Bibi's neo-nazi government is not worth two shits. Trump and earlier political weaklings captured by the Israel lobby are/were weak and mean. It does not have to be that way. That's Crabgrass opinion, apart from the featured LAT item: News Analysis: Trump’s framework deal with Iran includes few details, prompts fury on the right
In late February, when he launched massive airstrikes against Iran,
Trump said his aims were to eliminate Iran’s nuclear program, destroy
Tehran’s ballistic missiles, end its ability to threaten its neighbors
and, with luck, bring about “regime change.” More bluntly, in his words,
he sought “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER.”
Weeks
of U.S. and Israeli attacks succeeded in destroying Iran’s air force
and navy and reduced its arsenal of ballistic missiles, although the
degree of damage to the missile force has been debated.
[...] The result was a stalemate followed by a ceasefire and weeks of
negotiations that produced a “framework agreement”: a deal to end the
war, reopen the strait and begin longer negotiations that would limit
Iran’s nuclear program in return for relaxed U.S. economic sanctions.
It was a long way from unconditional surrender.
“The
deal is deeply flawed,” wrote Danny Citrinowicz, a former Iran analyst
at Israel’s defense intelligence agency. “But given the options
President Trump actually had, it was probably the least bad choice. …
Trump was forced to accept Iran’s terms because the alternatives were
even worse.”
Iran hawks in Washington reacted with fury.
Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo,
a former Trump appointee, charged that the deal being described would
“pay the [Iranian regime] to build a WMD program and terrorize the
world.”
“Not remotely America First,” he complained.
“If a deal is
struck to end the Iranian conflict because it is believed that the
Strait of Hormuz cannot be protected against Iranian terrorism … then
Iran will be perceived as being a dominant force,” warned Sen. Lindsey
Graham (R-S.C.). “It makes one wonder why the war started.”
Mark
Dubowitz, a leading critic of past agreements with Iran, said the terms
of the deal that have been described so far sounded like “a foolish
agreement” under which “Iran would get real money, but they could
continue to close the strait any time they wanted simply by making
threats.” He said he hopes the final terms of the deal will turn out to
be tougher.
It seemed telling that Trump and his aides, who
declared weeks ago that the United States had won the war by every
measure, made no claims of victory this time.
Instead, the president reacted to his conservative critics with irritation. “Don’t listen to the losers,” he wrote on his social media site. “[The deal] isn’t even fully negotiated yet.”
[...] “The
net result of this war is significant damage to U.S. strategic
interests,” wrote Daniel B. Shapiro, who served as U.S. ambassador to
Israel under President Obama. “That said, since the war was a mistake
from the beginning, we can at least be thankful it appears President
Trump is moving belatedly to end it.”
But Robert Kagan, a
conservative foreign policy scholar at the Brookings Institution, wrote
that a deal to reopen the strait while deferring the nuclear issue would
amount to a U.S. “surrender.”
“On
the present trajectory, Iran will emerge from the conflict many times
stronger and more influential than it was before the war,” Kagan wrote
in the Atlantic.
Despite the apparent progress toward a deal to
reopen the Strait of Hormuz, the gaps between the two countries on other
issues — Iran’s nuclear program, and the U.S. sanctions that have
crippled its economy — remain large.
When the war began, Trump’s
goals included completely eliminating the vestiges of Iran’s nuclear
program, [...] Instead of banning Iranian
nuclear activities completely, the recent talks have focused on
narrower, more achievable goals: a “suspension” of nuclear enrichment
for 20 years or less and removal or destruction of Iran’s highly
enriched uranium, the essential ingredient for a nuclear weapon.
“The
fact that we’re talking about a suspension of all enrichment, and the
question is whether it will be five years, 20 years or halfway in
between — that’s important,” said Nate Swanson, an Iran expert who
worked at the National Security Council under President Biden and Trump. [...] Swanson
said other issues, including Iran’s long-term nuclear research and its
advanced ballistic missiles, haven’t been addressed and will remain
points of contention between the two sides.
“An interim deal to
buy time [is] probably where we end up,” he said. “Buying time is not a
bad thing. Ending a war is not a bad thing. But it’s not a comprehensive
solution.”
Absent from the analysis - "regime change." Bibi was hot to trot on that, and it splatted all over him.
The Republican Guard - military was largely in charge before, and is more firmly in charge now, in Iran.
That, a rigid military dictatorship, is not necessarily bad. The Arabs across the Persian Gulf from Iran are not beacons of good statehood either. Sunni, Shia and China got them talking to one another before Bibi with Trump in tow moved to scuttle that. China is interesting. Since Mao's Cultural Revolution, they've not warred with anyone, and built infrastructure and quality electric automobiles. TSMC on the island makes chips for Nvidia and others, so the Chinese mind, both sides of the earlier civil war, needs respect.
Let Iran and the Arabs pump and ship oil in competition with the Brazilians, Mexicans, and Nigerians; and whoever else can do it cheaper than fracked US stuff, the Norwegians - a market that existed already, and tell the Trump oil oligarchs to just fuck off. That's policy, of a better kind than Trump - Rubio empire lust and such. Just get along. We've already, the US of A, lost too many wars, divided Korea, onward.
Try peace for a change. As Whats-his-name campaigned in the 2024 election. The guy sitting with somebody else's Nobel Prize. You know who I mean. The one with the Greenland fetish.
UPDATE: Apology for meaning to mention it sooner, letting it slip. Pompeo. That Christian Nationalist asshole - even Trump 47 gave him the cold shoulder after Trump 45. Trump showing a learning curve is not an entirely bad thing. But Trump only switched Christian Nationalists, Pompeo out, Hegseth in. Both vomit-worthy sicko sociopaths. (Opinions may differ. But really should not.)