If the west helps they will be getting into the backseat of the bus driven by the drunks, nowhere near the steering wheel.
Best to stay off and hope the drunks dont kill anyone before they crash.
Well that seems to be working so well now?
Make a coalition, build up a credible force for invasion, move appropriate assets into theatre for defense of the area — all the things that made sense to have in place prior to the kickoff of the current season.
Militarily Iran is easy to conquer, hard to occupy. Yes there is a difference.
There is only a problem if you don’t know LoAC and attempt to model it from single aspects in isolation from all others. Proportionality always matters.
In theory, but let’s face it, the victory writes the rules, or at least interprets their meaning.
A lot of infrastructure can be legitimately targeted due to the nature of the Iranian government. At least from the point of view of anyone who has a say in the situation.
We justified dropping nukes on Japan to save allies lives, we justified the Dresden Fire bombing. Yes this isn’t the 1940’s, and I do not see anyone in the West advocating for casually carpet bombing Iran, but there is the ability to destroy or interdict various infrastructure used by the Regime with a low level of collateral damage to the civilian population.
Russia has used incendiary weapons on civilians in Ukraine - I don’t see anyone stopping them.
But at the end of the day, I think
@Brad Sallows is correct when he says a lot of the senior figures in the Regime has little interest in losing their lives for the cause. Capitulation in the face over overwhelming force aligned against them I beleive would a likely COA if they believed that force would be used.
The question everyone should be asking is not why we got in this mess - that can happen later — but how to get the world out of it at a better place.
Leaving the current system in place in Iran isn’t doing that.