
IRGC can still mutate into a thousand decentralized terror cells. The transition must be as surgical as the initial strikes, yet there is little evidence of a political architecture ready to take over. The “confused victory” that Donald Trump celebrates could easily devolve into a decades-long security nightmare.
The strategic landscape of 2026 will be defined by how the “day after” is handled. The Iranian plateau is too vast and too important to be left to chance or to the whims of local militias. The intelligence supremacy that won the war must now be deployed to navigate the political minefield of Tehran. It has been proven that the war can be won without a massive ground invasion; now it must be proven that the peace can be won.
Ultimately, the fall of the Mullahs serves as a warning to every autocratic regime. Intelligence and technology have rewritten the rules of sovereignty. If a regime chooses to be an enemy of global stability, it will be treated as a technical problem to be solved. But technical solutions do not solve historical grievances.
The house of cards has collapsed, and the shadow of the IRGC has been lifted. The world is watching to see if the coalition has the vision to match its firepower. The terms of the new order must be dictated before Russia, China, or the remnants of the Mullahs fill the void. The victory is here, but the peace remains a distant, difficult horizon.
A roadmap for the New Iran must be provided. If not, the brilliant intelligence successes of 2026 will be remembered as the prelude to a much larger catastrophe. The Mullahs are gone, but the ghost of their regime will haunt the region until a legitimate, homegrown alternative is firmly established. The time to plan was yesterday, the time to execute that plan is now.
The primary risk remains the lack of institutional continuity. When a state is decapitated so efficiently, the nervous system often goes into a state of permanent shock. The intelligence apparatus must now transition from a destructive role to a constructive one, identifying leaders who can command the respect of the Persian heartland without appearing as puppets of the West. This is a task for which military intelligence is rarely trained.
The absence of an exit strategy acts as a force multiplier for Iranian resistance. Mojtaba Khamenei exploits this uncertainty, framing the coalition as an agent of chaos rather than liberation. If the coalition cannot articulate what a post-Mullah Iran looks like, the narrative of “Perpetual Resistance” will find fertile ground among a population that fears anarchy as much as it hated tyranny.
In the final analysis, the technical brilliance of the Israeli-American strike must be matched by an equally brilliant political strategy. The neutralization of the Artesh airbases and the decapitation of the Quds Force are historic achievements. Yet, without a stable transition, these successes only set the stage for a more volatile and unpredictable era. The mission is not complete until a functional state emerges from the ashes of the theocracy.






