No Result
View All Result
SUBMIT YOUR ARTICLES
  • Login
Saturday, February 21, 2026
TheAdviserMagazine.com
  • Home
  • Financial Planning
    • Financial Planning
    • Personal Finance
  • Market Research
    • Business
    • Investing
    • Money
    • Economy
    • Markets
    • Stocks
    • Trading
  • 401k Plans
  • College
  • IRS & Taxes
  • Estate Plans
  • Social Security
  • Medicare
  • Legal
  • Home
  • Financial Planning
    • Financial Planning
    • Personal Finance
  • Market Research
    • Business
    • Investing
    • Money
    • Economy
    • Markets
    • Stocks
    • Trading
  • 401k Plans
  • College
  • IRS & Taxes
  • Estate Plans
  • Social Security
  • Medicare
  • Legal
No Result
View All Result
TheAdviserMagazine.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Market Research Economy

Why Iran Must Be Broken to Build the U.S.–Israeli Vision for a “New Middle East”

by TheAdviserMagazine
3 weeks ago
in Economy
Reading Time: 8 mins read
A A
Why Iran Must Be Broken to Build the U.S.–Israeli Vision for a “New Middle East”
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LInkedIn


The U.S. and Israel want to redraw the face of the Middle East, as Netanyahu has explicitly stated, to ensure the continuation of Israel’s colonial project, move energy flows away from China, and gain leverage over oil prices. Iran stands in the way of that project—not simply as a hostile state, but as a systemic obstacle to a reordered region.

For much of the past decades, the Middle East had a bipolar order. On the one hand, American/Israeli hegemony; on the other, Iran as the region’s only coherent counter-system to that hegemony. Through the so-called Axis of Resistance—linking Tehran with Hezbollah, Syria, Palestinian militias, and affiliated forces across Iraq and Yemen—Iran imposed a form of negative order.

This bipolar structure constrained Israeli freedom of action, limited Arab strategic autonomy, and placed an informal ceiling on regional realignment by threatening multi-front escalation. Regional competition operated within these bounds, and Iran’s presence helped suppress open rivalry among Arab states by imposing costs on unilateral moves. However, this bipolar order is now ending.

The U.S. has expressed a desire to disengage from the region—not to abandon it, but to reduce its physical engagement while offshoring control costs to allies. As a result, over the past two years, Israel together with the U.S. and other allies have conducted a systematic campaign to degrade the Axis and dismantle much of its regional proxy capacity. What remains is a collection of weakened local actors operating under financial strain, intense surveillance, and tightening escalation ceilings, alongside an Iranian state under acute pressure.

The strongest pressure on Iran, aside from last year’s “12 Days War,” has been economic, through sanctions that have crippled Iran’s economic capacity, placing serious stress on both the state and the population. This is what led to the initial protests on December 28, which were subsequently co-opted by foreign agents, most likely Mossad, as they stated. In a rare moment of honesty, U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent acknowledged that sanctions were responsible for the collapse of the Iranian currency and called it a form of “statecraft.” Rather, it constitutes a form of economic warfare.

Justin Podur argues that part of the blame lies with Iranian officials who push for “financialization” and neoliberal economic policies instead of seeking alternative models. He quotes Yousef Abazari asking sardonically: “what’s the point of resisting America if Iran implements the same economic policies on its people? Iran has been attacked by many Western weapons, but among the worst weapons seems to be giving a Western economics education to many of Iran’s leaders.”

The result is the collapse of bipolarity. A regional system once bounded by American management on one side and Iranian-led resistance on the other has lost both constraints, producing an environment in which the security architecture is being redefined. Previous regional powers, such as Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Israel, are extending their reach to secure their interests and fill the vacuum. New alliances are forming and new poles are emerging. It is within this context that the U.S. and Israel’s desire to attack Iran must be understood.

That is because without a U.S. counterbalance, Iran, if internationally integrated and allowed to develop its full potential, could become a hegemonic power in the region. This is something that Israel wants to avoid at all costs, including by pushing for the collapse of the state. The U.S. cannot allow this either, as it would strengthen Chinese and Russian influence in the region and place significant energy reserves outside its direct reach. Arab neighbours, though they prefer a weaker Iran, do not want to see it collapse.

However, it seems increasingly improbable that Trump will de-escalate military pressure against Iran without a prize he can market as a great triumph. It also seems increasingly improbable that such a win will come through negotiations. The Iranians are willing, as they have made abundantly clear, to negotiate, but Trump is demanding total submission, which they will not accept. This leaves very little room for a diplomatic solution.

Larry Johnson proposes three possible scenarios. The first is that the Turks, Arabs, Chinese, and Russians manage to convince the Trump administration of the risks of a military strike and persuade it to accept some symbolic concessions through negotiations. Both Johnson and I see this as the preferred scenario, but it is unlikely. If the U.S. military buildup against Venezuela is any guide, Trump would demand a trophy—ideally the Iranian Supreme Leader, Khamenei—which Iranians will not accept.

In an analysis shared at NC, Andrew Korybko proposes that Iran could avert an attack by agreeing to divert oil flows from China to India, which he considers one of the U.S. objectives. While this logic is sound, it is doubtful that such a concession would now suffice to justify de-escalation. As Yves noted in the introduction to that article, the U.S. may already have sought Iranian acquiescence to a performative strike, which Iran refused.

The second scenario is that the U.S. launches a targeted attack that causes the collapse of the Iranian government. The ensuing chaos would drive the country into civil war and possible balkanization. In this scenario, the U.S. would support a regime to control oil production under its supervision, as it claims to be doing in Venezuela, even if that regime held limited territory. This is Israel’s preferred outcome—but one most Arab states are actively trying to prevent.

Here, end-state preferences diverge sharply. Israel’s strategic horizon is regime change. It is not merely attempting to limit Iranian projection or degrade capabilities; it seeks to permanently break the Islamic Republic, without the possibility of regeneration. This objective is evident both in sustained military pressure and in Israeli messaging toward Iran’s protest movements, which consistently frame regime collapse as an acceptable—indeed, desirable—terminal outcome.

Arab preferences are fundamentally different. Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states do not want regime change in Iran. They may prefer an Iran that is weakened, constrained, and internationally isolated—but not a collapsing state whose internal convulsions could spill across borders or trigger uncontrolled escalation. At the same time, they also oppose the opposite outcome: a secular, wealthy, internationally reintegrated Iran normalized with the West and capable of stable relations with both Washington and Israel. Such an Iran would become a formidable competitor for regional primacy.

This preference is inseparable from oil market dynamics. The normalization of Iran would allow production to return to four million barrels per day or more. Combined with a potential rehabilitation of Venezuelan output, this would inject massive supply into already volatile markets, undermining OPEC+ leverage and depressing prices at precisely the moment Saudi Arabia requires elevated revenues to sustain domestic transformation. From Riyadh’s perspective, a sanctioned Iran is economically advantageous. Iranian normalization threatens the material foundations of Saudi power.

This divergence produces a recurring structural collision between Saudi and Israeli strategies. Israel seeks regime collapse as a terminal victory; Saudi Arabia seeks a weakened but intact Islamic Republic kept in pariah status. Both countries are reportedly trying to influence Trump—Israel in favor of a military strike, Saudi Arabia in favor of de-escalation.

The third scenario—and the most probable if the U.S. neither stands down nor reaches an agreement—is a protracted conflict. The U.S. and Israel would achieve initial strikes, but as air defenses are depleted, Iran would begin striking sensitive targets, as seen in the so-called “12 Days War.” As Johnson notes, if combat lasts more than two weeks, U.S. operations become extremely difficult—especially if the Strait of Hormuz is closed.

Simplicius suggests the U.S. may attempt a naval blockade, following what the U.S. administration perceives as success in Venezuela, to force concessions or internal defections. This is a variation of the first scenario and substantially misreads the situation. Iran holds regional leverage that Venezuela never had. China and Russia, due to proximity and strategic interests, would be far more inclined to provide support. And for Washington, sustaining a prolonged pressure campaign without a clear justification would be politically costly.

What these scenarios do not consider is what Julian Macfarlane describes, quoting Shivan Mahendrarajah, as Iran’s pivot to consider U.S. and Israeli military and economic pressure from a “manageable conflict” to as an “existential threat”. 

Accordingly, Iran’s leadership has concluded that “if Tehran does not ‘sort out’ the U.S./Israel problem in the immediate future, the Islamic Republic of Iran will collapse under the crushing weight of sanctions, currency devaluation, inflation, socio-economic unrest, and the system’s internal contradictions. Iran needs a complete solution to its U.S./Israel problem.”

This may compel Iran’s leadership to seek out conflict and attempt to cause maximum damage. “Iran’s most powerful tool is its ability to wage economic warfare—to wit, jack up oil and gas prices and crash U.S., U.K., and EU equity markets and the dollar,” writes Macfarlane.

Faced with this most plausible scenario, the question is why the U.S. has chosen the path of escalation. The justifications do not hold. If Iran’s nuclear program was already “obliterated,” then escalation cannot plausibly be about non-proliferation. Iran had previously accepted monitored enrichment until Trump withdrew, and it was attacked while negotiations were ongoing.

Nor does the protest justification stand. Initial demonstrations were triggered by economic mismanagement and reversed policy decisions. What followed those initial protests was a two-week destabilization and propaganda campaign, reportedly directed by Mossad and the CIA and amplified by Western media with inflated casualty figures. This does not constitute a credible humanitarian rationale for war.

Israel’s lobbyists in Washington cannot be underestimated, but they should not be overestimated either. Over the past year, Israel has faced an unprecedented situation: not that the U.S. has withdrawn or diminished its support, but that Netanyahu was no longer certain how far that support could be extended. This can be inferred from the numerous trips to the U.S. since Trump became president. The Israeli lobby must have sold this attack not only as beneficial for Israel, but also as beneficial for the U.S. Given Trump’s transactional approach, ideology alone cannot explain the decision.

If similarities to Venezuela are to serve as a guide, then the U.S. is after control of the oil. It could accept a submissive regime in Tehran after extracting its public prize, while controlling oil flows and revenues. By controlling Iranian oil together with Venezuelan oil, the U.S. would control the largest share of oil reserves in the world. This would provide leverage against China and allow the U.S. to counteract OPEC+ price movements at a time when Saudi Arabia needs high prices and Trump needs low prices to rein in domestic energy costs ahead of the midterms. The strength of the dollar may also be part of the equation.

The U.S. and Israel are out to “change the face of the Middle East,” each for its own reasons—some of which collide. Arab countries, emerging from decades of American hegemony that suppressed their ambitions and rivalries, are confronting a new reality that requires redrawing alliances. The Islamic Republic of Iran has been preparing for this moment almost since its inception. The question is whether it will stand.



Source link

Tags: brokenBuildEastIranMiddleU.S.Israelivision
ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

Apple buys Israeli startup Q.ai

Next Post

It’s People All The Way Down

Related Posts

edit post
Supreme Court’s Trump tariff decision: five takeaways

Supreme Court’s Trump tariff decision: five takeaways

by TheAdviserMagazine
February 21, 2026
0

U.S. President Donald Trump gestures as he speaks during a press briefing at the White House, following the Supreme Court's...

edit post
Four-Letter Economic Words | Mises Institute

Four-Letter Economic Words | Mises Institute

by TheAdviserMagazine
February 21, 2026
0

In this episode, Mark Thornton offers a practical “seven-word” framework for navigating economic life, especially when policy chaos and uncertainty...

edit post
Market Talk – February 20, 2026

Market Talk – February 20, 2026

by TheAdviserMagazine
February 20, 2026
0

    ASIA: The major Asian stock markets had a mixed day today: • NIKKEI 225 decreased 642.13 points or...

edit post
Trump’s Tariffs & The New Risk Ahead

Trump’s Tariffs & The New Risk Ahead

by TheAdviserMagazine
February 20, 2026
0

Over 60% of total tariff revenue in 2025 stemmed from tariffs imposed under IEEPA, which has never before been used...

edit post
After Supreme Court ruling, industries still face higher rates

After Supreme Court ruling, industries still face higher rates

by TheAdviserMagazine
February 20, 2026
0

The Supreme Court during a rain storm in Washington, Feb. 20, 2026.Annabelle Gordon | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesThe Supreme Court...

edit post
Supreme Court Overrule’s Trump’s Tariffs

Supreme Court Overrule’s Trump’s Tariffs

by TheAdviserMagazine
February 20, 2026
0

Download the Decision: Trump Tariffs 2-20-26 24-1287_4gcj The Supreme Court has ruled as I expected. I have said on Podcasts that...

Next Post
edit post
It’s People All The Way Down

It’s People All The Way Down

edit post
Lazy Portfolio Basics: Easy, Low-Cost Wealth Building 

Lazy Portfolio Basics: Easy, Low-Cost Wealth Building 

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
edit post
Medicare Fraud In California – 2.5% Of The Population Accounts For 18% Of NATIONWIDE Healthcare Spending

Medicare Fraud In California – 2.5% Of The Population Accounts For 18% Of NATIONWIDE Healthcare Spending

February 3, 2026
edit post
North Carolina Updates How Wills Can Be Stored

North Carolina Updates How Wills Can Be Stored

February 10, 2026
edit post
Gasoline-starved California is turning to fuel from the Bahamas

Gasoline-starved California is turning to fuel from the Bahamas

February 15, 2026
edit post
Where Is My 2025 Oregon State Tax Refund

Where Is My 2025 Oregon State Tax Refund

February 13, 2026
edit post
2025 Delaware State Tax Refund – DE Tax Brackets

2025 Delaware State Tax Refund – DE Tax Brackets

February 16, 2026
edit post
Key Nevada legislator says lawmakers will push for independent audit of altered public record in Nevada OSHA’s Boring Company inspection 

Key Nevada legislator says lawmakers will push for independent audit of altered public record in Nevada OSHA’s Boring Company inspection 

February 4, 2026
edit post
Iran concerns hit interest rate cut likelihood

Iran concerns hit interest rate cut likelihood

0
edit post
Could You Get a Big Tariff Rebate Check? Here’s the Latest.

Could You Get a Big Tariff Rebate Check? Here’s the Latest.

0
edit post
AARP Examines Ways to Strengthen Original Medicare 

AARP Examines Ways to Strengthen Original Medicare 

0
edit post
Pre-Existing Conditions in Personal Injury Claims: Barrier or Advantage?

Pre-Existing Conditions in Personal Injury Claims: Barrier or Advantage?

0
edit post
The US Trade Deficit – A Cause For Concern?

The US Trade Deficit – A Cause For Concern?

0
edit post
Jordi Visser: AI and crypto will disrupt existing market structures, stablecoins are processing more volume than Mastercard, and Bitcoin’s performance is closely tied to software ETFs

Jordi Visser: AI and crypto will disrupt existing market structures, stablecoins are processing more volume than Mastercard, and Bitcoin’s performance is closely tied to software ETFs

0
edit post
Could You Get a Big Tariff Rebate Check? Here’s the Latest.

Could You Get a Big Tariff Rebate Check? Here’s the Latest.

February 21, 2026
edit post
How Many Fed Rate Cuts Can We Expect this Year?

How Many Fed Rate Cuts Can We Expect this Year?

February 21, 2026
edit post
World shakes its weary head at more Trump tariff chaos as he ‘says a lot of things, and many of them aren’t true’

World shakes its weary head at more Trump tariff chaos as he ‘says a lot of things, and many of them aren’t true’

February 21, 2026
edit post
Jordi Visser: AI and crypto will disrupt existing market structures, stablecoins are processing more volume than Mastercard, and Bitcoin’s performance is closely tied to software ETFs

Jordi Visser: AI and crypto will disrupt existing market structures, stablecoins are processing more volume than Mastercard, and Bitcoin’s performance is closely tied to software ETFs

February 21, 2026
edit post
Hot Stocks: KW 8 / 2026 – Der neue Superzyklus der Verteidigung!

Hot Stocks: KW 8 / 2026 – Der neue Superzyklus der Verteidigung!

February 21, 2026
edit post
HG Vora Dumps All Six Flags Shares Worth .4 Million

HG Vora Dumps All Six Flags Shares Worth $49.4 Million

February 21, 2026
The Adviser Magazine

The first and only national digital and print magazine that connects individuals, families, and businesses to Fee-Only financial advisers, accountants, attorneys and college guidance counselors.

CATEGORIES

  • 401k Plans
  • Business
  • College
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economy
  • Estate Plans
  • Financial Planning
  • Investing
  • IRS & Taxes
  • Legal
  • Market Analysis
  • Markets
  • Medicare
  • Money
  • Personal Finance
  • Social Security
  • Startups
  • Stock Market
  • Trading

LATEST UPDATES

  • Could You Get a Big Tariff Rebate Check? Here’s the Latest.
  • How Many Fed Rate Cuts Can We Expect this Year?
  • World shakes its weary head at more Trump tariff chaos as he ‘says a lot of things, and many of them aren’t true’
  • Our Great Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use, Legal Notices & Disclosures
  • Contact us
  • About Us

© Copyright 2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Financial Planning
    • Financial Planning
    • Personal Finance
  • Market Research
    • Business
    • Investing
    • Money
    • Economy
    • Markets
    • Stocks
    • Trading
  • 401k Plans
  • College
  • IRS & Taxes
  • Estate Plans
  • Social Security
  • Medicare
  • Legal

© Copyright 2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.