You're missing the fourth option. The one that's actually happening.
No retreat. No invasion. No nuke. Just keep going. Grind. Day 9, day 20, day 45. And that's the one Iran built its entire military doctrine around.
CSIS published the number: $891 million a day. Pentagon already wants $50 billion more. Congress just killed the War Powers Resolution so there's no brake pedal. Meanwhile Iran's burn rate is a fraction of that — $20K drones against million-dollar interceptors, dispersed production at 500m depth across dozens of sites, mobile launchers the US still can't find after eight days of full-spectrum surveillance.
The three options you listed assume America decides. That's the wrong framing. Iran already decided. Hormuz is closed. Maersk left. Oil at $91 and climbing. GCC can't export, can't import, storage filling up. India bleeding $15 billion for every $10 increase. Europe's gas comes from Qatar — Qatar that's under missile fire.
Iran doesn't need to win a single battle. It needs Tuesday to become Wednesday to become Thursday. Every sunrise costs Washington a billion dollars and buys Tehran another day of proving the same point: you can't regime-change a country from the sky. Nobody ever has. Not Germany. Not Japan. Not Vietnam. Not Afghanistan. Not Iraq.
Your three options are what America chooses. The fourth option is what America gets when Iran chooses for them.
Elle a entièrement raison. Ce n'est pas la démocratie qui a permis à la Chine ou aux Émirats arabes unis de se développer à vitesse grand V. La démocratie est un moyen - le plus séduisant de tous - et non une fin en soi.
🚨🚨💢 Voilà pourquoi les occidentaux et plus précisément la France 🇫🇷 détestent la grande sœur, la Dame de Sochi @Nath_Yamb .Ecoutez, elle dénonce leurs pillages de l’Afrique. Je porte mon soutien inconditionnel à cette courageuse Dame qui se bat pour les intérêts de l’Afrique .❤️✊🏾
@BPartisans On se rend compte que :
●le dôme de fer est une passoire
●Tsahal est incapable de battre l´Iran
●leurs stocks de missiles sont limités
●les missiles hypersoniques d´Iran ont mis à genoux Israël
●Trump leur a sauvé les fesses en définitive
●il y a doute sur ladoctrine Samson
Iran never plays the victim — because Iran has the spine to stand and the courage to strike back.
Only cowards rush to attack and then whimper behind the mask of victimhood — and Israel is the real coward.
It bombs from the sky, hides behind foreign shields, and cries foul when the fire returns.
Iran faces war-cravers head-on — not with tears, but with tenacity.
While Israel slaughters children by day and sells victimhood by night, Iran stands on its feet, not its knees.
The real coward is the one who fears a fair fight — Israel provokes, kills, then weeps, not for the dead, but for attention.
Iran resists, Israel deceives — one fights with honor, the other with hypocrisy.
And the bravest thing Israel does… is lie.
@DebunkerNews Le gouvernement israélien sait qu'une grande partie de sa population ne reviendrait pas, ce qui contrecarrerait l'expansionnisme criminel d'israël, en effet, ces territoires conquis, il faut bien les peupler de juifs. Les femmes sont mises à contribution en mode poules pondeuses.
If Israeli air defenses could face depletion before Iranian missiles run out, then the question isn’t about defense — it’s about overconfidence meeting its natural limit. For decades, Israel flaunted “invincibility” on borrowed technology and American aid, while Iran built resilience in isolation, under sanctions, and pressure.
You cannot mock a nation into submission that has learned to survive with less and strike with precision.
This isn't just a missile count — it’s a shift in regional power dynamics. Iran isn’t playing for headlines; it’s playing for history. And history doesn’t favor occupiers who rely on Iron Domes to shield collapsing moral ground.
So yes, perhaps Israeli defenses may deplete — not just physically, but morally, politically, and globally. And when that happens, no dome will stop the fall that arrogance began.
Orano, c’est fini! Le Niger a nationalisé la Société des mines de l’Aïr (Somaïr), jusqu’ici détenue à 63,40 % par le français Orano et à 36,60 % par l’État via la Sopamin. La société exploitait l’uranium d’Arlit depuis 1971. Ça va pleurer fort à Paris. 😂