Sometimes They Lit the Match

There’s a lot of noise right now about Iran, war, terrorism, and who is responsible for what. Depending on who you listen to, Iran is either the mastermind behind every conflict in the Middle East… or just another country reacting to events outside its control. Like most things in geopolitics, the truth usually sits somewhere in the uncomfortable middle.

From my perspective — and from the perspective of a lot of people who have actually worn the uniform and seen the consequences up close — Iran has been a recurring problem. Not always the original spark. Not always the main enemy standing directly across the battlefield. But very often a force that made dangerous situations worse.

The analogy I keep coming back to is simple:

Sometimes they lit the match.
Sometimes they showed up with gasoline.
And sometimes they just made damn sure the fire department had a flat tire.

That’s not meant as a slogan. It’s meant as a way to understand how modern indirect warfare actually works.

Iran learned long ago that it couldn’t win a conventional war against the United States. So instead of relying on tanks and fighter jets, it invested heavily in influence, proxies, deniability, and patience. Over time, it developed a strategy built around operating in the gray zone — the space between peace and open war.

In Lebanon, Iranian backing helped build Hezbollah into a powerful militia and political force. In Iraq, after the fall of Saddam Hussein created a massive power vacuum, support flowed to various Shiite militias that fought coalition forces and rival factions. In Syria, Iran intervened to preserve an allied regime and maintain a strategic foothold. In Yemen, Iranian support has strengthened the capabilities of Houthi fighters and added pressure on regional shipping lanes and stability.

None of those conflicts were created by Iran alone. Each had its own history, its own grievances, and its own local actors. But Iran repeatedly found ways to insert itself into chaos. Sometimes to defend its own security interests. Sometimes to expand influence. Sometimes simply to raise the cost of American involvement until continued engagement became politically harder to justify.

That doesn’t mean every roadside bomb or insurgent attack can be traced directly back to Tehran. Wars are messy. Sunni extremist movements, tribal rivalries, sectarian politics, corruption, and foreign interventions from multiple countries have all shaped the conflicts of the past few decades.

But it also doesn’t mean Iran’s role was minor.

In Iraq, particularly during the height of the insurgency, there is strong evidence that Iranian-backed networks supplied training, funding, and specialized weapons that increased the lethality of attacks against U.S. forces. For the men and women on the ground, that wasn’t an abstract policy discussion. It was a daily reality.

The broader strategic pattern is what matters. Iran rarely starts the fight. But when instability erupts — when governments collapse, civil wars ignite, or foreign interventions disrupt fragile systems — Iran has consistently shown a willingness to move quickly and shape the outcome.

That approach reflects a long-term mindset. Iranian leadership tends to think in decades, not election cycles. They are willing to absorb sanctions, take incremental gains, and accept temporary setbacks if it means gradually improving their strategic position. They don’t always win outright. But they often succeed in preventing their adversaries from achieving clean, decisive victories.

This is where the debate becomes more nuanced. Some argue that eliminating Iran as a destabilizing actor would solve many long-term security problems in the region. There is some truth in that. Removing a major sponsor of proxy warfare would likely reduce one significant source of violence and friction.

At the same time, it would not magically stabilize the Middle East. Ethnic tensions, sectarian divides, weak governance, economic instability, and lack of upward mobility would still exist. History has shown that power vacuums can produce outcomes that are even harder to manage than the regimes that preceded them.

The real challenge is not simply identifying villains or heroes. It is understanding systems — understanding incentives, long-term strategy, and how states pursue survival in a hostile environment.

Geopolitics is rarely a story of clear good guys and bad guys. More often, it is a story of competing fears, ambitions, and survival instincts playing out over generations.

But one lesson from the past several decades is difficult to ignore:

When instability spreads, Iran has often been there —
sometimes with a match,
sometimes with gasoline,
and sometimes quietly making sure the people trying to put out the fire never quite arrive on time.

Fabricated Outrage Inc.: Baltimore and the Squad

Recently the left has been up in arms about supposedly “racist” tweets of President Trump’s as well as comments made about Elija Cummings district in Baltimore. These are completely fabricated outrages, or to quote Mark Levin, “pseudo-events”.

Let’s start with the Tweets as quoted from Vox:

He said nothing of race. He spoke of countries, not a specific demographic of people from those countries. How is that racist? The answer, of course, is that it’s not racist.

If it’s the use of harsh words like “infested,” why is it that when Elija Cummings said Baltimore is Drug-infested, that wasn’t considered racist by the media?

President Trump doesn’t cower at a little criticism. If he makes a statement, he stands by it. Shortly after the tweet outrage occurred he doubled down on his statements. “If they don’t like it here they can leave.”

Now on to Baltimore. President Trump called Elija Cummings district in Baltimore rat-infested. It’s a statement that can either be proven or disproven. After President Trump made the statement (Tweet), all eyes were on Baltimore.

From NPR:

Maryland leaders and residents are condemning a series of tweets by President Trump on Saturday that attacked Rep. Elijah Cummings and derided the black congressman’s district as “a disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess.”

With all eyes scrutinizing Baltimore we’ve found President Trump’s statements to be true. Even as the news was reporting a rat photobombed the shot.

It’s a fallacy that pointing out the negative aspects of a predominately (pick your demographic) local or country is racist. If the country is what it’s being accused of being, the race of the people there doesn’t matter. Anyone that makes it about race is racist or at a minimum trying to invoke racism.

President Trump has never made mention of race or skin color in his criticisms. He doesn’t discriminate. He criticizes Nancy Pelosi and Elizabeth Warren just for a couple of examples of many.

The “racist” narrative is not new. Since President Trump. The media and Hollywood started the whole racism narrative as soon as he implemented the travel ban from countries that have a high terrorism threat. What the fake news left out, intentionally, was that Barack Obama came up with the list of countries that were a threat, in 2015, before he left the office.

From National Review:

Donald Trump has not been afraid to take on the media, which is why they despise him so. These pseudo-events will continue to happen until we can break the bias of the Democrat Party Media.

Isaiah 29:16
“Surely your turning of things upside down shall be esteemed as the potter’s clay: for shall the work say of him that made it, He made me not? or shall the thing framed say of him that framed it, He had no understanding?”