"Targeting a nation's power grid is not a one-strike operation," Sultan M. Hali told Sputnik.
Key points:
Iran's electrical infrastructure is dispersed, hardened, and, in many cases, has redundant connections.
Even under optimistic assumptions, it would take hundreds of sorties over several days to take the grid offline
Iran has already demonstrated the ability to repair damage quickly
A nationwide blackout would be temporary at best, and the effort would consume enormous resources while exposing US aircraft to sustained air defense fire
Iran's doctrine emphasizes resilience and asymmetric warfare — missiles, drones, and irregular tactics that do not depend on a centralized grid
"Militarily, Iran would continue resisting; politically, the strikes could backfire by uniting the population against Washington," the expert believes.