It feels like every few years, the world turns its attention back to Iran. The names change. The flashpoints shift. The headlines evolve, often depending on the bias of the news source. But the underlying tension—layered and decades in the making—remains. So let’s start with a simple question: what do we actually know right now?
Tensions involving Iran have escalated again—through direct conflict, proxy activity, and rising threats that pull in other nations. The region remains simultaneously one of the most strategically important and volatile in the world. And when things heat up there, the ripple effects reach here. I don’t like the rising price of gas. Everyday people often bear the heaviest burdens.
We thus also know this: the situation is complicated.
So what don’t we know?
A lot.
We don’t know the full extent of behind-the-scenes diplomacy. We don’t know which actions are meant as deterrence and which might invite escalation. We don’t know how far any one player is truly willing to go—or what might force their hand. Most importantly, we don’t know how this will end. That’s the scary part from my limited perspective.
Conflicts like this rarely follow clean scripts. They stretch. They evolve. They surprise. Right now, tension hasn’t tipped into full-scale war, but it hasn’t exactly eased either. It seems the kind of situation that can last far longer than anyone wants. Which brings us to the big question no one can answer with confidence: how long might this take? History often suggests… longer than we think.
Conflicts rooted in ideology, security concerns, and regional power don’t resolve overnight. They require patience, strategy, and ideally, cooperation. So much is involved. And again from my limited perspective, I find myself holding multiple concerns at once…
I was concerned when Pres. Trump authorized military action involving Iran last month because any use of force carries consequences we can’t fully predict. I was concerned years earlier when policies under Pres. Obama created space—directly or indirectly—for Iran to continue advancing its nuclear capabilities, even under agreement and oversight. That, too, carried risk. I also remain concerned today about Iran itself—its leadership, posture, and stated hostility toward the U.S. and Israel. This isn’t speculation; it’s been voiced, repeated and reinforced over time—through actions, alliances, and rhetoric in the region. Those concerns don’t cancel each other out—they coexist.
As much, therefore, as we dislike what’s happening, this conflict isn’t the kind of thing that a Gallup or Pew poll can solve. It takes military, foreign relations, and historical experts—far more than any semi-humble, current events blogger or briefly tenured congressperson can figure out. We need experts to craft effective solutions.
For the rest of us then, the challenge is simpler but still hard: how do we hold complexity without rushing to pick sides? Situations like this don’t fit neatly into “right” and “wrong.” There are real risks in action, real risks in inaction, and consequences no matter which path is taken. Multiple things can be true at the same time.
Strength can be necessary—and so can restraint. Diplomacy can be valuable—and so can skepticism. Leadership decisions, regardless of party, carry both intention and unintended consequence.
Hence, moments like this prompt me to pray for our leaders rather than pick any team. Pray for solutions, knowing no single approach will work on its own. Strength without strategy risks escalation. Diplomacy without leverage can stall. Patience without clarity can drift. The challenge is combining these elements in a way that actually moves things forward.
So what does a solution look like?
Less escalation. More stability. Fewer lives at risk. More collaboration than conflict—both there and here. That’s the win.
Respectfully,
AR
