The retaliation, when it came, was a direct attack on U.S. soldiers. On the surface, that should be enough to warrant a swift reprisal from the White House.
But the impact of Iran's missile strikes on U.S.-Iraqi air bases is not so straightforward. The bases were already on high alert — Iraq says Tehran notified it beforehand — and it's possible there were few if any U.S. casualties.
The initial reaction from the U.S. was cautious — President Donald Trump met with senior advisers, but there was no formal statement aside from his Tweet that "All is well!"
As Washington processes the news of the strikes, the question is whether Iran has calibrated its action — a retaliation for the U.S. drone attack that killed top general Qassem Soleimani — to allow it to claim a show of strength without tipping things into a full-scale war.
There was a strong initial market reaction to the missile strikes, with gold and oil prices spiking. But that settled down as it became clear the U.S. would not immediately react.
The worst outcome is this sets off a tit-for-tat that ends in an all-out ground war. Much depends on two things: Trump's reaction (and that of his close advisers), and whether Iran sees itself largely done with this strike.
Either way, Tehran is likely to continue its long-running campaign of proxy attacks in the Middle East. Anything beyond that, though, is likely to be self-defeating.
— Rosalind Mathieson
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