Trump has admitted defeat on Iran war after historic blunder

Trump has admitted defeat on Iran war after historic blunder

Trump has admitted defeat on Iran war after historic blunder

Donald Trump has arrived for this week’s G7 summit in France keen to celebrate his peace deal with Iran. But the agreement has only proved this war was one of the greatest strategic blunders in US history.

 

The Iran “deal” is a tacit admission of strategic defeat by the Trump administration and of a failure to achieve nearly all of his war aims.

The US and Iran have agreed to stop fighting and to open the Strait of Hormuz. Everything else is being kicked down the road over 60 days of ceasefire and beyond.

Given that the Strait was open before the conflict was started by Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu, reopening it is no great achievement. It simply restores the status quo ante bellum.

Trump Accidentally Admits to Epic Iran Blunder as War Takes Worse Turn | The New Republic

 

After a war that has cost an estimated $30bn, killed thousands and destroyed hundreds of millions of dollars worth of US military hardware, have any of Trump’s declared objectives been fulfilled?

Five big nos

• No on Iran’s nuclear programme: both the fate of Iran’s highly enriched uranium stockpile and its enrichment project are to be discussed over the coming weeks. It remains far from obliterated.

• No to changing the regime: Ayatollah Khamenei and a slew of top-ranking commanders have been killed but have been replaced by even more hardline figures, apparently in no mood to compromise.

• No to helping the Iranian people who rose up against their government. If anything, the war has strengthened Iran’s leadership, particularly if it benefits from sanctions relief as part of this deal, which seems more than likely.

• No to destroying Iran’s ballistic missile arsenal. America’s self-styled bombastic ‘Secretary of War’ had claimed it had largely been neutralised; US intelligence estimates 70% of Iran’s missiles remain serviceable.

• No to reining in Iran’s proxies. These are not part of any deal, it seems, for now at least.

 

Trump's Staggering Humiliation in Iran | The New Republic

 

Trump’s supporters will point out that Iran’s military has been massively degraded.

His lieutenants are fond of saying most of its navy is at the bottom of the sea. But not where it counts. Iran’s naval potency has remained intact in the Strait of Hormuz, giving the Iranians leverage they could only have dreamt of before.

Iran’s air force has been destroyed, but it was largely obsolescent anyway.

A huge number of Iran’s IRGC and military bases have also been taken out, but their occupants have survived and remain firmly in control of the country.

 

The War Room newsletter: Trump is scrambling for options in Iran

 

A deal that achieves nothing new

In short, Iran priced in the beating its conventional military would take and has prevailed where it’s mattered most.

As things stand, the deal achieves none of what Barack Obama’s 2015 nuclear deal did. So far, the highly enriched uranium stays in Iran, the enrichment programme can be reassembled, and there is no moratorium yet on enriching more.

Trump accused Obama of handing the Iranians billions. Negotiations following this memorandum of understanding are likely one way or another to do the same.

 

Trump administration says its war in Iran has been 'terminated' before 60-day deadline

 

Trump at the G7

The US president arrived in Evian-les-Bains, an upmarket French resort town on the shores of Lake Geneva, on Monday.

Upon arrival, he said he was “very happy” with the deal he’s agreed to with Iran. It will be signed in Switzerland on Friday, with JD Vance set to attend on behalf of the US.

For Trump, attention apparently now switches back toward Ukraine and Russia – which will be a focus of other leaders at this week’s summit, including Britain’s Sir Keir Starmer, who will announce a new sanctions package targeting Moscow.

Trump – as he has said many times to no avail – believes the end of the war is in sight.

Speaking to the media alongside Emmanuel Macron on Monday, he said: “We had a very good conversation yesterday with President Zelenskiy and President ⁠Putin, and I think maybe we can do something there. I really do. I think they’re both open to it.”

Watch a preview of what’s to come from the rest of the summit from Sky’s Alistair Bunkall below.

 

Trump's Iran blockade snatches defeat from the jaws of victory | Responsible Statecraft

 

Trump has found his off-ramp to this war. He has a better chance now of averting global economic meltdown. He hopes to move on and salvage his party’s political chances in America’s forthcoming midterm elections.

There is a huge amount at stake in the diplomacy that now follows, which will be fiendishly difficult.

Iran has acquired leverage through this war that it never enjoyed before. Its control of the Strait of Hormuz gave it a grip on a fifth of the world’s oil supply. It can wield that power at will in the future.

It is likely, therefore, to be even less accommodating in these negotiations.

 

Attacking Iran turned out to be a massive miscalculation for Donald Trump.

It has cost America’s standing in the world dearly and left Iran potentially stronger.

It will go down as one of the greatest strategic blunders in US history.

 

Trump Celebrates While America Capitulates

The peace deal with Tehran is an Iranian victory.

Donald Trump

 

President Trump has announced that the United States and Iran have reached a deal to end their war. “Congratulations to all!” he said in a posting on his Truth Social site this evening. He then headed off to oversee the garish public spectacle he’d arranged for his birthday on the South Lawn of the White House. The United States, however, has little to celebrate: Trump and his team, in record time, just lost a war to a militarily mediocre—but nonetheless extremely dangerous—adversary.

The details of the agreement remain unconfirmed, but the president, of course, is eager to spin the outcome as a victory. (Trump was in a hurry to sign the deal on his birthday; the Iranians, who now seem to be in charge of this whole business, instead said they will send someone to a meeting in Switzerland on Friday.) But even before we have the details, it is clear that Trump has failed to achieve every one of the goals he put forward for this war of choice, and now he is determined to sign, seal, and deliver America’s capitulation as quickly as possible.

 

Though Unhappy With Deal, Trump Doesn't Expect a New Shutdown - GV Wire

If defeat seems a strong word, consider what we do know about how this war will end. Iran has suffered significant damage from U.S. and Israeli military action. But as I and others warned at the outset, killing people and bombing things do not by themselves produce victory. The reality is that the war will close with the regime in Tehran intact and in the grip of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps; the Strait of Hormuz will remain under the threat of Iranian attacks; Iran will continue to possess significant drone and missile stocks; the regime will maintain the capability to be a state sponsor of terror; and many sanctions will be lifted and billions of dollars in unfrozen assets will flow to Iran. In other words, the Iranians have achieved their key strategic aims—regime survival above all—while the Americans have achieved none of their own.
Indeed, the United States has perhaps done worse than gaining nothing. Iran, while temporarily weakened, is now an even more powerful political actor: The regime in Tehran stood up to a massive U.S. onslaught, survived, and then inflicted pain on various states in the Gulf as punishment for going along with Trump’s war.

Donald Trump's Candidates Crashed and Burned | The Nation

The Israelis, for their part, have been left out in the cold. It is difficult to shed any tears for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who unwisely encouraged Trump to attack Iran, but he, too, is feeling the sting of humiliation. The Iranians cagily linked Netanyahu’s war against Hezbollah in Lebanon to Trump’s war in the Gulf, and Trump is now angry at Netanyahu for making it harder for the United States to get out of the conflict. (When Netanyahu planned major strikes in Beirut at the beginning of June, Trump called him, swore at him, and said, “You’d be in prison if it weren’t for me.”)

Reportedly, the upcoming agreement requires a cessation of hostilities in the region, including in Lebanon—and Trump is negotiating as if he can deliver on that demand while leaving Jerusalem out of it. Today, the Israelis said that Hezbollah had launched weapons into Israel. Rather than calling on the Iranians to restrain their proxy, Trump took to social media to tell the Israelis to calm down, noting that the attack “was very small and meaningless, nobody was hurt, injured, or killed, and should not disrupt this important process.”

Trump is making America sad again - New Statesman

 

The Trump administration will claim that it achieved a victory because it got an Iran without nuclear weapons. But this claim is both silly and redundant. Tehran had already pledged 10 years ago in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action not to seek nuclear weapons. No one should trust the Iranians, but before Trump unilaterally cancelled the agreement in his first term, the JCPOA seemed to be working. More to the point, at the time Trump chose to go to war, Iran was nowhere near getting a bomb, and certainly not within weeks of a weapon, as Trump asserted. The effort to claim that this war has defeated Iran’s nuclear ambitions is merely an effort to distract from the administration’s failure to achieve regime change, which was always its main goal.

Trump is an almost inexpressibly sad specimen – Hartford Courant

(Trump’s self-congratulations about averting the Iranian bomb are like the old joke about the London cabbie who used to throw “lion powder” out of the window to keep lions away. When told that London has no lions, the cabbie said: “And a bloody good thing, too, because the powder don’t work.”)

The agreement—if it actually gets signed on Friday—will then initiate a two-month period of further negotiations, and Trump could argue that he’ll get more in that process. But how?

Trump says delaying State of the Union would be 'so very sad.' Read his  full letter to Pelosi | PBS News

Trump has for weeks talked about getting rid of Iran’s “Nuclear Dust”—his odd term for the uranium now lying under the rubble produced by U.S. bombings—and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth claimed this morning that the United States has multiple plans for removing this material. The Iranians, however, are busily planting booby traps around the uranium to ensure that it stays where it is, and despite Hegseth’s blustering, America is not going to march into Iran and dig it out without Tehran’s consent. If anything, the Iranians now have every incentive to sprint to a bomb, and can do so with far less transparency than they had to endure under the JCPOA.

Meanwhile, the Strait of Hormuz will “open,” but it was already open, at least to those the Iranians allowed to pass. In his celebratory message, Trump said: “I hereby fully authorize the toll free opening of the Strait of Hormuz.” That’s terrific, but such a statement has about as much effect as I or my wife or my cat declaring the Strait open; only Iran can make that decision. Trump also declared that the U.S. Navy’s blockade of Iranian ports is over, something that is indeed within his power, but that only means America will withdraw while Iran remains.

Not just Iran, Trump 'UNHAPPY' with Israel too now? Here's how US president  reacted after ceasefire violation

Meanwhile—and again, these are the terms that so far have been leaked to the press, mostly from the Iranians—Iran claims that it will not only get some $12 billion up front, but get another $12 billion within 60 days. Down the line, the Iranians are claiming that they will get a $300 billion fund for reconstruction. (U.S. officials have insisted to reporters that any release of funds will be performance-based, a fuzzy condition that raises more questions and could invite the Iranians to dig in and haggle if the Americans balk at delivering the money.) The war leaves Iran battered, but more powerful and with more cash at its disposal, while it leaves America weaker, with important stocks of weapons depleted, and with its consumers paying the price for the war at the gas pump.

Trump today also claimed that he is perfectly willing to restart hostilities if the Iranians don’t cooperate. Tehran, however, can be forgiven for smirking at the idea that Trump is going to tie down U.S. forces and then ignite a second conflict just weeks from the midterm elections, especially because the American people—and, perhaps more important from Trump’s perspective, the international markets—have soured on the conflict.

Trump began this war by promising the Iranian people that they would be able to seize their government from the theocratic tyrants who oppress them, and he repeatedly said he would settle for nothing less than “unconditional surrender.” Had Trump toppled the regime in Tehran, he would have had the thanks of most of the world—and congratulations from even his most dedicated critics. Instead, the United States has been defeated, and this evening found Trump out on the lawn waiting for the rain to clear so he could begin his party.

 

 

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