The 100 Days That Shook the World: Why the U.S. and Israel Failed to Defeat Iran - Softcover

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9798235710061: The 100 Days That Shook the World: Why the U.S. and Israel Failed to Defeat Iran

Synopsis

The 100 Days That Shook the World

Why Military Superiority Failed to Produce Decisive Victory

For 100 days, the Middle East stood at the center of a confrontation that threatened to reshape the global balance of power.

The United States and Israel entered the conflict with overwhelming advantages in air power, precision weapons, missile defense, intelligence, cyber capabilities, global logistics, and diplomatic influence. Iran could not match them conventionally. Yet superior military power did not produce decisive victory.

*The 100 Days That Shook the World* explains why.

Iran relied on a different form of strength: ballistic missiles, kamikaze drones, mobile launchers, underground facilities, strategic geography, the Zagros Mountains, the Strait of Hormuz, and a regional network extending through Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq, and Syria. These capabilities transformed what was expected to be a limited military campaign into a prolonged, multi-front struggle.

Drawing on Modern War, deterrence theory, asymmetric warfare, and modern strategic thought, this book examines the crucial difference between destroying military targets and achieving lasting political results.

It explores the intelligence failures and miscalculations that drove escalation, Israel's preventive-strike doctrine, the strain placed on expensive air-defense systems by low-cost drones and missile saturation, the strategic value of Iran's underground infrastructure, and the role of Hezbollah, the Houthis, and Iran-aligned armed groups.

The book also analyzes the global consequences of the conflict: pressure on oil and LNG markets, disruption of maritime trade, rising insurance and shipping costs, threats to the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea, and the competing interests of the United States, Russia, China, Türkiye, the Gulf states, and Europe.

This is not a celebration of Iran, nor a dismissal of the security concerns of Israel and the United States. Iran suffered major military, economic, and infrastructural damage. However, its political system survived, its missile and drone capabilities were not completely eliminated, its nuclear ambiguity remained unresolved, and its regional networks continued to influence the battlefield.

The result was neither a clear Iranian victory nor a conventional American-Israeli defeat. It was a demonstration of the limits of military power.

Written for readers of geopolitics, military history, international relations, security studies, and contemporary Middle Eastern affairs, this book asks one central question:

**Why can the strongest military dominate the battlefield and still fail to control the political ending of a war?**

In an age of drones, proxy networks, underground facilities, cyber warfare, strategic chokepoints, and globally connected markets, the ability to strike an enemy is no longer the same as the ability to defeat it.

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