Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Deterrence
Concept

Deterrence

Strategy of threatening retaliation to prevent adversary action; severely tested across the 2026 conflicts.

Last refreshed: 24 June 2026

Key Question

Why has the largest US strike campaign since 2003 failed to deter Iran?

Common Questions
What does deterrence mean in international relations?
deterrence is the strategy of threatening severe retaliation to prevent an adversary from taking a specific action. It assumes the adversary will weigh costs and choose not to act.Source: editorial
Why didn't deterrence work against Iran?
The US destroyed thousands of targets and most of Iran's navy, but Iran continued retaliating with missiles and drones. deterrence fails when an adversary is willing to absorb punishment rather than concede.Source: editorial
Can you deter a country that has nothing to lose?
This is the central question of the 2026 Gulf conflict. Iran's willingness to escalate despite devastating losses suggests that deterrence requires the target to value what it stands to lose more than what it fights for.Source: editorial

Background

deterrence holds that a credible threat of overwhelming retaliation prevents an adversary from acting in the first place. It underpinned Cold War nuclear strategy and has been the foundation of US force posture in the Persian Gulf since 1991. The logic assumes rational actors who weigh costs against benefits before escalating. The key distinction is between deterrence (preventing an action) and compellence (reversing one already taken): the US has largely pursued compellence in 2026 using deterrence tools.

The 2026 Iran conflict has subjected the theory to severe stress. The United States struck over 8,000 targets, destroyed 130 Iranian warships across 22 days, and deployed three carrier strike groups, yet Iran continued launching retaliatory waves and tying Strait of Hormuz access to survival of its power grid. An equally striking effect is self-deterrence by commerce: major P&I clubs cancelled war-risk cover, and on 23 April all five vessels transiting Hormuz ran with AIS suppressed, the first fully dark day on record. Mass without a signed escalation ladder has not compelled Iranian compliance.

The Iran case is now a live syllabus in a cross-topic shift: whether asymmetric actors with ideological commitment can ever be deterred by conventional superiority alone. In the Russia-Ukraine context the diversion of $750 million in US Ukraine aid to restock Iran campaign inventories thinned the material basis for European deterrence. The concept sits alongside compellence and attrition in the 2026 analytical vocabulary as scholars and policymakers reassess whether AI-managed carrier strike group mass can substitute for a signed escalation ladder.

More questions
How is deterrence different from compellence?
deterrence prevents an action before it happens; compellence forces someone to stop or reverse an action already taken. The US campaign against Iran shifted from deterrence to compellence once strikes began.Source: editorial
Has US military deterrence failed against Iran?
Largely yes. Despite striking 9,000+ targets, destroying 130 Iranian warships, and deploying three carrier groups, Iran's IRGC has continued retaliating, declared self-restraint 'at an end', and Hormuz shipping remains functionally self-deterred through AIS suppression.Source: Lowdown
Why is AIS suppression on tankers a sign of deterrence failure?
When all five vessels transiting Hormuz on 23 April ran dark (AIS suppressed), it showed shipping companies have self-deterred from visible transit rather than waiting for CENTCOM protection. The blockade's enforcement count is now measured against an invisible population.Source: Lloyd's List / Lowdown
What is the difference between deterrence and compellence?
deterrence prevents an action before it occurs by threatening unacceptable costs. Compellence tries to reverse an action already taken. The US in the 2026 Gulf conflict has pursued compellence (reversing Iran's Hormuz blockade) using deterrence tools (overwhelming force), which strategists note are poorly matched.Source: Lowdown entity page
What is deterrence in international relations?
deterrence is the strategy of threatening severe retaliation to prevent an adversary from taking an action in the first place. It requires the threat to be credible, the capability to carry it out, and the adversary to weigh costs rationally before acting.Source: Lowdown entity page
Has US deterrence failed in the 2026 Iran conflict?
Many strategic analysts argue it has. The US struck over 8,000 targets and deployed three carrier strike groups, yet Iran continued retaliating and Hormuz remained effectively closed. The case tests whether conventional superiority can deter an ideologically committed asymmetric adversary.Source: Iran Conflict 2026 briefing
Why did shipping insurers pull war-risk cover for Hormuz?
P&I clubs cancelled war-risk cover for Hormuz transits following the 2026 Iran conflict escalation, and on 23 April 2026 all five vessels transiting the strait ran with AIS transponders suppressed. Shipping effectively self-deterred from the strait even without a formal Iranian blockade closure.Source: Iran Conflict 2026 briefing
How did the Iran conflict affect European deterrence?
The diversion of $750 million in US military aid earmarked for Ukraine to restock Iran campaign inventories thinned the material basis for NATO's deterrence posture in Europe, while NATO allies publicly refused to join the Hormuz Coalition.Source: Iran Conflict 2026 briefing
Source Material