The New Phase
Iran Is No Longer Fighting for Survival. It Is Fighting for Dominance
The central question is no longer whether Iran will survive.
It is what Iran intends to do with that survival.
Over the past week, attention focused on repeated ceasefire violations and the question of whether the Iran War was ending.
But the more important question is how the war is changing.
The evidence points to a clear direction. Rather than moving toward a stable settlement, the conflict is evolving into something more familiar in the history of long wars: a transition from a lull to a new phase of military confrontation.
A phase of strategic pressure by Iran.
Iran Is Shifting from Survival to Regional Hegemony
For Iran, the opening months of the war were dominated by a single issue: regime survival.
Israel and the United States sought to degrade Iran’s military capabilities, pressure the economy, and create political strains inside the Islamic Republic.
Yet despite severe damage, the Iranian regime survived – as did its drone and missile forces.
And enough of its nuclear infrastructure remained intact to preserve Iran’s threshold status.
More surprising was the outcome this Substack anticipated months ago but many analysts missed:
Iran emerged with control over Hormuz.
That changes the strategic situation for Iran and the incentives it faces.
Once survival is secured, states begin asking a different question:
How can immediate survival be converted into long-term security and power?
The sequence now becoming visible is:
Survival → Leverage → Regional Power
This week, Mohsen Rezaei, senior military adviser to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, demanded the release of $24 billion in frozen Iranian assets, rejected the possibility of a Trump-Khamenei meeting, and warned that renewed conflict could spread beyond the Persian Gulf.
The significance of these statements is not simply their rhetoric.
They suggest that Tehran increasingly views diplomacy itself as another arena for exercising leverage.
The objective is no longer merely sanctions relief.
It is to transform military survival into political and economic concessions.
Since the revolution, many Western analysts have interpreted Iranian strategy primarily through the lens of deterrence.
But Iran’s behavior over the past two decades has consistently extended beyond immediate deterrence.
The individual facts are well known: Hezbollah in Lebanon; influence in Iraq and Syria after 2003; support for the Houthis in Yemen. And now, repeated efforts to shape the political orientation of the Gulf.
These all point toward a broader objective.
Iran does not appear to seek territorial conquest. Nor is it attempting to recreate a Persian empire.
The facts point to a different goal: Regional primacy.
In practical terms, that means becoming the state with the greatest influence over security, energy flows, and the political decisions of its neighbors.
The aim of regional hegemony is a common pattern in world politics. The United States sought this position in the Western Hemisphere. China seeks it in Asia. Russia seeks it in Eastern Europe.
Now Iran appears to be following the same pattern in the Persian Gulf.
The emerging sequence increasingly looks like:
Threshold Nuclear Capability
+ Influence over Energy Routes
+ Pressure on U.S. Alliances
= Regional Hegemony
Whether Iran ultimately succeeds is a separate question.
What matters is that the objective itself is becoming easier to see.
The Pressure Campaign Is Aimed at the Gulf States
Over the past week, Iranian missiles and drones again targeted Kuwait and Bahrain, both of which host major American military facilities.
U.S. forces intercepted most of the attacks. But the targets themselves are revealing.
To be clear:
Iran is not primarily striking Israel. Nor is it focusing mainly on U.S. naval forces. It is pressuring the states that host American power.
This reflects a strategic objective that long predates the current war.
The objective is not necessarily immediate expulsion.
It is to raise costs, create anxiety, and encourage Gulf governments to question whether hosting American forces remains worth the risk.
Most important, it is to demonstrate that America can no longer provide security against Iran’s growing power.
In effect, the coercive logic is:
Pressure on Gulf States → Alliance Friction → Reduced U.S. Presence
Hormuz Remains the Center of Gravity
The war increasingly revolves around the Strait of Hormuz.
American strikes on Iranian radar facilities near Qeshm Island occurred only after Iranian drones threatened maritime traffic. Iran then retaliated against U.S. positions in Kuwait and Bahrain. This is no accident.
Control of Hormuz has always occupied a central place not only in Iranian strategic thinking, but in the logic of America’s commitment to the Persian Gulf.
From the Soviet Union during the Cold War, to Iraq after the Cold War, to Iran today, America’s overriding objective has been to prevent any single state from becoming a regional hegemon in the world’s most energy-rich region.
Regional hegemony in the Persian Gulf ultimately rests on three pillars:
• influence over energy flows;
• preservation of nuclear threshold status;
• military predominance inside the Gulf itself.
Iran has not yet achieved these fully.
But Iran is moving fast across all three dimensions.
Why the War Is Not Ending
Many wars do not conclude when fighting subsides.
They evolve. Goal posts move. Fighting expands beyond the immediate objectives of the opening phase.
This happens because war is a continuation of geopolitics by other means.
The Iran War increasingly resembles a transition from short-term military confrontation for survival to long-term strategic competition for power.
That shift may prove more consequential than the opening stages themselves.
The deeper logic is becoming visible:
Military Denial → Economic Pressure → Diplomatic Leverage
Military pressure around Hormuz produces economic pressure on Gulf states and global markets.
Iran’s economic leverage over the Gulf states is not simply about tourism or temporary disruptions.
With 20-30 percent of Gulf GDP at risk, the issue goes to the heart of Gulf security.
And ultimately to a larger question:
Are the Gulf states more secure with American bases.
Or without them?
That is the new phase of the war.


The wild card remains! Will the US naval blockade eventually force Iran to capitulate. In other words, which side can sustain the pain the longest? Any thoughts on this element of the confrontation?
Professor, what do you make of the increasing involvement of Pakistan? Not merely mediators between Iran and US, but also with armed forces now based inside Saudi and as per Reuters today the head of the Lebanese armed forces is visiting Pakistan (https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/lebanese-army-chief-leaves-pakistan-invitation-counterpart-2026-06-06/)