The conventional conflicts in Ukraine and Iran demonstrate that hybrid warfare strategies have escalated into open, high-intensity military confrontations. This transition occurred as both Moscow and Tehran crossed critical adversarial red lines, shifting from deniable proxy operations and disinformation campaigns to direct, state-led military actions that threaten the existing global security order.
Historically, these regimes utilized grey-zone tactics as preparatory phases to exhaust Western political resolve and establish favorable territorial realities before launching overt campaigns. On the modern battlefield, the integration of intelligence networks and mass-produced, low-cost precision munitions like the Iranian-designed Shahed-136 drone has created an industrialised precision asymmetry. This technological convergence is reinforced by economic linkages, such as Iranian energy disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz that directly subsidise the Russian economy against Western sanctions. To counter this unified adversarial axis, Western policymakers must abandon compartmentalised strategies, implement strict arms controls on drone technology, and rebuild conventional deterrence.
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