By the third week of war, the game has completely changed.



Week one: Iran gets bombed, America and Israel go on a bombing spree, thinking it'll be over in three days. Then Iran fires missiles anyway, closes the strait, and oil prices take off.

Week two: Iran starts hitting its stride, drones take out air defenses, missiles hit bases, and Gulf states start panicking.
America realizes it's running out of ammunition—Patriot stockpiles hit bottom, tankers get shot down.

Week three: Now both sides are preparing their killer moves.

Iran says it's opening a "new front," and this isn't a bluff—the Strait of Hormuz controls twenty percent of global oil supply, another oil spike and America's homefront revolts. Little Khamenei hints at "new cards on the table," could be cyber warfare, special ops, or simply unleashing all proxies: Houthis blockading the Red Sea, Hezbollah moving north, Iraqi militias hitting bases.

America's in a worse spot.

Trump shouts "epic victory" while Iran keeps fighting stronger.

The Pentagon admits it has no plan for strait closure, the Energy Secretary got caught lying by the market, the Treasury Secretary met the president with a shaking voice. Gas prices spike domestically, midterms approaching, Republicans fracturing internally.

Iran's most brutal move is this "death by a thousand cuts" strategy. No decisive battle, just attrition.

Your Patriot costs a billion per unit, my drone runs five grand each—you gonna feel that?

Your interceptors fire and they're gone, my missiles fire and I can make more.

Time's on my side, pressure's on yours.

Gulf states are in a bind now.

American bases are both protection and a death warrant—Iran warns daily about "closing bases" but America can't even defend them.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE are pulling capital, Dubai banks are fleeing, capital flight moves faster than missiles.

By now, this war isn't about who bombs more—it's about who can outlast whom.

Iran wants "not losing equals winning," America needs "must win."

Different mindsets, different tactics, different outcomes.
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