By Nagesh Bhushan THE LESSON, it turns out, was always hiding in plain sight. In 1992, General Krishnaswamy Sundarji — former Chief of Army Staff of India and one of Asia’s most prescient strategic thinkers — reflected on the Gulf War with characteristic bluntness: “The lesson of the war is: don’t fight the United States unless you have nuclear weapons.” He was speaking about 1991. He might as well have been writing the epitaph for the 2026 Iran-US-Israel War. History’s greatest ironies tend to be structural rather than accidental. The 2026 war was justified, in no small part, as a preemptive strike to eliminate Iran’s nuclear programme and prevent a nuclear-armed Iran from destabilising the Middle East. Within a fortnight, it has achieved the precise opposite. It has become the most powerful advertisement for nuclear deterrence in the post-Cold War era — a masterclass in how coercive counter-proliferation guarantees the outcome it seeks to prevent. Russian Foreign Minister Serge...
A Multi-Dimensional Strategic Analysis Date: March 12, 2026 Classification: Strategic Analysis / Open Source Nagesh Bhushan Preface Twelve days into one of the most consequential military conflicts of the 21st century, the world watches a war that is being fought — and judged — on far more dimensions than the battlefield alone. The Iran-US-Israel War of 2026 has shattered regional order, disrupted global energy markets, tested the limits of great power alliances, and raised existential questions about the future of nuclear proliferation, international law, and the post-unipolar world order. This article synthesises the military, strategic, economic, political, and geopolitical dimensions of the conflict to answer one central question: who is really winning — and what does “winning” even mean in a war this complex? Part I: The Battlefield — What Has Actually Happened On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched coordinated surprise...