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The Pentagon's ground operation plans in Iran are a smart, calculated move to finish what airstrikes started — dismantling a regime that's already been militarily obliterated. Seizing Kharg Island alone would cut off Tehran's oil revenue and hand the U.S. a powerful bargaining chip. Iran is begging for a deal, and boots on the ground would seal the win.
Seizing Kharg Island isn't a path to victory — it's a gamble with no guarantee of a payoff. U.S. forces could take the island, only to face ballistic missiles, drone swarms, oil fires, and no reliable resupply, leading to a grinding attrition war, not a quick win. And if things go wrong, extracting troops under loitering munitions is just as dangerous as staying. This isn't shock and awe; it's Ukraine in the Persian Gulf.
Any U.S. ground invasion of Iran would lead troops into certain destruction — Iranian forces are dug in, battle-ready and counting down to strike back hard. National unity has only strengthened Iran's resolve, and resistance groups across the region are already shifting the balance of power on the battlefield. Washington's war has no endgame, and a ground offensive would make that humiliation permanent.