We see a 'Smart Bomb Trap' unfolding—a phenomenon where the attacker is so mesmerized by the accuracy of their weapons that they mistake hitting targets for achieving strategic success.
Netanyahu spent decades warning that Iran was becoming a nuclear threat, but previous U.S. presidents stopped short of direct war, fearing regional chaos, economic shock, and another long Middle East entanglement. Trump cast himself as the first willing to do what others would not, but that decision raises the deeper question: once a president crosses into direct conflict, does strength become a trap that makes getting out harder than getting in?

샌프란시스코에서 컬럼비아 대학교 동문들이 만들었습니다
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샌프란시스코에서 컬럼비아 대학교 동문들이 만들었습니다

If you spent twenty years warning of a fire, does finally lighting the match make you a prophet or an arsonist? For decades, Benjamin Netanyahu cast himself as a modern-day Churchill, warning that Iran was a "1938" level threat. Previous presidents hesitated, but last June, Donald Trump finally crossed that line with Operation Midnight Hammer. Now, eight months later, we have to ask: if the goal was to "obliterate" the threat, why are missiles still flying? We’ll explore whether this show of strength has actually become a trap, trading long-term regional stability for a war of choice that—much like Iraq in 2003—is proving far easier to start than to finish. Is this a strategic triumph, or are we watching a decades-long obsession finally spiral out of control?