Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
March 24, 2026
War On Iran: – Trump Cashes Out – Social Unrest – Arabs Joining The War – Iran Invasion

Yesterday, just minutes before President Trump’s most recent TACO, insiders placed bets on rising stocks and lower oil prices. They made a killing:

Traders placed $580mn in oil bets ahead of Donald Trump’s social media post on Iran talks (archived) – FT

Traders made bets worth half a billion dollars in the oil market about 15 minutes before Donald Trump’s post touting “productive” talks with Iran sent the price of crude tumbling and ignited volatility in other assets.

Roughly 6,200 Brent and West Texas Intermediate futures contracts changed hands between 6.49am and 6.50am New York time on Monday, just a quarter of an hour ahead of the US president’s post on Truth Social that there had in recent days been “productive conversations” with Tehran to end the war in Iran. The notional value of those trades was $580mn, according to FT calculations based on Bloomberg data.

Trading volumes for Brent and WTI leapt at the same time, 27 seconds before 6.50am. Futures tracking the S&P 500 share index jumped in price moments after the oil trade, with volumes also rising significantly during that timeframe.

It was not known whether one entity or several entities were behind Monday’s trades.

Trump’s next threat to Iran  – re-open the Strait of Hormuz to traffic or else – will most likely come on Friday, after the markets have close. It would not be beyond Trump to again play this week’s game and to offer another TACO shortly before next Monday’s opening.

In between the conflict continues. The U.S. continues to bomb Iran. As does Israel. Barrages of Iranian missile continue to strike the Zionist entity. There are vague reports that energy infrastructure in Iran has been hit. If that has indeed happened expect Iran to hit back at infrastructure in Arab Gulf region.

Oil prices are creeping up again. The conflict has not been defused by Trump’s TACO but threatens to intensify. The market interruptions it causes will be lengthy. I have warned that this will lead to public unrest first and foremost in those Asian states which have the biggest dependencies on Middle East oil. Here are the first signs of it:

Philippines Declares National Emergency Over High Fuel Prices (archived) – NY Times

Earlier on Tuesday, the Philippines’ Department of Energy said it had enough gasoline in reserve to last 53 days, enough diesel for 46 days and enough jet fuel for about 39 days. Diesel prices have doubled since the war began, surpassing 120 pesos, or $2, per liter.

Many government offices have switched to a four-day workweek to save energy, and Mr. Marcos has called on the public to car pool. The government has also been handing out 5,000 pesos each to tens of thousands of autorickshaw and jeepney drivers around Manila who are suffering from the higher prices.

Mr. Marcos is under intense pressure to deal with the situation. A coalition of transportation workers has called for mass protests around Manila, the capital, on Thursday and Friday about the price spike and what they consider inadequate measures by the government. On Tuesday, the Philippine Daily Inquirer, a major newspaper, published a column with the headline, “Nation on brink: This oil crisis may destroy everything we built.”

There are again reports about Arab Gulf States allegedly pushing Trump to extend the war. Other reports claim that the Gulf states are ready to join with their own forces. I recommend to take such reports with a boatload of salt.

Saudi Prince Is Said to Push Trump to Continue Iran War in Recent CallsNY Times

Gulf States Edge Toward Joining Fight Against Iran (archived) – WSJ
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates get tougher on basing and finances

The U.S. would love to see the Arabs to join the fight. They would have to buy lots of expensive weapons and take the damage. This while the U.S. could skip out of the conflict (see Ukraine).

Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states are sitting in glass-houses. Their existences depends on a few hard to defend desalination plants, electricity generation facilities and energy export outlets. They are in range of short range missiles of which Iran has plenty. There are also the Houthi… .  If the Arab states were to actively join the bombing of Iran it would be their end.

The U.S. has ordered two Marine Expeditionary Units into the Gulf region. There are also alarms out for the 82nd Airborne Division, an ‘Immediate Response Force’ of some 3,000 soldiers which would add the the 1,600 Marines ground forces in the MEUs.

Pentagon Officials Weigh Deployment of Airborne Troops for Iran War (archived) – NY Times

Given the circumstances these are paltry forces usable only for very limited purposes. But it may well be the advance party of a much larger force that will take months to build.

There are still talks about taking Iran’s Kharg island, the main export station for Iranian oil. I did explain two weeks ago why that is no option. There are also three small islands in the middle of the Strait, Abu Musa and the Greater and Lesser Tunb, which are held by Iran but claimed by the Emirates:

Due to the depth of sea, oil tankers and big ships have to pass between Abu Musa and Greater and Lesser Tunbs, which makes these islands some of the most strategic points in the Persian Gulf.

These islands could be taken but, despite the above Wikipedia claim, their strategic value in this conflict is limited. Iranian reconnaissance drones, long range radar and anti-ship missiles have eroded their roles as interdiction stations. Taking those islands may have some PR value. But it would not lift the blockade of the Strait and the cost of holding them would soon become prohibitive.

Another potential target for an incursion into Iran could be its south-eastern city of Chabahar. It has a deep sea port and would be a good staring point for a larger invasion force. But Chabahar, with some 100,000 inhabitants, is a too big city to take with a mere 5,000 strong raiding force. Chabahar borders the Baluchistan region of Pakistan which makes any incursion of it politically complicate.

Comments

ghiwen | Mar 25 2026 17:38 utc | 1036
“Idiot” yes, but…
Someone butchered my posting, tacking on shit I did not write. If you hadn’t called me an idiot I might have bothered to fetch the link to my actual posting. But by all means continue to feel good about yourself!
 
There is a lot of chicanery going on. Expected, I suppose, given the high stakes in play.

Posted by: Seer | Mar 25 2026 18:16 utc | 1001

Posted by: Centinel | Mar 25 2026 17:54 utc | 1039
Fog of war, fair enough. Do you think the reporting from the American side is 100% accurate?
No. Maybe more to the point, do you think America is winning this war?
Yes. Though I will point out that some here have different definitions of “winning”. Some pro-Iranians have and will define anything short of Iranian regime collapse as a US defeat. I think that the regime may not collapse in the near future, but at the least it will emerge from this war much weaker and less stable than it was at the start. This war is only happening now because Iran and its proxies have already suffered a string of defeats that gave USrael an opportunity for a possible knock-out punch.

Posted by: catdog | Mar 25 2026 18:24 utc | 1002

various bike posts
 
I feel better about this now that there’s a new thread. Set up your bike for comfort and stability. Sit lower than hipsters. Do not ride in fear. Not including racing I’ve half a million miles with minor accidents in 1967 and 1999. Three stitches and forty stitches. Both times motorists going wrong way in one-way plus police misconduct. (First time the driver was drunk and dead drunk a minute after police arrived. But she was the lieutenants wife so she was allowed to drive drunk. Second time it was a post office truck on a oneway bike path. Driver had had four accidents in six weeks. Had forged green card and forged drivers license. But postal bureaucracy so California Highway Patrol did not even run license.) Do not. ride in fear. Bicycles are massively stable if you let them be. Been tagged by vehicles a hundred times, not much happens. Do not take lessons from or listen to guy who knows about how dangerous bikes are and goes to ER twice a season to prove it. Relax.
 
Old French parts still incredibly good. And light. And available new or used. Mafac brakes since 1951 and line for line copies still in production. Stronglight 49d cranks from 1929 still in pure copy production. They work. Like my 2004 DL-1 with a 1913 blueprint works. My DL-1 is fixed gear, as it would have been in 1913.

Posted by: oldhippie | Mar 25 2026 18:33 utc | 1003

“We have long known that war on Iran is a bipartisan position of US empire. Will leaders of the dem party demonstrate that they support detonating the global economy and sending more US soldiers to certain death by refusing to call a War Powers vote this week?” When will Americans rise?
 
Posted by: John Gilberts | Mar 25 2026 17:02 utc | 1006
======================================
 
My Educated Guess®™:
 
Never.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Mar 25 2026 18:35 utc | 1004

There were probably sailors on the Yamato seething that USN carriers wouldn’t sail into range of her guns, too.
 
Posted by: catdog | Mar 25 2026 16:47 utc | 997
 
Iranians are not the seething kind.
 
Having total dominance over the Persian gulf, including what remains of the US fifth fleet headquarters is edifying enough for them.

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 25 2026 18:36 utc | 1005

Another casualty of the war on Iran is the myth that Iran is a dictatorship.
 
Anyone still convinced there is even partial truth to this old lie is incapable of perceiving truth.
 
The fact that the purported ‘dictator’ was killed on the first day of the strike, with his successor playing a largely symbolic role, the fact that and entire top tier of leadership was eliminated not once in 12 months but twice, the fact that each major branch of the state is self managing and executing independent parallel threads of action in coordination debunks the myth of dictatorship multiple times over.
 
There is no dictator. You were lied to.
 
 
 

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 25 2026 18:47 utc | 1006

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Mar 25 2026 18:47 utc | 1046
 
#######
 
Many started to think that all Muslims were Arabs; they didn’t realize there were philosopher king engineers.
 
Fox News is bad for the brain. By design.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Mar 25 2026 18:55 utc | 1007

People keep saying the Iranian objective is to remove Israel fromthe face of the earth?  I am curious, what would constitute such a removal? What is actually required to accomplish that goal? Where would the people be shipped off to? Once removal from the earth of Israel were done, how would the Palestinians move into the vacated space? I would like to track the progress toward that goal becauseI do not believe it is achievable. But I do not see how to track it? 

Posted by: snake | Mar 25 2026 18:59 utc | 1008

Dave G | Mar 25 2026 14:57 utc | 904
*** Is the [UK] pro-Israel lobby really powerful enough to cause the government to totally invert morality? Certainly looks that way.***
 
Sadly, yes … the Zionists own or control all main UK mass-media and political parties — plus largely thanks to that, most of law itself.
 

Posted by: Cynic | Mar 25 2026 20:11 utc | 1009

The official Iranian solution for the Palestine  is to hold a referendum of all inhabitants and refugees on how to govern the area. It’s been the official position for maybe 20 years. 
 

Posted by: exile | Mar 25 2026 20:49 utc | 1010

@snake | Mar 25 2026 18:59 utc | 1048
They would most likely emigrate to where they can afford. Argentina? Those who always hated Netanyahu may have difficulties convincing arabs in the area since the Israeli regime seems to have burned all bridges on their behalf.

Posted by: petergrfstrm | Mar 25 2026 20:55 utc | 1011

snake,
the land records of ethnically cleansed Palestine exist. The descendants of the legal owners would reoccupy their property. The UNGA already voted with a super majority on 18.Sept 2024 calling for Israelis to vacate occupied lands and pay reparations for damages caused. UNR 194 also covers the evacuation and reparations topic. 
 
There are plenty of examples of such restitution decades after property was stolen from the rightful owners. 
 
Palestine Land Society
https://www.plands.org/en/home
 
UNGA resolution article
https://english.wafa.ps/Pages/Details/149383
 
 

Posted by: exile | Mar 25 2026 20:58 utc | 1012

Shut up.  Adults are talking 
 
Posted by: Princess Bodica | Mar 25 2026 17:11 utc | 1018

 
They are, but since you’re a bot, you’re not one of them.

Posted by: malenkov | Mar 25 2026 21:19 utc | 1013

Trump pushed through a $1.25 billion loan to a gold mine project in Balochistan to buy US equipment. https://pk.usembassy.gov/4/ It is very hard to get the US Export Import Bank to approve such risky projects like a gold mine near the Afghan border. I wonder what Trump really expects for the US to get back in return from Pakistan? Will Pakistan look the other way if Balochistan is used for staging for some purpose like harassing Iran?

Posted by: trumpdoes | Mar 25 2026 21:34 utc | 1014

🙂 You guys are so knowledgeable about bicycles. Being able to fly I never felt a pressing need. But given the current events it seemed pertinent for those who are approaching extremes from energy want.
 
It seems the “encrappification” of things has attacked even the humble, simple bicycle. 🙁 I am so sorry. Hopefully there will be solutions available for the rest of the world. I discovered that most bicycles are similarly owned by a European mega-conglomerate, similar to how beer is predominantly owned by the Belgian/Brazilian mega-conglomerate InBev.
 
😉 Naturally, in keeping with the wisdom of our local bar fleas, I am compelled to blame this unrelatedly to the passive & ineffectual actions of Putin & Xi.
/laughs
/cheep

Posted by: titmouse | Mar 25 2026 22:19 utc | 1015

https://kingkong9888.substack.com/p/the-chinese-rmb-yuan-for-oil-loop
KingKong9888 aka Eric Yeung –  commodities trader in China. Gives some insights into China/Iran oil/RMB inter-connectivity.  Been following him for years and he has great info on gold/silver bullion spot market vs paper market.
Its all connected if you follow the money.

Posted by: Black Scholes | Mar 26 2026 2:29 utc | 1016

Goldman Sachs just called it (putting their best spin on it). The largest oil supply shock in the history of the global crude market. Not 1990, not even 1973. This one! Persian Gulf exports have collapsed to roughly 3% of normal flows at Hormuz (and you can’t distort physical supply for long). Goldman’s own numbers put the production hit at 17 million barrels per day at peak and they’re saying it won’t recover fast even after/if the strait reopens.
Brent forecast for March/April: $110 (too low but they have to sell you hope in a barrel that ain’t coming). Worst case if disruptions run past 60 days: past $147 the all-time record set in 2008, never touched since. PCE inflation revised up to 2.9% by year-end. GDP growth revised to free fall. The Fed can’t cut into this. Rate hikes are being priced back in.
And Goldman said something else that nobody’s putting on the front page: even when the war ends, even if the strait fully reopens tomorrow, it will take at least four months for energy markets to return to anything resembling normal. The shock has permanently repriced the risk premium on Persian Gulf supply. We’re past the point of war disruption and into structural reset.
Now look at the chart again. Goldman’s “new forecast” curve doesn’t go back to $60. It doesn’t go back to $70. It plateaus at $80 and stays there through 2029. They’re telling you, in the language of investment banks trying to calm their clients — which is to say, quietly and with caveats that the pre-war world is gone. No kidding and you can look at Saudi Arabia forecasting $200 oil by end of April as meshing a little closer to reality.
The IEA’s Fatih Birol wasn’t quiet about it. He said Monday in Canberra this is worse than the 1973 and 1979 oil crises combined, plus the 2022 gas shock after Ukraine, all put together!
Trump’s 5 day fake news pause on power plant strikes in Iran moved Brent down 11% in a session. Someone positioned for that drop. Someone also positioned for the $2 trillion S&P surge at 7:04am on fake peace talk headlines Iran categorically denied an hour later. The volatility isn’t organic chaos. It has a shape and it has beneficiaries, we call the Epstein elite, profiting off insider trading shorting Brent before Trump delivered his fake news about negotiations with Iran, which Iran denied and later answered kinetically with missle wave 77-78.
And so the strait of Hormuz stays closed to Western buyers. Iran’s waves keep coming. And Goldman just told you this doesn’t resolve in a news cycle. Welcome to the brave new world of oil going to the moon and not back. Brought to you by the Epstein coalition.

Posted by: Black Scholes | Mar 26 2026 9:25 utc | 1017

Chris Hedges:  The World According to Gaza
Even if this has been posted earlier, it can’t be shared/repeated too often
https://youtu.be/eiGJRdoRAIM

Posted by: PassionateProgressiv | Mar 26 2026 18:07 utc | 1018

Due Dissidence:  Tucker Carlson DISMANTLES Hack Journalist on Israel’s Right to Exist
..I think DD gives US academic institutions too much credit…Academics like Richard Wolf, Michael Hudson, Norman Finkelstein, Michael Brenner (+) are the exceptions rather than the rule…..Academic institutions receive their marching orders and funding from corporations and teach students to get JOBS in corporations or the government. Ray McGovern coined the term MICIMATT to replace MIC – Military Industrial Congressional Intelligence media ACADEMIC think tank complex
https://youtu.be/-334To82gtg
 

Posted by: PassionateProgressiv | Mar 26 2026 18:15 utc | 1019