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Noise, Certainty, and Credibility: Why Analysts Disagree in the Current Iran Conflict

The current Iran conflict has become not only a military confrontation, but also an information war. Missiles, drones, naval blockades, airstrikes, and economic pressure dominate the battlefield, yet another struggle unfolds in parallel: the battle to interpret events. Governments issue strategic messaging, think tanks publish rapid assessments, journalists chase breaking developments, and a growing ecosystem of self-employed online commentators produces hourly analysis. In such an environment, it is hardly surprising that experts often draw sharply different conclusions. The more interesting question is why. The first explanation is the oldest one in warfare: the fog of war. Early reports in any conflict are frequently incomplete or wrong. Claims about aircraft losses, missile interceptions, naval incidents, or regime instability often emerge through anonymous sources, partisan media, or social media fragments stripped of context. In the current Iran conflict, competing narratives abo...

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