When I hear “no boots on the ground in Iran,” I don’t hear wisdom. I hear fear dressed up as strategy. We built the most powerful military on earth. Not to sit on the sidelines. Not to fight halfway. But to finish what we started. I’m not blind to the risks. Ground operations in Iran mean exposure—IEDs, ambushes, drones. It means American soldiers in harm’s way. But that’s already happening. The difference is that right now, we’re taking hits without delivering a knockout.
I keep hearing it like a broken record—“no boots on the
ground.” That phrase gets thrown around like it’s holy scripture. Like it’s the
last commandment carved into stone. And every time I hear it, I ask the same
simple question: what exactly is the U.S. Army for?
We already sent the United States Navy to choke the sea
lanes. We unleashed the United States Air Force to dominate the skies. Bombs
dropped. Missiles fired. Targets hit. The opening act is done. The stage is
cleared. And now, when it’s time to finish the job, suddenly everyone develops
cold feet.
That makes no sense.
War is not a half-measure business. You don’t start a
fire and then complain about the smoke. If the objective is to stop Iran’s
nuclear capability, secure the Strait of Hormuz, and dismantle what’s left of
the regime under Ali Khamenei, then airstrikes alone won’t cut it. Air power
can break things. Ground forces control them. That’s not opinion. That’s
military doctrine going back to World War II.
Let’s call a spade a spade. The Pentagon is already
preparing for ground operations. Thousands of troops are moving into position.
Not for sightseeing. Not for diplomacy. For combat. Officials are talking about
weeks—maybe a couple of months—of targeted operations. Raids. Seizures.
Surgical strikes on coastal defenses and strategic assets like Kharg Island.
This isn’t theory. It’s already war-gamed, planned, and staged.
And yet, politicians stand in front of cameras and say,
“we can achieve our objectives without ground troops.” That’s fantasy.
Look at history. In Iraq War, the U.S. used “shock and
awe” bombing to cripple Saddam Hussein’s forces. It worked—partially. But
Baghdad didn’t fall from the sky. Ground troops rolled in. Tanks. Infantry.
Boots. Without that final push, Saddam stays in power. The war drags. The
mission fails.
Same story in Afghanistan. Same story in every war where
territory matters.
You don’t win by hovering above the battlefield like a
nervous spectator. You win by stepping into it. Right now, Iran still has
assets on the ground. Intelligence points to roughly 400 kg of highly enriched
uranium (HEU). That’s not abstract. That’s real material, sitting somewhere,
guarded by real people with guns. You don’t secure that with tweets or
airstrikes. You secure it by sending soldiers to physically take it. Anything
less is theater.
And let’s not pretend this war is clean. It’s already
messy: 13 U.S. troops are dead in just the first month. Over 300 wounded.
Drones hitting bases across at least 7 countries. This is not a video game. The
enemy is firing back.
So what exactly are we protecting by avoiding boots on
the ground? Lives? That ship has sailed. War always costs lives. The only real
question is whether those losses lead to victory or drag on into a slow bleed. When
you hunt a snake, you don’t stop after cutting the tail—you crush the head. Right
now, we’re cutting tails.
The Strait of Hormuz is still a choke point. Nearly 20%
of the world’s oil flows through it. That’s not a side note. That’s global
economic oxygen. If Iran mines it or disrupts it, oil prices spike, markets
panic, and the ripple hits every American household. Gas. Food. Everything. You
don’t secure that with drones flying overhead. You secure it by putting forces
on the ground, clearing coastal missile sites, and holding key positions.
That’s exactly what military planners are discussing—fast, mobile raids along
Iran’s coast. Hit. Move. Hit again. Keep the enemy off balance.
But here’s where the fear kicks in.
Polls show 62% of Americans oppose ground troops. Only
12% support it. Politicians read those numbers like gospel. They don’t see
strategy. They see elections. So they hedge. They stall. They talk about
“options” and “alternatives.” Meanwhile, the war keeps moving.
Even within Congress, the split is obvious. Some want
limited special operations—quick in, quick out. Others flat-out reject any
ground presence. Then you have voices like Lindsey Graham saying, in plain
terms, we’ve done harder things before. He pointed to Iwo Jima, where about
6,800 U.S. troops died taking a single island. Brutal. Costly. But decisive.
People don’t like hearing that kind of truth anymore. They
want clean wars. Cheap wars. Wars you can watch on a screen and forget before
dinner. That’s not reality. That’s denial.
Even critics inside the system admit the obvious problem.
Seizing territory like Kharg Island isn’t the hard part. Holding it is.
Protecting troops from drones, missiles, and counterattacks—that’s the real
challenge. And yes, it’s dangerous. Nobody sane denies that.
But danger is not an argument against action. It’s part
of the job.
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is not going to
fold because we flew over them. They will dig in. They will fight. They will
use every advantage they have, including oil infrastructure as cover. That’s
what enemies do.
So again, I ask: what’s the plan?
Bomb from a distance and hope the regime collapses? That
didn’t work in North Korea. Didn’t work in Vietnam. Didn’t even fully work in
Iraq until ground forces stepped in. This idea that we can “win without boots”
sounds good in a press briefing. It collapses under real-world pressure. And
here’s the uncomfortable truth nobody wants to say out loud: If we refuse to
commit ground troops now, after already escalating the conflict, then we risk
the worst outcome of all—a long, drawn-out war with no clear end. More strikes.
More retaliation. More casualties. No closure.
Half a war is worse than no war at all.
I’m not blind to the risks. Ground operations mean
exposure—IEDs, ambushes, drones. It means American soldiers in harm’s way. But
that’s already happening. The difference is that right now, we’re taking hits
without delivering a knockout.
War doesn’t reward hesitation. It punishes it.
So when I hear “no boots on the ground,” I don’t hear
wisdom. I hear fear dressed up as strategy. We built the most powerful military
on earth. Not to sit on the sidelines. Not to fight halfway. But to finish what
we start. If we’re not willing to use it when it matters most, then maybe the
real question isn’t about boots on the ground.
Maybe the real question is this—why do we even have an
Army?
For readers interested
in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are
available on Google Play. Read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.






