Paul Musgrave, a government professor at Georgetown University in Qatar, suggests that while the Vietnam War involved a higher death toll, the current fallout from the Iran engagement poses a greater threat to the United States' reputation. Writing in Foreign Policy, Musgrave noted that the U.S. is now in a demonstrably weaker position, having failed to secure regime change while inadvertently empowering hardline factions within the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
The conflict has also highlighted the operational limits of American military supremacy. Despite a $1 trillion annual defense budget, U.S. forces struggled to neutralize Iran’s missile stockpiles. National security journalist WJ Hennigan observed that the war exposed a critical vulnerability: the reliance on high-cost weaponry that is notoriously difficult to replenish. During an April 30 congressional hearing, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth acknowledged that replacing expended interceptors and cruise missiles could take years.

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