From Vox Day's post today.
I’m not so sure, despite my own enthusiasm for game theory. Consider this analysis of the Sutton Analogy in the context of the 2026 Gulf War, as presented in fictional form in his excellent 1968 novel The Programmed Man. This is just a thought experiment, but [...] I thought it might be interesting to walk through the idea that what we’re observing in the Gulf isn’t just a war and an economic crisis, but perhaps the end of a long-running geopolitical theater piece.
For eighty years, the post-WWII order has rested on a foundation that no party with knowledge of its true nature has had sufficient incentive to expose. Nuclear deterrence has served every major power simultaneously: it caps conventional conflicts before they become existential or excessively expensive, it justifies astronomical defense budgets, and it provides smaller states with a diplomatic weight they could never achieve through conventional military development alone. The arrangement has been self-reinforcing precisely because the costs of exposure fall on everyone inside the club equally, regardless of their nominal alignments. American, Russian, Chinese, Israeli, and Pakistani leadership have all had stronger reasons to maintain the narrative than to shatter it.
Iran represents the first state in the nuclear era with both the strategic motivation and the ideological disposition to force an exposure, if indeed there is anything to be exposed. Unlike every previous threshold state, Iran has not sought entry to the club on the club’s terms. Its nuclear program has functioned less as a weapons development effort than as a prolonged demonstration that the red lines drawn around it are not enforced because they cannot be enforced. Thirty years of imminent-breakout assessments with no breakout, combined with increasingly direct conventional confrontation with Israel, have been a controlled experiment in how much pressure the system can absorb before its internal contradictions become visible to everyone.
Israel’s behavior during the current conflict is the most diagnostically significant element. A state genuinely possessing the Samson Option, facing simultaneous existential pressure from Gaza, Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq, and daily Iranian ballistic salvos, would present its adversaries with a credible escalation threshold. Instead, each escalation has been met with a carefully bounded conventional response, and the publicly articulated doctrine has remained entirely rhetorical. Whether this reflects Israeli restraint or Israeli limitation is precisely the question Iran has been engineering conditions to answer. Every round of escalation that Israel absorbs and responds to conventionally narrows the range of explanations available to outside observers.
Does anyone really believe that Israel, which is hardly known for its self-restraint, isn’t willing to use even small tactical devices in order to “stop the Iranian nuclear threat” for fear of global public opinion?
Russia’s notably tepid support for Iran throughout this period would appear to indicate a different calculation. Moscow benefits from US distraction, Gulf instability, and eventual US retreat from the region, but benefits far more from the continued credibility of nuclear deterrence, which underpins its entire strategic position in Europe and its implicit claim to great power status. A Russia stripped of nuclear credibility is a large conventional army with second-tier economy. Putin understands this arithmetic clearly. Russian support for Iran therefore stops consistently at the point where Iranian pressure might force the exposure scenario, a boundary that has held even as Russian-American relations have deteriorated to their lowest point since the Cold War.
And China’s behavior is arguably the hardest to explain. Its manufacturing power dwarfs that of Russia and the USA combined, yet it is content to maintain a relatively small nuclear arsenal that is a fraction of the other two global powers, and instead of catching up and surpassing them, focuses on manufacturing large quantities of conventional weapons.
The United States and its regional partners are caught in an increasingly narrow corridor. Allowing Iranian conventional dominance to consolidate visibly undermines the credibility of American security guarantees, but forcing a confrontation that reaches the declared nuclear threshold of any party risks the exposure that the entire architecture exists to prevent. Which threshold, by the way, includes sinking a US aircraft carrier.
The longer the current conflict continues without a decisive conventional resolution, the more the behavior of all parties makes the most sense under the charade hypothesis. What looks like strategic incoherence from the rational actor perspective, the superpower that won’t win, the nuclear state that won’t escalate, the revolutionary regime that won’t build the weapon it has spent thirty years almost building, resolves into a coherent picture once you accept that all of them are navigating around the same unspeakable fact that no one, after eighty years of the historical narrative, would ever even begin to imagine, let alone believe.
It may be that Iran’s true objectives do not end with the defeat of Israel and the withdrawal of American forces from the Gulf. Iran’s primary objective may be to bring about the end of the entire post-WWII global order, which might explain the increasing desperation with which the USA is calling for a ceasefire.


















































