For years, American policy in the Middle East has rested on a delicate fiction: that the region’s various conflicts, rivalries, and fault lines could be managed through careful diplomacy, selective intervention, and the maintenance of a rough balance of power. President Donald Trump has shattered that fiction in seven days of military operations that have killed more than 1,230 Iranians, displaced over a million Lebanese, drawn missile fire across four Gulf states, and demanded the unconditional surrender of a major regional power.
The military campaign has been the instrument of that shattering. American B-2 stealth bombers have struck Iran’s buried missile infrastructure with dozens of 2,000-pound penetrating munitions. A large Iranian naval vessel has been hit and possibly destroyed. Israel has issued mass evacuation orders in Lebanon covering over one million people and struck Hezbollah’s command infrastructure across Beirut. The defense secretary has promised a dramatic surge in US firepower. The IDF chief has promised new phases and undisclosed surprises.
Iran has responded by extending the conflict geographically. Missiles and drones have been launched at US military bases and energy infrastructure in Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Bahrain. Six American soldiers have been killed. Civilian buildings in Bahrain have been struck. Kuwait’s airspace has been repeatedly violated. The Revolutionary Guards have promised new weapons and military initiatives. Hezbollah has maintained its military campaign in Lebanon. The conflicts are multiplying, not contracting.
The international community has responded to the shattering of stability with alarm. The United Nations has appealed for de-escalation. European governments have called for restraint. China and Russia have demanded that both sides step back. Arab states have condemned civilian casualties while quietly cooperating with American military operations. The UK has deployed additional fighters to the region while carefully avoiding offensive operations. None of these responses has slowed the conflict by a single day.
The fiction of Middle Eastern stability was always fragile. The region’s conflicts — between Iran and its neighbors, between Israel and the Palestinians, between Sunni and Shia, between secular and religious governance — have simmered for decades. Trump has replaced careful management of those tensions with an attempt to resolve them through overwhelming military force. Whether that attempt succeeds or produces a new and more dangerous instability is the central question of a conflict that has permanently altered the strategic landscape of the world’s most volatile region.
