Status quo huggers hide behind fear of what might happen instead of confronting the brutal truth of what’s actually happened or is happening.
GARRY KASPAROV
June 14, 2025
The Next Move
Pour one out for Ben Rhodes. In some ways, The World As It Is was a perfect title for the longtime Obama foreign policy advisor’s memoir, because the illusion of the status quo is all that Rhodes and his fellow travelers could ever stomach in geopolitics. But it was always just that: an illusion. Rhodes never really looked at the world as it is; he simply imagined a facade of post-Cold War stability. The historic Israeli military campaign against Iran that began yesterday represents another crack in that facade, joining the October 7 attacks, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the annexation of Crimea, and the Arab Spring.
After spending the past year and a half knocking out one Iranian proxy after another, Israel dealt the Islamic Republic a heavy blow on Friday. Not just militarily, but politically too. Israeli forces killed a number of senior officials in Tehran, including the chief of staff of the military, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the commander of the IRGC’s Aerospace Force, and a senior advisor to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. And that was just in the first few hours. I suspect that the occupational hazards associated with employment in the Iranian government will continue to grow with each passing day.
Now that the Islamic Republic is severely weakened, the alarmist foreign policy commentariat is apprising us of the unacceptable risks, raising their well-worn red flags (or should I say, white flags?). “Escalation!” “Global war!” And the ultimate enemy of the status quo: “Regime change!” In the shadow of the US-led invasion of Iraq, I don’t doubt that Rhodes and some like him had good intentions, but we all know what the road to hell is paved with.
Under President Obama, American officials frequently stared down the nastiest offenders in the international rogue’s gallery and insisted that there was “no military solution”.
“No military solution” might sound nice to enlightened ears. Unfortunately, it’s a meaningless slogan. Tellingly, Russian officials repeat it all the time too. Just yesterday, the Russian ambassador to the UN used that Ben Rhodes-esque turn of phrase at the Security Council, declaring that “no military solution can be legitimate or viable” in Iran. But Russia does believe there are military solutions to its problems—ask any Ukrainian, Syrian, or Georgian. Yet too many in Washington remain determined to fight armed marauders with flowery words.
The main takeaway from Rhodes on the well-earned battering that the Iranian regime received in the wee hours of Friday morning was that “this war will above all harm innocent people for no good reason.”
Notice the reliance on the future tense. Status quo huggers hide behind fear of what might happen instead of confronting the brutal truth of what’s actually happened or is happening. Call it a preference for deadly reality over frightening uncertainty.
If you are worried about innocent people being killed, as Rhodes claims to be, spare a thought for the millions of Iranians who face imprisonment, torture, or death if they dare deviate from the strict precepts of the Islamic Revolution. Or the hundreds of thousands of Syrians whose murder Iran was an accomplice to. Or the Ukrainian civilians who have found themselves on the receiving end of over 8,000 Iranian-made suicide drones over the past three years. Or scores of Argentinian Jews blown up in a Buenos Aires synagogue without even the thinnest of martial pretexts.
Rhodes still has his students in Washington. Democratic Senator Chris Murphy was quick and confident in his pronouncement that Israel’s operation in Iran “risks a regional war that will likely be catastrophic for America.” Maybe. But a regional war was already underway before this week. Iran was already supporting the Houthis in Yemen, Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, and Russia in Ukraine. Israel is simply moving things toward a more decisive conclusion. What does Senator Murphy suppose should be done about what’s already taking place? Put a band-aid on it and wait for the next war?
Republicans are not immune from this malaise, though the root cause differs. Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s immediate reaction to the Israeli strikes in Iran was to say “wasn’t us!”—and then to plead with Tehran not to attack US personnel and assets in the Middle East. Murphy is acting out of ideological blindness. Rubio, like nearly all of his Republican colleagues, is wanting for a spine. Whatever the reason, people like Murphy and Rubio lack vision and will end up getting left behind by events.
I am not going to pretend that what comes next for Iranians will be easy. Anyone who suggests that forty-six years of theocratic dictatorship will be replaced by Swedish social democracy overnight is not being honest with you.
Throughout my decades of pro-democracy activism in Russia, I have faced the same dilemma. Generations raised under Soviet communism and a quarter-century of a KGB mafia state have not exactly made the Russian Federation fertile ground for freedom. Whenever I call for the end of Vladimir Putin’s regime, someone inevitably asks: What if the next guy is worse?
What if? There is no way of knowing for sure. Today, we Russians can tell you with our five senses and the names of friends who’ve been beaten, jailed, and assassinated that the current guy is that bad, and that he is worse than he was the year before. We have to face the real dangers of letting a murderous crime boss remain at large rather than agonize over the theoretical risks that a more ruthless capo replaces him. It’s our responsibility to meet the enormous challenges of the world as it is so that we don’t wait forever to realize the world as it ought to be.