PNW STAFF
Fourteen countries. That is how many evacuation alerts the United States has now issued as this rapidly expanding conflict with Iran deepens. Fourteen warnings do not signal a short, surgical campaign. They signal preparation. They signal escalation. They signal that Washington believes what comes next may be bigger than anything we have seen so far.
And then came the words that sent shockwaves through Washington and beyond.
In a recent interview with Jake Tapper, President Donald Trump reportedly suggested that "the big one is coming." According to Tapper's account, the president projected that this military operation could last "about a month," while cautioning that the timetable is fluid. He also hinted that more U.S. casualties may be ahead.
Those are not throwaway lines. They are signals.
Because if the United States and Israel have already eliminated Iran's long-tenured supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, along with significant portions of the regime's upper command, what exactly qualifies as "the big one"?
The Calm Before a Wider Storm?
The decapitation of Iran's leadership was historic -- arguably one of the most aggressive regime-targeting operations in modern warfare. Removing Khamenei and key figures within days sent a clear message: the objective was not symbolic retaliation. It was structural collapse.
But decapitation does not always end a war. Sometimes it begins a more chaotic phase.
Iran's power structure has long relied on layered command networks, proxy militias, and asymmetric warfare doctrine. Even without central leadership, regional commanders and aligned militias remain capable of launching large-scale retaliation. Hezbollah in Lebanon, militia groups in Iraq and Syria, Houthi forces in Yemen -- the architecture of response is still intact.
When Trump says "the big one is coming," he may be referencing a final blow designed to cripple Iran's remaining military infrastructure. That could mean sustained air campaigns against missile sites, cyber operations targeting command-and-control systems, or strikes against naval capabilities in the Strait of Hormuz.
Or it could mean something even more consequential: a coordinated campaign to permanently dismantle Iran's Revolutionary Guard structure.
If that is the case, we are not watching the end of a war. We are watching its midpoint.
Why the Evacuations Matter
Evacuation alerts across 14 countries are not issued lightly. They are preemptive shields.
When the U.S. government begins urging citizens to leave multiple regions simultaneously, including our key ally Israel, it signals credible intelligence of imminent danger -- not just theoretical risk. It suggests that U.S. officials anticipate retaliatory strikes not limited to a single battlefield.
Retaliation could take many forms:
Missile attacks on U.S. bases in the Gulf
Cyberattacks on American infrastructure
Terror operations by sleeper cells or lone actors
Attacks on embassies or civilian targets
If Washington expects retaliation to expand beyond conventional military targets, evacuation warnings make strategic sense. You move civilians first -- before you move aggressively.
This aligns with another revealing comment: Trump has reportedly hinted that more American casualties may be coming. Presidents do not prepare the public for losses unless they believe the probability is real.
That preparation serves two purposes. It steels public opinion. And it lowers the shock factor when losses occur.
The One-Month Window
Tapper's reporting that Trump projected a possible one-month duration is equally telling.
Public support for war historically declines sharply after the initial surge of unity. The American public can tolerate short, decisive action. It struggles with drawn-out uncertainty. Trump understands that political reality.
A month suggests a strategic objective: hit hard, dismantle critical capabilities, absorb expected retaliation, and conclude before fatigue sets in.
1 comment:
I see that Jeffrey Epstein has been pushed back to the want ad section of Saturday's newspaper minimized to microscopic levels. A manifestation of oral irregularities.
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