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miércoles, 15 de julio de 2026

Trump’s Iran Trap

Why a Military Victory Could Become an Economic and Political Defeat for the United States

by Timothy Hopper | Jul 15, 2026 

https://original.antiwar.com/timothy_hopper/2026/07/14/trumps-iran-trap/

The latest U.S. strikes on Iran have put one of Donald Trump’s defining promises under pressure. He returned to the White House insisting that America could no longer keep paying for other countries’ wars. During the campaign, he pointed to trillions spent in Iraq and Afghanistan while roads, factories, and communities at home were neglected.

A long conflict with Iran would make that promise difficult to keep. The question is not whether the United States can defeat Iran conventionally. It can. The harder question is whether Washington can contain the fallout, absorb the cost, and keep a limited operation from widening. Presidents rarely stumble because their forces cannot win a battle. Trouble begins when war grows, bills rise, and its purpose becomes harder to explain.

Iran makes that distinction important. Discussion centers on missiles, air defenses, naval power, and Gulf force balances. But hardware superiority is not the same as success. Iraq and Afghanistan made that clear. The opening campaign can be swift; what follows is harder: sustaining forces, limiting instability, preserving support at home, and keeping costs from erasing gains.

Avoiding a ground invasion would not make the operation cheap. Carrier groups must stay on station, bases need reinforcement, and precision munitions and missile interceptors must be replaced. Intelligence, logistics, and maintenance continue daily. Modern war consumes money through equipment and tempo, not only troop numbers. A few more weeks can turn a limited operation into a larger expense.

That expense would come at an awkward time. Washington faces heavy public debt, recurring deficits, and demands for restraint. Trump returned promising lower taxes, domestic investment, and taxpayer relief. A prolonged war would compete with those priorities. Money presented as domestic renewal would again be committed overseas. The contradiction would be political as well as fiscal.

The damage would not stop with the federal budget. Disruption in the Persian Gulf can move oil markets almost immediately. The effects reach gasoline stations, shipping companies, manufacturers, and households. Most voters do not experience foreign policy through strategy papers. They experience it when filling a tank or paying for goods whose transport costs have risen. If war raises living costs, Trump’s economic message – one of his strongest assets—becomes harder to sustain.

Markets can absorb a brief shock. They are less comfortable with uncertainty that has no clear end. A drawn-out confrontation could delay investment, weaken confidence, and slow activity without producing a dramatic crash. The damage may be gradual, but households and businesses notice when stability fades.

Trump therefore faces a problem larger than the campaign. Winning battles is one thing; keeping victory from consuming the domestic program that returned him to power is another. The longer the conflict continues, the more pressing a second question becomes: what is America giving up in another Middle East war?

China is the obvious answer. Republicans and Democrats largely agree that Beijing, not Tehran, is America’s main long-term strategic competitor. The competition includes artificial intelligence, semiconductors, supply chains, technology standards, and Indo-Pacific influence. Successive administrations have argued that American planning and investment must remain focused there.

A prolonged Iran war would pull policy the other way. A carrier moved to the Gulf cannot be in the Pacific. A defense dollar spent replacing weapons used in the Middle East cannot be spent elsewhere. Officials consumed by another crisis have less time for long-term priorities. Strategy is about trade-offs. The United States might win militarily against Iran and still be less prepared where its future interests matter most.

There is precedent for that danger. Iraq and Afghanistan absorbed American money and attention while China enlarged its economy, modernized its forces, and expanded its reach. Beijing did not need to challenge the United States directly. It benefited while Washington spent its energy elsewhere. A new Iran war could reproduce that pattern.

The domestic political cost may be just as serious. Trump built part of his appeal by attacking “endless wars,” not defending them. That argument helped bind an America First coalition tired of overseas spending while problems at home remained unresolved. An extended Iran conflict would strain that identity. Each passing month makes it harder to explain how the war fits a promise to avoid foreign traps.

This is where military achievement and political success separate. Bombing can destroy targets while eroding the coalition that approved it. Higher fuel prices, a larger defense bill, and renewed focus on the Middle East could weaken Trump’s agenda. The most dangerous reaction may come not from opponents, but from supporters wondering whether his administration has entered the cycle it once condemned.

Allies would add another difficulty. European governments and regional partners may accept a short operation meant to restore deterrence. Keeping the same coalition together through a long war is harder. Costs are shared unevenly, priorities diverge, and patience wears thin. Diplomatic attention, like military capacity, has limits.

Supporters have a reasonable reply. The United States holds the military advantage, and limited strikes might restore deterrence without occupations like Iraq and Afghanistan. That possibility should not be dismissed. But the measure is not whether American forces can hit targets. It is whether doing so produces a political outcome worth the cost. Recent history offers little reason to assume the two coincide.

That is Trump’s trap. A president elected in part to end expensive foreign adventures could repeat their basic pattern. The greatest danger is not battlefield defeat. It is a victory that leaves the country paying more, politically divided, and strategically distracted.

Great powers rarely weaken because of one lost battle. More often, they wear themselves down by allowing immediate military goals to crowd out longer-term needs. If another Middle East war consumes the money and attention required for economic renewal and competition with China, the cost of victory may exceed the cost of restraint. That may become the defining foreign-policy test of Trump’s second term.

martes, 14 de julio de 2026

The Inconvenient Jew Is One of Zionism’s Biggest Problems

by Jason Jones | Jul 14, 2026 

https://original.antiwar.com/jason_jones/2026/07/13/the-inconvenient-jew-is-one-of-zionisms-biggest-problems/

Israeli Ambassador to the United States Yechiel Leiter recently offered what he apparently believed was a devastating answer to those decrying the genocide in Gaza.

“Jews do not use children’s blood for rituals,” Leiter said. “Jews do not poison wells. And Jews do not starve populations or commit genocide.”

The smear in this common Zionist talking point is obvious: Those who accuse the Israeli government belong in the same moral category as those who spread medieval blood libels against innocent Jews. To say the regime of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has committed genocide is not merely to criticize a government, an army, or a political ideology. It is to accuse “the Jews.”

But there is a growing problem for Zionism and its favorite smear: the moral indignation of Jews.

According to a new AP-NORC poll, 30% of Jewish adults in the United States say Israel has committed genocide against Palestinians in Gaza. Only 49% say it has not. Among religiously unaffiliated Jews, the share rises to about four in ten. Also, only about four in ten Jewish adults believe Israel’s continuing military operations in Gaza are justified, while roughly six in ten view Netanyahu unfavorably.

In light of the grave public perspective of a growing percentage of Jews, the Zionists look more and more foolish. Their go-to argument – if you can even call this substance less insult an argument – has become an argument ad absurdum: Nearly one-third of American Jews, Zionists believe, are secretly medieval antisemites; Jewish critics of Netanyahu believe Jews poison wells; Jews who watch children starve in Gaza and call it genocide are not morally serious observers but morons trafficking in blood libel … against themselves.

But the absurdity is rapidly leading to yet another Zionist offense – as if a genocide were not enough. Since the inconvenient Jew is now one of Zionism’s biggest problems, the Jew himself – insofar as he accepts the universal human principles that genocide flies in the face of – must be treated as an impossibility.

He cannot be debated honestly, because his very existence blows the argument apart. He proves that Jewish identity does not require loyalty to Netanyahu. He proves that revulsion at starving children is not (forgive the grotesque suggestion – it is not mine but Zionism’s) an anti-Jewish prejudice.

So, Zionism does to the inconvenient Jew what it does to every inconvenient person.

It erases him.

He becomes “self-hating,” “brainwashed,” “disloyal,” or – perhaps most insultingly of all – “not a real Jew.”

Insulting, yes. But I should add that to be insulted by a Zionist in 2026 – after nearly three years of genocide in the name of Zionism and yet another bloody campaign explicitly modeled on Israel’s Gaza operation now underway in Lebanon – is a badge of honor.

Let’s look again at Leiter’s formulation. He did not say “The evidence does not prove that the Israeli government has committed genocide.”

He said “Jews do not commit genocide.”

That substitution is doing all the work.

In the place of a morally indefensible government, the Zionist propagandist places an entire people — millions of human beings scattered across countries, cultures, religious practices, and political convictions — summoned as a human shield around the Netanyahu government.

Nothing could be further from a genuine defense of Jews than Zionist rhetoric. It is the opposite: A grotesque use of Jews. And worse: An attempt to make them morally complicit in what – as the polling shows – many of them reject.

Don’t get me wrong, by the way. I’m not addressing myself to Jews, as if I’m in a position to explain their own interests to them. And it should come as no surprise to anyone that, according to the same poll cited above, two-thirds of Jewish adults surveyed already understand (and said in the poll) that criticizing Israel’s military actions is not antisemitic. About half also said anti-Israel protests are not inherently antisemitic.

They get something Israel’s ambassador pretends not to get: attacking a Jewish person because he is Jewish is not the same thing as judging Zionist ideology or the actions of a government operating in its name.

I wrote recently that in light of the spread of the shocking truth about Israel’s conduct in Gaza, the ideology of Zionism is committing suicide by genocide.

This new poll reveals another reason why that’s the case: Jews are among the most convincing witnesses to the genocide. And every time Zionist spokesmen respond by erasing those Jews, they make their own fraudulence more obvious.

And so the Jew now standing in solidarity with the vulnerable Palestinian, is now vulnerable to the same attacks. But – in another twist of fate that makes the Jew very much like the Palestinian – the harder Zionism tries to make inconvenient Jew disappear, the more clearly everyone else can see him.

lunes, 13 de julio de 2026

Trump’s New Iran Strikes Are Turning Failure Into a Wider Disaster

The President’s renewed strikes will not make Iran easier to coerce. They will make America weaker.

by Brian Hudson | Jul 13, 2026

https://original.antiwar.com/brian_hudson/2026/07/12/trumps-new-iran-strikes-are-turning-failure-into-a-wider-disaster/

The easiest mistake in war is to confuse the ability to strike again with proof that the previous strike worked. Donald Trump is making that mistake in Iran. The latest U.S. attacks may destroy more military assets and infrastructure, but they do not answer the political question that has haunted this war from the beginning: what outcome is all this destruction supposed to produce?

The Trump administration launched the initial campaign claiming that it would curb Iran’s nuclear program and break the military power behind what Washington described as Tehran’s regional threat. Months later, Iran has not surrendered, the nuclear dispute remains unresolved, and the Strait of Hormuz has become an even more dangerous center of confrontation. The United States is still negotiating through intermediaries over shipping and other unresolved issues. Trump says talks can continue even as he declares the ceasefire over and orders new attacks. This is not a strategy approaching success. It is a strategy using escalation to avoid confronting its own failure.

That pattern is the central danger. Each time force fails to produce the promised political result, the administration treats the failure not as evidence that its strategy is wrong, but as evidence that it has not used enough force. The inability of the initial campaign to compel Iran becomes the justification for another round. If that round also fails, its failure can authorize the next. The strategy becomes almost impossible to disprove because every setback is reclassified as unfinished business.

Iran has suffered enormous damage. The opening attacks killed senior political and military figures, while the wider campaign struck thousands of targets and degraded military capabilities. Yet destruction did not translate into political compliance. Even the scale of the funeral ceremonies for the Iranian leader assassinated in the opening U.S.-Israeli strikes, while not proof of national unanimity, showed that foreign bombardment had not produced the easy collapse in political authority some advocates of war expected.

Supporters of escalation will say Washington simply stopped too soon. Iran was weakened but not weakened enough, and more punishment will eventually force Tehran to concede. But this logic turns every failure into a reason to repeat the policy that caused it. If bombing does not secure surrender, bomb more. If retaliation follows, strike harder. If negotiations remain necessary, claim that diplomacy works only because the bombs created leverage.

Damage, however, is not leverage unless it moves the opponent toward the outcome being demanded. The initial campaign changed the arena of bargaining without resolving the conflict. Hormuz, not the nuclear file, has become Iran’s most powerful instrument of pressure. Tehran now treats control over the waterway as its strongest strategic card. Washington went to war in the name of eliminating Iranian leverage. Instead, it helped elevate a maritime chokepoint through which the equivalent of about one-fifth of global oil and petroleum-product consumption passed before the war into the central battlefield of the relationship.

The confrontation in the strait is therefore evidence that the initial campaign failed according to its own declared logic. Washington presented the reopening of Hormuz as proof of success. Yet commercial shipping remains exposed, tanker traffic has slowed, Iran continues to assert authority over passage, and the United States is again using force to impose the access it claimed had already been secured. A victory that must be repeatedly recreated through bombing is not a durable victory. It is an unstable military arrangement waiting for the next incident.

The deeper problem is that Trump has no visible theory of how escalation ends. Is the objective a nuclear agreement, unconditional access through Hormuz, the destruction of Iran’s conventional military capacity, regime change, or punishment for attacks on shipping? Each goal would require a different strategy and political settlement. The administration’s shifting objectives obscure how little the bombing has accomplished. Ambiguity allows every new strike to be described as necessary while preventing the public from judging whether the war has succeeded.

This is how an unsuccessful campaign becomes permanent policy. Iranian retaliation justifies American escalation; American escalation produces further retaliation; and the resulting insecurity is presented as proof that restraint would be dangerous. War becomes both the cause of the crisis and the proposed solution.

The military cost is already substantial. The initial campaign consumed advanced U.S. munitions at a rate that exposed the limits of the industrial base. The Center for Strategic and International Studies estimated that the United States may have used more than half of its prewar inventory in four of seven key systems, with one to four years required to rebuild those stocks. Each new round narrows future choices, increases competition among theaters and allies, and turns scarce production capacity into fuel for a war without a defined endpoint.

A serious “America First” policy would treat this as a warning. It would ask whether another missile fired at Iran makes the United States safer or merely postpones the moment when Washington must negotiate. Trump instead treats the act of striking as its own strategic justification. Firepower substitutes for political purpose, even as escalation depletes military readiness and deepens dependence on the diplomacy the administration publicly derides.

The economic costs follow the same pattern. Hormuz connects energy prices, shipping, insurance, manufacturing, agriculture, and household expenses. Oil prices fell when diplomacy appeared to reduce the risk of disruption and rose again when U.S.-Iran fighting resumed. That volatility is not incidental. It is one of the principal ways the war transfers its costs to people far from the battlefield.

A sustained campaign would raise insurance and freight costs, unsettle investment, and increase pressure on fuel-dependent industries and food production. The burden would fall on workers whose jobs depend on stable trade, families already struggling with prices, and communities repeatedly told that housing, health care, schools, and infrastructure are unaffordable. A government cannot plausibly claim to put Americans first while exposing them to a preventable energy shock and treating public resources as an inexhaustible reserve for escalation.

The regional political cost is equally serious. U.S. operations depend on Gulf states for bases, logistical support, and access. Yet those states absorb the immediate danger when Iran retaliates. The more Washington turns their territory into infrastructure for an open-ended conflict, the stronger their incentive becomes to hedge and seek arrangements that reduce their exposure. Trump’s escalation risks weakening the very network of relationships on which American power in the region depends.

Restraint is not surrender. It is the recognition that force without a political theory of success becomes an expensive ritual. Before any further attack, the administration should state its objective, explain how military action will achieve it, define the conditions for ending operations, identify the risks of retaliation, and provide the legal authority for widening the war. Congress should demand those answers rather than allowing a failed campaign to expand through presidential momentum.

The initial campaign proved that Iran could be damaged without becoming politically compliant. The renewed strikes are proving something more dangerous: Trump is prepared to weaken American military readiness, economic stability, regional relationships, and democratic accountability rather than acknowledge that bombing did not produce the settlement he promised. The responsible course is to use the remaining diplomatic channel to reduce escalation and negotiate the unresolved issues. Otherwise, every failure will become the excuse for another attack, and the United States will turn a failed strategy into a permanent war.

domingo, 12 de julio de 2026

FIFA is not an independent sporting organisation; it is a political tool.

Football fans around the world are only now finding out what Palestinians have long known.

By Xavier Abu Eid

A political scientist.

Published On 11 Jul 2026

https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2026/7/11/fifa-is-not-an-independent-sporting-organisation-it-is-a-political-tool

This World Cup has increasingly put FIFA and its leadership under scrutiny. Its decision to overturn the suspension of an American football player after US President Donald Trump’s intervention has roiled fans around the world. Meanwhile, there have been accusations of referees favouring Argentina in their decisions during games against Egypt and Cape Verde.

In Palestine, we have seen and experienced FIFA’s corrupt nature for years. Despite its statute explicitly requiring the organisation to respect human rights, it has systematically failed to do that when it has come to Palestinian football.

It has repeatedly refused demands from the Palestinian Football Association (PFA) to suspend the Israeli Football Association (IFA) for allowing its league games to be played on occupied and stolen Palestinian land by teams that reside in illegal settlements.

It has not condemned the mass killing and maiming of Palestinian football players or demanded the release of detained football players – most recently Rand Halawani and Natalie Abu Dayyeh, members of the Palestinian women’s football team. It has not protested against the destruction of Palestinian football stadiums. It has done nothing to force Israel to abandon the various policies that restrict and undermine Palestinian football, including denying Palestinian teams travel permits.

FIFA has not just tolerated and normalised racism, apartheid and occupation, but it has also taken part in efforts to congratulate the participation of Israeli footballers in war crimes in Gaza or Lebanon.

Despite the repeated rulings by the International Court of Justice and various UN resolutions, FIFA continues to claim that Palestinian demands are  “a highly complex matter under public international law” and that “the final legal status of the West Bank remains unresolved”. This is nothing short of endorsing Israeli talking points, embraced by the Trump administration to shield its ally Israel and legitimise the theft of Palestinian land.

Just as Israel has made use of tourism, archaeology, religion, agriculture and others to normalise its illegal annexation, it has also done so through football – with FIFA’s support.

FIFA’s contribution to Israeli crimes has expanded under the presidency of Gianni Infantino. Human rights organisations have rightly referred Infantino’s actions to the International Criminal Court, accusing him of acting “in full knowledge that these practices constitute the commission of human rights violations, apartheid and war crimes” and ignoring multiple reports and letters on the subject.

The FIFA leadership has not only been silent and passive about Israel’s crimes and IFA’s involvement, it has also actively participated in their whitewashing. Last month, FIFA suggested that Palestine should play Israel as the opening match in a U-15 tournament to “promote peace”. Weeks earlier, Infantino personally tried to force the head of the PFA to shake hands with his Israeli counterpart.

FIFA is clearly no longer a neutral international sporting federation, which per its statute should avoid any political interference. It has been turned into a political tool that supports the foreign policy of the US and its allies.

Infantino himself is a great illustration of this reality. In 2018, for no apparent reason, he attended the official signing of the Abraham Accords in Washington – an agreement that in effect sought to remove the Palestinian question from the collective Arab agenda. In 2021, he participated in a conference of the right-wing Israeli newspaper, the Jerusalem Post, held in a venue built on the desecrated Muslim cemetery of Mamillah in Jerusalem.

In February, Infantino attended the inauguration of the controversial “Board of Peace”, which seeks to end the UN’s involvement in the Palestinian question and stop any international legal effort to end the Israeli occupation and genocide. He even announced a “strategic partnership to drive recovery and peace through football” with the board.

The ongoing controversies over the organisation of the World Cup should be understood in this context. FIFA has clearly lost control over its independent decision-making as an international sporting organisation and has abdicated from its responsibility to keep politics out of football.

When asked about the various violations the US has committed as a host against footballers, referees and fans, Infantino told the public that they should “chill, relax”.

All of this is incredibly damaging to public trust in international organisations like FIFA. It is also harmful for international football and to its reputation as a sport inclusive of all. If Infantino does not radically change his path, the legacy he will leave behind is one of destruction.

As for Palestinian football, it will persevere. The sport has existed since the creation of St George’s School team in Jerusalem in 1904. Since then, football has been part of every moment of Palestinian life. And like all things Palestinian, it has the strength to survive an occupation, a genocide and a corrupt FIFA.

sábado, 11 de julio de 2026

Israel pressuring Washington for 'green light' to attack Iran, claims Tehran plotting Trump assassination: Report

Israeli media claims Tel Aviv was ‘uninvolved’ in hundreds of US strikes on Iran over the past week

News Desk

JUL 10, 2026

https://thecradle.co/articles/israel-pressuring-washington-for-green-light-to-attack-iran-claims-tehran-plotting-trump-assassination-report

Tel Aviv is pressing Washington for a “green light” to resume strikes against the Islamic Republic, Israel’s Broadcasting Corporation (KAN) reported on 9 July, amid reports that say Israel has discovered an "Iranian plot” to kill Donald Trump.

KAN reports that Israeli officials estimate Iran and the US will continue exchanging strikes in the coming days. The current escalation is “limited to the US and Iran only, without any Israeli involvement,” the report added. 

As a result, Israel is “seeking approval” to join in, according to KAN and other media outlets. 

The Israeli broadcaster said the US is trying to maintain a “controlled” level of escalation with Iran that does not erupt into a full-scale war, and is avoiding strikes on Tehran’s energy infrastructure for now.

The KAN report states Tel Aviv is prepared to join any upcoming US strikes on Iran.

“We’re willing to do it again, if needed … should Washington seek help,” an Israeli source was cited as saying by the New York Post.

“We’ve proven that we stand with the US. I’m not sure it will be the interest of them — of the US that Israel will join on this — but, we realize that we need to stretch our muscles,” the source added. 

On Thursday, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) claimed Tel Aviv gave Washington intelligence on a “fresh Iranian plan” to assassinate Trump.

“Israel shared new intelligence with the US that it said indicated a fresh Iranian plan to kill President Trump,” WSJ claimed, citing “people familiar with the matter.”

The Israeli Embassy in Washington refused to comment on the report. 

Iran’s UN Mission did not respond to a request for comment, while the White House referred WSJ to what Trump claimed at the NATO summit in Ankara this week. 

“They want to take out the US leader—me. I’m on every list. I saw this morning, I’m on every single one of their lists. And so far, I guess I’ve been a little bit lucky, but that maybe doesn’t last very long,” the US president told reporters on Wednesday. 

Millions of Iranians demanded vengeance during the week-long funeral procession for the martyred supreme leader Ali Khamenei. 

Citizens carried banners reading “Kill Trump” and “Kill Netanyahu.” 

Iran launched a large-scale wave of retaliatory operations targeting US assets in the region on 9 July, including in Qatar, Kuwait, Jordan, and Bahrain.

The operations were a response to hundreds of US strikes against Iran earlier on Thursday. 

The escalation came a day after Trump declared that the so-called ceasefire was “over.” Since then, the White House has claimed it remains “committed” to the Islamabad agreement.

viernes, 10 de julio de 2026

Israeli prime minister says Iran war ‘has not ended’

Israeli army chief also says military campaign against Iran ‘not over’

Said Amori and Rania Abushamala

09 July 2026

https://www.aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/israeli-prime-minister-says-iran-war-has-not-ended-/3993540

JERUSALEM/ ISTANBUL

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that Iran war “has not ended,” amid military escalation between Tehran and Washington in recent days.

"The war has not ended. There are new challenges," Netanyahu said at an air force graduation ceremony at Hatzerim Air Base in southern Israel, as cited by the daily Yedioth Ahronoth.

"Maintaining air superiority is a fundamental pillar of Israel's national security doctrine. It is key to preserving stability in the turbulent Middle East."

Iran and the US exchanged attacks over the past two days amid escalation following Iranian attacks on three commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz.

Israel and the US launched joint attacks against Iran in February, killing more than 3,000 people, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Tehran retaliated with drone and missile strikes against Israel and Gulf countries hosting US assets.

Army Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir also said the military campaign against Iran is “not over.”

“On the drawing board are new plans. Major operations are still expected to lie ahead of us. Be prepared,” he said in brief remarks.

Iran and the US reached a Pakistan-brokered memorandum of understanding on June 17 aimed at ending their military conflict and paving the way for a lasting peace agreement.

However, on Wednesday, US President Donald Trump declared that the memorandum was “over,” effectively ending the agreement and triggering a new round of military confrontation.

jueves, 9 de julio de 2026

How the US-Iran Fight in the Strait of Hormuz Can Be Resolved Before It Blows Up the MoU

Sacrificing the entire MOU over the question of who nominally manages the Strait for the next few weeks would be a costly and unnecessary mistake.

by Trita Parsi | Jul 9, 2026 

https://original.antiwar.com/trita-parsi/2026/07/08/how-the-us-iran-fight-in-the-strait-of-hormuz-can-be-resolved-before-it-blows-up-the-mou/

For the second time since the U.S.-Iran Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) was signed, Washington and Tehran have slipped back into direct military confrontation. The United States struck “80 targets in Iran with precision munitions” after Iranian forces fired on several ships transiting the Strait of Hormuz without prior coordination with Tehran. The scale of the American strikes reportedly far exceeded the previous U.S.-Iran exchange, suggesting that Washington sought not merely to retaliate but to reestablish deterrence. The United States also reimposed sanctions on Iranian oil sales, reversing one of the central concessions of the MOU. The IRGC, in turn, claimed to have attacked 85 U.S. military sites across the region, including the Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain and Ali Al-Salem Air Base in Kuwait, and said eight were destroyed.

At the heart of the dispute are two competing interpretations of the MOU. Tehran’s reading is that while the Strait of Hormuz is to remain open, all commercial traffic during the 60-day interim period must be coordinated with Iran as the parties negotiate a permanent maritime arrangement. Washington, by contrast, interprets an “open” Strait to mean that vessels may transit either the Iranian or Omani shipping lanes without coordinating with Iran.

For Tehran, this is not a technical disagreement but a strategic one. Iranian officials fear the United States is using the MOU to erode Iran’s control over the Strait by rejecting any requirement for coordination and, in effect, establishing an alternative corridor that could remain open even if war resumes. Such an arrangement would deprive Iran of what many of its strategists regard as its single most important source of leverage in a future conflict: the credible ability to disrupt maritime traffic through Hormuz. From Tehran’s perspective, commercial shipping can resume without surrendering that leverage—but only if all vessel movements continue to be coordinated with Iran, thereby reinforcing its nominal authority over the waterway.

Washington counters that the text of the MOU does not explicitly require ships to obtain Iranian authorization before transiting the Strait. Instead, it assigns Iran responsibility for ensuring the safe passage of commercial vessels, a distinction the United States argues falls short of granting Tehran operational control over all maritime traffic. Paragraph 5 of the MOU states:

“Upon the signing of this MoU, the Islamic Republic of Iran will make arrangements using its best efforts for the safe passage of commercial vessels, with no charge for 60 days only, from the Persian Gulf to the Sea of Oman, and vice versa. The traffic of commercial vessels will immediately start, and considering the need for removing the technical and military obstacles, and de-mining by the Islamic Republic of Iran, will be instated within 30 days.”

Following the previous round of fighting, the two sides explored a compromise under which commercial vessels would coordinate their transit with both Iran and a designated Gulf Cooperation Council state. Under such an arrangement, ships would notify Tehran while also reporting to a GCC maritime authority, balancing Iran’s demand for oversight with Washington’s desire to avoid granting Tehran exclusive control. The talks, however, appear never to have been finalized before they were suspended for the funeral of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

During that pause, several commercial vessels – with their AIS transponders switched off – attempted to transit the southern shipping corridor without notifying Tehran. Iran viewed these voyages as a direct challenge to its interpretation of the MOU and responded with force.

Both sides are clearly testing each other’s red lines. If the dispute were solely about ensuring the safe passage of commercial shipping, vessels could simply transit through the Iranian shipping lane. Tehran has not prevented ships from using the northern corridor. Instead, the insistence on using the southern corridor without notifying Iran appears designed to challenge Tehran’s claim that it exercises authority over the Strait—a claim the United States and most Gulf states have long rejected. Beyond questions of transit tolls or administrative fees, no country in the region is eager to legitimize Iranian control over one of the world’s most strategically important waterways. The current confrontation is therefore less about navigation than about sovereignty and strategic leverage.

The compromise discussed before the talks were suspended offers a sensible way out. Requiring vessels to notify both Iran and a designated GCC maritime authority would defer the sovereignty dispute without prejudging its outcome, allowing commercial traffic to continue while negotiations over a permanent arrangement proceed. Sacrificing the entire MOU—and the far more consequential regional framework it could ultimately produce—over the question of who nominally manages the Strait for the next few weeks would be a costly and unnecessary mistake.

The question now is whether the dual-notification arrangement can still be revived after the exchange of fire over the past 12 hours, or whether this latest escalation has closed the diplomatic window altogether. The coming hours are likely to provide the answer.

One final observation: by responding with both military force and the reimposition of sanctions on Iranian oil exports, Washington appears intent on establishing escalation dominance – not merely deterring further Iranian action but demonstrating its willingness to raise the costs far more sharply than Tehran. The contrast with the first post-MOU confrontation in the Strait is striking. This time, the U.S. response has been substantially more severe, suggesting that Washington is seeking to redefine the deterrence equation before negotiations can resume.

There is, however, a danger in Washington’s decision to rescind the general license permitting the purchase of Iranian oil. The license was intended to serve as one of the MOU’s principal incentives for Tehran to remain committed to the agreement. But an incentive is only as valuable as its credibility.

Even before this latest escalation, Iran had struggled to attract new buyers. Many governments and companies were reluctant to enter long-term arrangements because they feared negotiations would collapse and the license would expire without renewal. That uncertainty alone diminished the commercial value of the concession.

From Washington’s perspective, Iran’s alleged violation of the MOU is serious and warrants a response. But if the United States is seen as issuing and withdrawing the license too readily, potential buyers may conclude that access to Iranian oil is too politically volatile to justify the risk. That would weaken one of Washington’s most important sources of leverage. The less valuable the license becomes in the marketplace, the less valuable it becomes at the negotiating table – and the less the United States can demand in return for restoring it.