increase of more than $0.60 per gallon may not sound catastrophic to someone filling a car once a week, but for drivers whose livelihood depends on constant driving, the increase is painful.

Ride-share drivers feel the impact immediately. Uber and Lyft drivers typically drive between 1000 and 1500 miles per week. A vehicle averaging 25 miles per gallon requires roughly 40 to 60 gallons of fuel for that level of driving. When gasoline rises by $0.60 per gallon, the weekly fuel bill increases by $24 to $36. Over a month that becomes about $100 to $150 in additional expenses.

That money does not come from nowhere. It comes directly from drivers’ pockets.

Unlike traditional taxi companies that sometimes adjust fares during fuel shocks, ride-share platforms rarely compensate drivers fully for sudden fuel increases. Drivers absorb most of the pain. Their earnings shrink while their workload remains the same. Many drivers respond by working longer hours, chasing surge pricing, or avoiding long-distance rides that consume too much fuel.

The meter keeps running even when the profits disappear.

History shows that oil shocks rarely remain isolated events. The world has seen this pattern many times before. In 1973 the Arab oil embargo caused oil prices to quadruple and pushed the United States into a deep economic slump. In 1990 Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait doubled oil prices within months. In 2008 oil surged to $147 per barrel, sending gasoline prices across America above $4 per gallon. And in 2022 the Russia–Ukraine war drove U.S. gasoline prices to a national average above $5 per gallon for the first time in history.

Each crisis began with geopolitical conflict. Each crisis ended with ordinary drivers paying the price.

What makes the present situation especially troubling is the fragile state of global oil infrastructure in the Middle East. Energy facilities across the region have already experienced disruptions. Saudi Arabia’s massive oil fields, Kuwait’s export terminals, and refineries across the Gulf remain within range of Iranian drones and missiles. Even if no direct attacks occur, insurance companies and shipping firms treat the entire region as a potential battlefield.

That hesitation slows oil shipments.

Energy analysts explain that restarting oil production after shutdowns is not as simple as flipping a switch. Wells must be reopened carefully. Refineries require inspections before restarting. Tankers need security guarantees before entering contested waters. Even if hostilities stopped tomorrow, restoring normal oil flows could take weeks or months.

During that period prices remain elevated. The Dallas Federal Reserve has estimated that a $10 increase in the price of Brent crude typically raises gasoline prices by about $0.25 per gallon in the United States. When crude prices spike rapidly, the impact appears at gas stations within days. Unfortunately the reverse process works much more slowly. When crude prices fall, gasoline prices often take weeks to decline.

Consumers experience the increases immediately but the relief comes slowly.

Political leaders are acutely aware of this dynamic. Gasoline prices have always been one of the most sensitive economic indicators in American politics. Voters may debate inflation statistics or unemployment rates, but the price displayed at the corner gas station becomes a daily reminder of economic pressure.

This is why energy markets watch wars so closely. Even if political leaders claim that the conflict is nearing its end, oil markets remain skeptical until infrastructure is secure and shipping routes are safe again. Analysts warn that the Strait of Hormuz remains vulnerable, and until shipping traffic returns to normal levels the risk premium embedded in oil prices will remain.

That premium may linger for months. For ordinary Americans the consequences are visible every time they pull into a gas station. The numbers flashing on the pump reflect not just supply and demand but missiles, tankers, diplomacy, and uncertainty stretching across half the globe. Oil may be pumped in the desert, but the bill arrives at the American gas station.

For ride-share drivers, delivery drivers, truckers, and millions of workers who depend on their vehicles every day, that bill is growing heavier by the week. A war thousands of miles away is quietly reshaping the economics of daily life in the United States. And until oil flows freely again through the Persian Gulf, drivers across the country will continue feeling the pressure every time they start their engines.

 

As a side note for regular readers, I have also written many titles in my Brief Book Series, now available on Google Play Books. You can also read them  here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

 

Monday, March 9, 2026

When the Sky Grew Teeth: How Cheap Drones Are Humiliating Billion-Dollar Missile Defenses

 


A $20,000 drone can slip past defenses worth billions, sink warships, and cripple infrastructure. The battlefield has flipped upside down, and the world’s most powerful militaries are scrambling to catch up.

War used to follow rules that generals understood. The sky belonged to missiles and fighter jets, and nations built gigantic radar networks and missile defense systems to stop them. Engineers in Washington and Tel Aviv designed air-defense shields with one goal in mind: detect a missile, track its arc, and destroy it before it lands. The mathematics was elegant and brutal at the same time. Radar scans the sky, computers calculate trajectory, interceptors launch, and the incoming weapon disappears in a bright flash before it reaches a city. For decades that logic dominated military thinking. But I am watching that logic collapse in real time, because drones have quietly rewritten the rules of the sky.

I say this without hesitation: drones have changed the calculus of modern warfare. The advanced air-defense systems built by the United States and Israel can almost completely shield against traditional missile attacks. Israel’s Iron Dome, for example, has intercepted thousands of rockets since it entered service in 2011. Military analysts often cite interception success rates above 90 percent during major rocket barrages from Gaza. The American Patriot system has a similar reputation for intercepting ballistic threats and has been used in conflicts ranging from the 1991 Gulf War to modern Middle East deployments. These systems are technological marvels. They were built with the geometry of missiles in mind, meaning the predictable physics of objects that launch fast, climb high, and follow arcs that radar systems can calculate within seconds.

The problem is painfully simple. Those systems were not built for the geometry of drones. Missiles scream through the sky at enormous speeds and predictable paths, while drones creep through the air like thieves slipping through a dark alley. A missile might travel at speeds above Mach 3 or Mach 5, while a drone might crawl along at 150 or 200 kilometers per hour. Radar systems optimized to detect high-speed ballistic arcs sometimes struggle with smaller, slower objects flying low to the ground. Drones can zigzag, hover, and approach from unexpected angles, turning the neat geometry of missile interception into a chaotic guessing game. When engineers designed these air-defense shields decades ago, they were imagining rockets and ballistic missiles. They were not imagining swarms of cheap flying robots that cost less than a family sedan.

This mismatch between design and reality has become visible in several modern conflicts. In the tensions involving Israel, Iran, and American forces in the Middle East, missile defense systems have proven extremely effective against traditional rocket attacks. During several regional escalations, Israeli and allied systems intercepted large numbers of incoming missiles before they could reach civilian areas. Yet in some of those same confrontations, drones managed to slip through the defensive net and strike infrastructure targets. The reason is not mysterious. When radar systems search for high-speed missile trajectories, they sometimes struggle to track slow-moving drones flying close to the terrain. In other words, the shield was built to stop arrows, but now the battlefield is filled with buzzing insects.

Iranian-designed drones such as the Shahed-136 illustrate this shift in brutal fashion. These loitering drones are not sophisticated weapons in the traditional sense. They are relatively simple machines with small engines, modest guidance systems, and explosive payloads. Yet their strategic impact has been enormous because they exploit the weaknesses of missile defense architecture. A Shahed drone can cost tens of thousands of dollars, while the interceptor missile launched to destroy it can cost hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars. This imbalance creates a strange and uncomfortable reality for modern militaries. Every time a defender launches an expensive interceptor to stop a cheap drone, the attacker wins the economic exchange. Over time, this financial asymmetry can drain even wealthy military budgets.

The war between Russia and Ukraine has pushed this dynamic into the global spotlight. When Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the Kremlin expected to dominate the Black Sea. Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, headquartered in Sevastopol in occupied Crimea, was supposed to enforce a powerful naval blockade that would cripple Ukraine’s economy. Ukraine is one of the world’s largest grain exporters, producing roughly 50 million tons of grain annually before the war. By cutting off Ukrainian ports, Russia hoped to choke the country’s economy while pressuring global food markets.

But once again, drones changed the equation.

Ukraine began deploying both aerial drones and naval drones in creative ways that few military planners had predicted. These unmanned systems were used for surveillance, targeting, and direct attacks on Russian naval assets. The turning point came in April 2022 when the Russian missile cruiser Moskva, the flagship of the Black Sea Fleet, was struck and eventually sank. Ukrainian forces used Neptune anti-ship missiles, but drone reconnaissance helped track and locate the vessel before the strike. The sinking of Moskva shocked military observers around the world. A major warship representing hundreds of millions of dollars in military investment was destroyed by a combination of relatively inexpensive technologies.

The drone campaign intensified after that event. Ukraine began deploying unmanned surface vehicles—essentially explosive naval drones—that raced across the water toward Russian ships and ports. These machines were small, fast, and difficult to detect. Several Russian vessels were damaged in attacks near Sevastopol, and repeated strikes forced Russia to reconsider the safety of its naval positions. Over time, parts of the Black Sea Fleet were relocated farther away from Ukrainian-controlled waters. Some ships moved to the Russian port of Novorossiysk, hundreds of kilometers east of Crimea.

That retreat had strategic consequences that went far beyond naval embarrassment. As Russian ships moved farther away from Ukrainian ports, the effectiveness of the grain blockade weakened. Ukraine gradually restored parts of its maritime export routes despite Russian pressure. The world’s grain markets began stabilizing again as shipments resumed through alternative corridors. In a strange twist of history, small drones helped push back a naval blockade imposed by one of the world’s largest military powers.

When I step back and examine these developments, the conclusion feels unavoidable. Modern militaries spent decades preparing for the wrong kind of sky. They expected missiles, jets, and ballistic trajectories. Instead they are facing swarms of small machines that behave unpredictably and cost almost nothing to build. The strategic advantage once held by nations with massive defense budgets is being challenged by technologies that smaller countries and even non-state actors can deploy.

This is why I believe the drone revolution will continue reshaping warfare in the coming decades. Military engineers are already rushing to build new defensive systems designed specifically to counter drones, including directed-energy weapons, electronic jamming systems, and automated anti-drone defenses. Yet history shows that every new defensive technology triggers an equally creative offensive response. The battlefield is a constant contest between shield and spear, and drones have suddenly become one of the most dangerous spears ever invented.

I watch these conflicts unfold with a sense of uneasy fascination. A drone that costs a few thousand dollars can now threaten infrastructure, sink ships, and expose weaknesses in billion-dollar defense systems. The old military logic assumed that technological superiority belonged to the richest nations. The drone era suggests something very different. In modern warfare, the smallest machine in the sky might carry the biggest strategic punch.

 

If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

 

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

The Day Washington Handed Tehran the Keys: How Obama’s JCPOA Tilted the Middle East Toward Tehran

 


Obama’s 2015 JCPOA cracked open sanctions, unleashed billions, revived Iran’s oil machine, and emboldened Tehran’s militias from Baghdad to Beirut. Critics say Washington didn’t restrain Iran—it supercharged it.

Let me slow this down and say it straight. When former President Barack Obama signed the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA)  in July 2015 in Vienna, he did not just negotiate a nuclear agreement. He redrew the power map of the Middle East. The JCPOA, agreed between Iran and the P5+1 — the United States, United Kingdom, France, Russia, China and Germany — was sold as a narrow nuclear fix. Limit enrichment. Cut centrifuges. Accept inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency. In exchange, lift sanctions. On paper, it was technical. In reality, it was geopolitical dynamite.

Before the deal, Iran was under crushing economic pressure. Oil exports had fallen from roughly 2.5m barrels per day in 2011 to about 1m by 2013. Inflation surged past 40%. GDP contracted by about 6% in 2012. The sanctions regime was biting hard. Tehran was boxed in. When the JCPOA took effect in January 2016, that box cracked open. Estimates suggest around $100bn in frozen assets became accessible. Oil exports rebounded toward 2m barrels per day by 2017. Iran’s economy posted growth of about 12.5% in 2016, largely driven by oil. That is not pocket change. That is oxygen to a regime that had been gasping.

The problem is that when you revive a sanctioned, murderous power like Iran, sitting at the crossroads of Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen, you do not just revive its economy. You revive its regional muscle. Money is fungible. If billions flow back into state coffers, the regime can fund salaries at home and redirect resources abroad. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps did not need a memo to understand that. Tehran did not have to choose between stabilizing its currency and backing militias. With sanctions eased, it could do both.

Supporters of the deal argued that Iran capped enrichment at 3.67%, reduced installed centrifuges from about 19,000 to roughly 6,100, and extended nuclear breakout time to about 12 months. That was the headline. But look beyond the centrifuges. The JCPOA did not dismantle Iran’s nuclear infrastructure. It managed it. It paused parts of it. It set sunset clauses, many between 10 and 15 years. The clock started in 2015. That means key restrictions would begin expiring in the late 2020s. Tehran was not surrendering its program. It was parking it.

Meanwhile, Iran’s regional footprint expanded. In Iraq, Iranian-backed militias gained political and military weight after the fight against ISIS. In Syria, Iran entrenched itself to keep Bashar al-Assad in power, securing corridors from Tehran through Baghdad and Damascus to Beirut. In Lebanon, Hezbollah remained heavily armed. In Yemen, the Houthis continued launching attacks. Critics in Riyadh, Abu Dhabi and Jerusalem looked at this and saw a simple equation: sanctions relief plus legitimacy equals leverage.

Diplomacy defenders say the JCPOA was never meant to fix everything. It was a nuclear deal, not a regional peace treaty. But geopolitics does not work in silos. When Washington chose to separate Iran’s nuclear file from its missile program and regional activities, it signaled priorities. United Nations Security Council Resolution 2231 merely “called upon” Iran to refrain from developing certain ballistic missiles. That is soft language in a hard region. Iran tested missiles anyway. It did not behave like a power on probation. It behaved like a power on parole with confidence.

The symbolism mattered as much as the economics. For decades, Iran was treated as a pariah. Suddenly, it was at the table with world powers. The image of American officials negotiating with President Hassan Rouhani’s government was not lost on the Middle East. Tehran was no longer isolated. It was legitimized. In a region where perception is power, that shift counted.

Then came 2018. Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the JCPOA and reimposed sanctions. Iran’s oil exports plunged again, at times falling below 500,000 barrels per day. GDP contracted sharply. In response, Iran expanded enrichment beyond 3.67%, later reaching 20% and even 60%, far above the deal’s cap. Supporters of the JCPOA argue this proves the deal was working while America stayed in. Critics argue it proves Iran was always waiting for the chance to accelerate once pressure changed.

But step back. I’m not saying that Obama loved Iran or that he intended to empower it. It is that by focusing narrowly on preventing a nuclear weapon in the short term, he accepted a broader shift in the balance of power. Sanctions that once crippled Iran were loosened. Oil revenue flowed. International firms explored deals. Tehran’s strategic depth across the region continued to grow.

In the Middle East, power vacuums do not stay empty. If Washington reduces pressure on one player, that player fills space. Saudi Arabia saw it. Israel saw it. The Gulf states saw it. They interpreted the JCPOA not just as arms control, but as a pivot. Whether that perception was fair is almost irrelevant. In geopolitics, perception shapes behavior.

Obama argued that without the JCPOA, Iran would be closer to a bomb and the alternative might be war. That is a serious argument. War in the Gulf would shake oil markets, destabilize allies and cost lives. But the counterargument is blunt: by trading long-term leverage for short-term nuclear limits, the United States strengthened a regime whose regional ambitions never paused.

I am not painting heroes or villains here. I am calling it as it looks from the desert. The JCPOA extended breakout time, yes. It reduced centrifuges, yes. It brought inspectors in, yes. But it also unlocked billions, restored oil exports and elevated Iran’s status. When you do that in a region defined by rivalry, you tilt the field.

Through the JCPOA, Obama may have aimed to defuse a nuclear crisis. Yet in doing so, he shifted power dynamics in favor of Tehran. He did not crown Iran king of the Middle East, but he eased its chains at a moment when its rivals wanted them tightened. In a game measured in leverage, that matters. And in the Middle East, when leverage moves, so does everything else.

 

If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

 

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Don’t Ban Teenagers from Social Media: Prohibition Failed Before. Don’t Repeat It With Your Kids

 


Ban social media and you raise liars and rebels; regulate it and you raise disciplined, high-achieving teens who earn every scroll. Simply put, Smash the apps and teens go underground; weaponize screen time and watch grades, grit, and ambition explode.

Let’s stop pretending this is complicated. Banning teenagers from social media is not strength. It is panic dressed up as policy. It is adults shouting, “I can’t control this, so I’ll outlaw it.” That may win applause at a press conference, but it will not fix the problem. Australia already blocked under-16s from major platforms. Britain and parts of America are circling similar ideas. Polls show majorities cheering the move. Fine. Popular does not mean smart. Prohibition once had majority support too. It failed spectacularly. When you ban what people crave, you don’t erase the craving. You drive it underground.

Yes, some children have been harmed online. Some have been tricked, bullied, manipulated by ugly algorithms. Those cases are real and serious. But turning worst-case stories into universal law is lazy thinking. The broader evidence that social media has single-handedly wrecked an entire generation’s mental health is not settled science. Teen anxiety and depression trends began rising before TikTok exploded. Social media may amplify problems for some kids, but it is not the sole villain. Blaming one app is convenient. Reality is more uncomfortable.

And here’s what politicians don’t want to admit: bans are porous. Teenagers are not clueless. Give them a wall and they’ll build a ladder. Age checks can be gamed. Accounts can be borrowed. Platforms can be swapped. Block Instagram and they drift to smaller, less regulated corners of the internet where oversight is weaker and predators are harder to track. That is not safety. That is displacement. Worse, when teens sneak around bans, they hide what they see. If something disturbs them, they hesitate to tell adults because they were not supposed to be there. Fear silences honesty. That is the opposite of protection.

There is also a hard truth about how we got here. Adults shrank teenagers’ physical freedom for decades. We stopped letting them roam neighborhoods. We feared traffic, strangers, lawsuits. We pushed them indoors and gave them Wi-Fi. Now we are shocked they socialize through screens. That is rich. You cannot confine a generation and then criminalize their coping mechanism. Social media became their public square because we dismantled the physical one.

So what do we do? We regulate. We do the harder thing. Governments should force tech companies to redesign features that trap teens in endless scroll loops. Stronger age verification should separate minors from adults. Teen accounts should default to higher privacy and stricter moderation. Platforms should release real data so researchers can measure harm instead of arguing in the dark. That is regulation. That is responsibility. It is slower than banning, but it is smarter.

Yet the most powerful regulation does not sit in parliament. It sits at the dinner table. Social media has immense pull for teenagers. That pull can either be fought in a losing war or used as leverage. I choose leverage. If I am raising a teenage daughter, I do not thunder, “Delete the app.” I look her in the eye and say, “Finish this week’s homework early and you earn 1.5 hours online tonight. Do the family laundry and you get 2 hours on Saturday.” Effort unlocks privilege. That simple shift changes everything.

I can raise the stakes. “Bring your math grade from a B to an A this quarter and you unlock 3 extra hours of screen time each week.” Suddenly algebra is not abstract torture. It is a key. Or I say, “Volunteer 4 hours this month at the shelter and you earn bonus online time.” Service gains immediate relevance. Or I push fitness: “Train hard and finish that 5K under 30 minutes, and you get extended access for the weekend.” Discipline meets desire. Even reading can enter the arena: “Read 2 books this month and give me thoughtful summaries. Do it well and you earn 5 hours of credits.” Literature now competes with TikTok—and sometimes wins.

This is not bribery. It is incentive design. Adults live by incentives. Employees grind for bonuses. Athletes train for trophies. Students chase scholarships. Teenagers are wired the same way. When screen time becomes earned instead of assumed, it transforms from entitlement into achievement. The same magnet pulling them toward memes can push them toward excellence.

Critics will say social media is too toxic to use as leverage at all. That view ignores its benefits. For isolated teens—those in rural towns, those questioning their identity, those who feel different—online communities can be lifelines. Social media exposes young people to ideas, cultures, and opportunities that once required access to elite institutions. It has replaced the evening newspaper and the nightly news broadcast. Whether we like it or not, this is the information ecosystem they inhabit. There is also psychological wisdom in gradual exposure. If you block access entirely until age 16 and then flip the switch to full freedom overnight, you invite binge behavior. Sudden, unrestricted access without training overwhelms judgment. Structured access builds digital literacy. It teaches restraint. It allows parents to coach instead of merely police. Experience, not isolation, builds competence.

Let’s also drop the fantasy that removing TikTok will suddenly create book-loving, tree-climbing saints. Many teens will simply shift to gaming consoles, streaming platforms, or encrypted messaging apps. The dopamine does not disappear. It changes outfits. Pretending otherwise is self-deception.

Banning feels dramatic. Regulation feels tedious. But drama does not build character. Structure does. Technology is not retreating; it is accelerating. Artificial intelligence is already reshaping education, work, and relationships. If society cannot manage platforms that have existed for more than 20 years, how will it manage the next wave of digital tools? Shielding teenagers from technology does not prepare them for adulthood. Teaching them to navigate it with boundaries does.

I refuse to treat teenagers as helpless addicts or social media as pure evil. It is a tool—dangerous when unmanaged, powerful when directed. Ban it and you create rebels who learn to hide. Regulate it and you create competitors who learn to earn. If we are serious about raising high-achieving teens, we must stop chasing easy applause and start building disciplined systems. Do not smash the screen. Make them earn it.

 

On a different but equally important note, readers who enjoy thoughtful analysis may also find the titles in my  Brief Book Series” worth exploring. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Monday, March 2, 2026

Let Them Cancel: America’s Defense Isn’t a PR Problem

 


Dario Amodei talks morality; Sam Altman backs defense. Freedom wasn’t won by slogans—it was bought in blood. History will judge who understood survival. Optics fade. Power decides who stands tomorrow.

I am tired of watching grown executives tremble because Reddit got mad. Sam Altman signs a deal with the Department of Defense and suddenly the sky is falling. Subscriptions are being canceled. Claude jumps to number 1 in the App Store. ChatGPT drops to number 2. A thread screams, “You’re training a war machine.” Katy Perry reportedly walks out the door. And Dario Amodei stands there polishing his halo, refusing to let Anthropic’s AI be used without tight limits.

Spare me.

Let me say it plain. Dario Amodei should be ashamed of himself for refusing the Pentagon’s request. The freedom that allows him to run Anthropic did not fall from the clouds like fairy dust. It was bought. Paid for. With blood.

More than 1.3 million Americans have died in U.S. wars since 1775, according to historical military records. In World War II alone, the United States lost over 400,000 service members. In Iraq and Afghanistan, over 7,000 U.S. troops died after 2001. Those men and women did not die so Silicon Valley executives could lecture the Pentagon about morality from glass offices.

Anthropic says it does not want its AI used for autonomous weapons or mass surveillance. Fine. That sounds noble. But I ask a blunt question: who exactly protects Anthropic’s headquarters from hostile states? Who keeps the shipping lanes open so its servers can be built with chips from Taiwan? Who deters regimes like Iran from targeting American companies?

The U.S. military.

The same Pentagon that Amodei treated like a moral hazard.

I hear the argument already. “We must not militarize AI.” That sounds clean in a podcast. But the world is not clean. China is investing billions into military AI. The Chinese government’s military-civil fusion strategy openly blends private tech with the People’s Liberation Army. Russia uses AI tools in Ukraine. Iran funds proxy groups across the Middle East and has long pursued nuclear capability. This is not a debate club. It is a chessboard with real casualties.

When OpenAI signed its agreement, critics said it was crossing a line. They called it bending the knee. I call it reality. If AI is the new electricity, then national defense will use it. That is not evil. That is strategy.

Some users accuse OpenAI of helping a “war machine.” I find that phrase dramatic. Every nation-state has a military. The U.S. defense budget in 2023 was about $816 billion. That money funds soldiers, sailors, airmen, cyber defense units, and yes, technology. The Constitution empowers Congress to raise and support armies. National defense is not a secret hobby. It is the government’s core duty under Article I, Section 8.

Amodei’s refusal may look moral on social media, but in practice it is selective outrage. Reports suggest that even Anthropic’s Claude was used by the Department of Defense to help select targets in Iran. If that is true, then this whole moral stand becomes theater. A stage play for venture capitalists who want to feel pure.

Let us talk about Iran. The regime led by Ali Khamenei has ruled since 1989. It has funded Hezbollah and other militant groups. The U.S. State Department has labeled Iran a state sponsor of terrorism for decades. The Iranian government has suppressed protests at home and backed armed groups abroad. When the U.S. and Israel strike Iranian targets, critics cry imperialism. But they stay silent when Iranian proxies fire rockets.

I am not naïve. War is ugly. Civilians die. Mistakes happen. But pretending that refusing to help your own country’s defense makes you morally superior is shallow. It is easy to tweet from safety. It is harder to face a world where adversaries do not share your ethics.

And then there is Katy Perry. I have nothing personal against her. She is a pop star. She sings. She performs. Good for her. But when she cancels ChatGPT over a Pentagon deal, I shrug. On what grounds is she qualified to teach us about military ethics? Fame does not equal expertise. A catchy chorus is not a security clearance.

If she wants to leave, let her go. As the proverb says, the river does not stop flowing because one leaf falls.

Sam Altman went on X and tried to calm the storm. He promised OpenAI would refuse unconstitutional orders. He joked about going to jail if necessary. He said the deal was rushed and that the optics did not look good. I think that is where he slipped. He framed patriotism as a PR problem.

It is not.

The armed forces swear an oath to defend the Constitution. There have been scandals in American history, yes. Edward Snowden exposed surveillance programs that many Americans found troubling. That debate is real. But to suggest that every partnership with the Department of Defense equals tyranny is lazy thinking. If OpenAI refuses to work with the U.S. military, what happens? The military will work with someone else. Maybe a less responsible firm. Maybe a contractor with fewer ethical guardrails. Technology does not disappear because one CEO says no. It simply moves.

I believe that if AI is going to be used in warfare, it is better for American companies, under American law, with public scrutiny, to be involved. Sunlight beats secrecy. If we push all advanced AI away from the Pentagon, we do not end militarization. We just reduce oversight.

The backlash against OpenAI feels like a “woke hype” cycle. A spike of outrage. A surge to number 1 on the App Store. A viral Reddit thread. Then what? People move on. They always do. Remember when companies were boycotted over minor political donations? Most of those companies are still standing. Anthropic may enjoy a short-term PR boost. But I question the long game. If the Pentagon labels you a “supply chain risk” and threatens to cut off federal contracts, that is not symbolic. The federal government is one of the largest customers in the world. Walking away from that over abstract moral branding may look brave, but it also looks ungrateful.

I say it clearly. The rights and business climate that allow Anthropic to exist were secured by force of arms when necessary. From Normandy to Fallujah, Americans fought. The U.S. Navy secures sea lanes. The Air Force deters aggression. The Army stands ready. Those realities create the stability that lets tech firms thrive.

I would rather see Sam Altman stand tall and say, “Yes, we support our country’s defense.” No apology tour. No nervous jokes about optics. Just clarity.

Helping America counter hostile regimes is not shameful. It is responsible citizenship. If that includes using AI to weaken a government like Khamenei’s, then so be it. We live in a world where adversaries are building their own tools. Refusing to participate does not make us pure. It makes us slower.

Some call it training a war machine. I call it defending a nation.

And I am not ashamed of that.

 

If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Kill the Monster in the Lab: Why Hitting Iran Now Makes Brutal Sense

 


Waiting 10 years means betting your future on a regime that chants "Death to America" today. Smash the lab now—or meet Frankenstein armed with nukes.

Let me say it plain. Waiting 10 years for Iran’s regime to grow stronger is not strategy. It is surrender with better manners. If you see smoke in the basement, you do not hold a seminar. You grab a hose. President Donald Trump is grabbing the hose. And I support it.

Critics say he is inconsistent. They shout that he once mocked wars in the Middle East. True. He did. He blasted so-called “neocons” for chasing regime change like it was a hobby. He tore up the 2015 nuclear deal negotiated under President Barack Obama. He promised better. He did not get it. That is the record.

But here is the part his critics do not want to face: Iran is not Denmark with bad manners. It is a regime that has funded and armed proxies across the region for decades. Hezbollah in Lebanon. Militias in Iraq. The Houthis in Yemen. Hamas in Gaza. After October 7, 2023, when Hamas killed about 1,200 people in Israel and took around 240 hostages, the mask slipped again. Iran’s fingerprints were all over the wider firestorm that followed. You can call that “regional complexity.” I call it blood on the floor.

The Defence Intelligence Agency reportedly assessed that intercontinental ballistic missiles were about 10 years away if Iran chose to build them. Critics cling to that number like it is a comfort blanket. “We have time,” they say. Time for what? Time for centrifuges to spin? Time for engineers to perfect enrichment? Time for hardliners to learn from North Korea’s playbook?

Look at North Korea. In 1994, the Agreed Framework was supposed to freeze its nuclear program. By 2006, Pyongyang tested its first nuclear device. By 2017, it was launching ICBMs capable of reaching the continental United States. Diplomacy bought time, yes. But it also bought the regime time. Feed the cub long enough and one day you meet the tiger. I see Iran the same way. The regime has enriched uranium to levels that the International Atomic Energy Agency has warned are far beyond civilian needs. It has installed advanced centrifuges. It has restricted inspectors. You do not move that chessboard unless you are thinking about checkmate. Waiting 10 years for a theoretical missile timeline is like arguing about the size of the match while the gasoline tank is already open.

Critics also mock Trump for fearing a nuclear program he once said he “obliterated.” Fair shot. Politicians exaggerate. He is not the first. He will not be the last. But degrading a program is not the same as deleting it from existence. Ask any engineer. You can bomb facilities. You can set them back 1 year, 3 years, maybe more. But knowledge does not vaporize. Scientists survive. Blueprints survive. That is why the question is not whether Iran can rebuild. The question is whether you make rebuilding too costly to try.

History is not kind to those who wait politely for threats to mature. In the 1930s, Europe watched Adolf Hitler rearm Germany in open violation of the Treaty of Versailles. In 1938, the Munich Agreement handed him the Sudetenland in exchange for “peace.” By 1939, Poland was invaded. By 1945, about 60 million people were dead worldwide. I am not saying Iran is Nazi Germany. I am saying this: appeasement has a track record, and it is ugly.

Now let me address the charge that Trump is acting because Iran is weak. Yes. That is precisely why this moment matters. Since October 7, Israel has battered Iran’s proxies. Hezbollah has taken hits. Hamas has been decimated. Iranian air defenses have reportedly been degraded by Israeli and American strikes. This is not 2019. This is a regime under pressure.

When your adversary is off balance, you push. You do not offer him a chair. Trump seems to understand that. I can almost hear the street logic in it: “You want to wait until he gets his wind back?” That is not bravado. That is cold math.

Critics argue he abandoned Obama’s deal recklessly. Let’s examine that deal. The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action placed limits on enrichment levels and centrifuges, but many of its core restrictions were set to expire after 10 to 15 years. Sunset clauses. After that, Iran could legally expand parts of its program. In other words, the clock was ticking from day one. If you believe the regime’s long-term intent is hostile, then the deal was a pause button, not a cure.

I am not naïve. War is messy. American interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan cost trillions of dollars. Brown University’s Costs of War project has estimated over $8 trillion in spending tied to post-9/11 wars. Thousands of American service members were killed. Hundreds of thousands of civilians died in conflict zones. I do not forget that. I carry that weight. But here is the moral knot: sometimes avoiding short-term pain guarantees long-term disaster. If Iran were to cross the nuclear threshold, the Middle East would not stay calm. Saudi Arabia would rethink its options. Turkey would rethink its options. Proliferation would spread like a virus. One nuclear state in a volatile region is dangerous. Several is a nightmare.

And do not forget oil. The 1979 Iranian Revolution helped trigger a global oil shock. Prices spiked. Inflation soared. The U.S. economy bled. Trump’s worldview was shaped in that era. He saw 52 Americans held hostage for 444 days in Tehran. That humiliation burned into American memory. When he talks about strength, it is not abstract. It is personal, historical, economic.

I hear critics say, “He is flouting international law.” Maybe. International law is often invoked by the same global bodies that failed to stop Syria’s civil war, failed to stop Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, failed to stop mass slaughter in plain sight. Law without enforcement is theater. A badge without a gun is just jewelry.

Trump’s style is chaotic. I admit that. He speaks off the cuff. He contradicts himself. He muses about “taking over the whole thing.” That unsettles allies. It unsettles markets. But style is not substance. The substance is this: deal with a regime that chants “Death to America” while it is cornered, not crowned.

The alternative is to gamble that 10 years from now Iran will be softer, friendlier, more reasonable, even as it accumulates technical know-how and possibly long-range missile capability. That is a bet on goodwill from a government that has shown little of it. I do not take that bet.

I know the risks. Airstrikes can escalate. Proxies can retaliate. Oil prices can spike. American forces can be drawn deeper into conflict. Nothing about this is clean. But I would rather confront a weakened adversary today than a nuclear-armed, missile-equipped Frankenstein tomorrow.

History rarely rewards the timid. It punishes the complacent. If Trump succeeds in permanently crippling Iran’s nuclear ambitions, critics will say they disliked the process. Fine. Process does not stop centrifuges. Power does.

So I take the hard view. I would rather smash the lab before the monster wakes up. Because once it does, you are no longer debating policy. You are bargaining for survival.

 

If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

The Ayatollahs’ Escape Plan: Why Iran’s Houthis Are Sitting Out a War That Could Decapitate Tehran

  Iran’s surviving rulers may already be planning their escape. The Houthis’ silence screams the truth: Yemen could become the regime’s last...