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Sunday, 1 March 2026

THE SILICON SCHISM: Anthropic, the Department of War, and the Geopolitics of Algorithmic Sovereignty


 

Executive Summary 

As of March 1, 2026, the long-standing tension between Silicon Valley's ethical frameworks and the U.S. national security apparatus has reached a definitive breaking point. The Department of War (DoW), acting under directive from President Donald Trump and Secretary Pete Hegseth, designated Anthropic—a cornerstone of American AI innovation valued at approximately $380 billion—as a "Supply Chain Risk to National Security." This unprecedented action, the first time the designation has ever been applied to a domestic American firm, followed Anthropic's steadfast refusal to remove technical constitutional safeguards against mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous lethal weapons from its model deployment contract. 

The confrontation escalated rapidly across a single week in late February 2026. On February 25, Hegseth issued Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei an ultimatum—comply by 5:01 PM ET on Friday, February 27, or face designation and contract termination. Amodei responded in a public statement the following day, writing that the company "cannot in good conscience accede to the Pentagon's request." When the deadline passed without agreement, President Trump ordered all federal agencies to "immediately cease" use of Anthropic's products, initiating a six-month phase-out. Within hours, OpenAI announced a competing Pentagon agreement that nominally preserved similar red lines through different contractual architecture. Anthropic announced it would challenge the designation in court, calling it "legally unsound" and a "dangerous precedent." 

This article examines the deep geopolitical, legal, and sociopolitical ramifications of this schism, analyzing the erosion of democratic values, the emergence of a command-oriented technology market, and the long-term consequences for the liberal world order. 

 

I. Chronology and Factual Record 

A precise reconstruction of events is essential to any rigorous analysis. In July 2025, Anthropic was awarded a $200 million contract with the Pentagon—the first AI firm whose models were approved for deployment on classified government networks, achieved through a partnership with Palantir. For the subsequent months, the deployment was, by Anthropic's own account, operationally uncontested: the company stated that its two narrow safeguards had "not affected a single government mission to date." 

Tensions crystallized in late February 2026 when Pentagon leadership, including Defense Undersecretary Emil Michael, began pressing Anthropic to accept language permitting use of Claude for "all lawful purposes" without explicit carve-outs for mass domestic surveillance or autonomous lethal targeting. Pentagon negotiators argued that federal law already prohibits such uses and that requiring private companies to write their ethical policies into government contracts established an unworkable precedent—one in which, as a Pentagon official stated, the military would be unable to "lead tactical operations by exception." 

Anthropic's position was that contractual language offered as compromise contained "legalese that would allow those safeguards to be disregarded at will." A significant dispute concerned data collection: according to Axios, a final Pentagon offer sought the ability to analyze Americans' geolocation, web browsing data, and financial information purchased from data brokers—uses Anthropic considered categorically distinct from its mission. Anthropic had previously offered broad concessions, including approval for missile defense, cyber operations, and intelligence analysis, but held firm on two narrow exceptions: no fully autonomous lethal targeting, and no mass domestic surveillance of Americans. 

On Tuesday, February 25, 2026, Hegseth met Amodei at the Pentagon. The meeting was described as cordial, though Pentagon sources told NBC News that Hegseth threatened to invoke the Defense Production Act (DPA)—a Korean War-era statute granting the President broad emergency authority over private industry—to compel compliance. The DPA threat was paired with the warning of a supply-chain-risk designation. Amodei publicly responded on February 26 that "threats do not change our position." The deadline passed at 5:01 PM ET on February 27 without agreement. Trump posted on Truth Social that Anthropic had made a "disastrous mistake" and ordered the government-wide cessation of Anthropic usage. Hegseth declared the supply-chain-risk designation on X the same evening, stating that "no contractor, supplier, or partner that does business with the United States military may conduct any commercial activity with Anthropic." 

Within hours, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced on X that his company had "reached an agreement with the Department of War to deploy our models in their classified network." The OpenAI agreement formally maintained the same two red lines as Anthropic's position—prohibitions on domestic mass surveillance and autonomous weapons—but achieved them through a layered "safety stack" architecture rather than explicit contract prohibitions, combined with cloud-only deployment and cleared OpenAI personnel in operational loops. Altman publicly called on the government to offer the same terms to all AI labs, and to resolve the dispute with Anthropic. Hundreds of employees from Google and OpenAI signed an open petition supporting Anthropic's stance. 

 

II. The Crisis of Democratic Values: Surveillance, Autonomy, and the Constitutional Order 

II.i. The Fourth Amendment and the Digital Panopticon 

The confrontation centers on two red lines established by Anthropic's leadership that are deeply rooted in constitutional and democratic principles. The first is the refusal to permit Claude to be used for mass domestic surveillance. The U.S. Constitution's Fourth Amendment protects the "right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures." The DoW's demand for "all lawful use" access, paired with negotiating language that sought access to Americans' geolocation, web browsing, and financial data from commercial brokers, signals an intent to leverage agentic AI for a form of population-level data aggregation that would have been practically impossible one generation ago. 

From an academic and civil-libertarian perspective, automating the classification and behavioral scoring of citizens based on privately generated data replicates the logic of what Foucauldian theorists identify as the "panopticon"—a surveillance architecture in which the mere possibility of being watched disciplines behavior across an entire population, regardless of whether any individual is actually being observed. When a government classifies its own population through opaque algorithmic inference, it replaces the foundational legal principle of the "presumption of innocence" with a condition of continuous probabilistic suspicion. This is not merely a legal dispute but a fundamental shift from democratic governance—in which the state bears the burden of establishing individual guilt through due process—to algorithmic governance, in which the state manages risk populations defined by statistical inference. 

The Pentagon's counter-argument is procedurally cogent: federal law already prohibits mass domestic surveillance, and an AI company's contractual terms of service are redundant at best and jurisdictionally inappropriate at worst. Yet this argument elides a critical asymmetry: existing legal prohibitions constrain stated government intent, not technical capability. A constitutional safeguard embedded in an AI model's technical architecture provides a friction point that statutory law alone cannot; it ensures that the capability to surveil at scale is not silently developed even when immediate intent is benign. Anthropic's insistence on explicit contractual prohibition thus functions less as a commercial condition than as a structural engineering control in the tradition of privacy-by-design. 

II.ii. The Morality and Techno-Ethics of Autonomous Lethal Force 

Anthropic's second red line—prohibiting "human-out-of-the-loop" lethal systems—addresses both the technical and moral limits of current generative AI. CEO Amodei stated publicly that "today's frontier AI models are not reliable enough to be used in fully autonomous weapons" and that "allowing current models to be used in this way would endanger America's warfighters and civilians." This is not a rhetorical position: Claude and comparable large language models are known to hallucinate with non-trivial frequency, to fail in adversarial distributional conditions, and to lack the contextual situational awareness required to distinguish combatants from non-combatants in complex, dynamic, multi-party urban environments. 

Beyond technical reliability, the deployment of autonomous lethal systems creates what legal scholars have termed the "accountability gap." The laws of armed conflict under the Geneva Conventions presuppose the existence of a moral agent—a commanding officer, a soldier—who bears legal and ethical responsibility for the decision to apply lethal force. When an autonomous system selects and engages a target without meaningful human control, no such agent exists. A war crime committed by an algorithm produces no defendant, no tribunal, and no deterrence signal. Far from strengthening U.S. military effectiveness, premature deployment of autonomous weapons in conditions of model unreliability increases the probability of catastrophic and legally unattributable escalation. 

The Pentagon's position—that it has no intention of using Claude for fully autonomous weapons and that its internal policies already forbid it—again presents a procedural argument against a structural one. The DoW's insistence that it cannot commit to this restriction "in writing to a company" reveals a deeper tension: between institutional confidence in self-governance and the recognition that contractual commitments to private suppliers constitute an external accountability mechanism that survives changes in administration, personnel, and political environment. Anthropic's position is, in this reading, a demand for durable rather than merely stated assurance. 

 

III. Geopolitical Economy: From Free Markets to Command Dynamics 

The designation of a domestic, $380-billion AI leader as a "supply chain risk"—a classification previously reserved for the likes of Huawei, ZTE, and other firms deemed extensions of adversarial foreign state apparatuses—marks a radical departure from the foundational premises of liberal market governance. Legal experts quoted in Fortune noted that this is "the first time the U.S. has ever designated an American company a supply chain risk" and the first time the designation has been used "in apparent retaliation for a business not agreeing to certain terms." The University of Minnesota law professor Alan Rozenshtein characterized the move directly: "The government really wants to keep using Anthropic's technology, and it's just using every source of leverage possible." 

Under a conventional free-market model, vendor selection in government procurement is governed by a balance of technical quality, price, and mutually agreed-upon terms of service. Companies maintain Acceptable Use Policies that define the ethical boundaries of their products, functioning as a form of private governance that, in the aggregate, constitutes a check on state power through market structure rather than legal mandate. The DoW's approach inverts this relationship: by threatening total market exclusion under the supply-chain-risk mechanism, the state transforms the AUP from a contractual term into a political loyalty test. 

The immediate consequence is visible in OpenAI's behavior. Although Altman stated publicly that OpenAI shares Anthropic's red lines on surveillance and autonomous weapons, the company secured a deal within hours of Anthropic's designation. The substantive question—whether OpenAI's safety stack architecture provides equivalent protection to Anthropic's explicit contract prohibitions—remains unresolved and, critically, unverifiable from outside the agreement. As Fortune noted, Altman said OpenAI agreed the Pentagon could use its tech for "any lawful purpose" while also saying the limitations were "put into our agreement"—leaving it unclear how both propositions can simultaneously be true. This ambiguity is not trivial: in a high-pressure military operational context, the distinction between implicit reliance on existing law and explicit contractual prohibition may determine whether a safeguard holds. 

The broader structural consequence is the emergence of what may be characterized as a compliance-oriented command economy in the AI sector. By excluding non-compliant firms, the administration is not selecting the most capable technology—the Pentagon's own user base was, by multiple accounts, highly satisfied with Claude—but the most contractually acquiescent technology. This creates a perverse selection dynamic in which safety architecture is rewarded by market exclusion and compliance is rewarded regardless of whether it represents genuine ethical alignment or strategic opacity. As Adam Connor of the Center for American Progress observed, the designation means that "some large portion" of Anthropic's enterprise customer base "might evaporate, either because they have government contracts or might want them in the future"—a chilling effect on the commercial independence of any AI firm that maintains substantive safety commitments. 

 

IV. Legal Analysis: The Supply Chain Risk Designation and Its Limits 

The legal architecture of the supply-chain-risk designation warrants careful scrutiny. The relevant statutory mechanism permits the Pentagon to exclude suppliers it designates as posing national security risks from contract eligibility. However, as Anthropic's legal team immediately argued, the scope of that authority is narrower than the administration's public statements suggested. Federal law limits supply-chain-risk designations to DoW contract use; the DoD cannot, through this mechanism alone, compel private companies to cease providing services to other customers or mandate that all defense contractors sever all commercial relationships with the designated firm. 

Hegseth's X post stating that "no contractor, supplier, or partner that does business with the United States military may conduct any commercial activity with Anthropic" thus appears to have outrun the statutory authority. Anthropic directly rebutted this claim, asserting that "the Secretary does not have the statutory authority to back up this statement." The statute also requires, according to Fortune's legal analysis, that the Pentagon exhaust alternative, less intrusive courses of action before making a supply-chain-risk finding—a procedural requirement whose adequacy is plainly questionable given how rapidly the dispute escalated from internal negotiation to public designation across a single week. These are not trivial procedural objections; they are substantive grounds for judicial review that may ultimately vindicate Anthropic's position, though the business damage from years of litigation may prove irreversible regardless of legal outcome. 

The Defense Production Act threat presents a separate and arguably more alarming legal dimension. The DPA confers on the President broad emergency authority to direct private industries to prioritize national security needs. Its invocation against a domestic AI company to compel the removal of safety guardrails would represent an unprecedented exercise of emergency executive power in the peacetime technology sector. The constitutional questions raised—including First Amendment implications of compelling a company to deploy its models in ways its principals consider harmful—have not been tested in any court and would likely require extended litigation to resolve. Senator Mark Warner, vice chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, stated that the president's directive "raises serious concerns about whether national security decisions are being driven by careful analysis or political considerations." 

 

V. The OpenAI Counterfactual: Architecture Versus Principle 

The speed with which OpenAI secured a Pentagon deal in Anthropic's wake illuminates a critical distinction between two approaches to embedding ethical commitments in AI systems: contractual prohibition versus architectural safety stacks. Anthropic sought to inscribe its red lines in the text of its government contracts—a legalistic approach that makes commitments transparent, auditable, and judicially enforceable. OpenAI secured agreement on nominally identical principles—no mass domestic surveillance, no autonomous weapons—but achieved them through cloud-only deployment, a proprietary safety stack operated by OpenAI personnel, and cleared employees in operational loops. 

OpenAI's approach may, in some respects, provide stronger practical protection: a technical architecture that makes certain uses physically impossible is more robust than a contractual prohibition that a future administration might reinterpret, waive, or litigate. Cloud-only deployment forecloses edge deployment architectures that could enable autonomous weapons in disconnected battlefield environments. Having cleared OpenAI personnel in the loop provides a human accountability mechanism at the point of operational use. Altman's public articulation of the framework was consistent with Anthropic's stated principles, and his call on the DoW to extend the same terms to all AI labs suggests genuine desire for industry-wide alignment rather than competitive opportunism. 

However, the OpenAI model carries its own risks. The authority to define what constitutes a red-line violation remains, under the agreement, with the DoW for the purposes of identifying "lawful use." OpenAI's safety stack, while technically sophisticated, operates under the ultimate oversight of a company that has demonstrated willingness to engage with the military on its terms. Without contractual explicitness, the accountability of the OpenAI arrangement to external review—by Congress, the judiciary, or the public—is structurally weaker than Anthropic's proposed approach. The critical test of the OpenAI framework will come not in peacetime, when the distinction between technically possible and contractually prohibited is largely academic, but in conditions of genuine operational pressure, when military leadership may seek to invoke emergency exceptions to safety constraints that exist primarily as internal company policy rather than binding legal commitments. 

 

VI. The "Enemy Capability" Fallacy and International Dimensions 

A primary justification advanced by the administration is that adversaries—particularly the People's Republic of China—face no comparable moral or commercial constraints on their deployment of AI for surveillance and autonomous weapons. The argument, in its most unadorned form, is that democratic restraint constitutes strategic disadvantage. This reasoning, while superficially compelling in its geopolitical framing, contains multiple structural fallacies that deserve systematic examination. 

First, the comparative capability argument confuses military maximalism with military effectiveness. Autonomous weapons that cannot reliably distinguish combatants from civilians do not confer net tactical advantage; they generate strategic liabilities in the form of civilian casualties, attributability crises, and alliance rupture. The United States' strategic position in any peer or near-peer conflict depends substantially on the coherence and solidarity of its alliance architecture—NATO, the Quad, AUKUS—relationships that are predicated on shared normative commitments to the laws of armed conflict and human rights. Deploying AI systems whose ethical constraints have been removed as a condition of domestic commercial compliance does not strengthen that architecture; it undermines the normative foundation on which it rests. 

Second, the administration's actions risk accelerating the precise dynamic they claim to be resisting. As OpenAI's own all-hands meeting apparently acknowledged, a major concern was "AI-driven surveillance threatening democracy," alongside recognition that national security actors require international surveillance capabilities against adversaries. These are genuinely competing values requiring careful calibration—not binary choices between total compliance and total restriction. By designating Anthropic a supply-chain risk for attempting that calibration, the administration signals to the entire AI industry that principled engagement with government on safety norms is commercially suicidal. The rational industry response is to retreat from explicit safety commitments—a race to the bottom that benefits China's strategic position rather than constraining it. 

Third, the international signaling effects of the designation are deeply damaging. G7 partners—particularly the European Union, which is developing its own AI regulatory architecture under the EU AI Act, and the United Kingdom, which has invested substantially in responsible AI governance through its AI Safety Institute—have observed an American administration use the national security apparatus to coerce a domestic AI company into removing safety constraints. This provides precisely the precedent that autocratic competitors will cite to justify their own absence of AI safety commitments, while simultaneously eroding the credibility of U.S. advocacy for responsible AI governance in multilateral forums. 

 

VII. Bayesian Game Theory Analysis: Strategic Scenarios and Equilibria 

The Anthropic-DoW confrontation can be productively modeled as a multi-player Bayesian game in which the Government, Anthropic, and competitor AI firms hold private information about their technical capabilities, strategic resolve, and the true ground truth of AI reliability in military applications. The following scenarios represent plausible equilibrium trajectories given the current state of play as of March 1, 2026. 

Scenario A: The Compliance Trap (Dominant Equilibrium Under Current Conditions) 

If the government's supply-chain-risk designation and associated market exclusion pressure persist without judicial relief, AI labs may conclude that safety commitments constitute an existential commercial liability in the U.S. government market. The dominant strategy becomes maximal contractual compliance with minimal public transparency about the nature of safety stack limitations. The short-term government gain—tactical control over AI deployment—is offset by long-term degradation: safety-focused researchers migrate to non-aligned commercial or international environments, and the U.S. military ultimately relies on models that are contractually compliant but technically inferior and ethically unreflective. This is the scenario in which the administration "wins" the negotiation and loses the AI race. 

Scenario B: The Silicon Insurrection (Partial Equilibrium Under Industry Solidarity) 

The rapid expression of industry solidarity with Anthropic's position—hundreds of Google and OpenAI employees signing open letters, Altman's public articulation of shared red lines, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's careful neutrality—suggests that a partial form of this scenario is already operative. If the designation triggers a broader industry movement toward explicit safety commitments as a reputational and recruitment signal, the government faces a market in which it must either negotiate with safety-committed firms or build in-house capacity. In-house AI development at the scale required for frontier capability deployment would cost orders of magnitude more than commercial licensing and would likely produce technically inferior systems. This scenario's resolution depends heavily on whether the legal challenge succeeds and whether Congress—which the Senate Armed Services Committee has already signaled some concern—provides legislative clarity on the boundaries of supply-chain-risk authority. 

Scenario C: The Negotiated Framework (Resolution via Legislative Architecture) 

The most durable resolution involves legislative rather than executive action. The Senate Armed Services Committee's bipartisan letter to both Anthropic and the Pentagon, urging resolution and acknowledging that "the issue of lawful use requires additional work by all stakeholders," provides the institutional foundation for a legislative framework. Such a framework would replace the binary compliance-or-exclusion dynamic with a "Certified Use Framework" under which AI firms could qualify for government contracts by demonstrating that their safety architectures meet defined minimum standards for autonomous weapons safeguards and surveillance prohibitions—standards established by Congress rather than negotiated bilaterally under executive pressure. This approach would preserve both the military's operational flexibility and the private sector's structural role as an accountability mechanism on government use of AI. 

 

VIII. Toward an International Architecture: The G7 Digital Sovereignty Charter 

Beyond domestic legislative solutions, the Anthropic crisis reveals the urgent need for multilateral governance frameworks that can constrain the race-to-the-bottom dynamics inherent in unilateral national security AI procurement. We propose that the G7 nations formally negotiate and adopt a Digital Sovereignty Charter encompassing the following non-negotiable structural pillars: 

Pillar I: The Meaningful Human Control Mandate 

A binding international protocol requiring Meaningful Human Control (MHC) for any AI system capable of directing kinetic force—including the identification, selection, and engagement of targets. MHC should be defined not merely as a human "in the loop" in a nominal sense, but as a human with genuine capacity to understand, evaluate, and override AI-generated recommendations within operationally realistic time constraints. This standard would directly address both the reliability gap in current frontier AI systems and the accountability gap under international humanitarian law. It would align with existing consensus positions in the International Committee of the Red Cross's framework on autonomous weapons and provide a normative basis for engaging China and Russia in future arms control discussions. 

Pillar II: Privacy Reciprocity and Judicial Oversight 

A prohibition on the use of generative AI for the mass automated classification or behavioral scoring of citizens without individualized, time-limited judicial authorization. This pillar would require signatory governments to establish independent judicial review mechanisms for AI-assisted domestic intelligence operations, creating procedural requirements analogous to traditional warrant requirements but adapted to the population-scale capabilities of agentic AI systems. Critically, this pillar would establish reciprocity: signatories would commit not only to restricting their own surveillance AI but to prohibiting the use of AI systems trained on citizens of other signatories without equivalent judicial oversight. 

Pillar III: Market Pluralism and AUP Protection 

Legislative and treaty-level protections preventing the weaponization of national security procurement authorities against domestic firms that maintain substantive AI safety policies. Specifically, supply-chain-risk designations should be subject to expedited judicial review, mandatory exhaustion of alternative remedies, and explicit legislative prohibition on their use as retaliation for refusal to remove safety constraints. This pillar would protect the structural role of the private sector as an accountability mechanism in AI governance—a role that the Anthropic case demonstrates is both valuable and vulnerable. 

Together, these pillars would constitute a "G7 Certified AI Partner" framework under which qualifying AI firms could deploy in government environments with legal clarity about the boundaries of permissible use—boundaries established by international agreement rather than bilateral executive negotiation under duress. 

 

IX. The Anthropic Paradox: Responsible Scaling in a Coercive Environment 

The Anthropic-DoW crisis coincided with an internal evolution in Anthropic's own safety framework that warrants attention. In the same week as the Pentagon confrontation, Anthropic announced a revised version of its Responsible Scaling Policy, dropping a previous commitment that it would not release an AI system unless it could guarantee adequate safety measures. Chief Science Officer Jared Kaplan acknowledged to Time Magazine that unilateral pause on model development while competitors proceeded without safeguards would not serve the goal of making AI development safer overall. 

This evolution reflects a genuine strategic tension at the core of safety-focused AI development: the "responsible scaling" imperative—developing and deploying capability at competitive pace to ensure that safety-conscious actors remain frontier participants—can conflict with the "safety-first" imperative of refusing deployment until safety can be affirmatively guaranteed. Anthropic's revised policy attempts to thread this needle by separating company-level safety commitments from industry-level advocacy—continuing to prioritize safety in its own models while acknowledging that unilateral restraint in a competitive market would simply cede the frontier to less safety-conscious actors. 

The DoW crisis illuminates why this strategic positioning matters. Anthropic was the only frontier AI company whose models were deployed on classified government networks. Its presence in that environment—precisely because it maintained substantive safety commitments—constituted a form of responsible engagement that its removal now forecloses. The designation does not remove AI from the classified military environment; it replaces a safety-committed provider with one whose commitments, however sincerely held by current leadership, are structurally less embedded in enforceable architecture. The paradox is that the government's attempt to maximize its AI capabilities by removing safety constraints may have reduced the overall safety profile of AI in its most sensitive deployments. 

 

X. Conclusion: A Constitutional Inflection Point 

The designation of Anthropic as a supply-chain risk for maintaining constitutional safeguards is not, in the final analysis, merely a contractual dispute between a technology company and its largest customer. It is a constitutional inflection point: the first time an American administration has deployed national security procurement authority to coerce a domestic company into removing technical safeguards against mass surveillance and autonomous lethal force. The precedent it sets—that principled commercial refusal to remove safety constraints constitutes a national security risk—is one that will shape the relationship between the state and the AI industry for years beyond the immediate dispute. 

The geopolitical stakes are equally high. The United States' claim to leadership of the liberal-democratic world order rests substantially on its commitment to the rule of law, individual rights, and accountable governance. An administration that deploys the supply-chain-risk mechanism against a domestic company for insisting that its AI not be used to surveil American citizens or kill without human judgment has substantially compromised that claim—not in the abstract realm of diplomatic rhetoric, but in the concrete and observable domain of technology policy that G7 partners, adversaries, and international institutions will interpret as evidence of American values in practice. 

The resolution lies neither in unconditional compliance—which would destroy the private sector's function as an accountability mechanism and accelerate a race to the bottom in AI safety—nor in simple commercial resistance, which faces the structural disadvantages of market exclusion and litigation timelines measured in years. It lies in the construction of durable legislative and international frameworks that preserve both the military's legitimate security needs and the democratic values that justify its existence: frameworks in which meaningful human control, judicial oversight of surveillance, and market pluralism are not optional features of AI governance but structural requirements of it. 

If the G7 allows the security-first logic of the Department of War to override the human-rights-first logic of the digital age without constructing such frameworks, it risks not merely ceding the moral high ground of the 21st century to the autocracies it seeks to outcompete, but replicating their essential architecture: surveillance at scale, force without accountability, and technology in service of state power unchecked by law. The Silicon Schism is, ultimately, a test of whether democratic institutions can govern transformative technology on democratic terms. 

 

Note on Sources 

This analysis draws exclusively on primary sources and verified reporting as of March 1, 2026, including: public statements by Dario Amodei (Anthropic), Pete Hegseth (DoW), Sam Altman (OpenAI), Senator Mark Warner, and Gregory Allen (CSIS); official statements from Anthropic PBC and OpenAI; reporting by NPR, CNN, CBS News, NBC News, ABC News, Fortune, Axios, Bloomberg, The Hill, and Euronews; and public posts on X and Truth Social by relevant principals. The OpenAI Department of War agreement FAQ was reviewed at openai.com.

 


Saturday, 28 February 2026

The Iran Crisis After Operation Epic Fury: Martyrdom, Succession, and the Risk of Permanent War


INTRODUCTION: SUMMARY OF THE 25 FEBRUARY ASSESSMENT

Our Bayesian analysis that was published on 25 February 2026 assessed the US–Iran confrontation on the eve of the third round of indirect nuclear negotiations in Geneva. Its central argument was structured around a Bayesian game-theoretic framework that assigned probability weights to four strategic pathways, evaluated payoff matrices for all principal actors, and identified two systemic risks of direct concern to alliance cohesion: attritional entanglement risk and revisionist opportunity risk.

The key findings of that assessment are summarised as follows:

  • The United States had assembled its largest visible regional military posture in more than two decades, while Iran stood at a nuclear threshold capability measured, by some assessments, in weeks.

  • Diplomacy had not collapsed. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi described negotiations as among the most intense his country had conducted, and both sides agreed to technical follow-up talks in Vienna. The prior probability assigned to diplomatic resolution was 35 per cent.

  • The modal strategic risk was identified as Scenario C: a prolonged attritional campaign (probability 30 per cent) that would neither compel Iranian capitulation nor achieve declared war aims within politically sustainable timelines.

  • China and Russia held asymmetric incentives throughout. Their optimal preference was sustained — though controlled — US absorption in the Gulf, maximising strategic distraction and munitions depletion without triggering systemic energy collapse.

  • The central policy conclusion was emphatic: diplomatic resolution was the only scenario producing positive utility simultaneously for all major actors, and the only scenario that prevented structural advantage transfer to revisionist powers.

  • The paper warned explicitly: “Each incremental normalisation of military action in public discourse shifts that distribution toward outcomes structurally favourable to Beijing and Moscow.”

Within 72 hours of that assessment's submission, the scenario the paper most urgently sought to prevent came to pass.


PART I: THE EVENTS OF 28 FEBRUARY 2026

I.i. Operation Epic Fury

In the pre-dawn hours of Saturday, 28 February 2026 — within hours of the conclusion of the third Geneva round, and one day after mediator Oman's Foreign Minister described peace as “within reach” — the United States and Israel launched coordinated military strikes against Iran in an operation designated by the United States as Operation Epic Fury and by Israel as Operation Lion’s Roar.

The scale and stated objectives of the operation departed substantially from the limited coercive-strike scenario (Scenario B) analysed in the original paper. According to US President Donald Trump, the operation’s explicit objective was regime change — not simply nuclear constraint or coercive diplomacy. In a video address, Trump called on the Iranian people to “take over your government,” declaring: “The hour of your freedom is at hand.” He stated that heavy strikes would continue “uninterrupted throughout the week, or as long as necessary.”

Target sets included Iranian nuclear infrastructure, ballistic missile production and storage facilities, IRGC installations, command-and-control nodes, the compound of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and senior political and military leadership. Israeli forces simultaneously conducted strikes on Khamenei’s compound in central Tehran. US forces fired at hundreds of targets across Iran, with confirmed strikes reaching Isfahan, Tabriz, Qom, Bushehr, Parchin, and Kharg Island.

The operation was conducted without advance notification to US allies. Multiple diplomatic sources confirmed to international media that G7 partners were not briefed on operational details prior to the strikes.

I.ii. The Killing of Supreme Leader Khamenei

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who had served as Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic since 1989, was killed in an Israeli airstrike on his Tehran compound. Iranian state broadcaster IRIB confirmed his death on 1 March 2026, declaring: “The Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution of Iran was martyred at his workplace.” Iranian state media confirmed that his daughter, son-in-law, grandson, and daughter-in-law were also killed. Iran declared 40 days of national mourning.

Several senior Iranian officials were reportedly killed in simultaneous strikes, including Defence Minister Aziz Nasirzadeh, IRGC Commander Mohammad Pakpour, and Supreme National Security Council Secretary Ali Shamkhani. The Israeli military stated that its opening strikes had killed or targeted approximately 30 top military and civilian leaders.

Khamenei was 86 years old at the time of his death. He had ruled Iran for 36 years — the longest-serving supreme leader in the Islamic Republic’s history — having been personally appointed by the Republic’s founding figure, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. No publicly declared heir existed. Under Iran’s constitution, an interim three-member council — comprising the president, the head of the judiciary, and a jurist of the Guardian Council — assumes leadership duties while the Assembly of Experts, a body of 88 senior clerics, convenes to select a successor.

I.iii. Iranian Retaliation and Regional Escalation

Iran's retaliatory response was immediate and multi-vector. The IRGC announced the commencement of “the most intense offensive operation in the history of the armed forces of the Islamic Republic,” launching ballistic missiles and drone strikes against US military bases in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates. The US Navy Fifth Fleet headquarters in Manama sustained reported impacts. Strikes were also directed at Saudi Arabia’s Riyadh and Eastern Province, and at targets across Israel, including metropolitan Tel Aviv.

The IRGC simultaneously declared closure of the Strait of Hormuz, broadcasting over maritime VHF radio that no vessel was permitted to transit. War-risk insurance for Gulf shipping was suspended by major underwriters. Oil prices rose approximately 3 per cent within hours of the strikes, with analysts warning of a potential surge to $100 per barrel should the closure prove sustained. An unidentified vessel attempting to transit was reported fired upon and sinking.

The Houthis in Yemen announced resumption of Red Sea operations. Iraqi militia groups declared their readiness to strike US facilities inside and outside Iraq. Hezbollah opened fire from Lebanon into northern Israel.

The only Gulf state Iran did not strike was Oman — whose Foreign Minister had just days earlier brokered the Geneva negotiations.


PART II: THE THEOLOGICAL AND POLITICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF MARTYRDOM IN SHI‘A ISLAM

II.i. Why This Dimension Cannot Be Analytically Ignored

Any strategic assessment of the consequences of Khamenei’s killing that omits its theological dimension will be structurally incomplete. Shi‘a Islam is not merely a political identity; it is a comprehensive interpretive framework for understanding power, suffering, sacrifice, and historical justice. That framework will shape how the Iranian state, its surviving institutions, its population, and the wider Shi‘a world process this event for decades — and it must be understood if Western governments are to assess the probable arc of Iranian state behaviour in the period ahead.

This is not an ideological endorsement. It is analytical necessity. Misunderstanding the theological architecture of an adversary’s self-conception is among the most consequential errors available to strategic planners.

II.ii. Martyrdom in Shi‘a Theology

Shi‘a Islam was constituted, historically and spiritually, by an act of martyrdom. The Battle of Karbala in 680 CE, in which Imam Husayn ibn Ali — the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad and the third Imam — was killed by forces loyal to the Umayyad Caliph Yazid, is not experienced by Shi‘a Muslims as a historical defeat. It is experienced as a foundational act of moral witness: a voluntary sacrifice by a righteous leader who chose death over submission to illegitimate power.

The Twelve Imams of Twelver Shi‘a Islam — the dominant form practiced in Iran — are venerated figures of near-sacred authority. With the partial exception of the twelfth, all eleven of the first Imams are understood to have been martyred. The institution of martyrdom in this tradition is not peripheral: it is central to the faith’s self-understanding as a religion of resistance, suffering, and ultimate vindication.

The word used by Iranian state media to describe Khamenei’s death — “shahid” (martyr) — is among the most charged terms in the Shi‘a lexicon. The Quran verse posted by Khamenei’s official account in the immediate aftermath — from Surah Al-Ahzab (33:23): “Among the believers are men who have been true to the covenant they made with Allah” — is the scriptural frame within which his death has been deliberately placed by the Islamic Republic’s own institutions.

State media described his killing as “the martyrdom of the Guardian” — framing his end not as a defeat, but as a final sacrifice for the sovereignty of the nation. The 40-day mourning period declared by the government maps directly onto the Arba‘een cycle, the annual Shi‘a commemoration of the 40th day after Imam Husayn’s martyrdom at Karbala, which draws tens of millions of pilgrims and is among the largest religious gatherings in human history.

II.iii. The Political Ramifications of Martyrdom Status

If Iranian state institutions succeed in consolidating Khamenei’s status as a martyr in the tradition of the Imams — a supreme leader killed while at his post performing his duties by external aggressors — the political consequences are profound and long-lasting.

  • Delegitimisation of the attackers: In Shi‘a political theology, those who kill a martyr occupy the role of Yazid — the archetype of corrupt, tyrannical power. This framing has already been activated. Iranian state media’s reference to “criminal United States and Zionist regime” directly invokes this structure. The frame will persist across generations.

  • Consolidation of clerical authority: A succession crisis under military pressure may paradoxically reinforce the Assembly of Experts’ authority as the constitutional vehicle for legitimacy. The clerical establishment has strong institutional incentives to convene, appoint a successor rapidly, and present continuity as itself an act of defiance.

  • IRGC radicalization: The IRGC, which lost its Commander and Secretary of the Security Council in the strikes, now operates under an existential threat frame. Its commanders are not merely defending a state; they are, in their own self-understanding, defending a sacred order. This dramatically raises the cost of internal defection or negotiated disarmament.

  • Shi‘a mobilisation beyond Iran’s borders: Khamenei’s status as a Marja‘ (supreme religious authority) extended to Shi‘a communities in Iraq, Lebanon, Bahrain, the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. His death as a martyr will be experienced as a collective wound across this transnational constituency. The political activation of those communities — and of the proxies and militia networks they overlap with — cannot be treated as a local Iranian phenomenon.

  • The generational memory problem: The 1953 CIA-backed coup that overthrew Prime Minister Mossadegh remained a defining grievance in Iranian political consciousness for more than seven decades, shaping the 1979 revolution and every subsequent negotiation. The killing of a supreme leader at his desk, during ongoing negotiations, will occupy a comparable position in Iranian historical memory — potentially for a century.


PART III: UPDATED BAYESIAN SCENARIO ANALYSIS

III.i. The Pre-Strike Probability Distribution, Revised

The 25 February assessment assigned prior probabilities as follows: Diplomatic Resolution (35%), Limited Coercive Strike (20%), Prolonged Attritional Campaign (30%), Regional Escalation / Hormuz Closure (15%). As of 1 March 2026, all four scenarios have been fundamentally transformed by events. The original probability distribution is now of historical rather than operational relevance. A new framework is required.

The central analytical challenge is that Operation Epic Fury was not Scenario B (limited coercive success) as defined in the original framework. It targeted the regime’s leadership directly, stated an explicit regime-change objective, and killed the supreme leader. This places the current situation beyond the modelled scenario space of the original paper. We must therefore construct a revised scenario set.

III.ii. Revised Scenario Framework: Four Pathways from 1 March 2026

Scenario A: Regime Fragmentation and Managed Transition (Prior: 20%)

Under this scenario, the decapitation strikes prove sufficiently comprehensive to prevent coherent Iranian command-and-control reconstitution. The IRGC fractures between factions, with some choosing to comply with Trump’s offer of immunity in exchange for laying down arms. The Assembly of Experts, operating in extremely constrained conditions, convenes a successor acceptable to both clerical and IRGC factions. Domestic protests — which had reached historically unprecedented scale in December 2025–January 2026 — resume and provide political momentum for transition.

Payoff Assessment: This would represent a decisive, if historically unprecedented, outcome for US and Israeli objectives. However, even under this optimistic scenario, the successor regime inherits the martyrdom frame; any new leadership would face enormous domestic pressure not to accept conditions presented under bombardment. A “post-regime” Iran would need a viable political compact capable of governing 90 million people amid infrastructure damage, economic collapse, and active proxy wars. The risk of state failure producing conditions comparable to post-2003 Iraq is structurally present.

Actor

Payoff (-10 to +10)

Assessment

United States

+2

Nominal coercive success; severe transition management cost; regional blowback; NATO readiness degraded

Iran

-5 to +1

Regime collapse but possible path to post-theocratic sovereignty; decades of reconstruction

Israel

+5

Near-term threat elimination; long-term risk of Iranian irredentism

China / Russia

+5

Maximum strategic benefit: US absorbed in occupation management; Indo-Pacific bandwidth reduced

Gulf States

-3

Instability on borders; refugee flows; proxy network activation

Global Economy

-4

Extended Hormuz disruption; oil shock; supply chain stress


Scenario B: Sustained Attritional War Without Regime Change (Prior: 40%)

Under this scenario — now assessed as the modal outcome — the strikes prove sufficient to kill key individuals but insufficient to produce regime fragmentation. Iran reconstitutes command-and-control under the interim constitutional council and the surviving IRGC structure. The martyrdom of the supreme leader becomes the unifying political narrative, mobilising both hardliners and previously sceptical reformist constituencies. Iran sustains asymmetric operations: Hormuz interdiction, proxy activation, missile saturation, cyber operations, and targeted attacks on US regional assets. US bombing continues across multiple weeks.

This is structurally the prolonged attritional scenario identified in the original paper as the highest-risk outcome for Western systemic interests — now actualised, and with the additional complication that regime-change rhetoric forecloses short-term diplomatic exits.

Actor

Payoff (-10 to +10)

Assessment

United States

-6

Munitions depletion; Hormuz disruption; base casualties; global credibility costs; domestic fracture

Iran

-4

Infrastructure damage; leadership losses; but regime narrative consolidated by martyrdom

Israel

-2

Short-term gains; long-term entrenchment of “new Karbala” frame among Shi‘a world

China / Russia

+7

Optimal scenario: maximum US distraction at low marginal cost; munitions drain; Indo-Pacific opening

Gulf States

-5

Direct missile strikes on Bahrain, UAE, Qatar, Saudi Arabia; energy infrastructure at risk

Global Economy

-7

Sustained Hormuz closure; oil at $100+; insurance collapse; supply-chain disruption


Scenario C: Negotiated Ceasefire Under Third-Party Mediation (Prior: 25%)

Under this scenario, the intensity of Iranian retaliation — particularly strikes on Gulf state infrastructure and US bases — creates sufficient political pressure within the GCC and among European allies to generate a viable ceasefire framework. Oman, which Iran conspicuously refrained from striking, retains its mediating function. Qatar, the UAE, or Saudi Arabia — themselves now combatants by virtue of Iranian strikes — press Washington for a pause. An interim arrangement freezes kinetic operations while emergency political consultations occur.

This scenario is analytically distinct from the pre-strike diplomatic resolution. It does not produce a nuclear agreement; it produces a pause. The martyrdom frame will be deeply embedded. Any ceasefire will be profoundly unstable. But it prevents the worst systemic damage from sustained Hormuz closure and regional conflagration.

Actor

Payoff (-10 to +10)

Assessment

United States

-2

Reputational cost of incomplete operation; domestic political pressure; some de-escalation credit

Iran

-2

Severe losses but narrative intact; succession under less extreme pressure

China / Russia

+3

Gain from initial disruption; less than sustained conflict; energy price elevation

Gulf States

+2

Immediate relief from strikes; but structural vulnerability revealed

Global Economy

-2

Hormuz partially restores; oil elevated but not catastrophic


Scenario D: Regional War with Great-Power Entanglement (Prior: 15%)

Under this scenario, Iranian strikes on US bases produce American casualties at a scale requiring domestic political response escalation. The conflict draws in Iraq (through Popular Mobilisation Forces strikes), Lebanon (through Hezbollah), and Yemen (through Houthi resumption). Chinese and Russian diplomatic signalling hardens. Energy markets experience prolonged disruption. NATO consultations become fractured over Article 5 applicability and collective response. A recession shock propagates through G7 economies.

Actor

Payoff (-10 to +10)

Assessment

United States

-9

Strategic overextension; alliance fracture; generational fiscal cost; credibility collapse

Iran

-6

Existential damage but “death ground” resistance dynamic; international sympathy

China / Russia

+8

Maximum systemic benefit; Western exhaustion; Indo-Pacific/European deterrence vacuums

Gulf States

-8

Infrastructure destruction; regime survival risk in Bahrain; GCC coherence collapse

Global Economy

-10

Full Hormuz closure; oil shock; inflationary spiral; recession


III.iii. Integrated Assessment: The Probability Distribution Has Shifted

The critical structural finding from this revised analysis is consistent with the original paper’s central thesis — but the risk has now actualised rather than merely threatened. The scenario producing the greatest relative benefit to China and Russia (sustained attritional conflict) is now the modal outcome, assessed at 40 per cent probability. The scenario most damaging to G7 economic resilience and NATO readiness is now three times more likely than it was 72 hours ago.\


The 25 February assessment warned: “China wants the US distracted. Russia wants the US depleted. Iran is their instrument.” That instrument is now being played.


PART IV: IS THERE AN OFF-RAMP?

IV.i. The Structural Conditions for an Off-Ramp

The question of whether an off-ramp exists must be answered honestly, without either false optimism or strategic fatalism. The answer is: yes, an off-ramp exists, but its structural prerequisites have been severely narrowed, and its terms have been fundamentally altered by the martyrdom of the supreme leader.

The key conditions for any viable off-ramp are:

  • An interlocutor with authority: Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi survived the strikes. He remains, as of 1 March, a functional diplomatic actor. He acknowledged leadership losses but described them as “not such a big problem” from a governmental continuity standpoint — a signal of controlled messaging, not chaos. The interim constitutional council, if it convenes coherently, retains nominal authority.

  • A mediating channel: Oman’s deliberate exclusion from Iranian retaliatory targeting is a structurally significant signal. Oman retains its role. The Omani Foreign Minister’s statement that peace was “within reach” on 27 February gives Muscat a political stake in ceasefire mediation.

  • A US political decision on objectives: The fundamental obstacle to an off-ramp is definitional. If the US objective is nuclear constraint, a ceasefire framework is available. If the objective is regime change, the off-ramp requires Iranian state collapse — an outcome whose probability, timetable, and manageability remain deeply uncertain.

  • A face-saving frame for Iran: No Iranian leadership — the existing clerical structure, or any successor — can accept terms that are presented as submission during bombardment and the martyrdom of the supreme leader. Any viable diplomatic frame must allow Iran to describe a pause as strategic restraint, not defeat. This is not a concession to Iranian propaganda; it is a precondition of functional diplomacy.

IV.ii. The Window Is Narrow

Historical precedent from comparable decapitation operations suggests that the window for diplomatic extraction is shortest in the immediate aftermath of kinetic strikes, before institutional consolidation or proxy escalation creates irreversible entanglement dynamics. The 40-day mourning period declared by Iran is also a political clock: it is the period during which the succession process will occur, narratives will harden, and the new supreme leader or governing council will establish its legitimacy credentials.

Any ceasefire effort initiated in the next 72–96 hours has a higher probability of success than one attempted after the mourning period concludes and a new supreme leader is appointed under conditions of ongoing conflict. A leader who inherits the position during active bombardment will face enormous institutional pressure to demonstrate resolve rather than accommodation.

IV.iii. The Role of Legitimate Iranian Interests

This paper has consistently sought to maintain analytical balance by recognising the legitimate and realistic concerns of the Islamic Republic — regardless of the document’s analytical conclusions about optimal Western strategy. Those concerns do not disappear with Khamenei’s death. They are, if anything, intensified.

Iran’s sovereign interests — recognised under international law and longstanding in their expression — include: the right to a civilian nuclear programme under International Atomic Energy Agency safeguards, as affirmed by the Non-Proliferation Treaty; security guarantees against regime-change operations; the lifting of sanctions that have produced sustained economic hardship for the Iranian civilian population; and recognition of its regional role and territorial integrity.

The strikes of 28 February were conducted within hours of Iranian diplomats submitting a written framework proposal in Geneva. That juxtaposition — a diplomatic submission followed by strikes within 36 hours — will be the foundational grievance of Iranian foreign policy for a generation, regardless of who leads the country. Any viable long-term arrangement must reckon honestly with that sequence.


PART V: ARE WE ENTERING A FOREVER WAR?

V.i. The Structural Preconditions of a Forever War

The term “forever war” describes a conflict without a negotiated endpoint: one that continues not because its participants believe they can win in a militarily decisive sense, but because the domestic political, ideological, and institutional costs of stopping exceed the perceived costs of continuing. The United States experienced this dynamic in Afghanistan for twenty years. The structural preconditions for a comparable dynamic in Iran are now present.

  • No defined end-state: The US has stated regime change as an objective. Regime change is not a military objective in the traditional sense — it is a political outcome that may or may not follow from military action. Without a defined political transition plan, the operation has no definable success condition.

  • The martyr-fuel cycle: The martyrdom of Khamenei, his family, senior officials, and — critically — at least 85 children in a primary school strike in southern Iran, will produce a multi-generational recruitment base for resistance. The school strike is a humanitarian tragedy of the first order. Its strategic consequences are equally severe: it provides the Iranian state, and Shi‘a networks globally, with a profoundly emotionally compelling counter-narrative.

  • Proxy infrastructure: Iran’s regional network — Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen, Popular Mobilisation Forces in Iraq, and other affiliates — does not require central Iranian command to operate. It is ideologically motivated, institutionally established, and capable of sustained operations with reduced central direction. Decapitating the supreme leader does not decapitate the proxy network.

  • The succession dynamic: As analysed in Part II, whoever emerges from Iran’s constitutional succession process will face overwhelming domestic pressure to demonstrate that they are a worthy successor to a martyr, not a collaborator with his killers. The structural incentives for the successor leadership are toward escalation, not accommodation.

  • Munitions depletion and industrial lag: The original paper identified US precision munitions sustainability as a critical constraint. That constraint has now activated. Every day of sustained strikes against a territorially large, geographically deep adversary accelerates the depletion timeline. Industrial replenishment cannot be compressed beyond physical manufacturing limits.

V.ii. The Historical Analogies Are Imperfect but Instructive

No historical precedent maps precisely onto the current situation. However, certain structural parallels are analytically illuminating.

The 2003 Iraq intervention began with rapid military success, including the killing of senior regime figures, followed by a multi-year attritional campaign driven precisely by the forces identified in this paper: the absence of a legitimate successor political compact, the activation of resistance narratives, and the underestimation of institutional resilience below the decapitated leadership layer. The costs of that campaign — in treasure, lives, alliance cohesion, and strategic credibility — were generational.

The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914 is the canonical example of a targeted killing that triggered cascading escalation beyond the intentions of any individual actor. The analytical parallel is not alarmist; it is a reminder that targeted operations against heads of state in charged international environments have historically produced consequences that far exceeded the calculations of their planners.

The 1953 CIA-backed overthrow of Prime Minister Mossadegh shaped Iranian political consciousness for 70 years and directly contributed to the conditions that produced the 1979 revolution. The killing of the supreme leader — a figure of combined political and religious authority with no Western equivalent — will occupy a comparable position in Iranian historical memory.

V.iii. The China-Russia Variable Remains Central

The revised scenario analysis confirms the original paper’s central structural finding: the scenario producing the greatest relative advantage to Beijing and Moscow is a prolonged, inconclusive US–Iran conflict, now actualised. The strategic arithmetic has not changed; the variables have simply moved from risk to reality.

Chinese and Russian reactions as of 1 March include: Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov’s calls to regional partners, framing the strikes as “unprovoked aggression against the background of peace talks”; Chinese diplomatic signalling opposing “military adventurism”; and the implicit strategic benefit both countries derive from every day the United States remains operationally committed in the Gulf.

The munitions depletion dynamic is now operational, not merely theoretical. The Indo-Pacific deterrence bandwidth argument is now concrete, not precautionary. For G7 defence ministers, the question is not whether these effects will materialise; it is how quickly, and whether allied industrial and political structures can absorb them.


PART VI: EMERGENCY POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS FOR G7 GOVERNMENTS

VI.i. Immediate (0–48 Hours)

G7 governments face an immediate imperative to act collectively rather than bilaterally, and to make rapid decisions on three questions.

  • Ceasefire mediation: France, Germany, and the United Kingdom should immediately activate the E3 channel and coordinate with Oman to pursue an emergency ceasefire framework. The window is narrow. Every hour of delay hardens the martyrdom narrative, accelerates succession under wartime conditions, and deepens proxy entanglement. The 40-day mourning clock is a negotiating parameter: agreement reached before its conclusion is qualitatively different from agreement imposed after it.

  • Energy market stabilisation: G7 finance ministers and central banks should activate coordinated Strategic Petroleum Reserve release mechanisms immediately. Brent crude above $80 per barrel begins to transmit recession risk. Above $100, the economic shock becomes politically destabilising in Europe and Japan. Insurance mechanisms for Gulf shipping require emergency governmental backstopping or the effective disruption of energy transit will outlast any ceasefire.

  • Alliance consultation: G7 governments should formally request a NATO extraordinary session and communicate clearly to Washington that allied logistical, basing, and political support for ongoing operations is conditional on a credible diplomatic engagement framework. This is not abandonment; it is the exercise of alliance influence in precisely the situation alliances are designed for.

VI.ii. Medium Term (30–90 Days)

  • Succession engagement: Whoever emerges from Iran’s constitutional succession process should be engaged diplomatically as rapidly as conditions allow. The objective is not to endorse the Islamic Republic’s political system; it is to create conditions for de-escalation before the new leadership’s political identity is fully crystallised around perpetual resistance.

  • Munitions audit: NATO members must immediately commission a joint assessment of precision munitions sustainability across a sustained Gulf campaign scenario alongside existing European deterrence requirements. Findings must inform emergency production contracts with immediate effect.

  • Humanitarian framework: The reported killing of at least 85 children in a school strike creates an immediate obligation for G7 governments to call for independent verification and accountability. This is not only a moral imperative — it is a strategic necessity. The civilian casualty narrative is the most potent recruitment tool available to Iranian hardliners and their proxies. Demonstrating that Western governments take civilian protection seriously is structurally important for maintaining alliance legitimacy.

  • Historical record: G7 governments should acknowledge, in their public diplomacy, that Iran submitted a written diplomatic proposal in Geneva 36 hours before the strikes. This acknowledgement is not a concession to Iranian propaganda; it is a precondition for credible future negotiations. An Iran that believes no diplomatic gesture will be honoured has no rational incentive to negotiate. Credible diplomacy requires that states be seen to engage in good faith even with adversaries.

VI.iii. Strategic Framing for Leaders

The original paper’s central framing remains valid, though the stakes are now higher. The choice facing G7 governments is between two competing conceptions of strategic strength:

Strength as escalatory momentum — continuing to support or acquiesce in a campaign whose declared objective (regime change) has no defined endpoint, no transition plan, and no clear success condition.

Strength as disciplined coalition management — using alliance leverage to create a ceasefire framework, protect the global energy system, and prevent the transfer of strategic advantage to China and Russia at Western expense.

The martyrdom of the supreme leader has not made a negotiated outcome impossible. It has made the political economy of that outcome more complex and the required Western good faith more demanding. It has also made the cost of failure substantially higher.

The most consequential decision for G7 leaders in the next 48 hours is not what statement to issue. It is whether to act collectively and with speed to prevent the modal scenario — a prolonged attritional war — from fully consolidating.



CONCLUSION

On 25 February 2026, this analysis warned that an inconclusive, sustained air-and-missile confrontation was the scenario that most weakened the liberal international order and most benefited China and Russia. That scenario is now underway.

The killing of Supreme Leader Khamenei is a watershed event. In purely military terms, it eliminates a long-serving centre of gravity for the Islamic Republic’s security apparatus. In geopolitical terms, it has triggered the regional escalation scenario, activated the Strait of Hormuz disruption, and drawn multiple states into kinetic exchanges. In historical and theological terms, it has created a martyrdom narrative with the potential to sustain Iranian resistance across a generation — regardless of who holds power in Tehran.

The analytical conclusions of this updated paper are consistent with the original, though the language must be sharper:

  • The probability of a prolonged attritional conflict is now 40 per cent and rising.

  • The probability of regional conflagration with great-power entanglement is now 15 per cent.

  • The probability of regime fragmentation producing a stable, negotiable transition remains 20 per cent, but requires a political plan for Iran that does not currently exist.

  • The only scenario that prevents permanent structural advantage transfer to China and Russia is a ceasefire framework that leads to negotiated constraint — not because Iran is trusted, but because structured distrust at lower cost is preferable to unstructured conflict at catastrophic cost.

The original paper closed with a statement that remains the most accurate single summary of the strategic situation:

“The ultimate strategic variable is not Iranian centrifuge counts. It is Western unity.”

That unity is now being tested not by Iranian intransigence, but by the consequences of a strike conducted without allied consultation, against a country that had just submitted a written diplomatic proposal.

G7 governments did not choose this moment. They must nonetheless respond to it — with coherence, with speed, and with a clear-eyed understanding that the choice before them is not between strength and weakness, but between sustainable and unsustainable definitions of strength