Poser
WKR
I don’t read truth social posts, or really any other social media stuff.
The blockade not only is crushing the Iranian economy, but it’s got china by the balls, too.
The regime, or what’s left of it is completely fractured.
The press secretary said the ships the radicals fired on and apparently seized, doesn’t break the ceasefire because of the nationality of the vessels.
So you’ve likely got some radical terrorists trying to extort money from those ships, because there is no more money coming in whatsoever.
They’re loosing a half a billion per day. Thats unsustainable.
My guess is Trump was counting on the irgc to close the straight, so the blockade could then be good to go for the stranglehold.
I dare not predict an hour or day with this crowd, (dare I be 12 hrs late again) as to when the next round of negotiations lead to a resolution, but I’m confident one is in the works already, despite what some media outlets are reporting.
I find it very difficult to believe that the administration anticipated the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. On the contrary, it seems clear that this development caught them completely off guard. Based on the buildup to the conflict, the administration was clearly banking on a quick, decisive outcome—similar to the initial expectations for Venezuela.
According to leaked details from the original Situation Room meeting, the administration’s internal dynamics were deeply fractured. Trump reportedly rubber-stamped Israel’s pitch with a dismissive "sounds good to me." Meanwhile, Rubio was hesitant about any objective short of regime change (and even resistant to that), Vance warned that this intervention would betray the isolationist base that elected them, and Hegseth was eager to wage a holy war. Perhaps the most grounded assessment came from General Cain, who warned that Israel historically "overpromises and under delivers."
We can see that under-delivery playing out now. Israel’s pitch outlined four stated objectives:
- Destroying ballistic missiles
- Dismantling missile production capabilities
- Neutralizing the Iranian Navy
- Preventing the acquisition of nuclear weapons
If the U.S. could reopen the Strait solely through bombing campaigns, it would be open by now. Instead, we are seeing the U.S. backfill the region with Marines and paratroopers in apparent preparation for ground operations.
This predicament is the result of underestimating an adversary that has spent 45 years studying U.S. military tactics in the Middle East. Iran has prepared deeply fortified bunkers to protect its munitions and production. They have decentralized their military into independently managed factions capable of operating without central leadership. Most importantly, Iran recognizes two key U.S. vulnerabilities: our advanced munitions are expensive, finite, and slow to replace; and the American public has zero appetite for a ground war. Iran simply prepared to survive the initial aerial onslaught with enough remaining force to transition the conflict into a war of attrition. The U.S. administration mistakenly believed they could achieve their goals using munitions alone, leaving us stranded in a strategic no man's land, desperate for an off-ramp as global oil prices surge.
While I agree this crisis has rattled China, it is hard to say the exchange was worth it, especially considering our only viable off-ramp may entirely depend on Beijing's willingness to negotiate with Iran on the world's behalf. Furthermore, if the administration's exclusive concern was truly the threat of a nuclear strike on U.S. soil, the 2025 Pentagon intelligence reports make it unequivocally clear that North Korea is a far more pressing priority than Iran.
Finally, one must look at the shifting narrative. In the opening week, this war was framed as a noble "liberation" of the Iranian people. That rhetoric quickly evaporated, replaced by administration threats to decimate civilian water and energy infrastructure. More alarmingly, there have been implied threats of nuclear strikes, with leaked reports even suggesting an attempt to activate nuclear protocols that was only thwarted by General Cain.
Ultimately, the administration's buy-in was driven by ego and ideology: Trump sought a definitive "legacy builder," Hegseth pursued a religious crusade, and the administration collectively wanted to signal to the world that the U.S. possesses the pure power to topple any regime within 24 hours. Instead, the strategy spectacularly backfired, resulting in the closure of a vital global chokepoint and leaving the world scrambling to mitigate a looming global oil crisis. And here we are.
