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The Perils of Putting American Troops on the Ground in Iran

  The Perils of Putting American Troops on the Ground Why the United States Should Declare Victory and Resist the Temptation of Ground War By Wahab Raofier   A Strategic Achievement — and Its Limits The American and Israeli air campaign against Iran has achieved something remarkable: it has destroyed much of Iran’s military infrastructure, eliminated its supreme religious leader, and left the regime badly weakened. The strikes have degraded Iran’s capacity to project regional power, at least in the near term. For an administration that prizes decisive action, the temptation to press further — to demand unconditional surrender and send troops to finish the job — must be considerable. That temptation should be firmly resisted. Before proceeding, the moral and legal questions raised by this campaign — including the killing of Iran’s supreme leader and the civilian toll of the bombing — deserve serious attention and cannot be brushed aside by military success alone...

. WHAT IS NEXT IN IRAN?

  The Regime Built on Iran’s Backs—and What Comes After Khamenei's legacy is not a nation — it is a system designed to survive at any cost to those it rules. By Wahab Raofi The death of a dictator is rarely a private event. It is the closing chapter of national suffering — and the opening of a reckoning. When that dictator has held absolute power for nearly four decades, his end does not merely mark a change of leadership. It forces an accounting of everything built in his name, and everything destroyed along the way. For more than 45 years, the Iranian people have lived under a regime that has treated their ancient civilization as an ideological fortress rather than a nation meant to serve its citizens. The clerics who seized power in 1979 constructed something more durable than an ordinary dictatorship. They built a theocratic military state — one in which revolutionary ideology and institutionalized repression fused into a permanent structure. At its apex stood A...
  Rebuilding the Afghan State from the Foundation Up  By Wahab Raofi This book asks an urgent question: can Afghanistan still be fixed—and if so, how? Since the overthrow of the constitutional monarchy in 1973, Afghanistan has cycled through successive political systems: the republic of Sardar Daud, the Democratic Republic of left-wing officers, the Mujahideen period, the first Taliban regime, the Western-backed Islamic Republic, and once again the Islamic Emirate. These governments differed in ideology, foreign sponsors, and governing style, yet all shared a single outcome: none succeeded in producing a stable, unified, and self-sustaining state. This recurring failure suggests that Afghanistan’s crisis is not ideological but structural. Breaking this cycle demands a fundamentally new approach—one that looks forward, not backward. This book does not seek to assign blame. Afghanistan’s past has been examined exhaustively, often with passion but little practical consequence....

A Strong Army or a Strong Nation?

  A Strong Army or a Strong Nation? Why Afghanistan’s Future Depends on People, Not Parades By Wahab Raofi A familiar argument insists that “a country with a strong army is a country that respects itself.” For Afghanistan—a land scarred by invasions and proxy wars—this idea carries deep emotional weight. The image of a unified, professional military promises sovereignty, order, and an escape from decades of instability. Yet Afghanistan’s modern history suggests that this pursuit has repeatedly confused the symbol of strength with its substance , often at the nation’s ultimate expense. Historically, Afghanistan’s military has played a decisive—and often destructive—political role. The relatively stable rule of King Zahir Shah and later President Sardar Daoud in the 1970s did not collapse because of foreign invasion or popular uprising, but because tanks rolled out of the barracks. These coups violated a foundational principle of any functioning state: that the military must rem...

Trump's Iran Stratigy

  The Limits of Pressure: Trump's Iran Strategy Why Trump Seeks to Contain Iran, Not Topple It Why it works: By Wahab Raofi Amid renewed saber-rattling between Washington and Tehran, a familiar pattern of threat and counter-threat dominates the headlines. Yet beneath the rhetoric lies a more consequential question: is the United States prepared to attack Iran to overthrow its regime? Shaped by the searing failures of recent history, the answer is almost certainly no. The Trump administration's strategy is not one of regime change but of  coercive restraint —a concerted effort to cripple Iran's capacity to project power and pursue nuclear weapons without triggering another open-ended war. This represents a fundamental departure from the ideological nation-building projects that defined earlier U.S. interventions. The 2003 invasion of Iraq under President George W. Bush culminated in the disastrous policy of de-Ba’athification, which dismantled the Iraqi state itsel...

The Tyranny of Fusion: Why Mosque and State Must Separate

  The Tyranny of Fusion: Why Mosque and State Must Separate From Taliban Decrees to Ibn Khaldun’s Warning — How the Coercion of Faith Corrupts Both Religion and Freedom By Wahab Raofi The Taliban rule Afghanistan by decree, enforcing a rigid and highly selective interpretation of Sharia law. By claiming divine authority, they govern without accountability to the people. Under this framework, dissent is not treated as a political disagreement but as an act of apostasy — an offense against Islam itself — punishable by imprisonment, torture, or death.7A recent Taliban decree illustrates the dangers of fusing mosque and state. It formally divides society into a four-tier hierarchy: religious scholars ( ulama ), elites ( ashraf ), the middle class, and the lower class. Justice under this system is not blind. The severity of punishment depends not on the crime committed, but on the social status of the accused. A religious scholar may receive a verbal warning for an offense th...
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