What could possibly be the U.S. options in Iran? Especially after day 30

 

    As strikes continue, the U.S. weighs multifaceted strategies to paralyze Iran’s regime without full-scale occupation, keeping Tehran under unprecedented pressure.

Sulaimanyah, March 29 Kurdish Policy Analysis The U.S.-Iran conflict, now in its 30th day, has entered a phase where strategic choices are broader and more complex than many analysts realize. While much public discussion jumps to the idea of a full-scale ground invasion, senior U.S. officials emphasize that current objectives focus on coercing behavior change, not regime change or occupation.

President Trump extended a 10-day pause on strikes against Iran’s energy infrastructure to April 6, underscoring a cautious approach to escalation. CENTCOM and Israel continue systematic attacks on Iran’s military systems, including ballistic missiles, drones, naval assets, and nuclear infrastructure. But the focus extends beyond purely tactical targets: Israel is actively pressuring the regime’s ability to govern, targeting leadership, intelligence nodes, and internal security mechanisms.

The declared objectives of Operation Epic Fury remain clear: dismantle Iran’s missile and naval capabilities, prevent nuclear weapon development, and degrade the regime’s ability to project power internationally. Achieving these objectives does not require regime collapse, though U.S. planners are prepared for that possibility.

Potential U.S. options include targeting Iran’s economic lifelines, particularly Kharg Island, which handles up to 2 million barrels of oil per day. Disabling this hub could cut critical revenue, crippling the regime’s ability to sustain its military, patronage networks, and internal security apparatus. The January 2026 protests and widespread civilian hardship demonstrated the fragility of the Iranian economy and society under pressure, with state crackdowns resulting in over 32,000 civilian deaths.

Cyber and precision strikes against the national power grid offer another pathway, potentially creating cascading outages that disrupt command, control, and communications. Likewise, the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 20 percent of global oil supply passes, is a key focus. Control or neutralization of strategic islands such as Abu Musa and the Tunb Islands could reduce Iran’s maritime leverage and eliminate its de facto “toll booth” system on shipping.

Options also exist for leveraging internal dissent. Iran’s young, urban population has shown persistent opposition to the regime. Psychological operations, messaging campaigns, and targeted support to internal resistance could amplify fractures within political, ethnic, and regional fault lines.



According to U.S. planners, the approach is not sequential but simultaneous: striking military, economic, cyber, and governance nodes at once to overwhelm Iran’s decision-making and paralyze the regime. Analysts caution against oversimplified comparisons to past conflicts in Vietnam, Iraq, or Afghanistan, noting that current objectives, technologies, geography, and intelligence capabilities create a vastly different operational landscape.

Despite public uncertainty, the United States retains a wide spectrum of options—many undisclosed and not fully understood outside intelligence circles. How these will be employed remains unknown, but the focus remains on exerting maximal pressure on both the means and will of the Iranian regime without stepping into full occupation.

#USIranConflict #OperationEpicFury #StraitOfHormuz #IranProtests #MilitaryStrategy #Geopolitics #Day30


Pshtiwan Faraj is the founder of Kurdish Policy Analysis based in Iraqi Kurdistan region.

He is a geopolitical analyst with a PhD about US Interventionism and Anti-Interventionism and US Foreign Policy, Kurdistan and the Middle Eastern Affairs. His thesis won Brunel University Vice Chancellors Outstanding Academic Merit and Research Excellence for 2015. You can access his Book on this topic

https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/bitstream/2438/13584/1/FulltextThesis.pdf

Learn more at:

https://kurdishpolicyanalysis.blogspot.com/

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