Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
April 12, 2026
War On Iran: – Loser Tries Setting “Terms” – The Strange Idea Of Blockading Blockaders

The first round of talks between the U.S. and Iran has failed to achieve any progress.

The U.S. negotiators thoroughly misjudged their positions and tried to set terms (archived):

Mr. Vance said little about what took place during more than 21 hours of negotiations, suggesting he had handed the Iranians a take-it-or-leave-it proposal to forever terminate their nuclear program, and they left it.
“We’ve made very clear what our red lines are,” Mr. Vance told reporters, “what things we’re willing to accommodate them on.” He added, “They have chosen not to accept our terms.”

The U.S. has so far lost the war. None of its war aims has been achieved. Its attempts to steal Iran’s enriched Uranium ended with the biggest air force losses since the Vietnam War era. It is not in a position to set any terms:

In that respect, this negotiation appears to have differed little from the one that ended in deadlock in Geneva in late February, …

Mr. Trump’s chief leverage now comes in his ability to threaten to resume major combat operations. After all, the fragile two-week cease-fire ends on April 21. But while the threat of resuming combat operations may be invoked in coming days, it not a particularly viable political choice for Mr. Trump — and the Iranians know it.

Mr. Trump declared the cease-fire last week in large part to stem the pain from the loss of 20 percent of the world’s oil supplies, which was sending the price of gasoline soaring, creating shortages of fertilizer and, among other critical supplies, helium for the production of semiconductors. Markets rose on the prospect of an agreement, even an incomplete or unsatisfactory one. Should the war resume, the markets would likely decline, the shortages would worsen and inflation — already up to 3.3 percent — would almost inevitably rise.

And that leaves the most urgent issue: the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.

After the end of the negotiations a tweet by Donald Trump pointed to a piece which asserts that his best next move to reopen the Strait of Hormuz is to blockade Iran:

The Trump card the president holds if Iran won’t bend: a naval blockade: https://justthenews.com/government/sec…
(TS: 12 Apr 00:16 ET)​​​‍​​‌‍​​‌‍​​​​​​​‌‍​​​​‌‍​​​​​​​​​‌‍​​​​​​​​​​‌‍​​​​​​​​‌‍​​​​​​​​​​‌‍​​​​​​​​​‌‍​​​​​‌‍​‌‍​​​​​​‌‍​​​​‌‍​​​​​‌‍​​​​​​​​​​‌‍​​​​​​​‌‍​​​‌‍

The piece in question – The Trump card the president holds if Iran won’t bend: a naval blockade – is by John Solomon, a lawyer, and remarkable for its ignorance:

If Iran refuses to accept the final deal the United States offered Saturday, Trump could bomb Tehran back to the “Stone Ages” as he vowed. Or he might just reprise his successful blockade strategy to choke an already teetering Iranian economy and ratchet up diplomatic pressure on China and India by cutting them off one of their key sources of oil.

Ironically, the massive USS Gerald Ford carrier that led the Venezuelan blockade is now in the Persian Gulf after a brief hiatus for repairs and crew rest after a deadly fire. And now it joins the USS Abraham Lincoln and other major naval assets.

The USS Gerald Ford, with broken toilets and a burned out laundry, is in the Mediterranean. It would have to pass the Suez Canal, the Bab al Mandeb Strait and the Strait of Hormuz to reach the Persian Gulf. Bab al Mandeb is controlled by the Houthi, Hormuz by Iran. Good luck passing either …

The idea of lifting Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz by blockading Iran is not from John Solomon but from the crazed neoconservative Jack Keene:

The idea of a naval blockade was first suggested last week by retired Gen. Jack Keane, one of the nation’s top military strategists.

“If the war resumes and after we degrade Iran’s remaining military assets sufficiently, the US military could choose to occupy Kharg — or to destroy it,” Keane wrote it a New York Post column. “Alternatively, the US Navy could set up a blockade, shutting down Tehran’s export lifeline.”

If we preserve Kharg’s infrastructure but take physical control, we’d have a chokehold over Iran’s oil and its economy,” he added. “That’s the ultimate leverage we’d need to seize its ‘nuclear dust,’ or stores of enriched uranium, and to eliminate its enrichment facilities.”

Kharg does not matter as much for Iranian exports as the DC nutters assume. During the eight years of the Iran-Iraq war Kharg was kept closed while oil exports from Iran continued to flow.

Any attempt to blocked Iran would necessitate the use of force to prevent Indian, Chinese and Russian ships from entering Iranian harbors.

It would also mean less oil supplies for the global markets. Historically sea blockades take many months and even years to show effects. That is more time than Trump has to politically survive.

Comments

Any attempt to blocked Iran would necessitate the use of force to prevent Indian, Chinese and Russian ships from entering Iranian harbors.
 
Not only that. China can now receive Iranian oil by rail link. Rail/road links to Russia plus the Caspian Sea link cannot be blockaded by US navy.

Posted by: BM | Apr 12 2026 10:15 utc | 1

My guess is that the latest fake ceasefire/negotiations were a third subterfuge for [ground] attacks concurrently being prepared. Massive numbers of osprey and helicopter flights seem to have been transporting troops and materials to border areas. No doubt the Iranians are waiting to welcome them.

Posted by: BM | Apr 12 2026 10:21 utc | 2

Loser Tries Setting “Terms” – 
 
The US lives in virtual reality, and still think they can win wars in virtual reality. It will take a much harder punch to bring them to their senses.

Posted by: BM | Apr 12 2026 10:25 utc | 3

It will take a much harder punch to bring them to their senses.
 
Posted by: BM | Apr 12 2026 10:25 utc | 3
 

 
It is the FED’s responsibility to take the punchbowl away just as the party gets going.
 

Posted by: too scents | Apr 12 2026 10:28 utc | 4

US has reportedly moved 22 F-35 and F-22s to UAE bases and 1500 troops.US is expected to launch attacks on Iran directly from Dubai or UAE soon.https://x.com/Xking332/status/2043187723738161408

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 10:30 utc | 5

Iran War Summary: Week Six, 10th April 2026: May be Useful to Some: Iran War Summary: Week Six – by Dr. Rob Campbell

Posted by: The Busker | Apr 12 2026 10:30 utc | 6

Trump is now talking about a naval blockade of the strait of Hormuz. Presumably this means blocking Iranian vessels from moving in the direction of SE Asia and China, perhaps even stealing the oil from those tankers.
 
So it will get worse.
 
Patrick Henningsen with the recent interview with Nima said US would actually benefit from the closure of Hormuz or physical destruction of oil/gas/fertilizer plants, as it increases the domestic US monopoly of these resources and tightens its ability to strangle Europe. In this sense, it’s the continuation of blowing of Nordstream II.

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 10:47 utc | 7

directly from Dubai or UAE soon.
 
Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 10:30 utc | 5
 

 
Summoned?
 

At the invitation of Premier of the State Council Li Qiang, HH Sheikh Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, will visit China from April 12 to 14.
 
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202604/1358705.shtml

 

Posted by: too scents | Apr 12 2026 10:51 utc | 8

US has reportedly moved 22 F-35 and F-22s to UAE bases and 1500 troops.US is expected to launch attacks on Iran directly from Dubai or UAE soon.
Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 10:30 utc | 5
 
 
I’m no military expert but moving the best part of your military within range of the enemy’s capabilities never seemed like a winning strategy to me …

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Apr 12 2026 10:55 utc | 9

No idea if true, could be some wish-reporting: The main reason why the talks collapsed was an under the table proposal by the US for Iran to officially recognize the state of Israel. The Iranian negotiators walked out of the table and refused to tolerate such a discussion. This was an embarrassment to the US team.
A counter-offer, would be for USA to recognize Palestine, haha.

Posted by: Call it what u will | Apr 12 2026 10:56 utc | 10

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 10:47 utc | 7

US would actually benefit from the closure of Hormuz or physical destruction of oil/gas/fertilizer plants, as it increases the domestic US monopoly of these resources and tightens its ability to strangle Europe. In this sense, it’s the continuation of blowing of Nordstream II.

Yes, that makes sense. Richard Medhurst’s that was discussed in yesteryday’s thread explains that very well. I believe this is (at least part of) the long-term US strategy. But oil/gas isn’t everything. If US vassals in the Pacific (Japan, South Korea, Taiwan) weaken too much from high energy prices and lack of resources then the profits of the US energy industry have to be balanced with a weaker strategic position.
 
And then the situation isn’t static: the rest of the world, especially Russia and China, must react if global trade is pirated by the USA. The pain will be felt everywhere.

Posted by: Konami | Apr 12 2026 10:59 utc | 11

Ysterday Crooke made a point that to me held delicious poetic irony: blockade creates hole.
With its blockade of the Strait of Hormuz Iran has slashed a hole in the sanctions ring-fence that has been suffocating it. Per Crooke transit fees could bring in $1 trillion/year (I think he said this would be just from fees; maybe also from elevated prices for its oil).
 
Per Crooke the US/IS/UK holds virtually no cards here.
 
Blockading the whole country seems to be tantrum talk.

Posted by: Jane | Apr 12 2026 11:03 utc | 12

Posted by b on April 12, 2026 at 09:59 UTC | Permalink

…After the end of the negotiations a tweet by Donald Trump pointed to a piece which asserts that his best next move to reopen the Strait of Hormuz is to blockade Iran:…

This would be a logical move by the US to mitigate the threat of an Iran brokered selective traffic through the strait. The US (and allies) has shown both the will and the means to affect non-aligned shipping across the oceans.

Posted by: robin | Apr 12 2026 11:04 utc | 13

A counter-offer, would be for USA to recognize Palestine, haha.
Posted by: Call it what u will | Apr 12 2026 10:56 utc | 10
======================
 
I like it!!

Posted by: Jane | Apr 12 2026 11:05 utc | 14

Posted by: BM | Apr 12 2026 10:15 utc | 1

Not only that. China can now receive Iranian oil by rail link. Rail/road links to Russia plus the Caspian Sea link cannot be blockaded by US navy.

Terminals, depots, bridges, pipelines… can be bombed.

Posted by: robin | Apr 12 2026 11:06 utc | 15

Threatening a naval blockade of Iran is the equivalent of putting a gun to your own head and threatening to shoot if you don’t get what you want.

Posted by: kickasso | Apr 12 2026 11:07 utc | 16

China provides air defenses to Iran, most notably advanced MANPADs.
 
https://southfront.press/china-is-preparing-to-ship-air-defenses-to-iran/

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 11:13 utc | 17

Patrick Henningsen with the recent interview with Nima said US would actually benefit from the closure of Hormuz or physical destruction of oil/gas/fertilizer plants, as it increases the domestic US monopoly of these resources and tightens its ability to strangle Europe. In this sense, it’s the continuation of blowing of Nordstream II.
Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 10:47 utc | 7

No it wouldn’t.  The guy is a poser.  The US imports nitrogen fertilizer which he obviously didn’t know.  Not a lot, but imports set the price, and prices have tripled.  That’s called massive food inflation. The US imports crude oil, around 6 MM bbls/day.  That sets the price, and diesel is already over $5/gal., which is catastrophic.  The War for Greater Israel is crushing the US economy and it will go into a severe recession at the minimum.

Posted by: JackG | Apr 12 2026 11:15 utc | 18

Posted by: JackG | Apr 12 2026 11:15 utc | 18
 
Yes, but US still has its own gas, oil, ammonia, nitrogen, fertilizer and other chemicals production with feedstock now aided by Canadian and Venezuelan gas and oil bolstering the dwindling domestic US fields.
 
Sure prices will rise in US too but relatively speaking Europe and Asia will take a far bigger hit.

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 11:16 utc | 19

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 10:47 utc | 7

US would actually benefit from the closure of Hormuz or physical destruction of oil/gas/fertilizer plants, 

Yes, that makes sense. Richard Medhurst’s that was discussed in yesteryday’s thread explains that very well.
Posted by: Konami | Apr 12 2026 10:59 utc | 11
 
If this really made sense then why would the US have had to un-block and un-sanction Iranian  energy during the 4- day war?
What this means is the US Energy market and dollar stability is still tied to stability of oil flows through Hormuz, regardless.
 
Cutting of Empire’s nose to spite Empire’s face?
 
 
 

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Apr 12 2026 11:16 utc | 20

during the 4- day war?
Posted by: Arch Bungle | Apr 12 2026 11:16 utc | 20
 
40-day war …
 

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Apr 12 2026 11:17 utc | 21

Than you very much for these great Iran analyses, “b”.  And for the mass of information and links your contributors provide.  Not a lot, if anything at all, I can venture to contribute on the subject.  Except …
 
I do hope those of us who don’t like neocon policy don’t adopt the get-out of blaming the current shambles mostly on the Israelis, or indeed mostly on the Trump administration.  Both awful, but it goes a whole lot further than that.  And I note a tendency for what I term, not affectionately, the Europoodles, to shift blame onto those convenient targets.   Also a get-out.   We’re in it just as deep. 

Posted by: English Outsider | Apr 12 2026 11:19 utc | 22

Terminals, depots, bridges, pipelines… can be bombed.
Posted by: robin | Apr 12 2026 11:06 utc | 15
 
The scale, range and depth of bombing required will cover a quarter of the globe and plunge humanity immediately into WW3.
 

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Apr 12 2026 11:20 utc | 23

‘Any attempt to [blockade] Iran would necessitate the use of force to prevent Indian, Chinese and Russian ships from entering Iranian harbors.’ — b
 
At the same time, a blockade of Iran would represent a total U-turn from America’s tactics in recent weeks, of lifting sanctions on Russian and even Iranian oil, in order to avoid a catastrophic cutoff of global energy supplies and an ensuing economic depression.
 
Retired general Jack Keane, writing in the Israeli-lapdog <i>New York Post</i>, does not set US policy. His are just the goofball jeers of an inflamed nobody, shouting from the peanut gallery.
 
In the unlikely event that the US proceeds with a blockade, the entire rest of the world would focus its ire on the US. NATO would collapse. Japan and Korea would see that the US is a nihilistic monster, indifferent to their economic destruction and looming starvation.
 
Now the US is well and truly backed into a corner. Given its established habit of doubling down on what didn’t work, all one can foresee is more feckless bombing of Iran — which will not open the Strait. Maybe Donnie Fubar, who’s never consulted a book or a dictionary in his entire blighted life, will declare that he has ‘double decimated’ Iran. Even if true, it won’t amount to a hill of beans.
 
 

Posted by: Jim H | Apr 12 2026 11:23 utc | 24

The scale, range and depth of bombing required will cover a quarter of the globe and plunge humanity immediately into WW3. 
Posted by: Arch Bungle | Apr 12 2026 11:20 utc | 23
 
With respect, World War III began on February 28, 2026. After a brief pause for reloading, now it’s about to get serious. 

Posted by: Jim H | Apr 12 2026 11:27 utc | 25

If I could give the Iranian leadership one piece of advice, it would be this: Eliminate Kushner and Witkoff.

Posted by: Apollyon | Apr 12 2026 11:28 utc | 26

Arch,
 
WW3 is already upon us. Maybe ongoing for last 2 years or so. 

Posted by: Exile | Apr 12 2026 11:29 utc | 27

Well, I guess team trump are ready to give the Iranians more ideas for leggo memes with accompanying rap. there is some pretty good ones out there now. Epstein’s always a feature with sometimes Trump chasing after little girls. And of coarse Netanyahu.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 12 2026 11:30 utc | 28

Sweden detained a Panamian flagged tanker Hui-Yuan travelling from Ust-Luga to Las Palmas, Spain.

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 11:30 utc | 29

Konami @ 11
 

Richard Medhurst’s that was discussed in yesteryday’s thread explains that very well. I believe this is (at least part of) the long-term US strategy.

 
If people haven’t seen this is essential watching, excellent big picture, geo-strategic petro-klepto exposition, kudos the Medhusrt for putting it together concise and clear:
 
The Petrogas-Dollar: The Secret US Strategy Behind the Iran War
 

Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Apr 12 2026 11:30 utc | 30

Posted by: English Outsider | Apr 12 2026 11:19 utc | 22
 
Yes, seconded. As for the Europoodles, when the Empire collapses these compradors will go with it, as they will have destroyed Europe too, with their blind servility. Unfortunately, although Trump is accelerating the process, it might take a few years yet for the final act – but you never know, Trump is quite effective as far as destructiveness goes.

Posted by: Jams O’Donnell | Apr 12 2026 11:37 utc | 31

China can now receive Iranian oil by rail link. Rail/road links to Russia plus the Caspian Sea link cannot be blockaded by US navy.
Posted by: BM | Apr 12 2026 10:15 utc | 1

 
A single rail line does not have the capacity of super-tankers. They’ll have to build a pipeline.
 
The building of rail lines from China to the West was always going to provide an intermediary between air and sea transport. less expensive and more capacious than air, but more expensive and less capacity than by sea.

Posted by: Laguerre | Apr 12 2026 11:39 utc | 32

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Apr 12 2026 11:20 utc | 23

Terminals, depots, bridges, pipelines… can be bombed. Posted by: robin | Apr 12 2026 11:06 utc | 15

The scale, range and depth of bombing required will cover a quarter of the globe and plunge humanity immediately into WW3.

I was responding to BM’s suggestion that oil trade with China was safe because of rail link and Caspian sea shipping. If I recall, Caspian coast harbours were attacked early on and, as Snake has previously mentioned, an Iran – China pipeline was also targeted. Honestly, I see no technical difficulty here for the US and no political cost any higher than the present one.

Posted by: robin | Apr 12 2026 11:44 utc | 33

long-term US strategy
 
Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Apr 12 2026 11:30 utc | 30
 

 
A dysfunctional society isn’t able to pursue any strategy, let alone a long term one.  Where does this idea come from?  There is no planning.  Only smash and grab while any accrued surplus remains.
 
 

Posted by: too scents | Apr 12 2026 11:48 utc | 34

Gen. Jack Keane, one of the nation’s top military strategists
 
Sad to say it, but that is probably true. Explains a lot, really…
 

Posted by: Yeah, Right | Apr 12 2026 11:50 utc | 35

Can anyone actually explain to me what the Lebanese army actually does??
Every time I start to develop some sort of (geopolitical) sympathy for whenever Israel hits them and kills their women and children, it quickly dissapates when I continually see their own army doing nothing serious, absolutely nothing and I don’t get it.
A sort of “if you don’t care why should I care” attidue has developed whenever I see the latest incident. 
I hate feeling like this but at least it’s honest as I genuinely don’t understand how they can see and hear what Israel says about them and their intentions…. and they do nothing (apart from the Resistance of course). 

Posted by: Skeletor | Apr 12 2026 11:50 utc | 36

Brilliant , next stage could be to nuke the strait to save the strait…
 
getting popcorns …

Posted by: Newbie | Apr 12 2026 11:52 utc | 37

Posted by: Jim H | Apr 12 2026 11:23 utc | 24

… In the unlikely event that the US proceeds with a blockade, the entire rest of the world would focus its ire on the US. NATO would collapse. Japan and Korea would see that the US is a nihilistic monster, indifferent to their economic destruction and looming starvation…

About that global ire. US belligerence is certainly nothing new and experience suggests that global resentment doesn’t weigh much at all. What has changed is that the narrative miracle has grown some more and that ire is now solely directed at Trump, not Uncle Sam.
 
My observation is that the ire-meter has been maxing out at ten for years, so no big change on that front.

Posted by: robin | Apr 12 2026 11:56 utc | 38

Solomon graduated from Marquette University with a bachelor’s degree in journalism and sociology.[17]
Another idiot who has a bachelor’s degree in journalism and sociology talking nonsens

Posted by: GV | Apr 12 2026 11:56 utc | 39

With respect, World War III began on February 28, 2026. After a brief pause for reloading, now it’s about to get serious. 
Posted by: Jim H | Apr 12 2026 11:27 utc | 25
Arch,
WW3 is already upon us. Maybe ongoing for last 2 years or so. 

Posted by: Exile | Apr 12 2026 11:29 utc | 27

 
* Throws hands up in despair  *
 

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Apr 12 2026 12:01 utc | 40

Honestly, I see no technical difficulty here for the US and no political cost any higher than the present one.
Posted by: robin | Apr 12 2026 11:44 utc | 33
 
I thought you were. To be explicit, this is a slippery slope and may begin with a pipeline or two before the US is playing whack-a-mole all over Central Asia pissing every little ‘stan and the Russian Federation off in the process while also disrupting global markets and the economies of most energy-dependent countries.
 

Posted by: Arch Bungle | Apr 12 2026 12:04 utc | 41

@41
That is the actual intent. As the saying goes this is the feature and not a bug.
a chaotic global economy is what is preferred by the masters of chaos. 

Posted by: Shango | Apr 12 2026 12:12 utc | 42

Well, since we have all the ingredients for a Shakespearean tradgedy…
 

  • Banquo. It will be rain to-night.

 
Let it come down
 

Posted by: john | Apr 12 2026 12:17 utc | 43

@20 Arch

“If this really made sense then why would the US have had to un-block and un-sanction Iranian energy during the 4- day war?”

Not sure destinations, but Pakistan, India, Philipines etc. are US allies (on and off), if their supplies from gulf ended they might have been in much trouble. Up to someone to research all of that, buying time while re-arranging etc. . Not sure, but there can be other reasons than just global (or US) economy and finance. Even as propaganda, who controls the oil flow, or is being rational.

Posted by: Ornot | Apr 12 2026 12:21 utc | 44

Can anyone actually explain to me what the Lebanese army actually does??
Posted by: Skeletor | Apr 12 2026 11:50 utc | 36That one’s easy. It was designed by the West to be unable to fight Israel. The airforce has only light training aircraft, unable to confront Israeli planes. The army is similarly disarmed, and is also immobilised by the constitution. The constitution designed by the French to keep the Christians in power. That led to the civil war, when the Christians were no longer the majority, but the problem has never really been resolved. It can’t be resolved because of the very deep bitterness felt by the Christians towards the Muslims particularly Shi’a. They feel deprived of their birthright, because of the mistakes made by the French in setting up the country in 1920.

Posted by: Laguerre | Apr 12 2026 12:23 utc | 45

Sweden detained a Panamian flagged tanker Hui-Yuan travelling from Ust-Luga to Las Palmas, Spain.
Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 11:30 utc | 29
 
Wow! Piracy is getting to be quite the vogue for these buccaneer Euro mafiosos. I’m sure Spain should be able to find a Swedish ship somewhere in their ports to hold hostage pending release of their tanker (presumably bearing much needed Iranian oil). 
 
Once society descends into unlimited lawlessness, everybody loses.

Posted by: BM | Apr 12 2026 12:26 utc | 46

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 11:30 utc | 29
 
I wonder. What happen to all those ships that are detained? Are they only delayed or are they emptied or destroyed or forced to return or what? 
 
And btw where is that UN resolution that merchant ships should travel freely…

Posted by: Avtonom | Apr 12 2026 12:33 utc | 47

So now the Iranians must wait for the enemy to restart the shooting. Or perhaps Trump will find another cause for pause.
 
This suggests that they were about to run out of some air defense resource.

Posted by: jared | Apr 12 2026 12:33 utc | 48

“US would actually benefit from the closure of Hormuz or physical destruction of oil/gas/fertilizer plants, as it increases the domestic US monopoly of these resources…”
— Posted by: unimperator | Apr 12 2026 10:47 utc | 7
 
USA has 12 years of oil reserves left to cover production at last year’s level. Please also remember that the primary purpose of fracking is recovery of the last scraps from wells. The reason for the desperate oil grabs is that the writing is on the wall. The US will increasingly horde its production to maintain domestic control. AS Nuland famously said, “F*ck Europe”. 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_proven_oil_reserves 

Posted by: Tom Paine | Apr 12 2026 12:37 utc | 49

What’s stopping the US from forcibly shutting down the globalized trade system completely through a combination of piracy, threats and the use of force? For example, could the US completely close the Strait by launching mines into it using stand-off weapons, the same way you would disperse cluster munitions? This would then put the US in the position of “defending” the mined Strait, while Iran would be stuck having to de-mine it or leave it shut.
 
It seems the US could sever the transoceanic trade links and wreak havoc among the Eastern hemisphere. If the US were to embark upon such a systematic strategy of causing general economic destruction and chaos, who would stop them? Would Russia and China then “escalate” directly against US military targets? The record so far is they would diplomatically protest and nothing more.

Posted by: Flying Dutchman | Apr 12 2026 12:39 utc | 50

an Iran – China pipeline was also targeted. Honestly, I see no technical difficulty here for the US and no political cost any higher than the present one.
Posted by: robin | Apr 12 2026 11:44 utc | 33
 
The more pipelines the US attacks the greater the probability of attacks on US pipelines. The US pipelines are especially vulnerable because they are old, badly maintained, and unprotected. Widespread attacks on US pipelines would be catastrophic for the US.
 
Aside from that, China is likely to take very severe asymetric countermeasures against the US in the financial sphere where it hurts most

Posted by: BM | Apr 12 2026 12:39 utc | 51

Posted by: Skeletor | Apr 12 2026 11:50 utc | 36

Can anyone actually explain to me what the Lebanese army actually does?? Every time I start to develop some sort of (geopolitical) sympathy for whenever Israel hits them and kills their women and children, it quickly dissapates when I continually see their own army doing nothing serious, absolutely nothing and I don’t get it. A sort of “if you don’t care why should I care” attidue has developed whenever I see the latest incident. I hate feeling like this but at least it’s honest as I genuinely don’t understand how they can see and hear what Israel says about them and their intentions…. and they do nothing (apart from the Resistance of course).

The question can also be asked as what the Lebanese military intends to now?
 
My impression is that Israel, having tested the waters in terms of international response to full blown ethnic cleansing and genocide, has decided to take the Lebanese war to another level. It is basically taking the country hostage and given the Prime Minister and military a choice: fight Hezbollah (ie civil war) or face greater destruction.
 
It’s difficult to imagine what carrots and sticks Israel could use to encourage Lebanese officials to take this route. Full aerial support? The threat of targeted attacks on officials interests?

Posted by: robin | Apr 12 2026 12:40 utc | 52

In my scenario above I’m assuming not just nuclear blackmail but that the US actually will use nukes terroristically against selected targets like in 1945.

Posted by: Flying Dutchman | Apr 12 2026 12:40 utc | 53

Posted by: BM | Apr 12 2026 12:26 utc | 46

Piracy is getting to be quite the vogue for these buccaneer Euro mafiosos. I’m sure Spain should be able to find a Swedish ship somewhere in their ports to hold hostage pending release of their tanker (presumably bearing much needed Iranian oil). 

This has been long in the making: over the last months, these acts of piracy were slowly increased. This is done to (a) harm Russia, (b) support the USA and (c) ultimately trigger a Russian response. The first two points are obvious while the last one sounds mad: but EUrope/USA is relying on a calibrated, rational Russian response. This will hurt one or more EU countries but help Brussels to centralise control over the rest. Russia is stereotypically slow to react but will have to do so at some point: 40% of Russian maritime trade go through the Baltic Sea. It’s the same plan as with Ukraine’s attacks on Donbas and Luhansk — keep it up until Moscow must go in, then NATO/USA/EU got the war they wanted.

Posted by: Konami | Apr 12 2026 12:41 utc | 54

Or another angle
They went into Friday with prospect of peace
Then on Monday its back to the mines
This allows the people to become acclimated to ongoing conflict?

Posted by: jared | Apr 12 2026 12:43 utc | 55

Posted by: Avtonom | Apr 12 2026 12:33 utc | 47

What happen to all those ships that are detained? Are they only delayed or are they emptied or destroyed or forced to return or what?

Often they get released after a while. Cargo is often stolen. Sometimes there are lawsuits against crew.
 
These pinpricks are effective even if the ships reach their destination, ie. delay only. The reason is that insurance costs for all Russia-bound vessels go up. This makes trade with Russia less feasible.
 
You mentioned the UN but we’re long past that point. Seizing a ship is an act of war. I am sure that Russia has plans for reciprocation — symmetric or not, we will see. This will, exactly as with the Ukrainian battlefield, hurt the vassals most. At least that part of the US plan is sound.
 

Posted by: Konami | Apr 12 2026 12:45 utc | 56

Posted by: BM | Apr 12 2026 12:39 utc | 51

…The more pipelines the US attacks the greater the probability of attacks on US pipelines. The US pipelines are especially vulnerable because they are old, badly maintained, and unprotected. Widespread attacks on US pipelines would be catastrophic for the US. Aside from that, China is likely to take very severe asymetric countermeasures against the US in the financial sphere where it hurts most

One would think so. And yet, all that maritime and continental belligerence discussed in the last few posts has been solely targeting interests that aren’t those of the United States of America.

Posted by: robin | Apr 12 2026 12:49 utc | 57

What was the point of these negotiations, unless it was to buy time for Iran to redeploy forces and receive weaponry from China*?
 
*Russia under Putin is another matter.

Posted by: Biswapriya Purkayastha | Apr 12 2026 12:53 utc | 58

Posted by: robin | Apr 12 2026 12:49 utc | 57

And yet, all that maritime and continental belligerence discussed in the last few posts has been solely targeting interests that aren’t those of the United States of America.

True. I wondered about that too. But then: do you remember the series of explosions in weapon factories all over the West? I am sure it happened in UK, USA and Czech Republic but perhaps there were more. These aren’t necessarily sabotage (and there were never accusations of sabotage!) but this is something that I think Russia is highly capable of.

Posted by: Konami | Apr 12 2026 12:54 utc | 59

At this rate it might be wise to plant food producing bushes and trees along with highly productive annuals…
 
Whatever short-term cleverness in fighting economic reality with this flappy hands irrationality is just eating one’s seed corn while maintaining a terminal months long bender. URsreal is zeroing out any global allies, either by utter disgust or outright gutting them openly as economic blood sacrifice. That’s unsustainable for mid- and long-term imperial managed collapse, regardless how the moneyed dynastic believe they can hideaway from the consequences. As the Duran has pointed out those decadent Roman dynasties did not survive these very same such clever tricks; and if my Asian history is right neither had such short-sighted Chinese, Persian, Russian, and Indian dynasties. 
 
Actually, that might be the Achilles’ heel of these monsters, naming the dynasties involved in this gamble upon global collapse. At this stage, what does humanity has to gain by keeping discretion about who’s who in such elite circles? They are actively seeking everyone else’s death in order to preserve their delusions…

Posted by: titmouse | Apr 12 2026 12:55 utc | 60

“I am sure that Russia has plans for reciprocation — symmetric or not, we will see.”

 
[Posted by: Konami | Apr 12 2026 12:45 utc | 56]
 
Bless your heart.

Posted by: Biswapriya Purkayastha | Apr 12 2026 12:55 utc | 61

WW3 is already upon us. Maybe ongoing for last 2 years or so. 
Posted by: Exile | Apr 12 2026 11:29 utc | 27

 
No conscription = Not real WW yet.
When the banksters decide that the useless plebs need to kill each other, then we will have conscription (and WW).

Posted by: Asian Frog | Apr 12 2026 12:57 utc | 62

Per Crooke transit fees could bring in $1 trillion/year (I think he said this would be just from fees; maybe also from elevated prices for its oil). 
Posted by: Jane | Apr 12 2026 11:03 utc | 12
 
 
What I like to call the ” Mugs” dilemma.
 
Iran can create 1 trillion per year, every year by issuing its own currency.
 
So what does taking $1 trillion or CN¥ 1 trillion actually mean in real terms ? 
 
Will spending $1 trillion or CN¥ 1 trillion be inflationary? Will spending I trillion Iranian rials be inflationary ?
 
 
Complete Nutters would say it would all be inflationary as the only real money is borrowing from a bank and bank lending. ( the sound money freaks ) 
 
 
Without even thinking about what the money is to be spent on. Without taking into consideration how many skills and real resources Iran has that could absorb that kind of spending. Regardless if it came from a government finger and keystrokes or it came from a bank loan.
 
Thats how stupid these people are and why it is a ” MUGS ” dilemma. All they have is government bad, banks good. The irony of it all is they NOW point at big numbers that Iran can take in. Without even realising Iran could create these big numbers using their own currency in the first place.
 
When you look at the destruction in Iran that limits what they can absorb when it comes to big numbers. The skills they have and the real resources they have determine how much money can be created and spent. Otherwise inflation becomes the problem. Regardless of it money from bank lending or keystrokes.

Posted by: Andrew | Apr 12 2026 13:03 utc | 63

A counter-offer, would be for USA to recognize Palestine, haha.Posted by: Call it what u will | Apr 12 2026 10:56 utc | 10====================== I like it!!
Posted by: Jane | Apr 12 2026 11:05 utc | 14

 
Well, I don’t, and for two reasons.

  1. This would be a tit-for-tat entailing the — categorically unacceptable — recognition of the Zionazi entity.
  2. This would almost certainly entail recognition of the Ziotoady kleptocracy known as the Palestinian Authority, and not the legitimately elected Palestinian government, which is Hamas.

Posted by: malenkov | Apr 12 2026 13:04 utc | 64

The US blockade concept might need some more detail. One would assume that in and out by Israeli of US interests would not be blocked by the US but instead be blocked by the Iranians.
The US enforcement of its blocking might result in the destruction of violators, me thinks, or just bluffing? Taking out Russiad and Chinese ships, for example?

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 12 2026 13:05 utc | 65

What was the point of these negotiations, unless it was to buy time for Iran to redeploy forces and receive weaponry from China*? *Russia under Putin is another matter.
Posted by: Biswapriya Purkayastha | Apr 12 2026 12:53 utc | 58

 
A long stream of MIL ?C17? Transport planes from the US was noticed.
Tentative guess: not to resupply Iran 🙂

Posted by: MAKK | Apr 12 2026 13:06 utc | 66

This is OT on this thread, but I am cross-posting it from the donations thread–Jane
===========
I want to add a personal POV re supporting  alternative media.
I greatly appreciate that b has not moved Moon of Alabama to Substack. Some blogs that I supported in the past when they asked for donations have moved to Substack. I don’t like that platform, and consequently I no longer can support those writers. To me Substack is a kind of creeping takeover of independent writers and their supporters. Substack is a universe where Substack can identify all commenters and make them use one handle for all Substacks. I don’t like this. Substack sends email messages, like Instagram, that are annoying and prodding and give me a creepy feeling. I also don’t really like the subscription format, although I understand why Substackers like that. Substack touts itself as a marketing platform for writers. OK, if they wanna do that, but I don’t want to be a target of that kind of marketing, a la Instagram. I just don’t want to go there.
 
I was happy to send donations to writers who had their own WordPress etc. platforms when they asked for donations. Now that they have gone to Substack I can longer support them without becoming enmeshed in Substack’s marketing (e.g., Alon Mizrahi).
 
So please, everyone, send a donation to b when he asks for support and keep Moon of Alabama as an independent entity.
I am taking the liberty of also posting this comment to the current Iran thread.

Posted by: Jane | Apr 12 2026 13:08 utc | 67

too scents @ 34
 
The petrodollar was pretty clever, and rather long term, pretty smooth implementation too, this time not so smooth, maybe it’s indicative, maybe you are right. I wouldn’t underestimate the evil bastards, not so much the “genius” but their all encompassing planet covering dark cloud of blackmail. 

Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Apr 12 2026 13:08 utc | 68

Press Points: 4/12/2026
 

  • Iran-US talks end without a deal after 21 hours due to excessive US demands
  • US failed to win Iran’s trust during Islamabad talks: Parliament speaker
  • Judiciary chief hails negotiators as ‘guardians’ of Iran’s war rights
  • IRGC Navy warns military vessels of ‘firm response’ to attempts at crossing Strait of Hormuz
  • Press TV Exclusive: US destroyers’ Strait of Hormuz transit stunt failed, came close to destruction

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 12 2026 13:11 utc | 69

69: https://www.presstv.ir

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 12 2026 13:12 utc | 70

Well, I don’t, and for two reasons. . . .
Posted by: malenkov | Apr 12 2026 13:04 utc | 64
==================
“haha”
Get it?
I think the comment was a bit jokesy, to make a point.

Posted by: Jane | Apr 12 2026 13:13 utc | 71

The Petrogas-Dollar: The Secret US Strategy Behind the Iran War
Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Apr 12 2026 11:30 utc | 30

Medhurst says US is a top oil and gas PRODUCER.
However one needs to ask  for how long that can be sustained. Oil/gas fields are like gas stations, they eventually go EMPTY, and that is where the US fields are. US fields are closer to empty than Russian or Iranian or for sure Venezuela. Shale oil/gas is expensive to produce and has a very short production lifetime compared to conventional oil/gas of which US has very little now.That is why US is acting like a Pirate to control oil/gas wherever they can do it with minimal damage to itself.

Posted by: Tom_12 | Apr 12 2026 13:17 utc | 72

Alex Jones posts Epstein insane body-snatch Trump to hand Netanyahu ‘EVERYTHING’.
Trump has lost a lot of supporters with his neo-con actions.

https://t.me/Slavyangrad/161486
 

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 12 2026 13:19 utc | 73

Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Apr 12 2026 11:30 utc | 30
The Medhurst video is the only thing I’ve seen that makes sense for me as an amateur historian. The only quarrel I have with him is that, for the China/Russia/Iran triangle to counter US policy is to engage in hot war on the oceans. Iran has a mighty heart, but Russia/China seem unable to handle their own success. These two countries must send out their navies to protect trade which is something they are reluctant to do. They either strike back hard or they too will join Europe as vassals of the Empire. I think “b” needs to emphasize Medhurst’s view. Outlaw countries like the USA/Israel have to be stopped since they are not going to go back to following international law (which I’ve been insisting for a long time). There is no international law and it will not return. There is only conquer or be conquered in this period. Within the Empire there is no chance Washington will alter its course–control of the US population is very strong and well-managed. 

Posted by: Chris Cosmos | Apr 12 2026 13:20 utc | 74

Per Crooke transit fees could bring in $1 trillion/year (I think he said this would be just from fees; maybe also from elevated prices for its oil). 
 
osted by: Jane | Apr 12 2026 11:03 utc | 12
 
 
That’s why the Iranians want paid in Chinese Yaun.  Keystrokes of Chinese tokens , From the finger of Chinese Treasury officials instead.
 
Allow China to help them with rebuilding their infrastructure. To try to keep inflation away from Iranian shores as much as they can. But if they don’t have enough skills ( people ) to implement what China makes for them they will get some inflation anyway.
 
Unless, they increase taxes in Iran to…..
 
1) To take the spending power away from every Iranian. Until they have enough skills and real resources to absorb it.
 
And 
 
2) To remove and destroy the currency and take it out of circulation as that’s what taxes do. They don’t fund anything and never have.
 
 
Moving interest rates up or down won’t make a blind bit of difference. It can’t do the heavy lifting that’s needed. One mistake by the Iranian central bank could destroy everything. 
 
As the increased cost of lending will just get passed onto Iranian consumers as higher prices.
 
Paying more interest on their bonds is a fiscal expansion and can be inflationary.
 
 
Regardless, what the ” sound money ” Monetarists say…

Posted by: Andrew | Apr 12 2026 13:22 utc | 75

Posted by: Konami | Apr 12 2026 12:45 utc | 56

 
Thanks – and my “Where is the UN” was more or less rhetoric – I know it’s dead if it has ever been alive.
 
So most of it is part of the project “Bad Russia must bleed”. However, the more ships with various flags detained, the more expensive insurance for everybody, not only Russia. Sooner or later, then, it will be open warfare at sea. That’s some kind of humanistic regression.
 
The Medhurst video – it’s brilliant, but overwhelmingly dark. If nothing stops the US, we’re doomed right away without the expected delay.
 
Spouse, sighing: “Humanity is left to fend for itself.” Me, protesting: “That’s more or less the definition of humanity.”

Posted by: Avtonom | Apr 12 2026 13:22 utc | 76

Mahmood OD: ‘|He Totally Lost It| Talking with Murderers| Why the War Will Restart|’
 
https://www.youtube.com/@Mahmood_OD/videos
 
“Trump declares victory before JD Vance leaves Islamabad talks; Why did Iran talk with the US?; Israel wants the US to go back to war.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 12 2026 13:23 utc | 77

—❗️🇺🇸/🇮🇷 WATCH: IRIB has released footage of the IRGC Navy warning Arleigh Burke-class destroyers USS Michael Murphy (DDG 112) and USS Frank E. Peterson (DDG 121) to turn away from the Strait of Hormuz yesterday, or risk being targeted
 
‘Attention U.S. Navy warship, transiting near Fujairah Port and Oman Sea; this is IRGC Navy; LAST WARNING, LAST WARNING, LAST WARNING’

https://t.me/Middle_East_Spectator/30890
 

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 12 2026 13:25 utc | 78

“Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the Finest in the World, will begin the process of BLOCKADING any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz,” Trump said in a post to his social media platform Truth Social.

Posted by: KillerDoll | Apr 12 2026 13:27 utc | 79

Glenn Diesen:  Prof Seyed Marandi
 
https://www.youtube.com/@GDiesen1/videos
 
“Negotiations collapsed – return to war.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 12 2026 13:28 utc | 80

—❗️🇺🇸/🇮🇷 BREAKING: President Trump announces a naval blockade on Iran ‘effective immediately’
 
Trump has also ordered the U.S. Navy to seize any civilian vessels in international waters that have paid tolls to Iran.

https://t.me/Middle_East_Spectator/30891
 

—❗️🇺🇸/🇮🇷 President Trump, in another Truth Social post:
 
‘Iran promised to open the Strait of Hormuz, and they knowingly failed to do so. This caused anxiety, dislocation, and pain to many people and Countries throughout the World. They say they put mines in the water, even though all of their Navy, and most of their “mine droppers,” have been completely blown up. They may have done so, but what ship owner would want to take the chance?
 
There is great dishonor and permanent harm to the reputation of Iran, and what’s left of their “Leaders,” but we are beyond all of that. As they promised, they better begin the process of getting this INTERNATIONAL WATERWAY OPEN AND FAST! Every Law in the book is being violated by them.
 
I have been fully debriefed by Vice President JD Vance, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner, on the meeting that took place in Islamabad through the kind and very competent leadership of Field Marshal Asim Munir, and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, of Pakistan. They are very extraordinary men, and continuously thank me for saving 30 to 50 million lives in what would have been a horrendous War with India. I always appreciate hearing that — The amount of Humanity spoken of is incomprehensible.
 
The meeting with Iran began early in the morning, and lasted throughout the night – Close to 20 hours. I could go into great detail, and talk about much that has been gotten but, there is only one thing that matters – IRAN IS UNWILLING TO GIVE UP ITS NUCLEAR AMBITIONS!
 
In many ways, the points that were agreed to are better than us continuing our Military Operations to conclusion, but all of those points don’t matter compared to allowing Nuclear Power to be in the hands of such volatile, difficult, unpredictable people. My three Representatives, as all of this time went by, became, not surprisingly, very friendly and respectful of Iran’s Representatives, Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf, Abbas Aragchi, and Ali Bagheri, but that doesn’t matter because they were very unyielding as to the single most important issue and, as I have always said, right from the beginning, and many years ago, IRAN WILL NEVER HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON!’

https://t.me/Middle_East_Spectator/30892

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 12 2026 13:30 utc | 81

These aren’t necessarily sabotage (and there were never accusations of sabotage!) but this is something that I think Russia is highly capable of.
Posted by: Konami | Apr 12 2026 12:54 utc | 59
 
Russia’s strength in espionage has always been human intelligence while the USA has relied on electronic intelligence. The USA has an open society with lax border security. It’s easy to get people into the country and assimilate. It’s much more difficult to enter Russia and assimilate.
I can’t imagine that every country that has a beef with the USA wouldn’t have sleepers crossing the southern border into the USA … it’s just too easy. And it doesn’t matter if You’re a Nicaraguan Sandinista, Persian, Chinese or Russian there is a population in the USA you can blend into and hide in until called upon. Good luck hiding in Russia and avoiding suspicion without knowing the language, culture and having family there.

Posted by: HB_Norica | Apr 12 2026 13:30 utc | 82

Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Apr 12 2026 11:30 utc | 30
 
The most concise and comprehensive analysis of the US plan.

Posted by: osi not ossi | Apr 12 2026 13:32 utc | 83

No conscription = Not real WW yet.When the banksters decide that the useless plebs need to kill each other, then we will have conscription (and WW).
Posted by: Asian Frog | Apr 12 2026 12:57 utc | 62
The US just announced that starting in December, all eligible men will be automatically added to the database in case of a draft. This will supersede the current way of each person to manually register when they become of age (18-25). Getting closer to a draft me thinks.

Posted by: Groovinpict | Apr 12 2026 13:34 utc | 84

Daniel Davis: Alastair Crooke : ‘Iran’s Motives’
 
https://www.youtube.com/@DanielDavisDeepDive/videos
 
“Iran’s motives: get out from the cage they’re in.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 12 2026 13:34 utc | 85

JUST IN – Trump orders the U.S. Navy to blockade the Strait of Hormuz to “any and all ships trying to enter, or leave.” Also instructing the U.S. Navy to seek and interdict every vessel in international waters that has paid a toll to Iran: “No one who pays an illegal toll will have safe passage on the high seas.”

I know I sound like a broken record, but what other country has the means to do this?  The entire planet is under the thumb of the United States.

Posted by: bored | Apr 12 2026 13:36 utc | 86

Trump just announced a total blockade of the Strait of Hormuz for all traffic.
 
This just days after his folks were preaching about ‘freedom of navigation’ …
 
Iran has lots of choices: Block of all oil from GCC countries. Close Bab al Mandeb. Attack U.S. ships which try to coerce others … 
 
Let’s see how the world will react to this …

Posted by: b | Apr 12 2026 13:37 utc | 87

@b | Apr 12 2026 13:37 utc | 87

Let’s see how the world will react to this …

Yes, ref my Apr 12 2026 13:30 utc | 81
 
By the way, I doubt that Trump wrote that long post himself, he is not that articulate. There is someone else deciding his words and controlling his decisions.
 

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 12 2026 13:42 utc | 88

Posted by: Flying Dutchman | Apr 12 2026 12:39 utc | 50
 
It seems the US could sever the transoceanic trade links and wreak havoc among the Eastern hemisphere. If the US were to embark upon such a systematic strategy of causing general economic destruction and chaos, who would stop them? Would Russia and China then “escalate” directly against US military targets? The record so far is they would diplomatically protest and nothing more.

 
Yes, the US could declare war on the rest of the world. But it seems an unlikely strategy. The global network of US military bases would probably be early targets, leaving the US isolated on its North America island. The rest of the world can get along without the US.  
 

Posted by: Clever Dog | Apr 12 2026 13:44 utc | 89

President Trump announces a naval blockade on Iran ‘effective immediately’Trump has also ordered the U.S. Navy to seize any civilian vessels in international waters that have paid tolls to Iran.

 
Blockade? Then what about the US allies (Taiwan, SK, europoodles) who desperately need oil and are ok with 1$ toll on a 150$ barrel?
 
What about trying to block a Chinese vessel with military escort?
 
Seizing a vessel in international waters… with a Jolly Roger flag? Oh, an Indonesian vessel :
“This is the day you almost caught Jacko Suparo…”

Posted by: Asian Frog | Apr 12 2026 13:45 utc | 90

Caligula has another tantrum;
 
……So, there you have it, the meeting went well, most points were agreed to, but the only point that really mattered, NUCLEAR, was not. Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the Finest in the World, will begin the process of BLOCKADING any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz. At some point, we will reach an “ALL BEING ALLOWED TO GO IN, ALL BEING ALLOWED TO GO OUT” basis, but Iran has not allowed that to happen by merely saying, “There may be a mine out there somewhere,” that nobody knows about but them. THIS IS WORLD EXTORTION, and Leaders of Countries, especially the United States of America, will never be extorted. I have also instructed our Navy to seek and interdict every vessel in International Waters that has paid a toll to Iran. No one who pays an illegal toll will have safe passage on the high seas. We will also begin destroying the mines the Iranians laid in the Straits. Any Iranian who fires at us, or at peaceful vessels, will be BLOWN TO HELL! Iran knows, better than anyone, how to END this situation which has already devastated their Country. Their Navy is gone, their Air Force is gone, their Anti Aircraft and Radar are useless, Khomeini, and most of their “Leaders,” are dead, all because of their Nuclear ambition. The Blockade will begin shortly. Other Countries will be involved with this Blockade. Iran will not be allowed to profit off this Illegal Act of EXTORTION. They want money and, more importantly, they want Nuclear. Additionally and, at an appropriate moment, we are fully “LOCKED AND LOADED,” and our Military will finish up the little that is left of Iran! President DONALD J. TRUMP……

Posted by: Exile | Apr 12 2026 13:47 utc | 91

Amusing stance, blockading the Strait. Looks like USreal speedrunning global pariah status, cannot be taken with any seriousness. But at least it’ll either bring: a) USreal navy closer within missile range and or, b) leaves Iran, Ansar Allah, and Hezbollah to focus on Occupied Palestine, because it’s the USreal’s precious, the one ring to rule them all.

Posted by: titmouse | Apr 12 2026 13:48 utc | 92

TNA: Brian Berletic
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JsELCv_hc3k
 
“US-Iran talks collapse: US floats Iran-China blockade as US prepares for further war on Iran.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 12 2026 13:52 utc | 93

Just when you thought they couldn’t get more stupid….
 
Watch this blockade blow up in their faces in the most spectacular way.

Posted by: Maverick | Apr 12 2026 13:52 utc | 94

Iran has lots of choices: Block of all oil from GCC countries. Close Bab al Mandeb. Attack U.S. ships which try to coerce others …  Let’s see how the world will react to this …
Posted by: b | Apr 12 2026 13:37 utc | 87

 
how many weeks before east Asia decides it has had enough? 

Posted by: Newbie | Apr 12 2026 13:54 utc | 95

Well I have to laugh at this. Virtually all US so called allies import fuel/oil.
 
I do however hope that non US allies who have import fuel can get it. Trump again talking about piracy here. Interdicting ships as he terms it then no doubt the American bandits stealing the oil. 

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 12 2026 13:56 utc | 96

By the way, I doubt that Trump wrote that long post himself, he is not that articulate. There is someone else deciding his words and controlling his decisions.
 
Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 12 2026 13:42 utc | 88

 
I suspect he dictates a lot of his longer comments to underlings, possibly with suggestions like “flesh it out with the names of those ragheads I keep forgetting”. 

Posted by: malenkov | Apr 12 2026 13:58 utc | 97

Posted by: Avtonom | Apr 12 2026 13:22 utc | 76

The Medhurst video – it’s brilliant, but overwhelmingly dark. If nothing stops the US, we’re doomed right away without the expected delay.

In this video, he focuses on one particular aspect: US strategy for energy/trade dominance. That’s an extremely important point for many reasons (among others: there may be local insanity among leaders but there’s an entirely rational plan). But it’s only one point.
 
Medhurst doesn’t go into many other aspects: Can the USA reliably support most of the world with energy? If so, for how long? (And what if the enemy interferes with US trade or energy infrastructure?) If not, and energy prices explode, sinking world economy — is this a net gain or less for US capital? (I’ve repeatedly made the point that I believe global depression could be a US aim but I don’t have an answer to the previous question.) Even if the US manages to get control over energy trade, there are other important resources — we all now know about the upcoming fertiliser and helium shortages, and the Chinese dominance over a bunch of them. This is no criticism of Richard’s video: he does an incredible job at illumating the energy point (in little time too), plus he sits on the right side of the conflict.
 
So I don’t know about the “doomed right away”. Nothing is settled yet, Iran is setting a positive example (paid for in blood, let’s never forget that — this is not a game) but it certainly doesn’t look good, especially for EUrope.

Posted by: Konami | Apr 12 2026 13:59 utc | 98

Posted by: BM | Apr 12 2026 10:21 utc | 2
 
My guess is that the latest fake ceasefire/negotiations were a third subterfuge for [ground] attacks concurrently being prepared.
 
Maybe.  Alternatively, what we see, to make it very pointed, is a small-ish band of actors – figures who are at cross purposes and are desperately trying to maintain some coherent communal action, plan, a public face. 
 
What looks like deliberate deceit (who in Iran or elsewhere would ever believe that proposed cease-fires from the US are make-nice efforts? …Yet they are moves all the same and there are many reasons to take them up) is weakness in another rubric.
 
The US’ aims in this ‘war’ (illegal aggro!..) as touted to the public have veered from freeing Iranians particularly women from a despotic dictatorship to obliterating, annihilating, the whole country, with many in-between scripts, such as Regime Change, killing the Masters of Terror, taking the Oil, preventing Iran from enriching Uranium, controlling the Straits to make money, and on and on. 
 
To guess at the deeper reasons, there are 3 paths..
 
First, an aim at world-wide control of energy exploitation, market, exchanges (which explains attacking Russian tankers, the Venezuela coup, and more.) 
 
Second, the symbiotic relationship between Isr. and USuk, with the ‘outpost’ supported to the hilt and then storming out of control. 
 
Third, the end of the US empire which is now flailing about and at a loss of what to do from day to day…
 
Combinations, other paths,  are possible of course. 
 
The main US-W actors (to return to top sentence) are at odds, hate each other, fight behind the scenes, can’t get it together, and are, as the old saying goes, on the Road to Ruin.
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_to_Ruin  

Posted by: Noirette | Apr 12 2026 13:59 utc | 99

Trump has lost a lot of supporters with his neo-con actions.

https://t.me/Slavyangrad/161486 Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 12 2026 13:19 utc | 73

 
I doubt it. Lots of TDS (Trump Dicksuck Syndrome) among the cultists.

Posted by: malenkov | Apr 12 2026 13:59 utc | 100