https://removepaywalls.com/https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/24/opinion/iran-war-history.html
Most Americans probably don’t look back at March 2012 — if they remember it at all — and think of terrifyingly high gas prices. In the month when “The Hunger Games” ruled the box office and President Barack Obama was on his way to a comfortable re-election, the price of Brent crude closed the month around $123 a barrel. That would be about $175 a barrel in today’s dollars.
As of Tuesday, despite Iran’s effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz and its attacks on its neighbors’ energy facilities, it’s hovering around $100, slightly higher than the average inflation-adjusted price since January 2001, roughly $95.
That ought to provide some perspective on the panic over the war in the Middle East. To hear the critics’ version of events, an unprovoked and unnecessary attack on Iran, launched at Israel’s behest, is already a foreign-policy fiasco that has put the global economy at risk without any clear objective or endgame. As Senator Chris Murphy, a Connecticut Democrat, told NBC’s Kristen Welker over the weekend, “We’ve never seen this level of incompetence in war-making in this country’s history.”
Really? Let’s take a tour of some of the recent history.
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During the 1991 Operation Desert Storm against Iraq’s Saddam Hussein, a campaign that is widely considered a brilliant military success, the U.S.-led coalition lost 75 aircraft, 42 of them in combat. In this conflict, four manned aircraft have been destroyed, three to friendly fire and one in an accident. Not a single manned plane has yet been lost over Iran.
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The U.S. air and land campaign in that operation lasted a full six weeks. Today it’s remembered as a lightning-fast war. The current conflict with Iran is less than four weeks old.
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In the 1989-90 invasion of Panama, whose military phase lasted a few days, the United States lost 23 soldiers, with 325 more wounded. So far in this war, U.S. losses are 13 dead. Among the more than 230 wounded, most have swiftly returned to duty.
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During the Persian Gulf crisis that began with Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in August 1990, the U.S. economy went into recession and the Dow fell by about 13 percent before the allied air war began. Since conflict with Iran began last June with Operation Midnight Hammer, the Dow is up by 9 percent as of Tuesday morning.
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Between 1987 and 1988, in the final stages of the so-called tanker war, the Reagan administration reflagged Kuwaiti tankers and had the U.S. Navy escort them out of the Strait of Hormuz. An Iranian mine nearly sank an American frigate. The conflict wound down after the United States sank a handful of Iranian navy ships. This time around, we have destroyed almost all of Iran’s navy with no naval losses of our own.
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In 1991, Iraq fired roughly 40 missiles toward Israel. Hardly any were intercepted despite the deployment of Patriot batteries there. In this war, Israel is registering an interception rate of 92 percent against more than 400 missiles. Iran’s overall rate of fire has dropped from 438 ballistic missiles on the first day of the war to 21 on Monday. Drone fire has also declined from 345 to 75 for the same dates.
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In the months leading up to the second Iraq war, the George W. Bush administration made a case based on erroneous information that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction. In the current war, there is no question that some 970 pounds of highly enriched uranium lie stashed and buried in Iran — possibly enough, with further enrichment and conversion into uranium metal, for 11 nuclear bombs. If the outrage of the Iraq war is that Hussein didn’t have W.M.D. capabilities, is it now supposed to be somehow more outrageous that Iran does?
In hindsight, the single biggest error of the gulf war was to end it too soon, before Saddam Hussein’s forces were thoroughly routed. President Trump should not make the same mistake.
I am not blind to the Trump administration’s failures in planning, particularly its unwillingness to make a stronger public case for war and get more allies on our side before the campaign began. I am also purposely comparing the war with Iran to past wars of similar scale, rather than our true military fiascoes in Vietnam, Korea and the two world wars — in which tens of thousands of Americans died due to poor tactical planning and bad strategy.
Still, if past generations could see how well this war has gone compared with the ones they were compelled to fight at a frightening cost, they would marvel at their posterity’s comparative good fortune. They would marvel, too, at our inability to appreciate the advantages we now possess.
NYT with another banger!
Takeaways:
1 you probably don’t remember the last gas crisis, here think of that years blockbuster movie! Wasn’t that fun?
2 America has done many stupid AF wars, here let me list them…
3 really we should just war harder and longer! Really laying some good ol’ war pipe, if you know what I mean!
4 anyway, the war is going really great! We have it sooooo good with our big sexy war prowess!
Edit:
So thank you to Bret Stephens, for an incredible opinion piece. Allow me to provide some criticism: what the actual fuck? Maybe just maybe we should stop will all the imperialism and wars and war crimes and corruption. Your bizarre piece listing out other dumb shit the US has done, including the last war we got up to in the Middle East, then claiming we should have done more longer war really, then saying ‘well at least it’s not Vietnam!’ Is insane.
Gas is getting much more expensive, we’re sorta in an affordability crisis across the board, and none of this talks about I dunno, the people there who’s lives are ruined and a region that we have destabilized pretty much constantly for a very long time and all the suffering that is causing, while saying ‘well, at least we didn’t lose as many troops as <insert other disaster>. It’s going great, we just don’t appreciate how good at this we are’ makes you look like a psychopath. Do you want to be seen as a psychopath, Bret?
the Iran invasion is a disaster. the US is losing another war it didn’t need to start while creating a new generation of enemies in a nuclear state, iran’s governmental structure has already repeatedly proven to be far more robust than estimates, its intact government is still running despite the US wasting nearly all the rest of its munitions that it cannot replace without China’s help, who has already said they will not help, replace U.S. munitions, massively increasing prices globally and domestically, further alienating allies who are as we speak brokering new treaties with countries to cut the US out.
This article is blindly ignorant and playing at some serious magical thinking.
cherry on top, trump is an absolute laughingstock internationally and the attitude toward U.S. citizens is not much better.
Iran isn’t a nuclear state. Yet.
An optimist!
It is from the NYT, after all.
More than three quarters of Americans, including 55 per cent of Republicans, said President Donald Trump’s policies had increased the cost of living in their community.
And economic confidence has hit a four-year low, according to Gallup.
Gas prices have continued to soar nationally, rising above US$4.50 (S$5.75 ) a gallon, according to AAA. A gallon is around 3.8 litres.
Nearly 80 per cent of voters – including a majority of Republicans – say the Trump administration is responsible for this price hike, according to polling from Fox News.
I guess they’re out of touch with the article’s reality. Or perhaps the author of that article (Bret Stephens) isn’t living their reality.
wow this guy has a pulitzer
Post a summary or bust.




