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30 January 2026 - 23:00
What Would the United States Use to Attack Iran?

In recent days, U.S. officials have repeatedly threatened Iran with military action. But the core question remains: if such an attack were ever to actually happen, what exactly would the United States use to go to war?

According to Khabaronline, For years, the U.S. has focused less on real war and more on the image of war—parading warships, issuing direct threats, floating security scenarios, assassinations, and even talk of fragmentation.

The purpose of this spectacle is to generate anxiety and psychological instability inside Iran. That is why the media space is constantly saturated with news about alleged U.S. military movements.

Outlets such as Iran International, for example, repeatedly warn of an “imminent attack”: a carrier has arrived, a carrier has stopped, a carrier has refueled, aircraft have landed, equipment has been transferred—sometimes even discussing “final targets.” This narrative relies far more on frightening public opinion than on realities on the ground.

But if we assume that a military confrontation were to actually take place, recent experience cannot be ignored. Just a few months ago, Iran and Israel entered a direct confrontation, and in the end, it was Israel that stepped back.

In such a context, a U.S. aircraft carrier is, at best, nothing more than a floating military base. The question is simple: can a country like Iran really be threatened with one or two warships?

Israel, despite its advanced military capabilities and full Western backing, failed to withstand Iranian strikes for more than two weeks. So what, exactly, are U.S. carriers supposed to do that Israel could not? What capability do these ships possess that Israel did not already have?

The reality is that even a single Iranian missile hitting the hull of one of these vessels—and the release of just one image—could deal a severe blow to U.S. credibility. American power rests less on actual warfare than on the display of power, and damage to that image would carry a heavy cost for Washington.

The Yemen experience is still fresh. During the clashes, the aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman was forced to pull back—so quickly that no clear image was even released to prove it had remained intact.

Of course, any war involves mutual damage. But a war with Iran would be costly, high-risk, and offer no guaranteed success for the United States.

Still, U.S. military movements and some of Donald Trump’s statements have pushed parts of Iranian society into worrying about the possibility of war. Whether war will happen is a separate debate. What is clear is that there are serious reasons discouraging the U.S. from entering a direct military confrontation.

More important, however, is America’s main project: psychological attrition.

The goal is to exhaust Iranian society mentally—to spread fear, anxiety, and despair about security and economic prospects. This psychological pressure can, at times, be even more dangerous than war itself. For the U.S., it is cheaper, less risky, and often more effective.

Even if one assumes a possibility of military conflict, the project of psychological erosion is certain—and it is precisely this project that Iran must take seriously and neutralize.

Iran’s counter-strategy lies in narrating the reality of the battlefield: a narrative that shows how the United States and Israel, after years of preparation, failed to achieve their goals in a 12-day confrontation and ultimately moved toward a ceasefire themselves.

After that, they turned to economic pressure in an attempt to create internal divisions in Iran—but Iranian society stepped in, and the result was yet another American retreat.

News ID 200574

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