Armchair strategist. No formal qualifications in geopolitics, economics, military strategy, or finance. Opinion and analysis only — not investment or policy advice. I have been wrong before and will say so when I am. This week I will say so immediately.
A reader correctly pointed out that Jibah — the halal throat cut — does not spare the animal suffering. The animal is conscious throughout. The blood drains slowly. I called it the clean kill. It is not clean for the animal. What I was reaching for was Zatka — the Sikh method, a single powerful blow that severs the head completely. Instant. No prolonged bleeding. Death before the animal understands what has happened. That is the clean kill.
The Jibah is something else. Maximum yield, yes. Correct form observed, yes. But the animal feels every second of it. Which means the last two weeks have been more Jibah than I intended — Iran is fully conscious, bleeding slowly, the blockade tightening, the ganadero still in the pen. The correction does not undermine the metaphor. It sharpens it.
I mixed up my abattoir terminology. The tracker is updated. The analysis stands and is in fact darker for the correction: there was never going to be a clean kill. There was only always going to be this.
We expected the kill immediately. The matador had done the work — six weeks of varas, a full round of banderillas in Islamabad, the blockade announced, the ganadero personally in the pen. The estoque was in the left hand, hidden. The crowd leaned forward. And then — a few more passes. The bull and the matador, by some silent mutual agreement, decided the faena was not yet complete. The corrida continues.
This is not unusual. Hemingway writes that the finest faenas are not the shortest ones. The matador who rushes to the kill before the crowd has been fully brought along is technically correct but artistically bankrupt. The passes are not wasted time between the banderillas and the death. They are the point. The faena is where character is revealed — the matador's courage, the bull's nobility, the quality of both. A great bull deserves a great faena. The crowd paid to see this.
The geopolitical translation: the week of holding pattern was not a failure of the model. It was the faena running its proper course. The outcome has not changed. The manner of dying is still being negotiated. That negotiation is, as Hemingway would insist, the whole point.
The Passes — What Hemingway Would See
Hemingway spends more pages on the faena than on any other part of the corrida. Each pass has a name, a purpose, a specific effect on the bull's body and mind. The crowd that does not know the names is watching violence. The afición that knows them is watching art. Here is what has been happening in the ring for the past ten days, pass by pass.
El Pase Natural — the fundamental pass — is where dominance is established. Cape extended, bull follows, man pivots. Done correctly the bull learns one thing above all others: it follows the cape, not the man. The man is separate from the thing it is chasing. The naval blockade is the pase natural of this faena. Iran is following the cape. The blockade established, without ambiguity, that American power can redirect Iranian energy flows at will. The bull is learning what it is chasing.
La Manoletina — named after Manolete, the greatest matador of the twentieth century — is the pass Hemingway would have loved above all others. The cape is held behind the matador's back. The body is fully exposed. The bull passes within inches of flesh with nothing but nerve holding the line. Pure arrogance turned into art. The seizure of the M/V Touska in the Strait of Hormuz while talks were supposedly ongoing was the manoletina. Maximum provocation, maximum exposure, Trump's body fully in the path of the charge. The message to the bull and the crowd simultaneously: I am not afraid of you.
El Derechazo — the right-hand pass, the workhorse of the faena — is done in series. Three, four, five passes in rhythm. It tires the bull, lowers the head incrementally, builds the crowd toward the kill. Trump's Truth Social posts this week are the derechazo series. "FAR BETTER THAN THE JCPOA." "NO MORE MR. NICE GUY." "EVERY POWER PLANT, EVERY BRIDGE." Each post another pass. The head drops a little lower each time. The bull is being worked.
El Pase de Pecho — the chest pass — is the finishing pass of any series. The bull is directed away from the matador's body, the cape sweeping across the chest, the fighter standing tall as the animal thunders past. It gives the crowd — and the bull — a moment to breathe before the next series begins. The ceasefire extension is the pase de pecho. Iran was charging at the Wednesday deadline, horns down, full weight committed. Trump swept it past with one Truth Social post — extended at Pakistan's request, until a unified proposal is submitted. The crowd exhaled. The bull circled. Another series begins.
Hemingway's central argument about the faena: it is not delay. It is accumulation. Each pass adds to the total — the bull's neck muscles tire incrementally, its charges slow, its head drops by millimetres. The animal that entered the ring still fighting with full force is, by the end of the faena, fighting with everything it has left. Which is less than it knows. The past ten days have been a faena. Iran is fighting with everything it has. Everything it has is less than it was on February 28. The estoque is still hidden. It will not be hidden much longer.
Notes From A Dirty Kill
Here is what the post last week did not say clearly enough: the kill is already happening. It does not require a formal signing ceremony at the Serena Hotel to be real. Every day the blockade runs, every day Iranian oil sits in tankers going nowhere, every day the IRGC watches its budget denominated in a currency it cannot access — that is the estoque going in. Not cleanly. Not at the perfect angle. But in.
The bull is bleeding. It has been bleeding since February 28. The question was never whether it would die. The question was always whether it would die well — whether the Jibah would be clean, whether the faena would be elegant, whether the afición would score it as art. What is becoming clear this week is that the answer may be none of the above. This may be a dirty kill. The estoque at the wrong angle, the bull circling, the crowd growing uncomfortable, the matador having to go in again.
And here is the thing about a dirty kill that nobody in the plaza mentions loudly: the blood gets on everyone. The GCC states that came to watch are sitting in the front rows and they are getting splattered. Saudi Arabia's East-West pipeline capacity reduced by Iran-linked strikes. Qatar's LNG premium spiking. The UAE watching oil markets whipsaw above $90 while its own sovereign wealth funds take the volatility hit. India, Japan, South Korea — all of them paying the dirty kill premium on every barrel of crude they import. The crowd came for art. They are getting a scandal. The ganadero's reputation is not unaffected.
The model's miss was not on the outcome. It was on the cleanliness. The Jibah is messy. The bull is taking longer to go down than predicted. The collateral damage to the crowd is higher than the model priced. These are honest misses and the tracker reflects them.
Iraq is the cautionary precedent. In 2003 the bull went into the crowd before the matador could finish it. Oil wells ablaze across the southern fields, crude bleeding into the Gulf, infrastructure sabotaged on the way down. The dying animal caused more damage than the living one had. The crowd scrambled. The cleanup took a decade. The afición scored it as the ugliest kill in living memory.
This time the matador has kept the bull in the ring. The blockade, the ceasefire framework, the Pakistan channel, the faena itself — all of it designed to ensure the bull dies in the sand, not in the stands. Messy, yes. Slow, yes. But contained. The crowd is getting splattered but nobody has been gored. That is not an accident. That is craft.
Update as this post goes live: Iran's Foreign Minister Araghchi has arrived in Islamabad. US envoys Witkoff and Kushner are wheels up for Pakistan Saturday morning. The bull walked into the ring on schedule. The faena continues.
Running Prediction Tracker — Weeks 1–9
| Prediction | Week | Prob. | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| US objective is energy revenue control, not regime change | Wk 1 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| Hormuz reopens within 60 days of Feb 28 | Wk 1 | — | ⚠ At Risk |
| Iran accepts post-war revenue oversight framework | Wk 1 | — | ~ Pending |
| Redollarization accelerates as Axis fractures | Wk 1 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| US GDP pulls away from China through 2027 | Wk 1 | — | ✓ On Track |
| 2026 as Axis of Resistance high-water mark | Wk 1 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| New Middle East, no Iranian veto over anything | Wk 1 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| Four-week resolution as modal scenario | Wk 1 | — | ✗ Wrong |
| Kharg oil infrastructure struck before April 10 | Wk 5 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| Hormuz physically forced open by US naval action | Wk 5 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| Escalation to persuade, not destroy — ceasefire and talks follow | Wk 6 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| Round 1: no closure, drama only, ceasefire held | Wk 7 | 85% | ✓ Confirmed |
| Pakistan announces next round — both sides accept | Wk 7 | 80% | ✓ Confirmed |
| Nuclear framed as civilian cooperation — fatwa exit ramp used | Wk 7 | 70% | ~ Developing |
| Brent below $85 Monday | Wk 7 | 75% | ✗ Wrong |
| Vance 2028 — Islamabad is where his campaign began | Wk 7 | 90% | ✓ Confirmed |
| Round 2 produces framework — ceasefire extended past April 21 | Wk 8 | 75% | ✓ On Track |
| Nuclear framed as civilian cooperation this weekend | Wk 8 | 70% | ~ Pending |
| Trump extracts maximum — the Jibah is clean | Wk 8 | 65% | ✗ Dirty Kill |
| Hormuz fully open within 10 days of Round 2 | Wk 8 | 60% | ✗ Wrong |
| This moves after Friday market close — unified proposal or bombs over the weekend | Wk 9 | 70% | ● New |
| Dirty kill completes within 3 weeks — Iran integrates into dollar ecosystem regardless of how messy the faena gets | Wk 9 | 80% | ● New |
| GCC formally requests accelerated resolution citing collateral economic damage — the crowd asks the matador to finish | Wk 9 | 65% | ● New |
The Prediction
The structural thesis has not moved. Iran integrates into the dollar ecosystem. Oil revenues through New York. Civil reconstruction agreements. The Islamic Republic ceases to be what it was ideologically and structurally — the Axis of Resistance Iran, the Iran that ran proxy wars as instruments of geopolitical leverage. That outcome was set on February 28 and nothing in the past ten days has changed it.
What has changed is the timeline and the cleanliness. The clean Jibah — the elegant faena, the precise estoque, the afición scoring it as art — is no longer the most likely scenario. The dirty kill is already in progress. The question now is not whether Iran dies but whether it dies in a way that leaves the matador, the ganadero, and the front rows of the crowd relatively unmarked.
The model says Friday after market close is when the next move comes. Either Iran submits the unified proposal Trump is waiting for — the bull finally lowering its head at the right angle — or the weekend brings resumed strikes, a new round of escalation, another derechazo series before the pase de pecho. The ceasefire extension without an end date removed the pressure on Iran and Trump's advisers know it. The next anchor needs to be planted before Monday's market open.
The GCC is the variable nobody is watching closely enough. Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE — they are in the front rows of this corrida and they are getting splattered. At some point the crowd stops being passive and starts signalling to the matador: finish this. When Gulf states begin formally requesting accelerated resolution — not quietly through back channels but publicly — that is the signal the dirty kill is entering its final phase.
Watch Riyadh. Watch what MBS says publicly this weekend. That is your tell.
Armchair strategist with no formal qualifications in geopolitics, economics, military strategy, or finance. Everything here is opinion and analysis — not investment advice, not policy recommendation, not prophecy. I have been wrong before, I will be wrong again, and the tracker exists precisely so there is nowhere to hide when I am.
Amusing Morose Musings · sweet-kandy.blogspot.com · April 2026