If anyone is interested in a look at this modern war by applying age old principles of geopolitics, here is my take on it:
Let us apply the Melian Dialogue from the Peloponnesian War to understand the strategic interaction between the United States and Iran, where a dominant power confronts a weaker state and reduces politics to raw asymmetry: the strong impose, the weak endure.
Yet the deeper lesson is more subtle. Athens’ reliance on coercion and Melos’ rigid defiance both prove self-defeating. The enduring insight is that power, whether excessive or insufficiently adaptive, can undermine itself.
For the United States, the danger lies in overusing power—allowing coercion, credibility concerns, and overextension to erode legitimacy and long-term influence. For Iran, the risk lies in overusing resistance—allowing defiance, escalation, and rigidity to generate isolation, economic damage, and strategic vulnerability. Both sides, in different ways, face the same structural problem: how to use their respective forms of power without exhausting them.
From the American perspective, a sustainable strategy requires discipline in the use of strength. This means defining limited objectives—such as preventing nuclear proliferation and maintaining regional stability—rather than treating every confrontation as a test of prestige. It also requires embedding deterrence within a broader political framework, where military power is paired with diplomacy, economic tools, and clear pathways for de-escalation. Alliances and legitimacy must be treated as strategic assets, not constraints, while economic coercion should be calibrated to achievable goals. Above all, the United States must avoid overextension, recognizing that long-term decline more often results from cumulative strain than sudden defeat.
From Iran’s perspective, a parallel form of discipline is required. Operating under structural asymmetry, Iran’s strategy centers on survival through deterrence and autonomy. Yet overreliance on asymmetric escalation, proxy networks, and confrontational identity can produce diminishing returns. A post-Melian approach for Iran would emphasize controlled resistance: maintaining the capacity to impose costs while avoiding actions that trigger overwhelming retaliation. It would focus on limited, achievable objectives—such as sanctions relief and security assurances—while using escalation selectively as a negotiating tool. Economic resilience and strategic flexibility would be treated as core elements of national security, rather than secondary concerns.
The symmetry of these strategies is striking. Both call for restraint, clarity of purpose, and the preservation of flexibility. Both reject maximalism—whether in the form of dominance or defiance—in favor of sustainability. And both recognize that legitimacy, whether expressed through alliances or selective engagement, functions as a form of power in its own right.
Ultimately, the Melian Dialogue offers a shared warning. The strong may hasten their decline through hubris; the weak may hasten their destruction through inflexibility. In the contemporary U.S.–Iran context, avoiding these outcomes requires not the abandonment of power, but its careful calibration. Enduring advantage lies not in overwhelming the adversary, but in managing the conflict in ways that preserve long-term strength, stability, and strategic choice.