Foreign Affairs | Gideon Rose
The Trump administration's intervention in Iran has rapidly mirrored the Johnson administration's Vietnam policy, progressing through entry, escalation, frustrated stalemate, and negotiations within just two months. The article posits that the conflict is now on a trajectory akin to the Nixon administration's extrication efforts, suggesting a swift, unsatisfying deal and a conclusion within another few months, followed by inevitable recriminations. While acknowledging inherent differences between the conflicts in Iran and Vietnam, such as distinct regions and ideologies, the analysis draws a compelling parallel between their strategic dynamics. Furthermore, the piece extends this comparative framework to the Ukraine conflict, likening its potential outcome to the Korean War, thereby suggesting that similar geopolitical engagements often conclude in comparable, often unsatisfactory, ways for intervening powers. This rapid historical compression underscores the article's central argument about the predictable patterns of protracted military interventions.