Opinion
Guest
Essay
Operation
Epic Fury, Meet Operation Colossal Blunder
May 4,
2026, 1:00 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/04/opinion/iran-us-israel-war-drones-strait-of-hormuz.html
Scott
Anderson
By Scott
Anderson
Mr.
Anderson is the author of “King of Kings,” an account of the Iranian
revolution.
America’s
war with Iran has entered a calmer phase: diplomatic posturing,
on-and-off-again negotiations and endless wrangling of a settlement. This, of
course, is far preferable to the annihilation of Iranian civilization that
President Trump was threatening just a few weeks ago. But it raises the
question of just what has spurred this turnabout.
The
answer is rather straightforward. The American and Israeli bombing of Iran
failed to provoke either a popular uprising against the regime in Tehran or its
capitulation, however painfully slow Mr. Trump and his advisers have been to
acknowledge that. Instead, Iran discovered its ability to shut down the vital
passageway of the Strait of Hormuz and send the global economy into chaos.
There are
now only two outcomes to the conflict: either the kind of wholesale destruction
of Iran that Mr. Trump posited, or a settlement that will leave the government
intact and empowered, and a blustering American president humiliated.
The first
option is increasingly remote. By publicly threatening the commission of war
crimes on an enormous scale, Mr. Trump has given both his domestic and foreign
opponents time to marshal resistance. As for the latter and more likely
outcome, this was predictable, if only the president and his administration had
bothered to take note of a new feature of modern warfare, a feature that can be
boiled down to a single word: drones.
The
weaponized drone has utterly transformed today’s battlefield. It is the
modern-day equivalent of the machine gun of World War I. Because of the drone,
the vastly outnumbered Ukrainian military has been able to withstand the
Russian Army of Vladimir Putin for the past four years, not only inflicting far
greater casualties on the invaders than expected, but doing so at a cost of
pennies to the dollar. As the Ukrainians have shown time and again, a $1,000
drone can destroy a roughly $4.5 million T-90 tank. While the Russians have
recently made significant strides in drone warfare, this simple weapon has
ensured that they’ve grievously paid for their war both on the battlefield and
in the pocketbook.
Much of
this same dynamic has played out in Iran for the past two months, although
without the staggering cost in human lives. Certainly, American and Israeli
warplanes can bomb Iran’s military infrastructure at will — and they have, tens
of thousands of times — but no amount of bombing can remove the primary
retaliatory weapon at its disposal.
On the
contrary, Iran can continue to mass-produce drones at a fraction of the cost of
the weapons being produced by the other side. What Mr. Trump calls his
“excursion” in Iran has already cost the United States at least $25 billion,
according to the Pentagon, and significantly depleted its stockpile of
sophisticated missiles. That depletion is already causing shortages in other
strategic arenas and could take years to replenish. All the while, with their
cheap and plentiful drones — assembling a top-of-the-line Shahed-136 drone
costs Iran an estimated $35,000 — Iran continues to dictate the terms in the
Strait of Hormuz choke point.
But what
about continuing the American naval blockade of the strait or launching a
ground assault on Iran’s shores, as Trump has also periodically proposed?
Granted, matters might get ugly, but surely this will lead to American victory
and an end to the impasse, right? Wrong. Build out an ironclad blockade or put
50,000 American troops on Persian Gulf beachheads, and the Iranians will still
retain the ability to fire a drone over their heads to hit an oil-laden tanker
and paralyze the global economy anew.
The
future security of the Persian Gulf now depends on the Trump administration
cutting a deal with the regime in Tehran. Despite the president’s assertion
that “We have all the cards,” almost the exact opposite is true. It is Mr.
Trump, rather, who is increasingly motivated to cut a deal and stanch the
growing pain to the U.S. economy — and his collapsing approval ratings — at
home. As a result, Iran is likely to try to drag out negotiations and extract
greater concessions from Mr. Trump in the process, knowing that time is on its
side.
Those
concessions might involve a lifting of the onerous “maximum pressure” sanctions
that Mr. Trump imposed on Iran during his first term and restored early in his
second, or reparations for the destruction that the American and Israeli
bombing campaign has inflicted. While a chief point of contention will be the
stores of enriched uranium that remain, any final settlement will almost
certainly leave Iran as the de facto gatekeeper of the Persian Gulf — or, in
other words, in a far stronger position than before Mr. Trump started this war.
The
standoff in the Persian Gulf underscores both a lasting and frightening shift
on the modern battlefield. While specific, critically important sites can
undoubtedly be made drone-proof — the White House, for example — defensive
shielding on a large scale is impossible, as Israel has now discovered with its
much-vaunted and much-punctured Iron Dome.
Given the
simplicity and cost of the weaponized drone, every one of the world’s
geographically strategic choke points — the Panama and Suez Canals, the Strait
of Gibraltar and the airspace over New York — is now vulnerable to attack by a
hostile force that has the ability to build such a weapon and a willingness to
suffer the consequences. Alarmist? Think of some of the apocalyptic regimes or
murderous guerrilla groups of the recent past — the Baader-Meinhof Gang in West
Germany, or the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, or bin Laden’s Al Qaeda — and imagine
what they might have done with a $2,000 weaponized drone.
When the
American attack on Iran was launched in late February, the name chosen for the
operation, Epic Fury, seemed an unusually apt description of the temperament of
the man ordering it. In pondering where that military misadventure leaves both
the United States and the future security of the world, a more fitting name
might be Operation Colossal Blunder.


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