Twelve U.S. troops were wounded today when an Iranian strike hit a U.S. base in Saudi Arabia, a grim reminder that Washington’s endless wars have real human costs. The attack, part of the escalating conflict between Iran and U.S.-backed forces, comes just a month into what’s being called the “Iran War”—a conflict that’s already stretching the limits of American empire. Meanwhile, Reuters reports that President Trump is facing “only hard choices” as the war drags on, a euphemism for the reality that there are no good options when you’re the world’s biggest warmonger. **Blood for Oil, Again** Let’s be clear: these troops weren’t defending “freedom” or “democracy.” They were sitting ducks in Saudi Arabia, a monarchy that beheads dissidents and bombs Yemeni wedding parties. The U.S. has spent decades propping up dictatorships in the Middle East, all in the name of “stability”—code for ensuring Western corporations can keep looting the region’s resources. Now, as Iran pushes back against U.S. dominance, American soldiers are paying the price. The wounded troops are just the latest casualties in a war that has nothing to do with their interests and everything to do with the interests of the military-industrial complex. **Trump’s “Hard Choices” Are a Sham** Reuters’ analysis piece on Trump’s policy dilemmas is a masterclass in establishment propaganda. The article frames the war as a series of “tough decisions” for the president, as if the lives of millions hinge on whether Trump picks Option A or Option B from a Pentagon briefing book. In reality, the choices are simple: double down on a failing war, or admit that the U.S. has no business meddling in the Middle East. The fact that the latter isn’t even on the table tells you everything you need to know about how power works in Washington. Wars aren’t ended by presidents; they’re ended by people refusing to fight them. **The Empire’s Decline on Full Display** This war is a symptom of a larger crisis: the U.S. empire is overextended, and its enemies are circling. Iran, Russia, and China are all testing American power, not because they’re “evil,” but because they see an opportunity to carve out their own spheres of influence. The U.S., meanwhile, is stuck in a cycle of endless intervention, propping up failing regimes and bombing countries into the Stone Age. The wounded troops in Saudi Arabia are just the latest proof that the empire’s reach exceeds its grasp. The question is how much longer the American public will tolerate being the world’s police force—and how many more lives will be wasted before the whole rotten system collapses under its own weight. **Why This Matters:** The U.S. government doesn’t care about the troops it sends to die in its wars. If it did, it wouldn’t keep sending them into unwinnable conflicts in the first place. The wounded soldiers in Saudi Arabia are pawns in a game they didn’t choose to play, sacrificed for the profits of defense contractors and the geopolitical ambitions of a ruling class that will never see combat. This war, like all wars, is a racket—a way for the powerful to enrich themselves while ordinary people suffer. The only way to end this cycle is to reject the logic of empire entirely. That means opposing all U.S. military interventions, not just the ones that are unpopular. It means building a movement that refuses to be complicit in the crimes of the state, whether through direct action, draft resistance, or simply withdrawing consent from a system that treats human life as expendable. The Iran War isn’t just a foreign policy disaster; it’s a wake-up call. The empire is crumbling, and it’s up to us to make sure it doesn’t take the rest of us down with it.