Israel’s true strategic surface, the 1,200 square miles that matter, is terminally small. Strip away the uninhabited Negev and unstrikeable agricultural belts, and what remains is a hyper-dense, fragile lattice of power, industry, and C4I nodes stacked atop civilian density. No strategic depth, no room to maneuver, and no capacity to absorb. Every hit is a system hit.
Meanwhile, Iran operates from a defense-in-depth paradigm, 636,000 square miles of sovereign volume, dozens of hardened redundancies, and decades of war-conditioned infrastructure. But more importantly, Iran manufactures its missile inventory domestically at industrial scale. Israel does not. The Israeli war machine is a proxy scaffold: F-35s from Lockheed Martin, interceptors from Raytheon, C4I firmware with NSA backdoors, and kill-chain logistics that begin and end in the Pentagon.
This is why Tel Aviv’s confidence is not self-derived. CENTCOM is the real command spine, and the entire Israeli escalation posture is designed with one core assumption: the Americans will step in before the ammo runs out. But the calculus flips if the U.S. blinks, delays, or decides, under resource pressure from the Pacific or domestic unrest, that a second-hand war with a nuclear-threshold state isn’t worth it.