This is not just another war in the Middle East. What we are watching right now is not simply a military campaign but something much larger unfolding, something that at the very least raises the question of the Lord’s providence moving in real time. How this moment ends will determine what comes next, not just regionally but globally. Right now, Israel and the United States, under Donald Trump, have inflicted serious damage on Iran’s military capabilities and its proxy network.
The United States and Israel have carried out a large-scale, coordinated military campaign against Iran, significantly degrading its leadership, military infrastructure, and strategic capabilities. Through thousands of strikes under operations Epic Fury and Roaring Lion, they eliminated key leaders, crippled Iran’s naval and air defense systems, reduced much of its missile capacity, and damaged major nuclear facilities like Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan, setting the program back by an estimated one to two years.
Despite major losses, Iran still retains key capabilities, including a stockpile of highly enriched uranium and the ability to threaten shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. The U.S. and Israel have avoided ground invasion and extensive destruction of civilian infrastructure, and although a ceasefire was put in place, the situation is still unstable.
Furthermore, just like Israel has degraded Hamas and dealt heavy losses to Hezbollah, the IRGC has been weakened by the U.S. and Israel. But they have not been eliminated, and that is the issue. The Iranian regime being dealt with is not simply political; it is ideological and religious at its core. If that is misunderstood, everything that follows will be miscalculated by President Trump.
If President Trump is in a position to deal with the Iranian regime, then the objective cannot be partial measures, temporary ceasefires, or political optics. The reality is that the IRGC is not a normal state actor. It operates with long-term Shia-Islamic ideological goals, and if it is left intact, it will regroup and seek retaliation against both Israel and the United States.
Biblical history shows that when threats like this are merely weakened rather than removed, they return later, often more aggressively, as evil Haman did against Israel in Persia. Remember, Haman was an Agagite, which likely meant that he descended from Agag, the king of the Amalekites.
So the issue isn’t just about the present conflict. It’s about what gets set up next from a prophetic perspective. This kind of unresolved hostility and regathering of power is exactly the kind of environment that could result in a larger coalition conflict down the road, often associated with what many refer to as the Psalm 83 Invasion and the Gog and Magog Invasion.
As Victor Davis Hanson has pointed out, Trump is surrounded by pressure from all sides—domestic politics, the midterms, international actors, intra-party divisions, and even competing voices within his own coalition. Iran understands this situation. They are not necessarily trying to win outright in the short term; they are trying to survive. They calculate that if they can drag the conflict out long enough, those political pressures will force a premature stop.
However, the fundamental problem that the United States and Israel face in dealing with Iran is not primarily military, political, or economic. It is theological. Specifically, it is rooted in the Twelver Shiʿa framework that forms how the Iranian regime understands reality, something the West consistently fails to grasp and is dangerously naïve about.
From that worldview, Iran is not simply another nation-state pursuing power, security, or prosperity. Since 1979, under the influence of Khomeini, the regime has operated with the belief that it has been chosen to prepare the way for the return of the Mahdi, the 12th Imam. This figure, believed to have entered a state of divine occultation in the 9th century, is expected to return during a time of global chaos to establish Islamic rule over the entire world.
That belief system changes everything.
It means that conflict is not something to be avoided at all costs. In many cases, it is something to be accelerated. Death, martyrdom, war, and instability are not viewed as setbacks but as instruments to bring about a divinely ordained outcome of the Mahdi’s return. From that perspective, Israel and the United States are not just geopolitical adversaries. They are spiritual warfare obstacles. Their very existence is seen as interfering with the timeline of the Mahdi’s return.
This is why traditional Western approaches collapse.
Negotiation, deterrence, economic pressure, and compromise all assume that the opposing side ultimately wants stability and survival. But if a regime believes that anarchy, confrontation, and even large-scale destruction serve a higher religious purpose, then those tools lose their effectiveness.
Mutual assured destruction, which has historically restrained nuclear powers, does not operate in the same way if destruction itself is seen as a trigger for the Mahdi’s return and intervention.
Within this system, Iran’s foreign policy is not simply strategic. It is eschatological. The elimination of Israel, the United States, the takeover of the West, and the destabilization of the global order are not just political objectives; they are seen as steps toward preparing the world for the Mahdi’s return.
In that sense, the goal is not necessarily to win a conventional war in the immediate term. The goal is to create conditions so severe, so destabilizing, that they force a larger, decisive moment in which the Mahdi returns. You could describe it as a kind of “crisis escalation strategy,” where the expectation is that overwhelming conflict will trigger the final intervention from the Madhi they are waiting for.
This is why Israel and the United States frequently appear to be fighting a different kind of war than their adversary.
The West tends to think in terms of timelines, elections, economic impact, and negotiated outcomes. Iran, formed by this theological framework, can think in terms of generational struggle, sacrifice, and ultimate fulfillment. That mismatch leads to repeated miscalculations by Trump and Israel.
So the problem is not simply that Iran is aggressive. The problem is that it is operating from a worldview in which aggression, chaos, and even catastrophic conflict can be seen as necessary steps toward what it believes is a divinely promised future. Until that is fully understood, every strategy built on political logic alone is likely to fall short.
So if Iran’s regime is not decisively dismantled, its survival all but guarantees future conflict, not only from Iran itself but through its proxy network, including Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis, which are used to destroy Israel and advance its eschatological objectives.
When you bring this into the biblical framework, the picture becomes even clearer. According to Bill Salus in his book Psalm 83: The Missing Prophecy Revealed – How Israel Becomes the Next Mideast Superpower, Psalm 83 describes an inner-ring coalition of Arab nations surrounding Israel. When those ancient names are mapped to modern regions, it is clear that many of these areas today harbor active Islamic terrorist organizations or networks that add to the ongoing conflict focused on Israel.
In Gaza and the Palestinian territories, groups such as Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Fatah-linked brigades, Popular Resistance Committees, and newer networks like Lions’ Den operate.
In and around Saudi Arabia and the wider Arabian Peninsula, groups such as Al-Qaeda, Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), and smaller ISIS-linked cells have emerged over time.
In Egypt, particularly in the Sinai region, ISIS-Sinai Province and other Islamist factions have carried out insurgent activity.
In Lebanon, Hezbollah remains the dominant militant force. And in the regions corresponding to ancient Assyria, modern Syria and northern Iraq, there is a complex mix of ISIS remnants, Iranian-backed militias tied to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), groups like Kata’ib Hezbollah and Harakat al-Nujaba, as well as Islamist factions such as Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham and other Al-Qaeda-linked elements.
The point is not that every one of these regions is controlled by militant groups, but that they collectively form a strategic arc of instability surrounding Israel. If these forces are not dismantled, they remain in place, regroup, and ultimately create the conditions for a wider regional conflict.
If that coalition attacks and is defeated, as Scripture indicates, the conflict does not end; it escalates. This is where Ezekiel 38 and 39 come into view, describing the Gog and Magog alliance, a wider, outer coalition of non-Arab powers that do not directly border Israel.
In modern terms, this includes Russia, Iran, Turkey, Sudan, and Libya, corresponding to the ancient names Magog, Rosh, Meshech, Tubal, Persia, Gomer, Togarmah, Ethiopia, and Libya. At that point, what began as a regional conflict becomes a global one. So this moment turns into a trigger point. If it is not finished decisively, it sets off a chain reaction of survival, regrouping, revenge, regional war, and ultimately global escalation.
Right now, the greatest risk for the United States and Israel is not defeat but stopping short. When everything is channeled through negotiation and deal-making, the tendency is to manage threats rather than eliminate them, and managing a threat like the Iranian regime all but guarantees it will return.
When you zoom out further, Europe is weakening. Its unity is fragile, its determination is limited, and its ability to act decisively is diminishing. Without U.S. leadership, NATO becomes largely symbolic, and when a larger conflict comes, these structures will not hold.
This is not the end. This is the setup for what Scripture indicates will unfold in the last days.
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