Parallax Views w/ J.G. Michael

"We've Seen This Movie Before": Operation Epic Fury, Iran, & Preemptive War w/ Jon Hoffman

Mar 6, 2026
Jon Hoffman, a Cato Institute defense and Middle East analyst, breaks down the Trump administration’s Operation Epic Fury and its murky aims. He critiques shifting rationales, the illusion that killing leaders ends wars, and the risks of ground deployment, proxy fights, and regional collapse. The conversation spotlights historical parallels, unclear timelines, and the high political and human costs of a preemptive campaign.
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INSIGHT

Gulf States Probably Didn't Want This

  • Gulf states likely opposed the strike because it raises political and economic costs that harm their investment agendas.
  • Hoffman argues Saudis prioritize foreign direct investment and stability, so regional warfare undermines their domestic projects.
INSIGHT

Brazen Vibes Replace Formal Justification

  • The administration's public rationale was largely 'vibes' rather than documented imminent threat.
  • Hoffman contrasts this with 2003's constructed case, calling Caroline Leavitt's 'feeling' justification brazen and unrigorous.
INSIGHT

War Is Financially And Logistically Costly

  • Financial and military costs are substantial: ~$1 billion per day and depleted interceptor stockpiles.
  • Hoffman cites $350M for buildup and a 25% drain of missile interceptors during the 12-day war, limiting future readiness.
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