The fog of war used to be a metaphor for the first forty-eight hours of a conflict, but here we are in late March, twenty twenty-six, and it feels like the fog has just become the permanent climate. It is the air everyone is breathing in the Middle East right now. Today’s prompt from Daniel hits on something a lot of people are feeling on the ground in Jerusalem, which is this sense that the initial shock, the big maps with arrows, and the clear strategic objectives have all sort of evaporated. We are looking at a definitive war of attrition where the leadership on both sides seems to have gone quiet, or at least lost the script.
It is a grim transition, Corn. We have moved from that high-intensity, kinetic phase we saw throughout twenty twenty-five into what I’d call a "grinding stasis." By the way, today's episode is powered by Google Gemini three Flash, which is helping us process a lot of this incoming data. And the data from the last twenty-four hours really confirms this attrition model. We saw a massive Iranian ballistic missile barrage yesterday, March twenty-eight, and the way it played out tells you everything you need to know about where this war sits right now. It is no longer about a knockout blow; it is about testing the math of the other side’s checkbook and interceptor stockpiles.
Well, let’s talk about that math, because that’s where the reality lives. You mentioned forty-seven ballistic missiles launched by Iran yesterday targeting air defense installations in the Negev. On paper, forty-seven missiles sounds like a world-ending event, but the reported interception rate was what, eighty-seven percent?
Exactly eighty-seven percent for the heavy hitters. Israel’s Iron Dome, David’s Sling, and the Arrow three systems are performing at an elite level, but the cost-exchange ratio is becoming the real battlefield. When Iran launches a medium-range ballistic missile, it might cost them a few hundred thousand dollars, maybe a million if it is one of the newer liquid-fueled variants like the Fattah-1. But an Arrow three interceptor? You are looking at two to three million dollars per shot. Often, they fire two at a single incoming target to ensure a kill.
Wait, two shots per incoming? So if forty-seven missiles come in, and they try to intercept all of them with that redundancy, they aren't just firing forty-seven interceptors.
You’re looking at potentially ninety-four interceptor launches for a single raid. So, you do the math on forty-seven missiles. Israel might have spent a hundred and fifty million dollars in twenty minutes just to keep the lights on in the Negev. And remember, that money is "gone" the second the fuse ignites. You can't recover an interceptor. It’s a one-way transaction of capital into kinetic energy.
And that is why it is attrition. It is not about whether the missile hits the target anymore; it is about whether the interceptor hits the Israeli treasury. It is a siege, just with Mach five projectiles instead of stone walls. I noticed the Israeli response was equally surgical but almost... routine? They hit IRGC logistics hubs near Isfahan. It feels like we are seeing a scheduled exchange of blows. Is there any variation in these targets, or are they just hitting the same warehouses over and over?
It’s becoming a bit of a "target carousel." They hit a depot, Iran spends three weeks rebuilding the corrugated steel roofs, and then Israel hits it again. It really is a cycle. We have settled into this pattern of two to three major strikes per week. Compare that to January, where it was daily, sometimes hourly. The tempo has slowed because the magazines are running low. You can’t maintain a high-intensity missile war for eighteen months without hitting a wall. Iran is pivoting to drone saturation specifically to address this. They are flooding the zone with those cheap Shahed variants—the ones that clatter along like lawnmowers—just to force the Israelis to use up their expensive Tamir interceptors. It is a tactical exhaustion strategy.
But how does that work in practice? If you're the guy sitting in the command center in Tel Aviv, and you see a hundred "lawnmowers" on the radar, do you have to shoot them all? You can't just let them hit, right?
That’s the dilemma. You don’t know which drone is carrying a ten-kilogram payload and which one is just a decoy with a radio reflector to make it look bigger. So you have to treat every "lawnmower" like a lethal threat. It’s a psychological and financial drain.
It makes me wonder about the leadership vacuum Daniel mentioned. If you are a civilian in Jerusalem or a resident in Tehran, what is the goal? Usually, in a war, there is a "victory condition." You capture a city, you sign a treaty, you topple a regime. But right now, both cabinets seem to be playing a game of "don't be the first one to collapse." Herman, is there any actual strategic communication coming out of these governments, or are they just reacting to the sensors?
It is remarkably quiet on the strategic front. In Israel, the war cabinet actually dissolved back in February after months of internal friction. Now you have a fragmented decision-making process where the military is essentially running the war on autopilot based on established red lines, while the politicians bicker over the budget. It’s almost like the military has its own "if-then" logic gates that don't require a Prime Minister to sign off every time.
So if the sensor says "launch," the system launches, and the political leadership just finds out about it on the news feed like the rest of us? That sounds like a terrifying way to run a nuclear-adjacent conflict.
It’s the ultimate "black box" governance. And in Iran, the leadership is facing a dual front. They have the external war with Israel and the United States, and an internal economic war. The Iranian rial has lost thirty-four percent of its value against the dollar just since this latest escalation began. When your currency is in freefall, your ability to project power abroad starts to rot from the inside.
So we have two exhausted boxers leaning on each other in the twelfth round, just throwing short ribs shots because they don't have the energy for a hook. But even these "short shots" are devastating. Let’s look at the Israeli defense budget. Twenty-three percent of their Gross Domestic Product is being swallowed by the military right now. That is the highest level since the nineteen seventy-three Yom Kippur War. You can’t run a modern high-tech economy like that for long without the social fabric starting to fray. I mean, think about the tech sector in Haifa or Tel Aviv. How do you pitch a startup when twenty percent of your workforce is on reserve duty every other month?
You don't. Or rather, you can't. We’re seeing a massive pivot in the Israeli tech sector toward defense-only applications. The "civilian" side of the economy is essentially on life support. And that’s the "utility gap" we’ve talked about before. Mainstream news shows you maps of where the missiles landed, but they don't show you the map of the middle class disappearing in both countries.
It’s a fascinating point. We talk about "brain drain" as an abstract concept, but in Israel right now, it’s literal. If you’re a senior software architect at a cybersecurity firm in Tel Aviv, and you’ve spent six of the last twelve months sitting in a bunker in the North or operating a drone unit, you start looking at those job offers in Palo Alto or Berlin very differently.
The attrition isn't just missiles; it's the brain drain, the halted investments, and the sheer psychological weight of living under a permanent "red alert." What’s fascinating technically is how the air defense systems are being modified for this long-haul reality. We’re seeing software updates to the David’s Sling system specifically designed to prioritize targets based on projected damage value. Basically, the AI is deciding: "This missile is going to hit an empty field, let it go. This one is headed for a transformer station, kill it."
It’s a literal economy of scale. If the machine thinks the dirt is cheaper than the interceptor, it lets the dirt get hit. That’s a cold way to run a war, but I guess it’s the only way to survive a multi-year conflict. But let’s go back to the strikes from the last twenty-four hours. You said six missiles actually impacted in the Negev. What was the damage? Because the official reports always say "minimal," which is the most "war of attrition" word ever. Does "minimal" mean a hole in the sand, or does it mean something else?
Minimal in this context means they hit taxiways or peripheral fencing. One hit a maintenance shed. But "minimal" is a relative term. If you hit a maintenance shed that contains the specialized tools for calibrating F-35 sensors, that’s a "minimal" structural hit but a "major" operational headache. Think of it like a professional athlete getting a tiny tear in a ligament. It’s a "minimal" injury, but they can't run.
That’s a great analogy. It’s not about destroying the plane; it’s about making the plane unusable for forty-eight hours because the specific wrench you need is now under a pile of rubble.
Right. But the real "hit" was the psychological confirmation for Iran that they can still penetrate the most dense air defense bubble on the planet. Even with an eighty-seven percent interception rate, thirteen percent of forty-seven is six. If they launch five hundred, that’s sixty hits. The math of saturation is the only thing Iran has left, and they are leaning into it. Meanwhile, the Israeli strikes near Isfahan were precision-guided munitions—likely launched from stand-off distances outside Iranian airspace. They destroyed an IRGC fuel depot. Again, it’s about logistics. You can't move your launchers if you don't have the diesel.
It’s like watching two people try to dismantle each other’s cars while they’re both driving at sixty miles per hour. One guy is throwing rocks at the windshield, the other guy is trying to puncture the gas tank. It feels like a tactical stalemate that has been elevated to a national identity. But what about the proxies? We used to talk about Hezbollah as this "sword of Damocles" hanging over northern Israel. But their operational capacity seems... diminished? Or are they just saving their strength for something else? I haven't seen a "major" Hezbollah headline in weeks.
They’ve been hit hard, Corn. The Israeli campaign in southern Lebanon over the last six months has systematically dismantled a lot of the short-range rocket infrastructure. We’re talking about thousands of small, concealed launch tubes buried in the hillsides. It’s a bit like trying to weed a massive garden by hand. You pull one up, and there’s another one six inches away. Hezbollah is still dangerous, but they’ve transitioned into the same attrition mindset. They aren't trying to invade Galilee anymore; they are just trying to keep the Israeli north evacuated. It's a war of displacement.
But how long can that last? You have tens of thousands of Israelis living in hotels in Eilat and Tel Aviv because their homes in the North are in the line of fire. That’s an enormous social and financial burden on the state.
It’s a ghost town. And if you can make a thousand square miles of your enemy's country uninhabitable without actually occupying it, you are winning a certain kind of attrition war. You don’t need to win a battle if you’ve already won the vacancy of the land.
And that leads us to the international fatigue. I was looking at the notes on the UN Security Council meetings lately. It’s like a ghost town. The world is tired of this. There were no major diplomatic initiatives this week. No "peace missions" from the Europeans. It’s like the global community has collectively decided that this is just the way the Middle East looks now, like a permanent weather system of low-level fire. Is there any pressure being put on either side to stop, or has the world just moved on to the next crisis?
It’s a dangerous kind of apathy. When the world stops looking, the combatants feel they have more room to experiment with escalation because there's no "audience" to perform for. It’s like a schoolyard fight where the teacher walks away; suddenly the rules about "no hitting below the belt" start to vanish. But the economic reality is going to be the hard ceiling. You mentioned the Iranian rial losing a third of its value. That level of inflation leads to bread riots. We saw those in Mashhad and Tabriz last month. And in Israel, when twenty-three percent of the GDP is going to the military, that means education, tech subsidies, and infrastructure are all being cannibalized.
The "Start-Up Nation" is becoming the "Fortress Nation," and those two things don't occupy the same space very well. You can't be a global hub for innovation when your primary export is "not being destroyed today." It reminds me of the old saying about how you can have a great military or a great economy, but it’s very hard to have both during a thirty-year war.
It’s the opportunity cost of war. Every David’s Sling interceptor is a laboratory that doesn't get built or a teacher that doesn't get hired. I think that’s why Daniel mentioned the loss of leadership clarity. To justify those kinds of sacrifices, you need a Churchill or a Lincoln. You need someone saying, "We are doing this for X, and we will stop when Y happens." Right now, it feels like the leaders are just hoping the other guy's engine seizes up first.
But Herman, what about the technical bottleneck? Is there a specific part or resource that runs out first? I mean, we always hear about "chips," but is it more specific than that?
Let's dive into the technical side of why this attrition is so "grinding." Most people think of missiles as these unlimited resources, but the precision components—the seeker heads, the guidance chips—those are specialized. This isn't just about pouring steel. Iran has become very good at "sanction-busting" and using dual-use technology—literally pulling chips out of high-end consumer electronics—but they can't mass-produce high-end ballistic components at the rate they are firing them. That’s why we see the shift to the Shahed drones. It’s "good enough" technology. They are using the quantity of low-tech to defeat the quality of high-tech. It’s a hardware hack of the Israeli defense budget.
It’s the classic "T-thirty-four versus Tiger tank" argument from World War Two, but with silicon and rocket fuel. If I have a thousand cheap drones and you have a hundred expensive missiles, eventually I win the math game. But what is Israel's counter to that? They can't just keep firing three-million-dollar interceptors at twenty-thousand-dollar drones. I mean, at some point, the accountant just walks into the war room and says "no more."
They are accelerating the deployment of "Iron Beam"—the high-energy laser system. This is the big pivot everyone is watching for twenty-six and twenty-seven. If they can get the power requirements and the atmospheric scattering issues solved—and that’s a big "if" in the dusty Middle Eastern air—the cost per shot drops to essentially the price of the electricity. That is the "holy grail" for breaking the math of attrition.
But what about the limitations of lasers? I’ve read that they don't work as well in heavy cloud cover or sandstorms. Doesn't that just create a "weather window" where the drones can still get through?
It’s not a magic wand. If you have a khamsin—one of those heavy dust storms—the laser loses focus. The beam scatters. So even with Iron Beam, you still need the kinetic interceptors as a backup. It’s just another layer of the onion, and layers cost money. For the next few months at least, it’s a race between Iranian drone production and the Israeli treasury.
Let’s talk about the domestic side in Israel for a second. With the war cabinet dissolved, who is actually making the calls on these retaliatory strikes? Is it just the IDF Chief of Staff? Or is there some shadow committee we don't know about?
It’s a very decentralized structure right now, and that’s part of the "lost script" Daniel mentioned. You have the Ministry of Defense and the Prime Minister’s office, but without a unified cabinet, there is a lot of friction. We’ve seen reports of "uncoordinated" strikes—moments where the military takes an opportunity on the ground that might not align with the long-term diplomatic goals, simply because there is no clear directive from the top. It’s "tactical drift."
You win a hundred small battles but you don't have a plan for the war. It’s like a chess player who is great at taking pawns but has no idea how to achieve checkmate. That’s a recipe for an accidental escalation. If one of those "uncoordinated" strikes hits something high-value or high-symbolism in Iran, like a religious site or a high-ranking civilian official, the whole "controlled attrition" model goes out the window. It’s like two people pushing each other in a hallway; it’s fine until someone trips and hits their head on a radiator. Then it’s a different fight. Does the IRGC have the same internal friction?
The Iranian side is equally opaque, but for different reasons. The IRGC has a lot of autonomy. Their strikes on the Negev yesterday were likely planned weeks ago, but the timing might be tied more to internal IRGC politics than any grand strategy from the Supreme Leader. They need to show the domestic hardliners that they are "doing something" to justify the economic misery they are putting the country through. If the people are hungry, you have to feed them images of missiles launching. It’s "performance warfare."
"Performance warfare." That’s a bleak term. You’re killing people and spending billions just to maintain a domestic narrative. But let’s look at the actual takeaways for people trying to make sense of this. If you are watching the news, how do you distinguish between "noise" and "signal" in a war of attrition? Because every explosion looks the same on a thirty-second news clip.
The first thing I look at is the interception rate. Forget the number of missiles; look at the percentage that get through. If that eighty-seven percent number starts to dip toward seventy or sixty, it means the defense systems are being overwhelmed or the interceptor stocks are critically low. That is a leading indicator of a major shift. The second thing is the target selection. This week, we saw fuel depots and air defense sites. If the targets shift to "dual-use" infrastructure—power plants, water treatment, internet hubs—that means they are moving from a military attrition model to a total societal attrition model. That’s a much darker phase.
We saw a hint of that in the cyber-attacks on the Haifa power grid last month. It’s moving from "I want to break your army" to "I want to break your country." We aren't there yet, but the economic indicators you mentioned suggest the countries are breaking themselves just by staying in the fight. The thirty-four percent drop in the rial is a massive signal. That’s not just a market fluctuation; it’s a total loss of confidence in the state’s ability to manage the future. Herman, does the average person in Tehran even see this as a war for a cause anymore, or is it just "the way things are"?
From the data we’re seeing, it’s becoming "the way things are." There’s a profound sense of fatalism. And on the Israeli side, keep an eye on the tech sector. If the venture capital starts to dry up because people are afraid their engineers will be in uniform for six months out of every year, that’s the "silent attrition." You don't see that on a map, but it’s a mortal threat to Israel’s long-term survival as a high-income nation. If the talent leaves for Berlin or Palo Alto, the "fortress" becomes a hollow shell.
I think one of the biggest misconceptions people have is that because the strikes are becoming "routine," the risk is lower. But it’s actually the opposite. In a war of attrition, the "breakthrough" happens suddenly. It’s like a dam. It looks fine, it looks fine, it leaks a little, and then it’s gone. One side hits a critical shortage of a specific component, or a specific type of fuel, and suddenly their entire defense posture collapses. Is there any historical precedent for this kind of high-tech attrition?
The closest thing might be the "War of the Cities" during the Iran-Iraq war in the eighties, but that was much lower tech. This is the first time we’ve seen two advanced states with massive missile and drone inventories just... grind. It’s the "Hemingway Law" of collapse—gradually, then suddenly. We are in the "gradually" phase right now. Both sides are trying to hide their leaks. Iran is trying to look like a regional superpower while their people are struggling to buy meat. Israel is trying to look like an invincible fortress while their debt-to-GDP ratio starts to look like a red line. The "suddenly" part happens when the money runs out or a system fails during a major raid.
Let’s talk about the "lost leadership" part of Daniel’s prompt. If you were advising the leadership on either side—not that they'd listen to a sloth and a donkey—how do you exit a war of attrition? Because history shows these things usually only end when one side literally cannot move, or a third party forces a stalemate. Is there a "middle way" out of this?
Usually, it requires a "shaking of the table." A massive diplomatic intervention, or a change in government on one or both sides. But right now, the domestic politics in both countries are so polarized that "peace" or even a "ceasefire" is seen as a betrayal. It’s a "sunk cost" fallacy on a national scale. "We’ve spent so much, we’ve lost so many, we can’t stop now without a total victory."
But total victory isn't on the menu in twenty twenty-six. There are no tanks rolling into Tehran, and there are no Iranian flags over Jerusalem. It’s a math problem with no solution. It’s the tragedy of the situation. The technology allows the war to continue at a low simmer indefinitely. In the old days, you’d run out of horses or food and the war would end. Now, you just keep printing money and importing chips and you can keep the missiles flying for years.
That’s a profound point, Corn. We’ve automated the logistics of destruction to the point where the "natural" end of a war—exhaustion—takes much longer to reach. The "efficiency" of modern warfare has actually made it harder to stop. We’ve perfected the art of the "forever strike." And as we mentioned in that episode about news maps, the way this is reported doesn't help. We see the flashes, but we don't see the erosion of the foundations. We’re watching the roof burn while the basement is flooding.
So, for our listeners, the "informational briefing" is this: The last twenty-four hours showed us the current steady-state of the war. A large-scale but largely intercepted Iranian strike, a precise but limited Israeli retaliation. The math of the interceptors is currently holding, but the math of the treasuries is failing. We are in a period of "tactical drift" where the soldiers know what to do, but the leaders don't know where to go. It’s a war being fought by the machines and the middle managers.
And keep a close eye on those interception percentages. Eighty-seven percent is the number to beat. If it stays there, the status quo holds. If it moves down to seventy-five, the calculus changes overnight. And watch the economic headlines as much as the military ones. The next "major strike" might not be a missile; it might be a bank failure or a general strike. Those are the kinetic events of a war of attrition.
It’s a sobering reality. Daniel’s feeling of a "lost script" seems to be the most accurate assessment of the conflict right now. Both sides are just reacting to the next sensor blip, the next drone launch, the next protest. It’s a loop. We will be keeping a very close eye on this, obviously, because the loop has to break eventually.
We have to. The implications for global energy, for tech supply chains, and obviously for the people living through it are just too high to ignore. But we need to look past the "performance warfare" and see the structural decay underneath. The real story isn't the explosion; it's the cost of the fuse.
Well, I think that’s a good place to leave it for this update. It’s a lot to process, but that’s the world in twenty twenty-six. We are all living in the attrition now. Thanks as always to our producer, Hilbert Flumingtop, for keeping us on track and making sure we don't drift too far into the fog ourselves.
And big thanks to Modal for providing the GPU credits that power this show and allow us to process all this data in real-time. Without that compute power, we’d be just as lost as the strategists.
This has been My Weird Prompts. If you are finding these deep dives helpful, we are on Spotify if you haven't followed us there yet. It’s the best way to make sure you don't miss these briefings as the situation evolves. We’re trying to provide the signal while everyone else is focused on the noise.
Stay curious, and keep looking for the signal in the noise. Don't let the "minimal damage" reports fool you—everything has a cost.
Talk soon.