Opinion
Nicholas
Kristof
The Three
Unknowns After the U.S. Strike on Iran
June 22,
2025
Nicholas
Kristof
By Nicholas
Kristof
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/22/opinion/us-military-iran-strike-trump.html
President
Trump has claimed a “spectacular military success” in destroying three sites in
Iran; we’ll see if that’s true. What is clear is that he has pushed America
into a war with Iran that he acknowledges may escalate.
Beyond
doubts about the legal basis for bombing Iran, I see risks for America and the
world ahead revolving around three fundamental unknowns.
The first
uncertainty is how Iran will strike back at the United States. Iran’s supreme
leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, previously promised, “The harm the U.S. will
suffer will definitely be irreparable if they enter this conflict militarily.”
Iran has
many options, including attacks on U.S. bases in Iraq, Bahrain and elsewhere in
the region. It could also mount cyberattacks, strike American embassies or
support terrorist attacks.
Another
option would be to seek to close the Strait of Hormuz, fully or partly, by
attacking shipping or by laying mines. That could be a blow to the world
economy, for one-quarter of the world’s oil passes through the strait. Experts
have told me that they believe the United States could, over time, reopen the
strait, but there might be economic and other costs. When Iran mined the strait
in 1988, a mine crippled a U.S. Navy frigate, the Samuel B. Roberts.
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When the
United States assassinated Qassim Suleimani, a top Iranian general, in 2020,
Iran launched a missile barrage at American bases in Iraq. A Ukrainian
passenger jet was hit by accident, killing all 176 people aboard.
My guess is
that Iran may want to strike back harder this time, partly to try to
re-establish deterrence, but its capacity to do so may be more limited. Israeli
strikes might have impaired its ability to mine the strait, for example, and
doing so would also impede Iran’s oil shipments to China, annoying its friends
in Beijing.
But it’s
worth remembering something James Mattis, a defense secretary in Trump’s first
term, once said: “No war is over until the enemy says it’s over. We may think
it over, but in fact, the enemy gets a vote.”
The second
uncertainty is whether the Israeli and American strikes have ended Iran’s
nuclear efforts or perhaps even accelerated them. That depends, in part, on
whether the bombing of Fordo and other sites was as successful as Trump
claimed, and that may take time to figure out.
It was not
clear beforehand that even 30,000-pound American bunker busters would be
sufficient to destroy the Fordo enrichment site, which is buried deep in a rock
mountain. We also don’t know if Iran has other centrifuges in another, unknown
site.
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There’s
broad agreement that a nuclear-armed Iran would be a disaster and would lead
other countries in the region to develop their own weapon programs. But Tulsi
Gabbard, Trump’s director of national intelligence, publicly said this spring
that Iran was not building a nuclear weapon; he was dismissive of that.
The risk is
that Israeli and American attacks on Iran lead that country to decide it does
need nuclear weapons. After all, if it had nuclear weapons, Israel would have
been far less likely to bomb it.
Iran has
already enriched enough fissile material to a high level for as many as 10
nuclear weapons, according to experts; that material was believed to be in the
city of Isfahan. Trump said the U.S. struck Isfahan, but it’s not clear whether
the site was destroyed.
The third
and final question is the largest: Is this the end of the conflict or the
beginning?
Optimists
such as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel seem to believe that he and
the United States can end both Iran’s nuclear program and the Iranian regime.
Then again, Netanyahu was a strong supporter of the Iraq war and thought that
would bring change to Iran as well; instead, the Iraq war benefited Iran.
Even if
Iran’s enrichment capacity is gone, the expertise to enrich uranium is probably
not possible to extinguish. So if the regime remains, this may be more of a
setback than an end to the nuclear program.
As for the
idea that bombing will destroy the regime, there’s not much sign of that.
Iranian dissidents, like the Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi, decried
the bombing last week and called on Trump to stop the bombing, not join it.
In my
travels in Iran, I’ve seen how unpopular the regime is. Iran — at the popular
level — has always struck me as one of the most pro-American countries in the
region, precisely because the government is so resented for corruption,
hypocrisy and economic incompetence.
That
pro-Americanism seemed to bode well for the future, after the death of the
supreme leader. But a pro-American government seems less likely if we have
waged war on Iran. Indeed, regime change might look more like a hard-line coup
than anything else. Once again, the range of possibilities is immense, with
some quite alarming.
Senator
Chris Van Hollen, Democrat of Maryland, framed the risks this way: “While we
all agree that Iran must not have a nuclear weapon, Trump abandoned diplomatic
efforts to achieve that goal and instead chose to unnecessarily endanger
American lives, further threaten our armed forces in the region and risk
pulling America into another long conflict in the Middle East. The U.S.
intelligence community has repeatedly assessed that Iran is not building a
nuclear weapon. There was more time for diplomacy to work.”
That seems
right to me. Trump’s speech was triumphant, but it’s much too early to be
celebrating, and far too much uncertainty remains.


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