By Douglas V. Gibbs
When we hear “boots on the ground,” our minds immediately flash back to Iraq and Afghanistan. The door-kicking, house-to-house searches, and the grinding counterinsurgency operations cost thousands of American lives and trillions of dollars. Americans have a right to fear repeating that scenario. But what we’re witnessing in Iran under President Trump’s Operation Epic Fury represents something fundamentally different. The key is understanding that not all “boots on the ground” scenarios are created equal. The targeted approach we’re seeing, potentially including securing strategic locations like Kharg Island, is a far cry from the nation-building quagmires of the past.
The current operation has already demonstrated remarkable success and precision. U.S. forces have conducted extensive bombing campaigns, including a large raid on Kharg Island that “totally obliterated” military forces while deliberately sparing economic infrastructure “for reasons of decency.” This surgical approach ofdestroying naval mine storage facilities, missile storage bunkers, and military sites without crippling Iran’s economic lifeline shows a level of restraint we rarely saw in previous conflicts. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has emphasized that Iran cannot have a nuclear bomb, and under Operation Epic Fury, they won’t. The mission is clear and focused, not an open-ended commitment to remake Iranian society.
The potential deployment of ground troops to secure specific locations like Kharg Island represents a tactical necessity, not a strategic shift toward occupation. Military experts have identified Kharg Island, a hub handling roughly 90% of Iran’s crude exports, as a critical strategic target. Unlike in Iraq, where American forces found themselves conducting counterinsurgency operations across entire cities for years, securing Kharg Island would be a limited, objective-focused mission. As one intelligence official told CNN, the attack on Kharg Island was a signal, but the question is what it will take to make Iranians realize keeping the Strait of Hormuz closed is no longer in their interest. A limited ground presence to secure this vital chokepoint could achieve that objective without the massive footprint of previous wars.
President Trump has consistently signaled that this operation is nearing completion, with the goal of reaching an end to hostilities as soon as possible. He recently warned that if Iran doesn’t reach a deal and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, the U.S. would conclude its “stay” in Iran by obliterating remaining infrastructure, suggesting a clear exit strategy rather than indefinite occupation. The administration has even deployed “several warships and 5,000 Marines and sailors” to the region, but this appears to be for securing specific objectives rather than widespread combat operations. This targeted deployment aligns with Trump’s dislike of war while acknowledging its necessity as a diplomatic tool when conversations fail with an Iranian leadership that embraces an apocalyptic ideology welcoming chaos.
Perhaps most importantly, Trump appears to understand that true regime change must come from within. While Israel may handle certain direct action scenarios, the president seems to believe that the Iranian people will eventually rise up against their oppressors, essentially serving as the “boots on the ground” for their own liberation. This approach recognizes that American forces cannot and should not be the primary agents of societal transformation in Iran. Instead, by applying targeted military pressure and creating conditions where the Iranian regime’s failures become undeniable, the U.S. can support organic internal movements for change without the pitfalls of externally imposed nation-building.
The distinction between the kind of “boots on the ground” we saw in Iraq and Afghanistan and what we’re potentially seeing in Iran couldn’t be clearer. One was about occupation, nation-building, and counterinsurgency. The other is about securing specific strategic objectives to create leverage for diplomatic resolution. As Americans, we should support this more restrained, mission-focused approach that protects American interests while avoiding the traps of previous conflicts. The mission is almost complete if Iran’s leadership would simply make an acceptable deal. Until then, limited, targeted operations to secure critical locations like Kharg Island represent not a step toward another endless war, but a smarter application of military power to achieve specific, achievable objectives.
— Political Pistachio Conservative News and Commentary
