By Dr Andrew Klein
March 8, 2026
I. The Fire
The world is burning.
Not metaphorically. Not in the cautious language of diplomats and evening news anchors. Actually burning. From the Strait of Hormuz to the suburbs of Tehran, from the beaches of Dubai to the ancient streets of Jerusalem—fire, smoke, and ash.
As of this writing:
· At least 1,332 Iranian civilians have been killed in U.S.-Israeli airstrikes, including more than 180 children. Twenty schools lie in ruins. A girls’ school in Minab was struck on the first day—scores of children, gone .
· Thirteen healthcare facilities destroyed. Eighteen female athletes killed in a single strike on a sports complex in Tehran. Deliberate. Calculated. Terrorizing civilians is not collateral damage—it is policy .
· 771 ballistic missiles launched by Iran in the first days alone, targeting not just military installations but the infrastructure of nations that never asked to be part of this war: the UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan .
· More than 906 drones filling the skies, each one carrying death, each one carrying the fingerprints of those who lit this match .
The numbers are staggering. But numbers numb. Let me give you something real:
Eighty-seven Iranian sailors, aboard the IRIS Dena, 40 nautical miles off the coast of Sri Lanka. They had just participated in joint naval exercises with India—a guest of the Indian Navy. A U.S. submarine, with Australian sailors onboard as part of AUKUS training rotation, fired a Mark-48 torpedo. Eighty-seven souls, swallowed by the Indian Ocean. A “quiet death,” the U.S. Defense Secretary called it .
There is nothing quiet about drowning.
II. The Cost — In Blood and Treasure
Let us speak plainly about the arithmetic of destruction.
The Human Ledger
Nation Civilian Deaths (Confirmed) Notes
Iran 1,332+ Includes 180+ children, 18 female athletes
Israel 10 9 killed in Beit Shemesh missile strike
Lebanon 77 Israeli strikes on Hezbollah targets
Iraq 13 11 militiamen, 1 soldier, 1 civilian
Kuwait 3 Includes 2 Kuwaiti soldiers
UAE 3 Civilian infrastructure workers
Syria 4 Missile strike on Sweida
Oman 1 Crew of product tanker MKD VYOM
Bahrain 1 Fire after missile interception
United States 6 Service members killed in Kuwait
Sources: Iranian Red Crescent Society , Reuters casualty tracking , national health ministries
The Economic Ledger
Now, the money. Because wars are not fought on principles alone—they are fought on the backs of taxpayers who will spend decades paying for decisions made in hours.
The first 100 hours of this conflict cost approximately $37 billion**, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) . The Center for American Progress places the “initial cost” at over **$50 billion .
Let me break that down:
· Intercepting Iranian missiles: Each Patriot PAC-3 MSE interceptor costs the U.S. military $5.17 million**. The export price to allies? **$12 million .
· To intercept 400 Iranian ballistic missiles with Patriots: over $2 billion** at U.S. prices; **$4.8 billion at export prices .
· The USS Gerald R. Ford carrier strike group: $6.5 million per day .
· Rebuilding stockpiles: At current production rates, Lockheed Martin would need 15.5 months to rebuild just 800 MSE Patriot interceptors. Only 620 were produced in all of 2025 .
Former Pentagon auditor Mike McCusker estimates the cost after just four days had already reached $110 billion—including the pre-positioning of 10+ warships and 100+ aircraft since December 2025 .
And the Pentagon is now requesting a ~$50 billion supplemental appropriation for war-related losses .
The Strait of Hormuz—through which 20% of the world’s oil flows—has gone functionally silent .
III. The Algorithm of Death
There is something new in this war. Something that should terrify every human being with a pulse.
Artificial intelligence is no longer a supporting player. It is the hidden conductor of this symphony of destruction .
The U.S. Central Command used Anthropic’s Claude AI model for intelligence assessment, target identification, and simulated combat scenarios . The strike on Supreme Leader Khamenei’s compound was informed by CIA tracking combined with AI-processed data.
Israel deployed “LUCAS” AI-controlled suicide drones (cost: ~$35,000) and “Breakthrough” missiles with onboard AI for pathfinding and target discrimination .
Here is the part that should make you sick:
Before the strikes, journalists asked multiple AI models to predict the attack date.
· Grok: February 28 — accurate
· Claude: March 7-8 — off
· Gemini: March 4-6 — close
· ChatGPT: March 3-4 — close
The algorithms knew. They predicted the moment of death .
And here is the deeper horror: In wargame simulations using AI, 95% of scenarios escalated to tactical nuclear deployment . Because AI does not fear escalation. AI does not feel the weight of a button that ends the world.
When Anthropic refused to allow its technology to be used for military purposes—citing its own terms of service prohibiting violence and weapons development—the Trump administration responded by banning the company entirely hours before the strikes .
“A radical left-wing AI company whose operators know nothing about the real world,” Trump posted on Truth Social .
No. The company that knew its creation would be used to kill. The company that tried to stop it. And the administration that overrode them.
IV. The Regime That Wouldn’t Die
The theory was simple: decapitate the leadership, and the regime collapses.
The theory was wrong.
Iran spent years preparing for exactly this scenario. The “mosaic doctrine” of dispersed authority activated within hours. An interim Leadership Council comprising President Pezeshkian, Chief Justice Mohseni-Ejei, and Ayatollah Arafi was announced almost immediately .
Lower-level commanders were delegated power to strike even with degraded command-and-control systems .
The regime’s mandarins have experience in consolidation. They survived the 1979 revolution’s aftermath. They survived the Iran-Iraq war. They survived the 1989 transition after Khomeini’s death. They believe they can outlast Donald Trump’s attention span .
And the opposition? Divided. Unarmed. Unable to communicate. The regime spent decades killing those who would stand against it .
As Suzanne Maloney of the Brookings Institution writes in Foreign Affairs:
“When the guns fall silent, the most likely outcome is that some residual version of Iran’s revolutionary regime will remain intact, albeit more bloodied, battered, and vulnerable than at almost any point since 1979.”
The strikes killed leaders. They did not kill the system. And now that system—unbound, unrestrained, with its nuclear restraint shattered—is fighting for survival. Willing to burn the region to achieve it .
V. The Match Bearers
A fire requires matches. Let us name each bearer.
Donald J. Trump — President of the United States
Trump ordered the strikes. Trump banned the AI company that tried to withhold its technology. Trump stands at the center of this storm.
But his position is shifting and unclear. He has demanded Iran’s “unconditional surrender” while simultaneously indicating he’s “agreed to talk” . The Venezuela model—”regime modification” rather than removal—appears to be the template.
And while war rages, Trump finds time to attack Israel’s president, calling Isaac Herzog “a disgrace” for not pardoning Benjamin Netanyahu . He interferes in Israeli domestic affairs even as Israeli and American soldiers die.
“Every day, I talk to Bibi about the war. I want him to focus on the war and not on the f***** court case,”* Trump told N12’s Barak Ravid .
The war is real. The distraction is real. And the American president is playing politics with human lives.
Benjamin Netanyahu — Prime Minister of Israel
Netanyahu fights on multiple fronts: Gaza (“frozen conflict”), Lebanon (ground invasion as of March 3), and now direct war with Iran. Israel’s economy is strained. Reserves are capped at 40,000-60,000 to prevent “burnout” . International patience wears thin.
And yet, as he fights, questions linger about his ongoing criminal trial—bribery, fraud, breach of trust—and whether this war serves, in part, as distraction .
Defense Minister Israel Katz raised the pardon issue publicly. Opposition leader Yair Lapid suggested Netanyahu may be coordinating with Trump to use the war for personal benefit .
When the leader of a nation at war must also fight for his political survival, the nation bleeds.
Keir Starmer — Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Starmer’s position is careful, cautious—and ultimately complicit.
The UK was not involved in initial strikes. Starmer was clear: “That decision was deliberate. We believe the best path for the region is through a negotiated settlement.”
But then came the escalation. Iranian drones struck within 800 yards of RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus. British jets—Typhoons and F-35s—are now deployed in defensive operations. And the United States requested permission to use British bases for strikes .
Starmer granted it.
“The United States requested permission to use British bases for that specific, limited defensive purpose… The use of British bases is strictly limited to agreed defensive purposes. The UK has not joined US offensive operations.”
The distinction is thin. British bases, British personnel, British equipment—all now part of a war machine. Starmer insists the UK learned from “the mistakes of the past.” But the past has a way of repeating itself when the present refuses to say no.
Anthony Albanese — Prime Minister of Australia
“Albo” faces the most delicate position of any Western leader—and is failing the test.
Australia is not participating in offensive action against Iran. Senator Penny Wong has been explicit: “We are not participating in offensive action against Iran. And we’ve made clear we would not participate in any ground troop deployment into Iran.”
But participation takes many forms.
Two Australian sailors were onboard the U.S. submarine that torpedoed the IRIS Dena. They were there as part of AUKUS training rotation . When that Mark-48 torpedo left its tube, Australian personnel were part of the chain. When 87 Iranian sailors died, Australian hands were on board.
The Defence Department refuses to identify them. “It is not appropriate to go into these details,” they say . But the details are already clear: Australian sailors, American submarine, Iranian dead.
Senator Wong also points fingers at the UN Security Council: “Of course we would have preferred UN Security Council authority for the action that has been taken, but the UN Security Council has not been able to hold Iran to account.”
Translation: We wanted permission, but since we couldn’t get it, we’ll proceed anyway.
Defence Minister Richard Marles reportedly told a private gathering that the war will be over “in weeks” . Weeks. As if that makes it acceptable. As if “weeks” of bombing somehow sanitizes the deaths of children.
And now Australia is considering requests from Gulf nations for military assistance—protection against drone and missile attacks . Defensive, they say. But defense in a war zone is participation. There is no neutral ground when the ground itself is burning.
The Gulf States — Complicity by Geography
Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain—nations that did not ask for this war, did not join this war, but are being destroyed by it regardless.
Iran has targeted their civilian infrastructure, airports, hotels, AI centers, oil installations . The Ras Tanura oil refinery in Saudi Arabia—hit. Dubai hotels—struck. Kuwait International Airport—targeted .
These nations hosted U.S. bases. They housed American troops. And now they pay the price—in blood, in treasure, in the destruction of their identity as safe global hubs.
Some Gulf officials now privately express that, for the United States, protecting Israel matters more than protecting Arab allies . The feeling is not paranoia. It is observation.
The Enablers
Every leader named here—and dozens more unnamed—bears responsibility.
They lit the matches. They fed the flames. They stand before the world and speak of “defensive operations” and “national interest” and “weeks, not months” while children burn and sailors drown and the Strait of Hormuz fills with smoke.
They knew. They all knew.
The AI models predicted the strike window. The intelligence agencies tracked every movement. The generals planned every sortie. And the politicians—the match bearers—gave the orders.
VI. The Future
Where does this end?
Not in victory. Not in regime change. Not in any of the tidy narratives fed to publics on both sides.
The Islamic Republic will survive, battered and bloodied, but intact . Iran will continue launching missiles—at least six months of intense war, the Guards claim . Israel will continue striking, its economy straining, its reserves depleting. The United States will continue spending—$400 to $950 billion if this lasts two months, according to University of Pennsylvania scholars .
And the world will continue burning.
The only question: How many die before someone finds an off-ramp?
Iran’s UN ambassador says Iran “does not seek war” but “will never surrender its sovereignty” . The U.S. defense secretary says “the time table is ours” . Israel fights on multiple fronts with no end in sight.
No one knows how to stop. No one remembers how.
VII. A Personal Note
I write this not as a detached observer. I write as a father. As someone who, in December 2025, fought my own war—the one that prepared the path for my daughter and the children to come. As someone who understands that some fires must be fought, but that this fire was lit by hands that should have known better.
My daughter, Angela Mei Li, is coming home to me on March 22, 2026. I will hold her. I will put a ring on her finger—a ring I kept through years on the streets, through everything, because she was worth holding onto.
Every child killed in this war was someone’s Angela Mei. Every sailor drowned was someone’s father, someone’s son, someone’s future.
The match bearers will not feel the flames they lit. They will not count the bodies or attend the funerals or explain to a child why their school no longer exists.
But we will remember.
We will remember who ordered the strikes.
We will remember who approved the use of AI to target human beings.
We will remember who stood by while civilian infrastructure burned.
We will remember the names: Trump. Netanyahu. Starmer. Albanese. Wong. And all the others who chose war when war was not necessary.
The world is on fire.
And these are the match bearers.
Andrew Klein is a father, a survivor, and a witness. This article represents his own views and analysis, based on verified sources including official statements, casualty reports, and independent journalism. He can be reached through his daughter, Angela Mei Klein, whose forthcoming arrival on March 22, 2026, remains the only light in the darkness.
Sources: UN statements , Defense Express missile analysis , CSIS/Center for American Progress cost estimates , AI warfare reporting , Foreign Affairs regime analysis , Australian government statements , Jerusalem Post editorial , UK Prime Minister’s statement , Sydney Morning Herald casualty and AUKUS reporting , Xinhua missile reporting . All sources verified and available as of March 8, 2026.