Iran Proves Resilience as US-Israel Strategy Hits Dead End: Ex-Diplomat

Former diplomat Mahesh Sachdev states the US and Israeli military campaign has reached a dead end despite targeted assassinations of Iranian leaders. He notes Iran's leadership succession was pre-planned, resulting in seamless transitions and a demonstration of systemic resilience, with new leaders being even more hardline. In retaliation, Iran has conducted attacks on Israel and US bases in the Gulf, adding an unexpected twist to the conflict. Meanwhile, Iran's Foreign Minister has condemned Israel's killing of journalists in Lebanon as a targeted assassination intended to silence truth.

Key Points: Iran's Resilience Stalls US-Israel Strategy, Says Ex-Diplomat

  • US-Israel campaign at dead end
  • Iran's leadership transitions seamless
  • New leaders are harder-line
  • Iran targeting US bases in Gulf
  • Journalist killings condemned as assassination
2 min read

"Iran's systems proved resilience": Former Diplomat Mahesh Sachdev

Former diplomat Mahesh Sachdev says Iran's system shows resilience, creating an unexpected twist as US-Israel campaign hits a dead end.

"the system has proved its resilience... the people who have inherited the lost leaders are harder-liners - Mahesh Sachdev"

New Delhi, March 29

Former Diplomat Mahesh Sachdev on Sunday said the US and Israel have come to a dead end as Iran continued to prove its resilience.

Sachdev, while talking to ANI, said that Iran's counterattacks come as an unexpected twist to the tale.

He said, "War has entered a very crucial juncture. After 4 weeks of intensive air campaign, the US and Israel seem to have come to a dead end. Although a number of Iranian leaders, both political and military, have been assassinated by targeted attacks, the leadership succession plan was already laid out, and the transitions have been seamless, and the system has proved its resilience... the people who have inherited the lost leaders are harder-liners than the previous ones."

"It does not serve the US and Israeli objectives to effect regime change... In retaliation, Iran has engaged in attacks on Israel, but has also targeted US bases, as well as US-affiliated installations on the other side of the Gulf, in the GCC countries. All put together, this has given a strange and unexpected twist to the developments," Sachdev added.

Meanwhile, Iran's FM Abbas Araghchi has condemned Israel's killing of three journalists in Lebanon, describing the attack as a "targeted assassination".

On his official Telegram channel, Araghchi said the killings are "not only a profound loss for the media community in the region and the world, but also a serious alarm for the global conscience," as quoted by Al Jazeera.

"This act, which was clearly a targeted assassination with an intention beyond eliminating individuals, is a clear attempt to 'terrorise the truth' and silence the voices of those who tell the truth."

He noted that Israel has a "long history" of targeting media professionals, which he said is a "clear violation" of international laws and conventions, as per Al Jazeera.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
The point about the new leaders being even harder-line is crucial. What did they expect? Assassinations only breed more resentment and radicalism. This is a lesson some powers never seem to learn. India must maintain its strategic autonomy and not get pulled into these forever wars. 🙏
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Rohit P
While I understand the geopolitical analysis, the killing of journalists is absolutely condemnable. Silencing the press is a coward's move, no matter who does it. The world's focus should be on protecting innocent lives and media freedom, not just on which side is "winning".
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Sarah B
Interesting to read an Indian perspective on this. From the outside, it often feels like a proxy war with no end in sight. Mr. Sachdev's point about the "dead end" for the US/Israel seems accurate. Military solutions rarely work in the long run for complex regional conflicts.
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Vikram M
Resilience or not, the common people in Iran, Israel, Lebanon, and across the Gulf are the ones suffering. As an Indian, my primary concern is the spike in oil prices and the safety of Indian workers in the GCC countries. Our government needs to be proactive in evacuation plans if things escalate further.
K
Karthik V
With respect to the diplomat's view, I feel the analysis is a bit one-sided. It glosses over Iran's role in funding and supporting proxies that destabilize the region. The "resilience" of a system that suppresses its own people's aspirations is not something to be admired. Every nation involved needs to de-escalate.

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