With every new attack by Iranian-backed militias against US interests in the region, calls in Washington for forceful retaliation against Iran grow louder. Proponents of this approach contend US deterrence is shattered and Iran is doing everything it wants in the region with impunity.
Don’t believe any of that.
While US deterrence has failed to stop Iran from spreading its influence through mostly low-intensity violence, it has held at the strategic level, which matters most for core US interests in the Middle East.
No doubt, the growth of Iran’s proxy network cannot be left unattended. Those militias aren’t a nuisance (look at what Hamas just did against Israel); they are a strategic problem, one about which America’s regional partners worry a great deal.
Iran’s henchmen in Yemen, Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon may not have the capacity to significantly hurt America’s core interests in the region, including freedom of commerce and navigation, but they do threaten the security of its regional partners.
Washington should care about that because it needs those partners to collectively address this threat network. And to secure their buy-in, it has to commit to their physical security.
Read more: The future of America's Middle East posture is now
A worsening tit-for-tat
It is a refrain Iran often repeats with much success and little pushback: to advance its expansionist agenda in the Middle East, it attacks US facilities and partners there — mostly by proxy. Washington responds, sporadically, with limited strikes against those proxies — and sometimes against Iranian personnel.
Consider the past few weeks and months: Kataib Hezbollah and other members of Iran’s threat network targeted American troops in Iraq and Syria with drones and missiles, and the Houthis attacked three commercial ships, fired two ballistic missiles against a US warship in the Gulf of Aden, and launched drone and missile attacks toward southern Israel.
The United States countered by killing a handful of Iranian-backed fighters and striking weapons depots, storage facilities, and operations centres belonging to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in Iraq and Syria. It also shot down drones launched by the Houthis in the Red Sea.
Yet for many in Washington, the US response to more than 76 Iranian attacks since 17 October has been a little too timid and a little too inadequate.
Republican Sen. Tom Cotton, who sits on the influential Armed Services and Intelligence committees, has called for “massive retaliation” against Iran to restore US deterrence.
His colleagues, Sen. Kevin Cramer and Sen. Tim Scott have called for more aggressive US action, including “attacking Iran, not just warehouses in Syria.” Officials in the Department of Defense and senior officers in the US military have even expressed concern about the weak US response to the Houthis’ attacks in the Red Sea.
The White House recognises the threat posed by Iran to US troops and interests in the region but has held off on pursuing more forceful kinetic action. President Joe Biden’s restraint may have caused uproar, but he is not alone in his policy.