The #1 stated goal was to degrade Iranian military capabilities which they bombed to smithereens
Plausibly. But that stance also looks like oversimplistic whitewashing away of a load of problems.
- Is that stated goal the actual goal?
- There have been multiple stated goals.
- These undermine the idea that there is a #1 stated goal as you claim
- Why kill Iran's leadership if the plan was to degrade its military?
- Multiple justifications as PR strategy so useful idiots can cherry pick the best one if some fail (re. is the stated goal the actual goal?)
- Is the stated goal justified by the circumstances?
- Iran's military capabilities have not substantially changed in a long time so why bomb them now?
- Iran has only used its own military defensively or reactively, and there seems no good reason to assume this would change. US intelligence itself appears to have said there was no sign Iran was planning an attack.
- Why did an action to degrade Iran's military seemingly trigger from collapsed talks on a nuclear program?
- Why Iran and not many other countries that could threaten the USA and its allies?
- If the stated goal has been stated to have been achieved, why is the war still going?
- The stated goal seems to have not been achieved in the timescale initially claimed, and indeed more military assets are being moved to the conflict zone - at minimum, this means the war severely did not go to plan.
- Is the stated goal justified by the costs?
- Casualties (including Iranian), economic, political/diplomatic, military (e.g. depletion of stocks), undermining other major strategic aims
- Contextually, inconsistent / misleading / false claims made by the Trump administration on the accomplishments of previous military action
Downstream of that, direct action inhibits their ability to prop up groups like Hamas and Hezbollah or even Russia to a limited extent. And all that is before concessions, which Iran is going to have to make to get out of this situation, as much as people might think they have the advantage in a war of attrition, you can't attrition an enemy that can kill any given individual at any time of its choosing, and is only stopping to have someone left to negotiate with.
You live in an alternative reality.
It's not that we live in an alternative reality, it's a divergence of worldview. My perception here is that most users here want our elected governments, who (theoretically) answer to us, to communicate with us clearly and honestly, and to use the power that they operate in our name wisely, responsibly, and generally within international law. To quote Shakespeare, "'it is excellent to have a giant's strength, but it is tyrannous to use it like a giant". There are very reasonable concerns about the justifications for this war being expressed.
You seemingly do not do not have any concerns, and prefer to witlessly cheerlead any mass murder your government feels like, unencumbered by doubts about whether it was wise, responsible, or worth the pain and suffering inflicted. That's not an alternative reality but your moral preferences. Might makes right. It's your prerogative to have that moral view of the world.
It's like the way you implored us to feel empathy for an ICE agent shooting a US mother in the head, but evidently can't spare anything to think, feel or say for the thousands of dead, wounded and further suffering from this war. It's the sort of way it's hard to determine any consistent value you hold other than support for the Republican Party.