The obvious signs the Iran war is part of larger contest with Russia and China

Critics who call Operation Epic Fury folly or a distraction are missing the point: Iran is just one front in an ongoing, evolving global contest that includes Russia and China.It stretches to other fronts as well, though President Donald Trump has shut down the one in Venezuela and looks to have Cuba headed the same way.But Tehran is much more entangled with Moscow and Beijing, exchanging arms, technical know-how and intelligence.Even now, Russia is giving Iran high-quality intelligence to target missiles on US installations, experts conclude: Such precision is beyond the limited capabilities of the Islamic Republic’s handful of military-grade satellites.The cooperation runs both ways: Tehran has been sending Shahed drones to Moscow for attacks on Ukraine for four years now; it even built a factory in Russia to produce thousands of these cheap, deadly unmanned aerial vehicles.Monitoring how well the drones work, Iranian observers then worked to improve the tech, which likely helped the attack that killed six Americas.
But we have allies, too: American forces are now leveraging Ukraine’s substantial experience with defeating Iranian-made drones — tracking, jamming and shooting them down.Indeed, President Volodymyr Zelensky is making Ukrainian specialists available to assist US interception of Iran’s drones before they can penetrate traditional defenses in the Middle East.China, meanwhile, has provided Iran with arms and air-defense systems — with plans to upgrade the latter prevented by Epic Fury’s start.That need was exposed by the complete failure of those systems in Venezuela, as US forces had no problem evading them as they deposed Nicolás Maduro — whose personal security was provided by Cuba, another way the alliance worked.
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