The nuclear deal with Iran has reignited a painful question for the United States: what was the war in Iraq for? Jeremy Bowen, the BBC’s international editor, offered a stark assessment from the region. His report, filed from Tehran, noted that the diplomatic breakthrough appears to validate the arguments of those who opposed the 2003 invasion.
Bowen’s analysis focused on the strategic incoherence of a conflict that toppled Saddam Hussein, empowered Iran, and ultimately led to negotiations with the very regime the war was meant to contain. The deal, if implemented, would lift sanctions on Iran in exchange for limits on its nuclear programme. But for many American and British families who lost soldiers in Iraq, the settlement raises uncomfortable questions about the human cost of a war that shifted the regional balance of power in Tehran’s favour.
Bowen’s reporting did not dwell on emotion. He presented facts: the war in Iraq cost thousands of lives and trillions of dollars. It removed a dictator but created a vacuum filled by Iranian-backed militias.
Now, the same Iranian government is being treated as a legitimate negotiating partner. The irony was not lost on him. The question “what was the war for?
” is not new. It has lingered since the fall of Baghdad. But the deal with Iran gives it a sharper edge.
Diplomats in Vienna insisted the agreement was a victory for non-proliferation. Bowen’s report undercut that narrative by linking the present moment to the past. He reminded readers that the war was sold as a necessary step to prevent weapons of mass destruction.
None were found. Instead, Iran’s programme advanced. The deal now seeks to roll back that progress through diplomacy, not force.
For the families of the fallen, that distinction may offer little comfort. Bowen’s report was a model of detached analysis. It connected the dots without accusation.
He let the chronology speak. The invasion of 2003, the insurgency, the rise of Isis, and now the nuclear deal. The chain of events forms a pattern that suggests the war achieved the opposite of its stated goals.
The lesson, Bowen implied, is that military power has limits. It can destroy but not construct. The Iran deal is an admission that diplomacy, however imperfect, is the only tool that can address the consequences of war.
The report was characteristically understated. No sweeping conclusions. Just a question left hanging in the air.
For the families who lost loved ones, it is a question that will never fully be answered. For policymakers, it is a warning about the unintended consequences of intervention. The war in Iraq was a strategic error.
The Iran deal is an attempt to correct it. But the cost of that error is already paid.








