Senator Richard Blumenthal emerged visibly shaken from a classified briefing on Tuesday. “I am left with more questions than answers,” he told reporters. “We seem to be on a path toward deploying American troops on the ground in Iran.”
American airpower is one thing. Ground troops belong to a different category entirely. Occupation follows: cities taken street by street, supply lines stretched across hostile territory, soldiers living for months or years inside a country that does not want them there. The difference between bombing a nation and invading it is the difference between a storm and a season.
The first military reality any planner confronts when looking at Iran is scale. The country is enormous. Iran covers more than 1.6 million square kilometers and holds a population approaching ninety-three million people. Iraq, the country the United States invaded in 2003, contained roughly a quarter of that population and a far smaller territory.
Iran is not a desert basin surrounded by flat terrain. It is a fortress of mountains. The Zagros range runs along its western spine like a natural wall, while the Alborz mountains guard the northern approaches. Any army moving into the country from Iraq would find itself forced through narrow corridors of terrain that favor defenders and punish invading columns.
This basic knowledge is not always well understood in Washington. During a recent interview with Tucker Carlson, Senator Ted Cruz struggled to answer simple questions about Iran while advocating confrontation with the country. The exchange illustrated a familiar problem. American debates about war often begin before anyone involved has studied the country in question.
Military superiority on paper does not erase geography. The United States commands vastly greater firepower, aircraft, and naval forces than Iran, along with a defense budget hundreds of times larger. Yet wars are not decided by spreadsheets.
Ground war is decided by terrain and logistics over time. Iran’s defensive strategy has long relied on exactly those factors, using its mountainous landscape, large ground forces, and dispersed infrastructure to absorb an attack and make any invasion painfully expensive. On March 1, Senator Tom Cotton, for his part, spoke of “an extended air and naval campaign,” as though the ground were a detail to be managed at a later time.
“I’d go back to South Carolina. I’m asking them to send their sons and daughters over to the Mideast.” – Sen. Lindsey Graham
The second reality is manpower. Occupying a country requires more soldiers than conquering it. Counterinsurgency doctrine typically assumes that stabilizing territory requires roughly twenty to twenty-five troops for every thousand civilians. Applied to Iran’s population, that formula produces numbers that quickly become absurd. The United States deployed roughly 150,000 troops during the height of the Iraq War. Even that force struggled to control a nation a third the size of Iran. To attempt something similar in Iran would demand numbers that Washington has not fielded since the largest mobilizations of the twentieth century.
Senator Lindsey Graham appears to believe those numbers can simply be summoned. On Monday, in an interview with FOX News, he suggested he would return to his home state and ask for them directly. “I’d go back to South Carolina. I’m asking them to send their sons and daughters over to the Mideast,” he said, while spending several minutes appealing to Gulf Arab governments to enter the war on Washington’s side.
An American senator asking Arab governments to fight Washington’s war was presented as a strategic vision the region had simply failed to appreciate.
Then there is time. Iran has spent decades preparing for the possibility of invasion. Its military structure is deliberately layered. The conventional army holds territory while the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps operates as a parallel force trained for asymmetric warfare.
Missiles, drones, and fast naval craft are designed not to defeat the United States outright but to make every mile of territory costly. Iranian planners understand that no invading army arrives indefinitely supplied. Supply lines stretch, equipment breaks, political patience erodes.
“We seem to be on a path toward deploying American troops on the ground in Iran.” – Sen. Richard Blumenthal
In an interview on March 5 with NBC News, Iran’s foreign minister was asked whether Tehran feared a U.S. ground invasion. His answer was blunt: “No, we are waiting for them.”
In Washington, the fantasy persists. On March 7, Senator Rick Scott said he hoped “the demolition of the Iranian military will happen quickly” and that it would lead to lower oil prices.
Time, in Washington, is often imagined as a matter of market confidence.
The American military would enter such a war with overwhelming technological superiority. Precision-guided munitions, surveillance systems, and advanced aircraft would dominate the opening phase. Yet wars rarely remain in their opening phase.
Once soldiers begin moving through cities and mountains, the war changes character. The battlefield fragments into thousands of small engagements. Roads become ambush points. Infrastructure becomes targets. What begins as a demonstration of technological superiority becomes a contest of endurance.
Iran’s strategy does not end at its borders. The United States maintains military bases across the Gulf and the Levant. Those installations exist to project American power. In a regional war they also become targets. Iranian doctrine openly assumes that any large conflict with the United States will extend beyond Iranian territory. Oil facilities, shipping lanes, and American bases across fall inside the battlefield. Early strikes against regional sites have already begun to reflect that logic. Even a limited ground invasion would ripple outward through an entire regional network of vulnerabilities.
History offers its own warnings. Foreign armies have entered the Iranian plateau before. Few stayed. Alexander the Great succeeded through sheer momentum and the collapse of the Achaemenid state. Later empires learned more caution. Roman armies never attempted a full invasion. Ottoman campaigns struggled to push beyond the outer mountain ranges. British planners during the nineteenth century considered Iran strategically important but rarely imagined occupying it outright. The geography alone discouraged ambition.
“The demolition of the Iranian military will happen quickly.” – Sen. Rick Scott
None of this means Iran would escape destruction. Air campaigns would devastate infrastructure. Cities would suffer. Civilian casualties would climb into the hundreds of thousands. War between a superpower and a regional state always produces brutal asymmetry in firepower.
Yet destruction and victory are not the same thing.
The United States learned that lesson in Iraq and Afghanistan, where overwhelming military dominance failed to produce political control. Iran would impose a far larger and more cohesive battlefield. Senator John Barrasso, however, reduced the matter to a single verb when he accused Democrats of preferring obstruction to the “obliterat[ion]” of Iran’s nuclear program. Destruction, in this language, appears as its own theory of victory.
Israel has been learning this lesson in Gaza. The entire Gaza Strip measures about 365 square kilometers. Yet the city of Tehran alone covers roughly 750 square kilometers, more than twice the territory Israel has been fighting over for years. In other words, a single Iranian city is larger than the entire battlefield that has consumed Israeli ground forces since 2023.
Even within that tiny space, the campaign has proven slow and costly. Gaza is surrounded by Israel on land and sea. Israeli brigades begin their operations minutes from their own bases. Ammunition, fuel, and reinforcements travel only a few kilometers along secure roads. The defending force is relatively small and confined inside a strip forty kilometers long.
Yet the fighting persists year after year. Gaza is smaller than many metropolitan districts. But it has consumed the attention of one of the most heavily armed militaries on earth, supplied by an unfettered Western airbridge.
“We are waiting for them.” – Abbas Araghchi, Iran’s foreign minister
Israeli armored columns enter districts that have already been bombed flat and encounter ambushes waiting in the ruins. Palestinian fighters appear from tunnels linking houses and courtyards, strike vehicles with anti-tank weapons, then disappear again beneath the ground. A battalion clears a block only to fight for the same streets months later. The battlefield shrinks to distances measured in meters.
Iran would be the opposite. Instead of a narrow coastal strip smaller than a single metropolis, the battlefield would begin with cities larger than Gaza itself and extend across a country of 1.6 million square kilometers and more than ninety million people. Supply lines would have to cross oceans and hostile territory before even reaching the front. Every kilometer of war would have to be supplied across them.
If a confined enclave next door can absorb years of ground war despite constant bombardment and immediate logistical access, the implications for an invasion launched from the other side of the world should be obvious.
This is the reality behind Blumenthal’s warning. The phrase “boots on the ground” sounds simple at a press conference. In military terms it means committing an army to a landscape built to resist it. It means turning missile exchanges into a war whose duration and cost no one in Washington can predict.
War planners understand this. That is why ground invasion is always discussed last.
Once the first boots touch the ground, the storm will be brief. The season that follows will belong to everyone else.
Commentary
Storm and Season: The Senators Dreaming of Boots on the Ground
Senator Richard Blumenthal emerged visibly shaken from a classified briefing on Tuesday. “I am left with more questions than answers,” he told reporters. “We seem to be on a path toward deploying American troops on the ground in Iran.”
American airpower is one thing. Ground troops belong to a different category entirely. Occupation follows: cities taken street by street, supply lines stretched across hostile territory, soldiers living for months or years inside a country that does not want them there. The difference between bombing a nation and invading it is the difference between a storm and a season.
The first military reality any planner confronts when looking at Iran is scale. The country is enormous. Iran covers more than 1.6 million square kilometers and holds a population approaching ninety-three million people. Iraq, the country the United States invaded in 2003, contained roughly a quarter of that population and a far smaller territory.
Iran is not a desert basin surrounded by flat terrain. It is a fortress of mountains. The Zagros range runs along its western spine like a natural wall, while the Alborz mountains guard the northern approaches. Any army moving into the country from Iraq would find itself forced through narrow corridors of terrain that favor defenders and punish invading columns.
This basic knowledge is not always well understood in Washington. During a recent interview with Tucker Carlson, Senator Ted Cruz struggled to answer simple questions about Iran while advocating confrontation with the country. The exchange illustrated a familiar problem. American debates about war often begin before anyone involved has studied the country in question.
Military superiority on paper does not erase geography. The United States commands vastly greater firepower, aircraft, and naval forces than Iran, along with a defense budget hundreds of times larger. Yet wars are not decided by spreadsheets.
Ground war is decided by terrain and logistics over time. Iran’s defensive strategy has long relied on exactly those factors, using its mountainous landscape, large ground forces, and dispersed infrastructure to absorb an attack and make any invasion painfully expensive. On March 1, Senator Tom Cotton, for his part, spoke of “an extended air and naval campaign,” as though the ground were a detail to be managed at a later time.
The second reality is manpower. Occupying a country requires more soldiers than conquering it. Counterinsurgency doctrine typically assumes that stabilizing territory requires roughly twenty to twenty-five troops for every thousand civilians. Applied to Iran’s population, that formula produces numbers that quickly become absurd. The United States deployed roughly 150,000 troops during the height of the Iraq War. Even that force struggled to control a nation a third the size of Iran. To attempt something similar in Iran would demand numbers that Washington has not fielded since the largest mobilizations of the twentieth century.
Senator Lindsey Graham appears to believe those numbers can simply be summoned. On Monday, in an interview with FOX News, he suggested he would return to his home state and ask for them directly. “I’d go back to South Carolina. I’m asking them to send their sons and daughters over to the Mideast,” he said, while spending several minutes appealing to Gulf Arab governments to enter the war on Washington’s side.
An American senator asking Arab governments to fight Washington’s war was presented as a strategic vision the region had simply failed to appreciate.
Then there is time. Iran has spent decades preparing for the possibility of invasion. Its military structure is deliberately layered. The conventional army holds territory while the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps operates as a parallel force trained for asymmetric warfare.
Missiles, drones, and fast naval craft are designed not to defeat the United States outright but to make every mile of territory costly. Iranian planners understand that no invading army arrives indefinitely supplied. Supply lines stretch, equipment breaks, political patience erodes.
In an interview on March 5 with NBC News, Iran’s foreign minister was asked whether Tehran feared a U.S. ground invasion. His answer was blunt: “No, we are waiting for them.”
In Washington, the fantasy persists. On March 7, Senator Rick Scott said he hoped “the demolition of the Iranian military will happen quickly” and that it would lead to lower oil prices.
Time, in Washington, is often imagined as a matter of market confidence.
The American military would enter such a war with overwhelming technological superiority. Precision-guided munitions, surveillance systems, and advanced aircraft would dominate the opening phase. Yet wars rarely remain in their opening phase.
Once soldiers begin moving through cities and mountains, the war changes character. The battlefield fragments into thousands of small engagements. Roads become ambush points. Infrastructure becomes targets. What begins as a demonstration of technological superiority becomes a contest of endurance.
Iran’s strategy does not end at its borders. The United States maintains military bases across the Gulf and the Levant. Those installations exist to project American power. In a regional war they also become targets. Iranian doctrine openly assumes that any large conflict with the United States will extend beyond Iranian territory. Oil facilities, shipping lanes, and American bases across fall inside the battlefield. Early strikes against regional sites have already begun to reflect that logic. Even a limited ground invasion would ripple outward through an entire regional network of vulnerabilities.
History offers its own warnings. Foreign armies have entered the Iranian plateau before. Few stayed. Alexander the Great succeeded through sheer momentum and the collapse of the Achaemenid state. Later empires learned more caution. Roman armies never attempted a full invasion. Ottoman campaigns struggled to push beyond the outer mountain ranges. British planners during the nineteenth century considered Iran strategically important but rarely imagined occupying it outright. The geography alone discouraged ambition.
None of this means Iran would escape destruction. Air campaigns would devastate infrastructure. Cities would suffer. Civilian casualties would climb into the hundreds of thousands. War between a superpower and a regional state always produces brutal asymmetry in firepower.
Yet destruction and victory are not the same thing.
The United States learned that lesson in Iraq and Afghanistan, where overwhelming military dominance failed to produce political control. Iran would impose a far larger and more cohesive battlefield. Senator John Barrasso, however, reduced the matter to a single verb when he accused Democrats of preferring obstruction to the “obliterat[ion]” of Iran’s nuclear program. Destruction, in this language, appears as its own theory of victory.
Israel has been learning this lesson in Gaza. The entire Gaza Strip measures about 365 square kilometers. Yet the city of Tehran alone covers roughly 750 square kilometers, more than twice the territory Israel has been fighting over for years. In other words, a single Iranian city is larger than the entire battlefield that has consumed Israeli ground forces since 2023.
Even within that tiny space, the campaign has proven slow and costly. Gaza is surrounded by Israel on land and sea. Israeli brigades begin their operations minutes from their own bases. Ammunition, fuel, and reinforcements travel only a few kilometers along secure roads. The defending force is relatively small and confined inside a strip forty kilometers long.
Yet the fighting persists year after year. Gaza is smaller than many metropolitan districts. But it has consumed the attention of one of the most heavily armed militaries on earth, supplied by an unfettered Western airbridge.
Israeli armored columns enter districts that have already been bombed flat and encounter ambushes waiting in the ruins. Palestinian fighters appear from tunnels linking houses and courtyards, strike vehicles with anti-tank weapons, then disappear again beneath the ground. A battalion clears a block only to fight for the same streets months later. The battlefield shrinks to distances measured in meters.
Iran would be the opposite. Instead of a narrow coastal strip smaller than a single metropolis, the battlefield would begin with cities larger than Gaza itself and extend across a country of 1.6 million square kilometers and more than ninety million people. Supply lines would have to cross oceans and hostile territory before even reaching the front. Every kilometer of war would have to be supplied across them.
If a confined enclave next door can absorb years of ground war despite constant bombardment and immediate logistical access, the implications for an invasion launched from the other side of the world should be obvious.
This is the reality behind Blumenthal’s warning. The phrase “boots on the ground” sounds simple at a press conference. In military terms it means committing an army to a landscape built to resist it. It means turning missile exchanges into a war whose duration and cost no one in Washington can predict.
War planners understand this. That is why ground invasion is always discussed last.
Once the first boots touch the ground, the storm will be brief. The season that follows will belong to everyone else.
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