Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
    • ASCF Board
  • Programs
    • Assignment Blue
    • American History Live
  • Take Action!
    • Congressional Letters
  • Videos
    • Peace Through Strength Podcast
    • Briefs
  • Articles
    • ASCF Articles
    • The DOWD Report
    • Technical Power
    • Guest Contributors
  • Home
  • About
    • ASCF Board
  • Programs
    • Assignment Blue
    • American History Live
  • Take Action!
    • Congressional Letters
  • Videos
    • Peace Through Strength Podcast
    • Briefs
  • Articles
    • ASCF Articles
    • The DOWD Report
    • Technical Power
    • Guest Contributors
Donate
Support ASCF

If you liked this article, please share it with your friends and family. You can also help the American Security Council Foundation shape American policy.

Donate
Recent Articles
China’s Perspective on the Iranian Conflict
June 15, 2026
Read More
The Growing Deficit of Consent in the Republic
June 8, 2026
Read More
Why Assimilation Is Again Becoming a Strategic Question
June 3, 2026
Read More
Why the 1953 Iran Coup Still Shapes U.S.–Iran Relations
May 27, 2026
Read More
THE CENTER OF MODERN POWER IS INDUSTRIAL ENDURANCE. Why Replacement Capacity Is Reshaping Strategy
May 20, 2026
Read More
center of gravity (1)
  • May 6, 2026
The Center of Gravity is the American Citizen
Written by Tom Raquer, Guest Columnist

Why the Iran War Fails the Clausewitz Test

 

A war that begins without public support does not just face opposition—it works under a separate set of constraints from the start.

 

Most discussions of strategy do not begin there. They begin with capability—force structure, alliances, operational design. Those are easier to measure and compare. But they do not answer the question that tends to matter later: whether the effort can be carried long enough to matter.

 

In a constitutional system, that question does not sit with the military.

 

Carl von Clausewitz’s idea—war as the continuation of politics—still applies. But in a republic, politics is not fixed. It shifts. Support narrows, or fragments, or wears down over time. That movement becomes part of the battlefield whether planners account for it or not.

 

Which raises a point that tends to get softened: the centre of gravity is not the deployed force. It is the population that must bear the cost repeatedly, without a clear endpoint.

 

That changes the timeline.

 

Conflicts backed by broad support can stretch. They can absorb delay, even missteps. When that support is not there at the outset, the opposite happens. Time starts working against the strategy at once—not dramatically at first, just steadily.

 

The current situation with Iran fits that pattern more than we might want to admit. Public backing has been limited from the beginning, and that does not just affect messaging. It narrows options and compresses decision space in ways that are not always visible early on.

 

At that point, the dynamic starts to favor the side that does not need a quick resolution.

 

Iran does not have to win outright. It must stay engaged long enough for pressure to move inward. Võ Nguyên Giáp, general and military strategist for North Vietnam in the Vietnam War, worked from that logic, time as a substitute for strength.

 

The United States still holds the advantage in capability. That part is clear. The harder question is whether it can sustain the alignment needed to keep using that capability without internal strain becoming the dominant factor.

 

Those two do not always move together.

 

More broadly, the issue is not whether the United States stays powerful, but whether the system it has sustained since 1945 can continue to work at the same scale and cost under present conditions.

 

And when those pressures accumulate, outcomes tend to be decided elsewhere than on the battlefield.

Operations

P.O. Box 781040
Sebastian FL, 32978

Headquarters

1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Ste 700
Washington, DC 20004

The American Security Council Foundation is a 501(c)(3) Tax Exempt Organization established in 1958.

Donation

ASCF is an educational non-partisan, non-profit, 501(c)(3) organization. We rely on fundraisers, sponsorships, grants, and donations to keep our programs running.

Donate

© 2024 The American Security Council Foundation. All Rights Reserved

Facebook-f X-twitter Instagram Youtube
  • Home
  • About
  • Peace Through Strength Podcast
  • Home
  • About
  • Peace Through Strength Podcast
  • Home
  • About
  • Peace Through Strength Podcast
  • Home
  • About
  • Peace Through Strength Podcast