For decades, the Middle East’s strategic order rested on three core assumptions. First, the United States could impose political outcomes through overwhelming military superiority. Second, Israel maintained complete regional control over escalation. Third, that Iran would remain a permanently isolated regional power, with its influence dependent on allied movements rather than its own capabilities.
Following the forty-day war and its aftermath, Irish political thinker Dylan Evans argues that all three assumptions have now been fundamentally overturned. While military academies and strategic planners will study the conflict for years to come, he believes its most important lessons are already unmistakably clear.
A Decisive Strategic Victory for Iran
According to Evans, Iran emerged from the conflict politically stronger than when it entered it.
Israel failed to achieve its strategic objectives, while the United States once again discovered that overwhelming military power does not automatically translate into the ability to dictate political outcomes.
Conventional narratives will focus on tactical successes and battlefield setbacks. However, Evans argues that this misses the central issue. Wars are not measured by casualty figures or the number of air sorties. Their true measure lies in whether they improve a state’s long term strategic position. Judged by that standard, he contends that Iran was the clear victor.
Before the conflict, Tehran faced significant internal pressure. Its economy remained constrained by sanctions, political dissatisfaction was evident, and international isolation appeared firmly entrenched.
Today, Evans argues, Iran has demonstrated something even more valuable than missiles or drones: resilience.
Despite facing a coordinated military campaign launched by two of the world’s most powerful armed forces, the Iranian state avoided the political collapse that many had anticipated.
Perhaps more importantly, the conflict demonstrated that the assassination of senior leadership is no longer an effective military strategy against a highly decentralised state.
For years, Israeli strategic planning had been built on the assumption that eliminating senior Iranian commanders would cripple the country’s command structure. Instead, Iran’s leadership apparatus continued functioning. Missile production continued uninterrupted. Drone operations remained active. Military decision making proceeded without paralysis.
According to Evans, the conflict revealed that Iran’s political and military system is considerably more resilient than many Western analysts had previously assumed.
He also argues that Iran’s indigenous military capabilities proved equally significant. Years of investment in decentralised command structures, underground infrastructure and relatively low cost precision strike systems delivered substantial strategic returns.
The key lesson, he says, is not that Iran possesses overwhelming military superiority, but that even the most advanced Western and Israeli military technology cannot necessarily secure decisive political outcomes against a determined and prepared adversary.
Fundamental Geopolitical Shifts
For the United States, Evans believes this conflict represents another chapter in the gradual erosion of American strategic influence.
Iraq exposed the limits of military occupation.
Afghanistan demonstrated the limitations of foreign intervention and nation building.
This war, he argues, revealed the limits of coercive escalation against a large and resilient regional power.
Military superiority has become increasingly expensive while delivering diminishing political returns.
Meanwhile, China observed developments from a distance.
Throughout history, great powers often decline not because they suffer direct defeat, but because they exhaust themselves attempting to preserve an increasingly fragile international order.
Beijing, Evans notes, had little need to intervene. Instead, it watched its principal competitor expend significant military and political resources while regional actors increasingly sought long term stability through alternative partnerships.
The Gulf’s Strategic Reassessment
According to Evans, nowhere are these changing calculations more apparent than in the Gulf.
For many years, Gulf states accepted a security framework based on American military protection alongside a steadily expanding strategic partnership with Israel.
Today, however, that arrangement appears considerably less attractive.
Rather than shielding Gulf states from conflict, American military bases have increasingly become potential targets for Iranian retaliation.
As a result, the long standing assumption that external security guarantees can replace regional diplomacy has been seriously weakened.
Evans argues that Gulf capitals are now reaching conclusions that would have seemed politically unimaginable only a few years ago.
Iran remains a permanent regional reality.
Neither sanctions, military pressure nor regime change campaigns have altered that geographical fact.
Ultimately, neighbouring states face only two enduring choices: perpetual confrontation or pragmatic coexistence.
Increasingly, Gulf leaders appear to be favouring the latter.
This does not mean they are embracing Iranian regional dominance.
Instead, Evans argues they will continue balancing Iranian influence whenever necessary.
However, strategic balancing differs fundamentally from permanent hostility.
Economic integration, diplomatic engagement and carefully managed competition have become far more attractive than endless cycles of escalation.
He considers this one of the conflict’s most significant strategic consequences.
Declining Support for Israel’s Military Agenda
Washington, Evans argues, has also begun, albeit gradually and unevenly, to reassess some of its long held assumptions.
For decades, successive American administrations largely viewed unwavering support for Israel’s military objectives as synonymous with advancing US strategic interests.
That proposition, he suggests, is becoming increasingly difficult to sustain.
Each new regional escalation imposes additional political, economic and military costs on Washington.
European allies likewise view instability around the Gulf not merely as a regional concern, but as a direct threat to global energy markets, inflation and broader economic security.
According to Evans, this reassessment is being driven less by ideology than by practical strategic interests.
This does not imply that the American Israeli relationship is close to collapsing.
Domestic political support within the United States remains strong, while institutional ties continue to run deep.
Nevertheless, strategic partnerships evolve according to interests rather than permanence.
If Israeli decision makers continue pursuing maximal military objectives without realistic political end goals, Washington may eventually confront a difficult question: whose strategic interests are ultimately being served?
Israel itself, Evans argues, faces a similarly difficult reckoning.
Military superiority cannot indefinitely substitute for coherent political strategy.
Repeated military campaigns across Gaza, Lebanon, Syria and Iran have demonstrated considerable tactical capability, yet their long term strategic outcomes have become increasingly uncertain.
Deterrence becomes difficult to sustain when adversaries repeatedly recover, adapt and return stronger than before.
No state, regardless of its military strength, can rely indefinitely on continual escalation without eventually experiencing diminishing strategic returns.
A New Regional Order
Evans concludes that the Middle East emerging from this conflict differs fundamentally from the one that entered it.
Iran has demonstrated both resilience and credible deterrence.
Gulf states are increasingly pursuing diplomatic hedging instead of dependence on external powers.
American influence remains significant but is no longer absolute or globally decisive.
Israel continues to possess exceptional military capabilities, yet faces growing questions regarding the long term sustainability of its strategic approach.
History rarely delivers neat or satisfying conclusions, and this conflict is no exception.
However, future historians may ultimately regard it as the moment when the post Cold War Middle East gave way to a genuinely multipolar regional order, one in which military dominance alone no longer guarantees political success, and where cautious accommodation gradually becomes more rational than perpetual confrontation.



