SOFREP Cartoon: This Is How It Ends, Or Starts
It’s the kind of clean, brutal spectacle that feels satisfying in the moment, right up until you realize the machine doesn’t shut off, it just waits for the next hand to pull the lever.
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It’s the kind of clean, brutal spectacle that feels satisfying in the moment, right up until you realize the machine doesn’t shut off, it just waits for the next hand to pull the lever.
Air power may rattle Iran and win headlines, but without disciplined diplomacy, allied unity, and congressional accountability, it risks trading short-term disruption for long-term instability in a region that punishes strategic impatience.
Before you even think, you choose a side, and if you’re not willing to tear your own beliefs apart and see what survives, you’re not defending an idea, you’re defending yourself.
Support for Israel on the American right is no longer politically frictionless. As the war with Iran sharpens divisions, a growing gap is emerging between institutional positions and segments of the conservative base—one that is already reshaping how politicians speak, align, and manage the alliance in public.
From a locked-down command hub in Florida to gunfire inside a Georgia VA clinic and precision strikes tearing through Iran’s leadership in Tehran, the same tension runs through it all, the system is holding, but you can feel the pressure building.
Three Iranian students in an American classroom described a people who love Americans, separate citizens from governments better than we do, and whose youngest generation would rather share tea than a battlefield — and right now, we’re bombing their home.
MacDill is locked down with no clear answers and no all-clear, just a single word, “threat,” hanging over one of America’s most critical war hubs as everyone inside waits for clarity that has not come.
After obliterating Kharg Island’s defenses with a precision strike that spared its oil lifeline, the United States has exposed Iran’s most critical export hub as both vulnerable and within reach, a warning shot that leaves open the option of boots on the ground.
“No new wars” carried weight when it constrained someone else. Under current conditions, it has receded. The standard changed. The consequences remain.
As Tehran tightens under fire, Washington fractures at the top, and Trump hints at a move on Cuba, the same pattern emerges across three fronts, power consolidating, pressure building, and nobody quite willing to say where this is actually headed.
Your boots aren’t failing you, the environment inside them is, and once your feet start breaking down, the rest of your day follows right behind.
Kissinger’s last viable chance at a controlled transition was killed not on the battlefield but in the moral theater of international politics, clearing the path for a far more violent and uncompromising outcome.