The problem is that there isn't enough time to build an Iranian air force. It takes years to rebuild. What's available is a short-term truce. To understand the game, America and the West are presenting information that the Iranian nuclear program has not been significantly damaged, meaning the mission has not been completed, so they must continue their strikes.
Israel is ready to get rid of Donald Trump so that strikes on Iran can resume. So what's the solution?
Egypt was building an Egyptian air defense system under fire and enemy air attacks. That means the air force is being built immediately, such as training pilots in neighboring countries and employing foreign pilots, just as Turkey employed Pakistani pilots when it faced a pilot shortage.
Iran can also restore its missile program by obtaining complete missiles from North Korea, China, and Pakistan, as well as launch pads to replace those destroyed, so that Iran can destroy all Israeli airfields in a single sortie. The Israelis are preparing for a new round, perhaps building new bunkers to prepare for a strike on Iran, and the Jews will not withstand missile strikes for long. But will they? Iran will persevere.
The Iranian Air Force's visit to Battalion to obtain weapons. China can provide integrated air defense systems, but will it even give Israel the opportunity to deploy air defense missile batteries? Iranian airspace is open to Israeli aircraft, unlike American airspace. Matters are more complicated than some imagine. Iran's vast territory requires numerous and diverse air defense systems. In the 1970s, Egypt, in the initial phase, built 150 medium- and long-range air defense missile batteries, 300 air defense artillery batteries, 2,000 SAM-7 launchers, 1,000 SAM-7 missiles, and 300 air defense radars in a matter of months. It was a less complex network with less sophisticated command and control capabilities than today.
Currently, Iran, with its vast territory, requires complex multi-layered air defense systems, including C5RISR systems, which require a long time to integrate, develop, and deploy. Time is not in Iran's favor, therefore. Iran is facing a major challenge in its missile capabilities, weakening them as quickly as possible. Israel's plan is to weaken Iran with initial strikes, which were carried out over 12 days, followed by a second phase of more complex and intense strikes over longer periods. This will leave Iran's skies and facilities exposed, and its losses heavy due to the lack of an air force to participate in a complex, multi-layered air defense. Things are not as easy as some imagine, and time is not really available.