The Us Military Is Entering Iran – The Land Invasion Has Officially Begun. | Douglas Macgregor

In a recent, sobering analysis, retired U.S. Army Colonel Douglas Macgregor has offered a grim prognosis for American military and geopolitical strategy. Comparing the current involvement in the Persian Gulf to the “Hotel California” of foreign policy—a place one can “check into but can’t check out”—Macgregor suggests that the United States is currently trapped in a conflict of its own design, lacking both a viable exit strategy and the means to force a decisive outcome.

The Limits of Military Power

Macgregor’s critique centers on the persistent belief within Washington that superior military force can indefinitely coerce the Iranian regime. He argues that this view is fundamentally flawed. According to Macgregor, every attempt to impose “pain” through missile strikes and incessant bombing has failed to compel the Iranian leadership to surrender. On the contrary, he asserts that the strategic initiative has increasingly shifted toward Tehran.

The retired Colonel notes that contrary to official narratives, Iran’s military capabilities remain largely intact. He highlights that over 90% of Iran’s missile-launching capacity and intelligence systems survived the initial phases of the conflict. Furthermore, he points to evidence of deep cooperation between Iran, Russia, and China, suggesting that Iranian defensive sites are now bolstered by advanced Russian radar technology and Chinese cruise missiles—some of which he describes as “practically hypersonic” and specifically engineered to neutralize U.S. naval assets.

The Economic and Sovereign Crisis

Beyond the military failure, Macgregor frames the conflict as an existential risk to the American economy. With the debt-to-GDP ratio exceeding 125% and bond market yields climbing, he warns that the U.S. is entering a fiscal danger zone unseen since the 1970s. He argues that American infrastructure, specifically its energy security, is being jeopardized by a war that the majority of the population does not support.

Macgregor contends that the American political class suffers from a disconnect with the citizenry. While Washington elites prioritize global interventionism, he believes the American public is focused entirely on domestic stability—specifically the price of energy and the integrity of the border. He predicts that when the economic fallout becomes unavoidable—with oil prices potentially hitting $200 a barrel—the illusion of American dominance in the Gulf will inevitably shatter.

A Multipolar Reality and the Withdrawal of Influence

Looking toward a multipolar future, Macgregor envisions a significant realignment of global power. He predicts that the United States is destined to follow a trajectory similar to the post-World War II British Empire: abandoning its role as a global hegemon and evacuating the “military colonies” it maintains across the globe.

He maintains that the era of forward-deployed military power is coming to a close, as modern technology ensures that such assets are vulnerable in the opening minutes of any serious conflict. According to Macgregor, the world’s wealth and influence have already shifted East, toward China and Southeast Asia. He suggests that the United States must stop viewing itself as the world’s “policeman” and instead turn inward to focus on social cohesion, debt management, and internal stability.

The Israel Question

Perhaps most controversially, Macgregor argues that Israel stands at a crossroads. He suggests that U.S. support has inadvertently hindered Israel from becoming a “normal nation” by enabling a quest for regional hegemony that may be unsustainable in the long term. He posits that once the U.S. finally withdraws from the Middle East—a move he believes is inevitable—Israel will be forced to choose between normalized regional integration and perpetual conflict.

Ultimately, Macgregor’s message is one of profound strategic retrenchment. He calls for the end of the “warfare state” and an abandonment of the 20th-century obsession with regime change and intervention. In his view, the path to American renewal lies in accepting the limitations of its own power, focusing on national sovereignty, and avoiding unnecessary conflicts that serve only to erode the nation’s remaining wealth and influence.