Thursday, March 05, 2026

War on Iran: Zionist strategy and the machinery of Muslim collusion

by Junaid S. Ahmad


Smoke rises from the area after multiple powerful explosions occurred in several locations across Iran’s capital Tehran on March 2, 2026. [Fatemeh Bahrami – Anadolu Agency]
For three days now, Iran has been under sustained bombardment. American and Israeli military power — long rehearsed through sanctions, covert strikes, assassinations, and proxy wars — has moved fully into the open.

And while the sky over Iran burns, West Asian monarchies and military regimes convene meetings.

They call it diplomacy. They call it stability. They call it coordination. What they are doing is far simpler: preserving their own arrangements while a neighbouring sovereign state is pounded from the air.

The war is visible to all. The question is: who is enabling it — and who is pretending not to.

The Architecture of Complicity

Wars of this scale do not operate in isolation. Airspace must remain accessible. Intelligence must circulate. Bases must stay operational. Silence must be maintained.

The Gulf monarchies understand this perfectly. Their territories host American military infrastructure. Their security doctrines are fused with Washington’s command structures. Their regimes are underwritten by American guarantees. For months, Tehran warned publicly that if the United States and Israel launched direct strikes, states hosting and enabling that assault would not be insulated from its consequences.

The warning was clear: you cannot facilitate aggression and claim neutrality.

Yet when Iranian retaliation follows bombardment launched from or enabled by regional territory, the monarchies are quicker to condemn Tehran’s response than the assault that triggered it. They issue urgent appeals for “restraint” once missiles approach their own airspace. They rarely deploy the same clarity when those missiles are falling on Iranian cities.

Their outrage is selective. Their fear is not war — it is exposure.

Jordan, too, sits within this grid. Hosting American forces while presenting itself as a stabilizing partner, it occupies the familiar space of strategic usefulness. But stability built upon another state’s bombardment is not neutrality. It is participation by arrangement.

Turkey and Pakistan: Managed Autonomy

Turkey performs calibrated indignation. It criticizes loudly enough to signal independence, yet remains anchored in NATO’s strategic architecture. It aspires to regional leadership while avoiding a rupture with the very power prosecuting the war. It projects strength in peripheral theatres; it grows cautious when Washington moves decisively.

Pakistan’s military establishment operates in an even narrower corridor. Islamabad is deeply interwoven with American security frameworks, yet invokes sovereignty in public rhetoric. When protests erupted in Karachi over the war on Iran and the killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the state’s reflex was not to confront the external force waging war, but to contain domestic dissent.

Outside the U.S. consulate in Karachi, anger was not abstract. It was immediate. Demonstrators gathered in response to bombardment and to what many perceived as the extrajudicial elimination of a central Muslim political authority. Two dozen protestors gunned down by American marines collapsed the illusion that this war was distant.

Both Ankara and Islamabad speak of autonomy. Both remain structurally aligned with the power conducting the assault.

1979: The Fear Beneath the Silence

To understand the present compliance, one must return to 1979. The Iranian Revolution terrified monarchies not because it was Shia, but because it was anti-monarchical.

It demonstrated that a ruler sustained by external backing could fall. It showed that Sunni and Shia alike could mobilize around sovereignty rather than sect. That was the contagion to be contained.

Sectarian polarization became policy. Tehran was framed as a theological aberration rather than a political precedent. The objective was regime preservation, not doctrinal purity.

Today’s war reactivates that suppressed anxiety. The extrajudicial killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — whatever one’s political position — would constitute the violent elimination of a world-historical political figure in the history of Shi‘ism in particular and Islam in general: a cleric whose authority shaped statecraft, theology, and resistance politics for decades.

Such an act is not processed in Muslim societies as a routine strike. It is understood as a decapitation of sovereignty itself.

The same logic applies to figures like Hassan Nasrallah, whose stature — regardless of one’s ideological view — commanded admiration that transcended sectarian lines in moments of confrontation with Israel. His symbolic authority was anchored in perceived defiance.

In Pakistan, outrage has crossed sectarian boundaries not because doctrine dissolved, but because symbolism required no translation.

When globally recognized Muslim leaders are eliminated in the context of open war by external powers, the meaning is immediate. The anger is not theological. It is political — and civilizational.

Selective Condemnation

The most revealing feature of this war is not only the bombardment of Iran, but the inversion of moral language in Gulf communiqués.

They condemn Iran’s retaliation. They caution Tehran against escalation. They urge “all parties” toward restraint.

The aggression that ignited the exchange receives diluted phrasing, if it is acknowledged at all.

This inversion is deliberate. A clear condemnation of the assault would expose their structural role in enabling it. Silence preserves alliances; clarity risks them.

So Iran becomes the destabilizer for responding. The original strike becomes background.

The palaces fear Iranian missiles. They fear American displeasure more.

The Streets and the Reckoning

Sectarian engineering long insulated these regimes from unified dissent. But visible war dissolves careful narratives.

When bombs fall openly, the questions become blunt: Who is bombing whom? Who is enabling it? Who condemns the response but excuses the cause?

In Karachi, Beirut, and beyond, those questions are no longer theoretical. Protesters are not debating doctrine. They are confronting the spectacle of external domination and internal compliance.

Iran is under sustained assault. That reality stands.

The more consequential question is how long Muslim-majority governments can condemn retaliation while facilitating the war — and expect their populations not to draw conclusions.

The palaces remain composed. The bases remain operational. The meetings continue.

But the streets are watching.

And the longer the war endures, the more visible the gap becomes between rulers who speak of sovereignty and rulers who quietly subcontract it.

The decapitation paradox: Why leadership assassination cannot collapse distributed sovereignty

For decades, Western military strategy has treated leadership elimination not merely as a tactical move, but as a decisive instrument of conflict management. The core question for the modern era is simple: Can a sovereign system be dismantled by removing its leadership if its operational architecture has already evolved into a decentralised nervous system?

  •  A strategic scenario analysis

Modern warfare has entered a profound structural transition. In the twentieth century, military doctrine was predicated on the assumption that sovereign power was concentrated within identifiable, hierarchical leadership structures. Under this "great man" framework, the logic of the "decapitation strike" was absolute: by removing the head of an adversary state, one could theoretically trigger an immediate institutional collapse, hollowing out the strategic DNA of the nation and forcing a rapid, surgical regime change.

However, the strategic environment of 2026 challenges this assumption at its foundation. As we move into an era defined by decentralised networks and AI-driven systems, the old blueprints of conquest are becoming obsolete. This analysis examines a hypothetical escalation scenario designed to test the structural limits of the “decapitation doctrine” within a distributed command system. The core question for the modern era is simple: Can a sovereign system be dismantled by removing its leadership if its operational architecture has already evolved into a decentralised nervous system?

The decapitation doctrine: An architectural flaw

For decades, Western military strategy has treated leadership elimination not merely as a tactical move, but as a decisive instrument of conflict management. The logic is linear: strike the head of the system, and the body loses its capacity for coordination, logistics, and will. This approach assumes a hierarchical pyramid where strategic decisions, operational authorisation, and escalation control are localised in a central hub.

Under those conditions, leadership removal creates immediate "operational paralysis." But this doctrine was developed for a world of monolithic states and clear chain-of-command structures. In the current global landscape, where technology allows for the rapid distribution of information and authority, this reliance on centralised targets has become an architectural flaw. When an aggressor removes a leader, they expect a "finish line." Instead, they often find they have merely removed the only individual with the authority to concede.

The distributed command hypothesis: The nervous system vs. the brain

In recent decades, sophisticated military organisations have transitioned from "brain-centric" models to "nervous system" architectures. These distributed operational networks are designed specifically to survive leadership loss. Under such a model, authority is not "held" at the top; it is pre-delegated to autonomous nodes.

In systems theory, this is the difference between a vertebrate organism and a starfish. If you remove the head of a vertebrate, the organism dies. If you sever a limb from a starfish, the limb can, in some species, regenerate into a new organism entirely. In this scenario model, the targeted state has engineered its command-and-control (C2) to function as a series of autonomous, pre-programed triggers. Retaliatory operations do not await a "green light" from a bunker; they activate through pre-programed escalation pathways embedded within decentralised nodes.

When the "brain centre" goes dark, the "nervous system" takes over. The system moves from deliberate action to automated reflex. In this state, the aggressor is no longer fighting a political entity; they are fighting a machine programmed for resistance.

True sovereignty in the 2026 era is defined by intellectual survivability. Nations must build systems that are "Decapitation-Proof," meaning their institutional resilience, their AI infrastructure, and their operational capacity must be distributed. If a nation's ability to function is tied to a central point of failure, that nation is not sovereign; it is a tenant of whoever owns the skies

The cost asymmetry layer: The economic shield

A second structural pillar of this scenario involves the shifting economics of force. Emerging battlefield technologies—particularly low-cost loitering munitions and autonomous drone swarms—have shattered the cost equation between offense and defence.

In a simplified architectural model, we see a massive divergence: a low-cost precision strike platform may cost approximately $20,000, while the interceptor missile required to stop it (such as a patriot or aegis variant) costs upwards of $2 million. When these inexpensive weapons are deployed in "saturation waves," even the most advanced defence systems reach a point of "kinetic exhaustion."

The defending state may intercept 90% of the incoming threats, but the 10% that cover the shield are enough to cause systemic failure. More importantly, the economic burden of the defence becomes structurally unsustainable. This is "economic attrition" disguised as warfare. The aggressor’s goal is not technological superiority, but the bankruptcy of the defender’s logistics.

The collapse of strategic immunity and sanctuary

For the last half-century, global powers have operated under the assumption of "geographic sanctuary"—the belief that logistics hubs, supply bases, and strategic infrastructure in allied territories remain "off-map" and insulated from retaliation. This "calculated immunity" allowed for high-intensity operations with low domestic risk.

However, the proliferation of long-range, low-cost precision tools has deleted the concept of sanctuary. In our scenario, these "safe havens" become primary targets for distributed retaliation networks. The result is a total collapse of the one-way street of violence. When a logistics hub in a "neutral" or "protected" zone is struck, the geopolitical earthquake shatters alliances and exposes the vulnerability of the global supply chain. The war is no longer "over there"; it is everywhere the system has a node.

Narrative architecture and information ecosystems

In the 2026 era, a decapitation strike is as much a "narrative strike" as it is a kinetic one. Aggressors use the elimination of a leader to broadcast a message of total dominance. However, if the targeted state has a robust "Narrative Architecture," the death of a leader is transformed into a "martyrdom event," which serves as a powerful recruitment and mobilisation tool for the decentralised nodes.

Without a central leader to "frame" the defeat, the information ecosystem becomes fragmented and radicalised. The aggressor finds that they cannot control the story because there is no longer a single story to tell. They are met with a thousand different voices of resistance, each operating independently, making the "conquest of intellect" impossible.

The escalation control problem: The blind giant

The most catastrophic consequence of leadership decapitation is the permanent loss of "escalation brakes." Political leaders, regardless of their ideology, function as the final authority capable of halting a conflict. They are the "systems translators" who can turn military action into diplomatic negotiation.

When these leaders are removed, the operational networks designed for survival continue to function, but they do so without a "stop" button. Decapitation strikes remove the only actors with the sovereign authority to negotiate de-escalation. The result is a "blind giant" syndrome: the aggressor has created a vacuum of power where no one is left to sign a treaty, leaving the conflict to burn until the system itself is physically annihilated.

 


In the age of distributed warfare, destroying the head of the system does not guarantee the collapse of the body. Instead, it ensures that the "nervous system" continues to act without a "brain" capable of stopping it


The strategic chokepoint: From battlefield to global shock

Modern global economies are not monolithic; they are tied together by a handful of critical logistical corridors. Energy supply routes, such as the Strait of Hormuz or the Suez Canal, are the jugular veins of the global architecture. If a distributed retaliation network—acting on pre-authorised reflex—targets these chokepoints, the war ceases to be a local affair.

The conflict becomes systemic. Supply chains fracture instantly. Energy markets destabilise, sending economic shocks through every capital city on earth. At this stage, the success of the "decapitation strike" is irrelevant. The aggressor may have killed a leader, but they have triggered a global economic collapse that they cannot contain.

Lessons for sovereignties: Intellectual survivability

This scenario highlights a vital lesson for sovereign structures. In an age where leadership can be "deleted" by a precision missile, national security cannot depend on the survival of a few individuals.

True sovereignty in the 2026 era is defined by intellectual survivability. Nations must build systems that are "decapitation-proof," meaning their institutional resilience, their AI infrastructure, and their operational capacity must be distributed. If a nation's ability to function is tied to a central point of failure, that nation is not sovereign; it is a tenant of whoever owns the skies.

Conclusion: The ghost in the machine

The purpose of this scenario analysis is to move past the "delusion" that surgical strikes lead to stable outcomes. In the age of distributed warfare, destroying the head of the system does not guarantee the collapse of the body. Instead, it ensures that the "nervous system" continues to act without a "brain" capable of stopping it.

We are entering a world where the "ghost" of the sovereign state—its decentralised nodes, its automated reflexes, and its martyr narratives—is more dangerous than the state itself. The "finish line" is a phantom; the only reality is the architecture of the system that remains.

Jeffrey Sachs: Attack on Iran Also an Assault on UN

 The U.S. objective is not the security of the American people. The objective is global hegemony. The attempt is to destroy the U.N. and the international rule of law — an attempt that will fail.

Amir Saeid Iravani, Iran’s U.N. ambassador, briefing reporters at U.N. headquarters in New York on Monday. (UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe)

By Jeffrey D. Sachs and Sybil Fares
Common Dreams

On Feb. 16, one of us (Jeffrey Sachs) sent a letter to the U.N. Security Council warning that the United States was on the verge of tearing up the United Nations Charter. That warning has now come to pass. 

The United States and Israel have launched an unprovoked war against Iran in flagrant violation of Article 2(4) of the Charter, without authorization from the Security Council, and without any legitimate claim of self-defense under Article 51.

They are trying to kill the U.N. Charter and the international rule of law, but they will fail.

At the Security Council on Feb. 28, the U.S. and its allies directed their condemnation not at the American and Israeli aggression, but at Iran. One U.S. ally after the next condemned Iran for its retaliatory attacks yet absurdly failed to condemn the illegal and unprovoked U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran. This performance by these countries was disgraceful and turned reality completely upside down.

The joint U.S.-Israeli attacks were described by Trump as necessary because Iran “rejected every opportunity to renounce their nuclear ambitions, and we can’t take it anymore.” 

This is of course a flat lie. As the letter of Feb. 16 recounted, Iran agreed a decade ago to a nuclear deal, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) that was adopted by the U.N. Security Council in Resolution 2231. It was Trump who ripped up the agreement in 2018. 

[See: WATCH: UN Security Council Debates Attack on Iran]

In June 2025, Israel bombed Iran in the midst of U.S.-Iran negotiations. This time too, the Israel-U.S. war plans were set weeks ago when Netanyahu met with Trump, and the negotiations underway between the U.S. and Iran were a charade. This seems to be the new modus operandi of the U.S.: start negotiations and then aim to murder the counterparts.

It is easy to understand why the U.S. allies behave in the embarrassing and self-abasing way they did at the U.N. Security Council. In addition to the United States, eight of the other 14 Council members host U.S. military bases or grant the U.S. military access to local bases: Bahrain, Colombia, DenmarkFranceGreece, Latvia, Panama and the United Kingdom.

These countries are not fully sovereign. They are partially governed by the U.S. The U.S. military bases house C.I.A. operations, and the host countries constantly look over their shoulder to try to avoid U.S. subversion in their own countries.

James Kariuki, acting U.K. ambassador to the U.N. and president of the Security Council for the month of February, chairing the Security Council meeting after the U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran, Feb. 28. (UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe)

As Henry Kissinger famously said, “It may be dangerous to be America’s enemy, but to be its friend is fatal.” We can add that to host U.S. military bases and C.I.A. operations is to turn your country into a vassal state.

As an absurd but telling example, the Danish ambassador parroted every U.S. talking point, pointing her finger at Iran for its aggression as if Iran had not been attacked by the U.S. and Israel. She completely forgot that such humiliating vassalage to the U.S. will not play well for Denmark if the U.S. occupies Greenland.

The truthful voices at the Security Council came from the countries not occupied by the United States. 

Russia explained correctly that the so-called West (that is, the countries occupied by the U.S.) is engaged in victim-blaming when it points its finger at Iran. China reminded the Council that the crisis began with the U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran, not with Iran’s retaliation.

Somalia’s ambassador, speaking on behalf of several African member states, truthfully portrayed the source of this recent escalation. The U.N. representative of the League of Arab States spoke brilliantly about the root cause of Israel’s mad aggression: the denial of rights to Palestinian people and Israel’s use of mass murder and regional war to prevent the emergence of a State of Palestine.

When Iran retaliates against U.S. military bases in the Gulf, it is exercising its inherent right of self-defense under Article 51 of the Charter. 

We must remember that the U.S. and Israel are openly and repeatedly assassinating Iran’s leaders, with the aim of overthrowing its government. When states murder a foreign head of state and attempt to destroy the government, the target of those threats is entitled under international law to defend itself.

The U.S.-Israeli bombing murdered not only Iran’s Supreme Leader and several top government officials, but also more than 140 (NYT now reports at least 175) young girls in their school in Minab. These young children are the victims of a horrific war crime.

The countries today that gave a pass to the United States and Israel for these killings — notably Denmark, France, Latvia, the United Kingdom, and of course the U.S. — are also complicit in this war crime.


This U.N. Security Council emergency meeting will likely be remembered as the day the United Nations ceased to function from its headquarters on American soil.

An international organization dedicated to the peaceful settlement of disputes cannot credibly operate from a country that wages illegal wars, threatens member states with annihilation, and treats U.N. Security Council resolutions as disposable instruments of convenience.

For the U.N. to survive, and we need it to survive, it will need several homes around the world — in Brazil, China, India, South Africa, and others — honoring the true multipolarity of our world.

Let us be clear about what the United States and Israel are pursuing. The U.S. objective is not the security of the American people. The objective is global hegemony. The attempt is to destroy the U.N. and the international rule of law — an attempt that will fail. 

Israel’s objective is to establish a Greater Israel, destroy the Palestinian people, and assert its hegemony over hundreds of millions of Arabs across the Middle East (from the Nile to the Euphrates, as U.S. Ambassador Mike Huckabee recently asserted).

The United States’ delusional efforts at global hegemony are proceeding region by region. The U.S. has recently claimed, in a wholly twisted supposed revival of the Monroe Doctrine, that it controls the Western Hemisphere and can dictate how Latin American countries conduct their economic and political affairs.

The U.S. kidnapped the sitting Venezuelan president to prove the point, and it now threatens to overthrow the Cuban government as well.

Today’s war against Iran aims to prove that the U.S. similarly owns the Middle East. The war is part of a 30-year campaign, initiated by the Clean Break doctrine, to overthrow all governments that oppose U.S. and Israeli hegemony in the region.

Those joint Israel-U.S. wars have included the genocide in Gaza, the occupation of the West Bank and the decades of wars and regime-change operations in Iran, Iraq, LebanonLibyaSomaliaSudanSyria, and Yemen.

One part of the U.S. global plan is to commandeer the world’s oil exports and to weaken China and Russia in the process. The U.S. seizure of Venezuela was designed to ensure American control of that country’s oil exports, especially to control the flow of oil to China.

U.S. sanctions on Russia aim to prevent Russian oil from reaching India and China. Now the U.S. aims to stop the flow of Iran’s oil to China. More broadly, the U.S. aims to control the entire Gulf region plus Iran to maintain its imperial dominance.

The international order that Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt helped to build after the catastrophe of WWII was founded on a simple and profound idea — that law and respect, not force, should govern relations among states.

That idea is now being destroyed by the very nation that did most to promote it in founding the U.N. The irony is bitter beyond measure.

U.N. Security Council meeting on Feb. 28 on Iran following U.S.-Israeli attacks. (U.N. Photo/Eskinder Debebe)

The truth is that the devastation of the war will not directly affect the so-called West: their children will not suffer traumas or death, and their countries will not be set ablaze. The victims of this attack are the people of the Middle East. They are the expendable ones who suffer from Western arrogance, abuse of power, and addiction to war.

We close with two observations. First, the United States will not achieve global hegemony or kill the U.N. The world is too large, too diverse, and too determined to resist domination by any single power, much less one with 4 percent of the world’s population.

The world outside of the U.S. and the countries it occupies want the U.N. to live and thrive. The U.S. attempt will surely fail, but it may cause immense suffering before it does.

Second, if Israel continues its addiction to war and occupation, it too will not survive. That addiction represents a mix of theocracy and post-traumatic stress.

Part of Israel believes that it is the biblical kingdom of the 5th century BC. The other part lives in the traumatic memory of the Holocaust, and so is determined to kill any perceived adversary rather than learn to live together with it in peace.

The Israeli Ambassador’s twisted defense of Israel’s brazen attack on Iran, as usual, cited the Bible and Auschwitz as the two justifications. These are Israel’s two perennial references, but not the real world of today.

A state that depends on permanent war, permanent occupation and slaughter of the Palestinians, and the indefinite subjugation of millions of people has no viable future, and the policies that the United States is now pursuing on Israel’s behalf will accelerate rather than prevent that outcome.

The two-state solution, which the Council has endorsed repeatedly, offers Israel a path to peace. Tragically Israel rejects that. The result, eventually, will be the end of Israel itself in its current form, especially as the U.S. population is rapidly turning against Israel’s violent theocracy and towards the cause of Palestine.

Perhaps there will be one democratic state for both Arabs and Jews living in peace, together, with an end of apartheid rule.

These are harsh truths, but emergencies demand honesty. The U.N. is being murdered by Israel and the United States. The Security Council must rouse itself from their military occupation by the U.S. and remember that they are the stewards of the U.N. Charter’s promise to maintain international peace and security.

Jeffrey D. Sachs is a university professor and director of the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University, where he directed The Earth Institute from 2002 until 2016. He is also president of the U.N. Sustainable Development Solutions Network and a commissioner of the U.N. Broadband Commission for Development.

Sybil Fares is a specialist and adviser in Middle East policy and sustainable development at SDSN.