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Iran – United States: The Truce Is Not Peace, It Is a Strategic PauseOp-ed by Isaac Hammouch

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Iran – United States: The Truce Is Not Peace, It Is a Strategic PauseOp-ed by Isaac Hammouch

The question is no longer whether Iran posed an imminent threat. It likely never did—at least not in the conventional sense—and this is precisely where much of the Western strategic debate has gone astray. By confining analysis to a short-term framework—one focused on urgency or immediate attack—decision-makers have long underestimated the true nature of Iranian power, which operates on a long-term, diffuse, and multidimensional logic. Iran does not necessarily seek to strike immediately; it patiently builds leverage through ideological influence, indirect territorial presence, and asymmetric military capabilities.


In this context, the United States’ decision to engage militarily cannot be understood as a response to an immediate danger, but rather as an attempt to contain a growing and structural risk. This risk is not limited to nuclear ambitions. It lies in the gradual consolidation of a regional arc of influence stretching from Tehran to the Mediterranean, through Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon, as well as in Iran’s ability to project power through proxy actors such as Hezbollah, Iraqi militias, and the Houthis. This strategy allows Tehran to shape regional dynamics while avoiding constant direct confrontation.


However, the military sequence that began in late February 2026 quickly revealed its limitations. Despite overwhelming technological and logistical superiority, the United States encountered an adversary whose strategic depth, dispersed infrastructure, and adaptability made any swift victory unlikely. Iran, for its part, lacked the capacity to impose a direct balance of power but demonstrated its ability to disrupt critical global economic arteries, particularly through tensions in the Strait of Hormuz. This underscored a fundamental reality: modern warfare is fought as much through control of flows as through control of territory.


It is within this context that the April 7 truce must be understood. Far from reflecting a voluntary de-escalation, it appears instead as the product of a dual strategic constraint. For Washington, continuing the conflict entailed rising costs—economically, through global repercussions on energy markets and supply chains, and politically, amid sensitive domestic electoral dynamics. For Tehran, the combined military and economic pressure created a tangible risk of internal destabilization, in a country already facing structural fragilities.


The truce, therefore, does not represent equilibrium but suspension. It provides both actors with breathing space to reassess their positions, recalibrate their strategies, and regain room for maneuver. In that sense, it reflects a classical pattern in conflict management: when direct confrontation reaches its limits, it gives way to a phase of strategic recomposition.


This recomposition unfolds within a broader geopolitical framework shaped by multiple actors. Gulf states, directly exposed to the consequences of escalation, seek to avoid uncontrolled conflict while maintaining their security alignment with the United States. Israel, for its part, remains firmly anchored in a strategy of long-term confrontation with Iran, viewing any pause as temporary and any Iranian consolidation as a lasting threat.

Meanwhile, global powers such as China and Russia observe and adjust their positions, capitalizing on Western vulnerabilities to expand their influence in the region.


In this complex environment, the truce does not signal the end of the conflict but its transformation. The confrontation between Iran and the United States is likely to continue in less visible yet equally decisive forms: economic pressure, indirect engagements, targeted operations, and influence warfare. This hybridization reflects the evolving nature of power in contemporary geopolitics, where the line between war and peace is increasingly blurred.


The key question now is not whether the war is over, but whether both sides can avoid a new uncontrolled escalation. For while direct confrontation has exposed its limits, it has resolved none of the underlying divergences. The United States cannot accept the continued expansion of Iranian influence across the Middle East without responding. Iran, in turn, cannot abandon a strategy that lies at the core of its security doctrine and regional projection.


In this light, the current truce appears as a necessary but fragile strategic pause. It offers temporary relief but does not alter the structural dynamics at play. It buys time, but it settles nothing.


History shows that such interim phases are often the most decisive. They redefine balances, reshape alliances, and prepare the next sequence of confrontation. The question, therefore, is not whether the conflict will resume, but in what form, at what intensity, and within what strategic framework.


Because beyond the confrontation between Washington and Tehran, what is at stake is the broader balance of the Middle East—and the capacity of global powers to contain a conflict whose consequences extend far beyond the region.

The truce is not peace. It is a recalibration in a confrontation destined to endure.


Isaac Hammouch
Belgian-Moroccan journalist and writer
Author of several books and op-eds, he analyzes societal issues, governance challenges, and the transformations shaping the contemporary world.