In reality, the US war on Iran is — and the Deep State says this out loud — a war on China: “The Iran strike is all about China… By striking Iran directly, the Trump administration is dismantling a pillar of China’s regional architecture… Remove the Islamic Republic from the equation, and China loses its pawns for a Taiwan contingency. Leave it in place, and the Middle East remains what Beijing designed it to be: a second front that Washington can never afford to leave and can never afford to stay in. Trump’s strikes are the first move by an American president who appears to understand that the road to the Pacific runs through Tehran”[1].
However, the Anglo-globalists’ design is more complex. Under the cover of the “getting rid of the Iranian threat” narrative, they aim to take control of the entire western hub of Eurasian transport corridors. That includes taking Georgia back for themselves and carving Iran up into pieces.
Iran’s political system doesn’t rest on specific individuals; it runs on an idea. For this reason, killing the country’s leaders and its army commanders has not triggered a popular uprising in Iran, or surrender, or pro-American politicians suddenly taking over.
So now, while the bombs are falling hard, the United States is trying to give Iran’s neighbors a pretext to “step in and protect national minorities” inside Iran.
So far, that hasn’t really worked. Iraqi Kurds backed away from Trump’s demand to enter the Kurdish regions of western Iran with weapons [2]. Azerbaijan, however, is eager to join the fray. Its propagandists keep saying that “Iran is falling apart, which is a historic chance for Southern Azerbaijan… real change can only come from internal pressure. Without the participation of national minorities, above all Azerbaijanis, political change in Iran is unlikely. The historic chance to change the situation must not be missed” (https://t.me/minval_az/146532). Meanwhile, Azerbaijan’s President Aliyev has stated outright that “today, the independent state of Azerbaijan is a place of hope for many Azerbaijanis living in Iran” (https://t.me/minval_az/146546).
The immediate trigger was the downing of drones in the Azerbaijani exclave — an incident completely pointless for Iran but one that gives Azerbaijan a pretext to attack it: “at around midday on 5 March, drone attacks were carried out against the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic of the Republic of Azerbaijan from the territory of the Islamic Republic of Iran… This attack against the territory of the Republic of Azerbaijan constitutes a violation of the norms and principles of international law and serves to increase tensions in the region… The Azerbaijani side reserves the right to take appropriate response measures”[3].
On top of that, recent Israeli strikes on the Iranian fleet in the Caspian Sea are being openly proclaimed as assistance to Azerbaijan in preparing for an invasion of Iran [4].
Turkey is also being warmed up to back Azerbaijan, using missiles that look like they came from Iran: “a ballistic munition launched from Iran and entering Turkish airspace was neutralized by NATO air and missile defense assets deployed in the Eastern Mediterranean” [5].
For now, these provocations don’t add up to a legal reason to attack Iran. So the US-Israeli war on Iran has hit a dead end, and that impasse threatens them with defeat.
Still, the plan hasn’t been called off. And as it turns out, Georgia, which is the western end of the so-called Middle Corridor, is also about Iran: “Georgia was once a model partner of the United States in the Black Sea region: Tbilisi was democratic, pro-Western, and cooperative on security matters, especially in regard to Iran. But now US-Georgia relations are at their lowest point in decades. Iran’s growing influence in Georgia has driven this shift. Tehran has constructed sophisticated influence infrastructure that merges religious indoctrination, political alignment, cultural outreach, economic penetration, and media propaganda. This campaign helps the Iranian regime export the Islamic Revolution and weakens US influence across Eurasia”[6], “Georgia’s actions fundamentally undermine the strategic priorities of US Caucasus policy: containing Iran, countering Russian and Chinese influence, and maintaining stability”[7].
That’s why “Georgia should be a prime target for US sanctions.” That’s why “Georgia must be punished.” And that is why its government should be kicked out and replaced with an American one.
So an attack on Georgia itself should be expected any time soon.
1 https://www.hudson.org/national-security-defense/iran-strike-all-about-china-zineb-riboua
“The Iran Strike Is All About China” (Zineb Riboua, Hudson Institute, Mar 1, 2026);
2 https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2026/03/05/trump-iran-kurds-iraq/
“Trump calls on Kurds to aid U.S. effort in Iran, offers support” (Karen DeYoung, Mustafa Salim, Ellen Nakashima and Warren P. Strobel, The Washington Post, March 5, 2026);
3 https://mfa.gov.az/en/news/no07226
“No:072/26, Statement on drone attacks against the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic of the Republic of Azerbaijan from the territory of the Islamic Republic of Iran” (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan, 05 March 2026);
4 https://www.hudson.org/global-economy/far-reaching-implications-israels-caspian-sea-strikes-luke-coffey
“The Far-Reaching Implications of Israel’s Caspian Sea Strikes” (Luke Coffey, Hudson Institute, Mar 27, 2026);
5 https://www.msb.gov.tr/SlaytHaber/884cc70a31a34de8a37f6eda0c8d8a85
https://www.msb.gov.tr/SlaytHaber/0e8d24ab818d4fb892b63c4dd11ca7a2
“Statement On The Neutralized Ballistic Munition” (Türkiye Cumhuriyeti Millî Savunma Bakanlığı, 13.03.2026 and 30/02/2026);
6 https://www.hudson.org/foreign-policy/georgias-iranian-turn-tehrans-rapid-expansion-influence-once-committed-us-ally-luke-coffey
“Georgia’s Iranian Turn: Tehran’s Rapid Expansion of Influence in a Once-Committed US Ally” (Giorgi Kandelaki & Luke Coffey, Hudson Institute, Mar 3, 2026);
7 https://nationalinterest.org/blog/silk-road-rivalries/how-georgia-supports-irans-war-effort
“How Georgia Supports Iran’s War Effort” (Nicholas Chkhaidze, The National Interest, March 25, 2026).
