After U.S. and Israeli missiles
struck Iran’s
nuclear sites in June 2025, Tehran responded with a limited attack on the
American airbase in Qatar. Five years before that, a U.S. drone strike
against Qasem Soleimani, head of the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps Quds Force, was followed by an attack on two American bases in Iraq
shortly thereafter.
Expect none of that restraint by Iran’s leaders following the latest U.S. and Israeli military operation currently playing out in the Gulf nation. In the early hours of Feb. 28, 2026, hundreds of missiles struck multiple sites in Iran, including a compound housing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who Iranian state media later confirmed had died in the attack.
“Operation Epic Fury,” as the U.S. Department of Defense has called the strikes, follows months of U.S. military buildup in the region. But it also come after apparent diplomatic efforts, in the shape of a series of nuclear talks in Oman and Geneva aimed at a peaceful resolution. Any such deal is surely now completely off the table. In scale and scope, the U.S. and Israel attack goes far beyond any previous strikes on the Gulf nation.
In response, Iran has said it will use “crushing” force. As an expert on Middle East affairs and a former senior official at the National Security Council during the first Trump administration, I believe the calculus both in Washington and more so in Tehran is very different from earlier confrontations: Iran’s leaders almost certainly see this as an existential threat given President Donald Trump’s statement and the military campaign already underway. And there appears to be no obvious off-ramp to avoid further escalation.
What we should expect now is a
response from Tehran that utilizes all of its capabilities – even though they
have been significantly degraded. And that should be a worry for all
nations in the region and beyond.
The apparent aims of the US
operation
It is important to note that we are in the early stages of this conflict – much is unknown. As of Feb. 28, it is unclear who has been killed among Iran’s leadership and to what extent Iran’s ballistic missile capabilities have been degraded. The fact that ballistic missiles have been launched at regional states that host U.S. military bases suggest that, at a minimum, Iran’s military capabilities have not been entirely wiped out.
Iran fired
over 600 missiles against Israel last June during their 12-day war,
but media
reporting and Iranian
statements over the past month suggested that Iran managed to
replenish some of its missile inventory, which it is now using.
Clearly Washington is intent
on crippling
Iran’s ballistic program, as it is that capability that allows Iran to
threaten the region most directly. A sticking
point in the negotiations in Geneva and Oman was U.S. officials’
insistence that both Iran’s ballistic missiles and its funneling of support to
proxy groups in the region be on the table, along with the longstanding
condition that Tehran ends all uranium enrichment. Tehran
has long resisted attempts to have limits on its ballistic missiles as
part of any negotiated nuclear deal given their importance in Iran’s national
security doctrine.
This explains why some U.S. and
Israeli strikes appear to be aimed at taking out Iran’s ballistic and cruise
missile launch sites and production facilities and storage locations for such
weapons.
With no nuclear weapon, Iran’s
ballistic missiles have been the country’s go-to method for responding to any
threat. And so far in the current conflict, they have been used on
nations including the United
Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain.
‘It will be yours to take’
But the Trump administration
appears to have expanded its aims beyond removing Iran’s nuclear and
non-nuclear military threat. The latest
strikes have gone after leadership, too, taking out Khamenei alongside
other key members of the regime.
It is clear that the U.S.
administration hopes that regime change will follow Operation Epic Fury. “When
we are finished, take over your government. It will be yours to take,” Trump
told Iranians via a video message recorded during the early hours of
the attack.
U.S. President Donald Trump
addressed the nation on Iran strikes. US
President Trump Via Truth Social/Anadolu via Getty Images
Regime change carries risks
for Trump
Signaling a regime change
operation may encourage Iranians unhappy with decades of repressive rule and
economic woes to continue where they left off in January – when hundreds
of thousands took to the street to protest.
But it carries risks for the
U.S. and its interests. Iran’s leaders will no longer feel constrained, as they
did after the Soleimani assassination and the June 2025 conflict. On those
occasions, Iran responded in a way that was not even proportionate to its
losses – limited strikes on American military bases in the region.
Now the gloves are off, and each
side will be trying to land a knockout blow. But what does that constitute? The
U.S. administration appears to be set on regime change. Iran’s leadership will
be looking for something that goes beyond its previous retaliatory strikes –
and that likely means American deaths. That eventuality has been anticipated by
Trump, who warned
that there might be American casualties.
So why is Trump willing to risk
that now? It is clear to me that despite talk of progress in the rounds of
diplomatic talks, Trump has lost his patience with the process.
On Feb. 26, after the latest
round of talks in Geneva, we didn’t hear much from the U.S. side. Trump’s
calculus may have been that Iran wasn’t taking the hint – made clear by adding
a second carrier strike group to the other warships and hundreds of fighter
aircraft sent to the region over the past several weeks – that Tehran had no
option other than agreeing to the U.S. demands.
What happens next
What we don’t know is whether the U.S. strategy is now to pause and see if an initial round of strikes has forced Iran to sue for peace – or whether the initial strikes are just a prelude to more to come. For now, the diplomatic ship appears to have sailed. Trump seems to have no appetite for a deal now – he just wants Iran’s regime gone.
In order to do that, he has made
a number of calculated gambles. First politically and legally: Trump did not go
through Congress before ordering Operation Epic Fury. Unlike 23 years ago
when President
George W. Bush took the U.S. into Iraq, there is no war authorization
giving the president cover.
Instead, White House lawyers
must have assessed that Trump can carry out this operation under his Article
2 powers to act as commander in chief. Even so, the 1973
War Powers Act will mean the clock is now ticking. If the attacks are
not concluded in 60 days, the administration will have to go back to Congress
and say the operation is complete, or work with Congress for an authorization
to use force or a formal declaration of war.
The second gamble is whether
Iranians will heed his call to remove a regime that many
have long wanted gone. Given the ferocity of the regime’s response to the
protests in January, which resulted
in the deaths of thousands of Iranians, are Iranians willing to face down
Iran’s internal security forces and drive what remains of the regime from
power?
Third, the U.S. administration has made a bet that the Iranian regime – even confronted with an existential threat – does not have the capability to drag the U.S. into a lengthy conflict to inflict massive casualties. And this last point is crucial. Experts know Tehran has no nuclear bomb and only has a limited stockpile of drones and cruise and ballistic missiles.
But it can lean on
unconventional capabilities. Terrorism is a real concern – either through the
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Quds Force, which coordinates Iran’s
unconventional warfare, or through its partnership with Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Or actors like the Houthis
in Yemen or Shia
militias in Iraq may seek to conduct attacks against U.S. interests in
solidarity with Iran or directed to do so by the regime.
A mass casualty event may put
political pressure on Trump, but I cannot see it leading to U.S. boots on
ground in Iran. The American public doesn’t have the appetite for such an
eventuality, and that would necessitate Trump gaining Congressional approval,
which for now has not yet materialized.
No one has a crystal ball, and
it is early in an operation that will likely go on for days, if not longer. But
one thing is clear: Iran’s regime is facing an existential threat. Do not
expect it to show restraint.
This article was updated on Feb 28, 2026, to include confirmation of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei death. -Javed Ali, Associate Professor of Practice of Public Policy, University of Michigan
The Conversation

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