Saturday, April 11, 2026

Weekly update - This world is a stage, Babu Moshoy!

The World Is A Stage — Amusing Morose Musings
On two emissaries who cannot say yes, one vice president who is running for president, and why the Islamabad talk (accord) is the casting call — not the closing night
Gulf Conflict Series · Week 7 · Prediction Post
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Disclaimer People are dying. Families across Iran, the Gulf, and Lebanon are living through things no analytical framework can adequately price. I am aware of this. The specific contribution I can make is analytical clarity, and that is what I am attempting here. If that framing is not for you, the tab is right there. For everyone else: flags go in the ground, predictions go in the tracker, and we check back honestly when reality delivers its verdict.

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.
All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances,
And one man in his time plays many parts,
His acts being seven ages.
At first the infant, Mewling and puking in the nurse's arms. And then the whining school-boy, with his satchel And shining morning face, creeping like snail Unwillingly to school. And then the lover, Sighing like furnace, with a woeful ballad Made to his mistress' eyebrow. Then a soldier, Full of strange oaths and bearded like the pard, Jealous in honour, sudden and quick in quarrel, Seeking the bubble reputation Even in the cannon's mouth. And then the justice, In fair round belly with good capon lined, With eyes severe and beard of formal cut, Full of wise saws and modern instances; And so he plays his part. The sixth age shifts Into the lean and slipper'd pantaloon, With spectacles on nose and pouch on side, His youthful hose, well saved, a world too wide For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice, Turning again toward childish treble, pipes And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all, That ends this strange eventful history, Is second childishness and mere oblivion, Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.
— William Shakespeare, As You Like It, Act II Scene VII · Jaques

Shakespeare remains immortal because he wrote lines like this — arguably among the finest ever committed to paper. I had to dig them up and read them multiple times before they unlocked. You will suffer through them too.

Four hundred and twenty-seven years after Jaques delivered those lines in the Forest of Arden, two men sat down at the Serena Hotel in Islamabad to negotiate the end of a war. One of them cannot say yes. The other cannot say yes either. Shakespeare, who understood power better than most diplomats who have ever lived, would not have been remotely surprised.

That is the entire analytical thesis of this post. Everything else is elaboration.

The Victory Lap

Week 6 Prediction — Made April 7, 2026 · Six Hours Before Deadline

Escalation sufficient to persuade, not to destroy. Trump's bluff had been partially called and the primary persuasion target was not moving. The next phase would not be capitulation and not obliteration — it would be calibrated escalation designed to give Iran just enough pain to justify accepting terms domestically. Strikes on Kharg Island perimeter infrastructure, bridges, select power nodes — enough to make a deal look like relief rather than surrender to the Iranian street. The oil export terminal itself would not be rendered non-functional. The power grid would not be demolished. The regime would not collapse under bombardment; someone inside it would find a way to say yes and frame it as something other than defeat.

What actually happened: Kharg Island strikes confirmed. Two-week ceasefire announced April 7. Strait of Hormuz partially reopened. Iran's new civilian leadership — not a Supreme Leader, because there isn't a settled one — agreed to talks in Islamabad. The regime did not collapse. Someone inside it found a way to say yes. They framed it as something other than defeat.

Confirmed. The tracker is updated below.

I want to be precise about what I got right and what I did not. The calibrated-escalation-not-obliteration call was correct. The "regime cracks from within" framing was directionally right but imprecise — it was not a crack so much as a succession gap. Khamenei and Larijani were dead before the ceasefire. The new civilian leadership that emerged — Ghalibaf most prominently — had no ownership of the old resistance posture and therefore no requirement to die on that hill. The mechanism was correct. The specific anatomy of how the wall came down was somewhat different from what I sketched. I will take the confirm and note the imprecision.

Running Prediction Tracker — Weeks 1–7

Predictions made publicly, updated honestly
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 within 30 days Wk 5 ~ On Track
Escalation to persuade, not destroy — ceasefire and talks follow Wk 6 ✓ Confirmed
Islamabad Round 1: no closure, drama only, ceasefire extended Sunday — this is the casting call, not the closing night Wk 7 85% ● New
The real NK moment — principals in the room — is still weeks away; watch for signals of a Trump-level direct engagement Wk 7 80% ● New
Nuclear framed as civilian cooperation with US investment — fatwa exit ramp used, not a hard concession Wk 7 70% ● New
Brent opens below $85 Monday — the press release, not a bombing run, is the weekend's kinetic instrument Wk 7 75% ● New
Vance 2028 launch: Islamabad remembered as the moment his presidential campaign began in earnest Wk 7 90% ● New

Two Men Who Cannot Say Yes

Let us be precise about what is actually happening in Islamabad today, because the coverage has almost uniformly missed the structural point.

On the American side: JD Vance. Vice President, not President. He flew in with Witkoff and Kushner — the same team that has been running every prior round of this negotiation. Vance is the most senior American official to visit Pakistan since 2011. His principals are Donald Trump, the Monday morning bond market, and — and this is the part nobody is writing about — the 2028 Iowa caucus. He cannot close a deal that Trump has not blessed. He is not in that room to conclude anything. He is there to be photographed concluding something.

On the Iranian side: Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf. Speaker of Parliament. Former IRGC commander. Emerged as de facto civilian leader after Israeli strikes killed Khamenei and Larijani. He has national security credentials — the IRGC background means he can frame pragmatism as tactical discipline rather than ideological surrender. But he has no settled Supreme Leader above him whose blessing makes a deal binding, and there are hardliners back in Tehran who could repudiate anything he signs the moment he lands. He cannot close a deal either.

These are two emissaries who cannot say yes, sitting across a table from each other, performing for principals who are watching from the wings. Shakespeare staged this scene four centuries ago and called it comedy. The Serena Hotel version will be filed under geopolitics. The genre is the same.

The North Korea comparison is instructive precisely because of how it differs. Singapore worked — or appeared to work — because the two principals were physically in the room. Kim and Trump could look at each other and decide. The thing that made Hanoi a genuine drama was that both men had actual authority to close or walk. Islamabad has none of that. The actual NK moment for this conflict — if it comes — is the meeting that has not been announced yet: Trump and whoever consolidates authority in Tehran, in a room, with cameras, with family present. Watch for that signal. That is the tell that the deal is real.

Until then, what you are watching is the audition.

The Soldier Seeking the Bubble Reputation

Go back to Jaques. "Then a soldier, full of strange oaths and bearded like the pard, jealous in honour, sudden and quick in quarrel, seeking the bubble reputation even in the cannon's mouth."

JD Vance did not fly to Islamabad to negotiate. He flew to Islamabad to be photographed ending a war. This is the most senior American official to visit Pakistan since 2011, leading the highest-level US-Iran diplomatic engagement since the 1979 revolution, brokering what will be packaged as a historic ceasefire framework. That is not a resumé line. That is a campaign poster.

Notice what was absent. Usha Vance. The children. The family tableau that American political iconography has required since at least Reagan. You do not bring the family to the audition. You bring them to the victory lap — to the closing ceremony, the signing, the moment the cameras are recording history rather than practicing it. The family arrives for the Singapore moment, not the Islamabad moment.

Usha is home, visibly pregnant with their fourth child, due in July. Three happy kids waiting. This is precisely the image the American electorate wants to see at the closing moment — a visibly pregnant wife hanging on his arm, three happy kids alongside, their father having just ended a war. That photograph is worth more than any treaty language. It is not an accident it is being held in reserve. The family deploys at the victory lap. This is Islamabad.

Vance has three principals in that room simultaneously: Trump, whose approval he requires for anything he agrees to; the Monday oil market, which is Trump's actual real-time scorecard for the weekend; and the New Hampshire primary electorate, which is his actual long-term constituency. He is optimising for all three at once. The negotiating posture that best serves all three simultaneously is: project strength, create drama, do not close, return home having "made significant progress." That posture is also, not coincidentally, exactly what Ghalibaf needs from his side.

Both men need the other to exist. That is the most structurally stable possible configuration for a Round 1.

The Nuclear Card Is Not What It Looks Like

Every piece of coverage going into today's talks has framed enrichment as the unbridgeable gap. US demands zero enrichment, Iran insists on the right to enrich, deal impossible, talks collapse, war resumes. Clean narrative. Wrong model.

Here is what the coverage has missed. Iran's Supreme Leaders — plural, over decades — have issued fatwas stating that nuclear weapons are haram, forbidden under Islamic law. This is public, documented, repeated. The stated theological position of the Islamic Republic is that they do not want the bomb. Now: was that ever entirely true? Probably not entirely. Was it a useful diplomatic off-ramp that has been sitting on the table for years, unused? Absolutely.

The nuclear file is not Iran's red line. It is Iran's most valuable chip. There is a significant difference. A red line is something you cannot cross. A chip is something you trade at the moment of maximum value. The moment of maximum value for the nuclear chip is the moment when accepting a "civilian nuclear program with US investment and IAEA supervision" framework — which was on the table before the war and which Iran walked away from in February — can be presented domestically not as capitulation but as vindication. We proved we could enrich. We proved we had the capability. We chose to redirect it toward civilian purposes because we are a civilised nation, not because anyone forced us.

Ghalibaf has the IRGC credentials to deliver that line and have it land. A cleric could not have said it. A soldier can. Watch for the "civilian cooperation with US investment" frame to surface — not as a concession, but dressed as a joint initiative. That is the fatwa exit ramp being taken, and it was always available. The question was only when the price was right.

The Lebanon Trap and the Abraham Accord Escape

Israel is currently bombing Lebanon. Iran says the ceasefire covers Lebanon. The US says it does not. This looks like an unbridgeable contradiction that will blow up the talks. It is actually the most solvable problem on the table, for the following reason: nobody in that room has any real ability to control what Netanyahu does, and everyone in that room knows it.

The move that nobody has written about — and which I will stake here — is that Vance raises the Abraham Accords expansion framework as the answer to the Lebanon question. Not as a solution to Lebanon per se, but as a reframe that dissolves the binary entirely. The question is not "does the ceasefire cover Lebanon." The question becomes "what does a new regional architecture look like in which GCC states, Iran, and Israel all have different incentive structures than they had before February 28."

GCC states want Iran defanged and regionally stable — a chaotic Iran is bad for Gulf investment climates. Iran's new civilian leadership wants sanctions relief, reconstruction capital, and regional legitimacy. Those are not incompatible. An Abraham Accords 2.0 that brings Iran into a normalisation framework — not with Israel immediately, but with GCC states who have already normalised with Israel — changes every party's calculation simultaneously. Lebanon becomes a sideshow inside a larger architecture rather than a veto point inside a smaller one.

Vance floats this. Neither side rejects it publicly. It goes into the communiqué as "broader regional stabilisation framework to be discussed in subsequent rounds." That is the diplomatic equivalent of kicking the Lebanon grenade down the road while keeping the ceasefire intact. Watch for that language.

What Monday's Market Actually Needs

Strip away the diplomatic theater and the Shakespeare and the campaign optics. The actual deliverable this weekend is a press release timed for Sunday evening, US Eastern time, that moves Brent crude below $85 by Monday open.

Trump does not need a final deal. He needs a market-legible signal. Specifically: ceasefire extended, Hormuz guaranteed open through the extension period, "framework for comprehensive negotiations" agreed, and enough vague positive language that oil traders have cover to price down the risk premium. That press release is the kinetic instrument this weekend. A warning bombing run is the backup — the instrument you reach for when the press release fails to move markets. If Sunday's communiqué does its job on Brent, nobody gets bombed on Monday.

Do not be surprised, however, by a perfunctory bombing run or two regardless. A little spice keeps everyone at the table and reminds both sides who is holding the match.

The persuasion stack Scott Adams laid out — and which this series has been applying for seven weeks — is still operating. The difference now is that the military coercion phase has done its work and the persuasion phase is fully in the lead. The bombs were the argument. The Serena Hotel is where the argument is accepted.

New Predictions — Week 7

Prediction 01 · Week 7
Islamabad Round 1 produces drama, not closure. Ceasefire extended Sunday evening.
Neither principal is in the room. Both emissaries need the other to exist. Multiple walkouts likely — Lebanon is the scripted dramatic moment. But neither side blows up the framework entirely because blowing it up serves nobody's domestic narrative right now. The output is a communiqué that both sides can read as victory, timed for Sunday evening US Eastern.
Confidence: 85%
Prediction 02 · Week 7
Brent opens below $85 Monday. No bombing run this weekend.
The press release is the kinetic instrument. A bombing run is only necessary if Sunday's communiqué fails to move markets. If the ceasefire extension holds and Hormuz passage is confirmed, oil traders have cover to price down the risk premium. Trump's Monday scorecard will be green without firing a single additional missile.
Confidence: 75%
Prediction 03 · Week 7
Nuclear framed as "civilian cooperation with US investment" — not as a concession.
The fatwa off-ramp has been available for years. Ghalibaf has the IRGC credentials to use it without losing face. "We chose to redirect our capability toward civilian purposes" is a sentence a soldier can say; a cleric could not. Watch for the joint civilian nuclear framework language to surface — dressed as a mutual initiative, not a US demand met.
Confidence: 70%
Prediction 04 · Week 7
The real closing moment — principals in the room — is still weeks away.
The North Korea playbook requires the principals to eventually sit across from each other. Kim and Trump at Singapore is what made a deal possible, however impermanent. The equivalent meeting here — Trump and whoever consolidates authority in Tehran — has not been scheduled. Watch for that signal. When it appears, the deal is real. Until then, we are watching rehearsals.
Confidence: 80%
Prediction 05 · Week 7
Islamabad is where JD Vance's 2028 presidential campaign began in earnest.
Seeking the bubble reputation even in the cannon's mouth. The most senior American official in Pakistan since 2011, at the highest-level US-Iran engagement since 1979 — and Usha is home, visibly pregnant with their fourth child, three happy kids waiting. No serious political operative leaves that image on the table unless this isn't the closing night yet. The family arrives for Singapore. This is Islamabad.
Confidence: 90%

The Final Observation

Jaques ends his seven ages not with triumph but with erasure. Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything. The diplomat's version of that ending is a deal that gets done, celebrated, and quietly unravelled over the following decade while everyone who negotiated it is doing something else entirely.

The NK comparison carries a warning embedded in it that the optimists tend to skip over. Singapore happened. The photographs were extraordinary. The handshake was historic. North Korea still has its nuclear program. The deal was the performance; the program was the reality. Anyone modeling a US-Iran framework as a durable resolution rather than a managed pause is watching the wrong level of the play.

What is being negotiated in Islamabad is not peace. It is the script for the next act. The stage directions are being set. The principals have not yet entered. When they do — when Trump and Tehran's consolidated leadership are actually in the same room — that is the scene that matters. Everything before that is Jaques in the forest, sorting humanity into seven ages, waiting for the real drama to begin.

The world is a stage. Islamabad is a very well-appointed rehearsal room.

Check back on Monday for the market verdict. The tracker will be updated with the same specificity it was built with. If I am wrong I will say so.

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Standard Disclaimer 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. Nothing here should be construed as a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold anything.

Amusing Morose Musings · sweet-kandy.blogspot.com · April 2026

Wednesday, April 08, 2026

Weekly update - Madness Before the Method — Unclutch Those Pearls

Madness Before the Method — Amusing Morose Musings
Viewing Trump's actions in the Gulf through the persuasion filter
Week 6  ·  Gulf Conflict Series  ·  A tribute to Scott Adams 1957–2026
People are dying. Millions have been displaced. Ordinary families across the Gulf cannot afford cooking gas. I am aware of all of this. I choose to model the system, not because the human cost is invisible to me, but because analytical clarity is the specific contribution I can make. If that framing bothers you, close the tab.

A note on timing. This post goes up with approximately six to seven hours remaining before Trump's 8 p.m. ET deadline — the latest in a series of deadlines that have each produced a variant of the same outcome. This is therefore also a prediction post. My call is in the tracker below. I am aware that by the time most of you read this, reality will have delivered its verdict. The flag goes in the ground anyway. That is what the tracker is for.

A note on sources. The analytical framework in this piece belongs almost entirely to Scott Adams — his Win Bigly persuasion filter, his podcast, his daily insistence on watching the mechanism rather than the event. I am attempting to apply his tools to a live situation he did not live to see. If you want the original and not the facsimile, stop reading here and go to the source directly. The podcast archive links are in the tribute section below. They are worth considerably more of your time than this post is.

There is a particular pleasure in watching someone operate at the top of their craft, even when you are not entirely comfortable with what the craft is being applied to. A chess analyst does not pause to lament the psychological toll of a brilliancy before annotating it. This piece is written in that spirit — and for the subset of readers whose underpants are already in a twist about framing a live military campaign as a persuasion exercise, the disclaimer above was your exit. Those still here are presumably interested in the mechanism. Let us get to it.

On the Shoulders of a Giant

Scott Adams died on January 13, 2026, at sixty-eight, from metastatic prostate cancer. He kept recording Real Coffee with Scott Adams from hospice. Paralysed from the waist down, heart failing, still on camera at 10 a.m. because the podcast did not stop until he did. That alone tells you something about the man.

If you never caught his daily podcast during the first Trump term, you missed one of the more unusual intellectual experiences available at no cost on the internet. Every morning — coffee in hand, camera rolling — Adams would dissect the previous twenty-four hours of political news not as a partisan, not as a journalist, but as a trained hypnotist cataloguing the specific mechanisms by which one side was winning the mental game and the other was not. His books Win Bigly and Loserthink are the written distillation of that project. Win Bigly in particular reads like a field manual for watching Trump — not a fan letter, not a hit piece, but a technical breakdown of how a master persuader operates in an environment where the other players do not know they are playing a persuasion game at all.

I listened to those podcasts the way some people listen to music — for texture, for pattern recognition, for the specific pleasure of watching a disciplined mind work through a problem in public without flinching. I miss them more than I expected to miss a daily YouTube show. Adams had the rare quality of genuine intellectual courage: he was willing to be wrong on camera, update his model out loud, and hold an uncomfortable position without softening it for the room. The media spent years calling him an eccentric crank while he was building the most accurate predictive model of the Trump era that anyone with a public platform was running. History was not kind to the media on that scorecard.

You can find the archive on Spotify and the full YouTube channel at Real Coffee with Scott Adams. If you want to understand the Trump era at the level of mechanism rather than event, that is where you start. Not here. There.

Prediction Tracker

The tracker exists because models that are never tested are not models. They are prose with confidence — which is the least useful thing in the world. The new prediction for this post is entered with approximately six hours left on the deadline clock. If I am wrong I will say so in Week 7 with the same specificity I am claiming it here.

New Prediction — Week 6April 7, 2026
Escalation sufficient to persuade, not to destroy. Trump's bluff has been partially called and the primary persuasion target is not moving. The next phase is not capitulation and not obliteration — it is calibrated escalation designed to give Iran just enough pain to justify accepting terms domestically. Expect strikes on Kharg Island perimeter infrastructure, bridges, select power nodes — enough to make a deal look like relief rather than surrender to the Iranian street. The oil export terminal itself is not rendered non-functional. The power grid is not demolished. The regime does not collapse under bombardment; someone inside it finds a way to say yes and frames it as something other than defeat. Pending
Made: Week 6
As of posting: US forces have begun strikes on Kharg Island. Iran has warned its restraint on regional oil infrastructure "will no longer apply." The 8 p.m. ET deadline is six hours out. The prediction is live and the gap between "calibrated" and "destructive" is exactly what this post is trying to measure.
Running Prediction TrackerWeeks 1–6
US objective is energy revenue control, not regime change Week 1 Confirmed — Trump explicitly discussed seizing Iranian oil and imposing a US toll on Hormuz shipping
Hormuz reopens within 60 days of Feb 28 Week 1 At Risk — April 6 deadline passed without resolution; Iran's 10-clause counter-proposal rejected by US
Iran accepts post-war revenue oversight framework Week 1 Pending — Iran's counter-proposal contains no revenue oversight language
Redollarization accelerates as Axis fractures Week 1 Confirmed — Dedollarization narrative structurally broken; Gulf states aligning with US framework
US GDP pulls away from China through 2027 Week 1 On Track — Gulf energy costs a compounding headwind for Chinese manufacturing
2026 as Axis of Resistance high-water mark Week 1 Confirmed — Hezbollah degraded; Houthi capacity reduced; proxy network operationally hollow
New Middle East, no Iranian veto Week 1 Confirmed — UAE publicly supports US military operation to control Hormuz
Four-week resolution as modal scenario Week 1 Wrong — Off the table. Underpriced a new Supreme Leader's structural inability to open with surrender
Kharg oil infrastructure struck before April 10 Week 5 Developing — Kharg Island strikes confirmed April 7 morning; extent of damage under assessment
Hormuz physically forced open by US naval action within 30 days Week 5 On Track — Naval assets in theatre; Asian nations making bilateral passage deals with Iran
Escalation to persuade, not destroy — regime cracks from within Week 6 Pending — 6 hours to run
The Framework

Adams' central observation, stated plainly in Win Bigly, is this: most people experience reality as a movie playing in their head. Facts are the set dressing. Emotion is the projector. A master persuader does not argue with the facts inside someone else's movie. A master persuader changes the movie. Everything downstream of that insight — the anchoring, the contrast reframing, the linguistic kill shots, the strategic ambiguity — follows from that single observation about how human cognition actually works versus how we prefer to believe it works.

The foreign policy establishment watches Trump's Gulf campaign and sees incoherence. The diplomatic corps sees recklessness. The market analysts see volatility. The pundit class reaches for its thesaurus of outrage synonyms and clutches its pearls so hard the string breaks. Adams — had he lived to see week six — would have watched the same events and seen a persuasion stack operating on five distinct audiences simultaneously, each receiving a different signal calibrated to their specific movie. That is what this piece attempts to document and score.

Seven techniques. Live examples from the current campaign. A score out of ten for execution. The deductions are where it gets interesting.

The Techniques
Technique 01Anchor High, Concede to Your Target
9
/ 10

Adams identified this as one of Trump's most consistently deployed tools. Open with a position so extreme that your actual objective — which is itself aggressive — reads as a reasonable compromise. The brain evaluates relative position, not absolute position. If your opening bid is the complete destruction of Iran's oil infrastructure and the seizure of Kharg Island, then "reopen the Strait and accept revenue oversight" looks like a magnanimous middle ground rather than the substantial concession it actually is.

The execution is close to textbook. "Complete demolition." "Living in hell." "A whole civilization will die tonight." These are not rhetorical accidents or presidential incontinence. They are anchor placements. The extreme ceiling means any deal, however disadvantageous to Tehran, registers as relief rather than defeat in the audience's head. The Iranian street, the Gulf markets, and the international press all consumed the anchor before the actual ask was tabled. By the time the envoys were in the room discussing terms, the frame was already built. That is not incoherence. That is sequencing. The pearl-clutching about the language is not a moral response to something incoherent — it is the technique working as designed on the people doing the clutching.

Adams called this "starting at the extreme" — the final deal is always evaluated against the stated opening bid, not against an objective baseline. The audience cannot help it. That is how the brain works.
Technique 02Contrast Reframing
8
/ 10

The brain does not evaluate absolute states. It evaluates change. "Living in hell" on Sunday followed by "good chance of a deal" on Monday does not read as contradiction to the audience consuming it. It reads as progress — even when the military posture has not moved an inch. The de-escalation is fictional. The relief it generates is real.

Watch the market data alongside the Truth Social timeline and the mechanism is visible. Each aggressive post compresses Brent upward. Each conciliatory one brings it back down. The swing is not erratic behaviour from a man who cannot decide what he wants. It is a throttle deployed within the same news cycle, manufacturing a contrast that makes the prior baseline feel like generosity. Adams documented this exact technique during the first-term trade negotiations: escalate to a crisis, retreat to the status quo, receive credit for de-escalation. The journalists calling it "unpredictable policymaking" are the technique working on them in real time.

Deduction: repetition degrades power. The deadline extension cycle has now run often enough that markets have started pricing the pattern rather than the individual headline. The contrast mechanism still functions but at reduced amplitude each iteration.
Technique 03Strategic Ambiguity as Negotiating Weapon
9
/ 10

Adams' formulation: a predictable negotiator gets anchored against. An unpredictable one forces the other side to negotiate against the worst-case scenario in their own head. Since the worst case in anyone's imagination is typically more extreme than anything the other party actually intends, strategic ambiguity extracts concessions that explicit threats cannot.

Tehran does not know which Trump shows up tomorrow. That is not an accident. The ambiguity is load-bearing structural architecture. Iran's negotiating team has to price in a genuine probability of full infrastructure destruction at every decision point — whether the strike ever happens or not. Pure persuasion operating at near-zero kinetic cost. Adams wrote about this in the North Korea context: the same ambiguity forced Pyongyang to negotiate against their worst-case imagination rather than against stated policy. The analysts calling it recklessness are, once again, the technique working on them.

The technique Adams would have admired most. Maintained consistently across six weeks without resolution — operationally difficult to sustain. One mark deducted: the Kharg strikes this morning are the ambiguity beginning to convert into action, which changes the dynamic in ways that are not yet fully priced.
Technique 04Writing the Other Side's Domestic Narrative
9
/ 10

The most sophisticated technique on this list and the most thoroughly missed by conventional analysis. When Trump publicly refers to a "new and more reasonable regime" in Tehran, he is not making an observation. He is constructing a usable story for Iran's new Supreme Leader to tell domestically when he eventually accepts terms.

The structural problem for any Iranian leadership accepting a deal is the domestic narrative of capitulation. You cannot open a new tenure with surrender. Adams identified this pattern explicitly: the master persuader solves the other side's face-saving problem before the negotiation concludes, so the path to yes is already paved when both parties need it. "New and more reasonable regime" gives Iran's leadership a frame they can use: we are not the old guard, we negotiated differently, we got the bombs stopped. Trump writes that narrative in advance and leaves it on the table. Whether Tehran picks it up is their decision. That it exists at all is the persuasion. The commentators complaining that the statement is factually misleading have once again missed the point entirely.

Adams called this "making the other side look good while they give you what you want." Full deduction comes only if Tehran declines to use the narrative — which remains, as of the deadline hour, an open question.
Technique 05Identifying the Real Audience
8
/ 10

Adams was adamant on this: the persuasion is never aimed at the obvious target. Amateur persuaders talk to the person in front of them. Master persuaders talk to the audience that person is accountable to. The Gulf campaign's primary persuasion target is not the Supreme Leader. It is the Iranian street — the people whose tolerance for continued hardship sets the domestic ceiling for how long leadership can sustain resistance.

"The bombs stop, the sanctions lift, the oil flows, your people can eat." That message is calibrated for an Iranian public enduring both the regime and the war simultaneously. The air campaign is the coercion layer. This is the persuasion layer running in parallel. Iran's deputy sports minister calling on young Iranians to form human chains around power plants is a sign the persuasion layer is landing — the regime itself is now conducting counter-persuasion against its own population, which is a significant tell about where the domestic pressure is building.

Deduction for tone bleed: "a whole civilization will die tonight" reads to ordinary Iranians as threat, not as an offer of relief. Adams would have noted the need to keep the coercive register (aimed at leadership) cleanly separated from the offering register (aimed at the public). The two are running on top of each other.
Technique 06The Firehose of Uncertainty as Price Management
7
/ 10

This is the technique the financial press keeps misreading as the behaviour of a man who cannot help himself. Trump is running a military campaign, a negotiation, and a commodity price desk simultaneously through a social media account, and the oscillation between registers is doing work on all three fronts. A post threatening Kharg destruction moves Brent to a level that creates domestic inflation pressure. Walking it back relieves that pressure. The ambiguity is a throttle, not a spasm.

Adams documented the media's consistent misreading of first-term volatility as incompetence when it was deliberate noise management. Full application here. Analysts quoted this week describe the approach as "headline-driven, unpredictable, and designed to apply maximum pressure quickly" — accurate as description, but missing the simultaneous price management function the unpredictability serves. The two objectives are not in tension. They are the same instrument played at different frequencies for different audiences at the same time.

The lowest score on this list for a real reason: the mechanism is degrading. When the noise becomes legible, it loses persuasive power. The Kharg strikes this morning may be partly a response to exactly that degradation — converting the threat into action to restore credibility the repetition had eroded. A persuader who has to stop persuading and start hitting has reached the limit of the technique.
Technique 07Social Proof via Demonstrated Template
8
/ 10

Adams wrote extensively about social proof as a persuasion instrument — not the manufactured kind, but the kind that comes from verifiable historical precedent the audience can confirm independently. The Iraq and Venezuela templates do that work in this campaign. Baghdad's oil revenues have cleared through New York since 2003. Maduro is in a Manhattan courtroom. Both facts are publicly verifiable, which is precisely the source of their persuasive weight.

The implicit message to Tehran is not "this is what we will do to you." It is "this is what we do." The pattern exists. It has been applied twice. It is being applied a third time. An explicit threat requires you to trust the persuader. A demonstrated template requires nothing — the audience reaches the conclusion independently using their own research, which means they own the conclusion. Adams called this the most durable form of persuasion: the kind that requires no trust in the persuader because the evidence does the work entirely on its own.

Deduction for completion gap only. The Iraq template took twenty years. Venezuela took months. Iran is in weeks. The pattern is clear but the conclusion has not yet closed, which leaves residual doubt about whether this iteration follows the same arc to the same end.
Technique 08The Pre-Built Exit Ramp
9
/ 10

This one is not in Adams. I have looked, and it is not there — at least not named and isolated as a distinct technique. What follows is my own observation, offered with the appropriate humility that comes from extending a dead man's framework without his permission.

The conventional reading of Trump's IEEPA tariff architecture is that it was a strategic instrument that got legally struck down — a tool deployed, tested, and then broken by the Supreme Court. The SCOTUS ruling is filed under "setbacks" by most analysts. I think this reading is wrong, and the error is consequential.

Trump chose the IEEPA route knowing it was legally fragile. There are other instruments — Section 232, Section 301, Section 122 — that are more legally durable but slower, more constrained, and far less dramatic in deployment. He did not reach for those first. He reached for the instrument that could be turned on and off at maximum speed, that could be raised and lowered within a news cycle, and that was visibly, provably contested at the highest levels of the American legal system. That visibility was not a liability. It was the point.

A legally contested instrument that survives creates more persuasive pressure than a legally settled one — because the other side can see the fight happening in real time and cannot be sure where it ends. And a legally contested instrument that eventually falls gives you something no negotiator normally gets: a clean, external, blameless exit. The Supreme Court stopped me. I tried. We move to the next instrument. No capitulation, no credibility loss, no admission that the original pressure was not working. The retreat looks like someone else's fault because it is, technically, someone else's fault.

The chaos of the tariff wars — the to-and-fro, the raises, the pauses, the country-by-country carve-outs, the constant motion — was not the strategy misfiring. It was the strategy functioning as a maximum-pressure chaos generator with a pre-installed abort mechanism. You pick the path with the most visible fights precisely because visible fights create leverage on the way in and a defensible stopping point on the way out. The legal fragility was the feature.

Score of 9 rather than 10 because the replacement instruments — Section 122 with its 150-day ceiling, the more constrained 232 and 301 tools — are less flexible than the original. The exit ramp was clean. The road it leads to is narrower. A truly perfect version of this technique would have the replacement instrument ready to deploy at equivalent intensity the same week the original falls. That has not yet happened.
"Unfortunately, there are effective people that we don't like. And if you're just looking at the tools and you can hold your nose and say, 'What can I learn?' — then you can learn."
— SCOTT ADAMS, WIN BIGLY
The Scorecard
Persuasion TechniqueScore
Anchor High, Concede to Your Target9 / 10
Contrast Reframing8 / 10
Strategic Ambiguity as Negotiating Weapon9 / 10
Writing the Other Side's Domestic Narrative9 / 10
Identifying the Real Audience8 / 10
Firehose of Uncertainty as Price Management7 / 10
Social Proof via Demonstrated Template8 / 10
The Pre-Built Exit Ramp — original observation, not in Adams 9 / 10
Overall Persuasion Execution8.4 / 10
Eight techniques, seven from Adams, one my own. The overall score moves to 8.4 — not because the tariff chaos was a strength the previous analysis missed, but because what looked like a stumble on closer inspection is a pre-designed feature. A persuader who builds his own exit ramp into every instrument he deploys is harder to beat than one who simply deploys instruments and hopes. The pattern legibility deduction still stands. The SCOTUS deduction does not.
A Note on What Looked Like a Stumble

Most analysis of the SCOTUS IEEPA ruling filed it as a setback — the tariff weapon dismantled, the economic lever weakened, the persuasion stack running short a tool. I held that view in an earlier draft of this piece. I no longer hold it, and Technique 08 above is the explanation for why.

The tariff chaos was not an instrument that misfired. It was an instrument that performed its full function and then exited cleanly through a pre-built door. The to-and-fro, the country-by-country carve-outs, the raises and pauses, the constant motion — that was not the strategy struggling to find coherence. That was a maximum-pressure chaos generator running at full output while simultaneously signalling to every counterparty that the pressure could stop at any moment. The legal fragility of IEEPA was not a flaw in the design. It was load-bearing. A legally settled instrument creates predictable pressure. A legally contested instrument creates unpredictable pressure plus a watching audience that cannot be sure where it ends.

And when the SCOTUS ruling came, it was not a loss. It was the exit ramp being used. No capitulation. No admission that the original pressure was not working. No credibility deducted. The Court stopped it — which is, technically, true, and technically someone else's responsibility. Adams would have admired the construction of that. He might even have named it. He did not live to see it.

The Final Observation

Adams' deepest point was not about Trump specifically. It was about the structural asymmetry between a player who understands that persuasion is the game and players who believe facts and logic are the game. You cannot win a persuasion contest by being more factually correct. You can only win it by understanding which contest you are in.

The foreign policy establishment, the diplomatic corps, and most of the international press are still filing dispatches about the game they think they are watching — a conventional negotiation where stated positions reflect actual intentions and deadlines reflect genuine decision points. They are watching the wrong movie. The movie actually playing is a persuasion campaign in which the military action, the Truth Social posts, the commodity prices, the face-saving narratives, and the historical templates are all instruments in a single integrated system aimed at one outcome: control over where the money from the oil goes. The underpants-in-a-twist brigade complaining about the language and the pearl-clutchers fretting about norms are not engaging with something incoherent. They are responding exactly as they are intended to respond to something working precisely as designed.

Whether that outcome is good for the world is a separate question, and a more important one. But understanding the mechanism is a prerequisite for any serious analysis of whether it will succeed — and what comes next when it does.

I wish Scott Adams were alive to write this piece better than I have.

— ✦ —

Wednesday, April 01, 2026

Weekly update - The Mad King May Burn It All - And It Is Planned

Week 5: The Mad King May Burn It All — And It Is Planned
People are dying. Millions have been displaced. Ordinary families across the Gulf cannot afford cooking gas. Sailors on both sides are not coming home. Ships are burning. I am aware of all of this. I choose to write commentary and model the system, not because the human cost is invisible to me, but because that is the specific contribution I can make. If that framing bothers you, close the tab. If you are still here, let us get to it.

The Mad King, For Those Who Did Not Watch The Show

Game of Thrones. The Mad King is Aerys Targaryen, ruler of Westeros, who in his final moments facing certain defeat gave one order: burn it all. Wildfire caches beneath the city. Let me rule the ashes or rule nothing.

The phrase entered the vocabulary as shorthand for a specific decision logic. If I cannot have it on my terms, I will destroy it before anyone else gets it. It is not madness in the clinical sense. It is a coherent negotiating position taken to its terminal extreme. The threat only works if people believe you would actually do it.

Trump is not Aerys. But he is running the same logic on the energy infrastructure of the Middle East, and unlike Aerys, he has the Air Force to back it up.

Prediction Tracker

A note before the table. This section exists because some readers expressed discomfort when the original predictions began landing too quickly. The feedback, charitably paraphrased, was that nobody wants to see geopolitical suffering turned into a scorecard. I understand the sentiment. I disagree with the conclusion. Models that are never tested are not models. They are just prose. The scorecard stays.

Prediction Made Status Notes
US objective is energy revenue control, not regime change This post Pending The thesis of this piece
Hormuz reopens within 60 days of Feb 28 Week 1 On track April 6 deadline, deal language getting specific
Iran accepts post-war revenue oversight framework This post Pending New Supreme Leader as wild card
Redollarization accelerates as Axis fractures Week 1 Confirmed Dedollarization narrative structurally broken
US GDP pulls away from China through 2027 Week 1 On track Gulf energy costs a direct headwind for Chinese manufacturing
2026 as Axis of Resistance high-water mark Week 1 On track Proxy network operationally hollow
New Middle East, no Iranian veto Week 1 On track Proxy degradation data holds
Four-week resolution as modal scenario Week 1 Wrong Off the table. Underpriced a new Supreme Leader's need to not open with surrender

The one miss is the timeline. The thesis is intact. I underpriced the structural reality that a new ruler cannot open with capitulation. That is not a political observation. That is physics.

The Play

Stop trying to understand what is happening in the Gulf through the lens of democracy promotion, nuclear non-proliferation, or the rules-based international order. That is all set dressing.

The United States is running a global energy control play. The offer on the table, in every theatre, is the same one. Let us sit between you and your oil revenues, or we remove your ability to have oil revenues at all. There is no third option. There has not been one for a while. We just stopped pretending recently.

Iraq. The Template.

Since 2003, Iraq's oil cheques have gone to an account in New York. Not a metaphor. Literally. The oil money of a sovereign OPEC nation lands at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York before Baghdad sees a cent. When Iraq formally asked American troops to leave in 2020, Washington picked up the phone and explained what would happen to that account. Baghdad reconsidered.

Oil is ninety percent of the Iraqi state budget. Salaries, schools, hospitals, all of it. You want to pay your teachers this month? You need Washington's goodwill. That is not leverage. That is a leash with a very polite name.

And now, quietly, while everyone watches the airstrikes, the same script is running on repeat. Sanction the current owner into the ground. Watch the asset become distressed. Watch a Washington-connected firm appear at the door with a cheque. Watch the Treasury approve the paperwork. Watch the flag change. Funny how that works, every single time, in every single country.

Venezuela. The Template, Accelerated.

Maduro captured. Transferred to New York. On trial.

Venezuelan oil now moves through US-controlled accounts. The ships were seized. The proceeds go where Washington directs. The head of state is in a Manhattan courtroom.

Iraq took twenty years to build. Venezuela took months. The administration learned from the long version. You do not need a generation of nation-building. You just need to control where the money lands.

Iran. The Play In Motion.

Now look at the Gulf. Week five.

The administration is openly discussing seizing Kharg Island, through which ninety percent of Iran's crude exports flow. Trump has threatened to obliterate the oil infrastructure entirely if the Strait does not reopen. The deadline sits at April 6. At the same time, Trump posted this week that the US is in serious discussions with what he called a new and more reasonable regime.

That phrase is doing a lot of work. It means Washington has identified someone on the Iranian side willing to talk terms. The offer is already on the table. The whole question now is whether the new Supreme Leader can find a way to accept it without calling it what it is.

The offer is the same one Baghdad got. The same one Caracas got. Let us sit between you and your revenues. In return, the bombs stop, the sanctions lift, the oil flows, and your people can eat. The alternative is Kharg burning and the Strait forced open by the US Navy anyway, except now you also have no infrastructure left to negotiate with.

Iraq said yes eventually. Venezuela said yes from a Manhattan jail. The question for Iran is only when.

The Plaza Accord Where The Other Party Is Not In The Room

In 1985, the US corralled France, Germany, Japan and the UK into a hotel in New York and negotiated a coordinated dollar devaluation. It worked because all five parties wanted a version of the deal and all five were in the room.

What is being constructed now is a Plaza Accord where the most important counterparty, China, has not been invited and is not expected to show up. The US is not negotiating with the major dollar holder. It is negotiating with the oil producers. Control the spigot, control the price, control who gets energy and on what terms, and you have done a trade rebalancing without Beijing ever needing to sign anything. You do not need China in the room if you are holding the tap that feeds Chinese factories.

The Iran campaign is not separate from the broader economic play. It is the same play on a different board. Squeeze China on trade from one direction and squeeze the energy supply that runs Chinese manufacturing from the other. The 1985 version required cooperation. This version requires nothing from China at all, because the coercion is structural rather than negotiated. That is a more dangerous design. Cooperative parties can signal when something is going wrong. Structural coercion has no such feedback mechanism.

The Noise Is The Tool

One more thing before the numbers. All the oscillation, the 48-hour ultimatums, the deadline extensions, the Truth Social posts swinging between great progress and I will obliterate everything within the same news cycle, none of it is erratic. It is active commodity price management.

Blow up Kharg in one post and Brent goes to $150 and you have a domestic inflation crisis before the midterms. Walk it back and Brent settles. Extend the deadline and the market breathes. The noise is a throttle. Trump is simultaneously running a military campaign, a negotiation, and a commodity price desk, and the ambiguity is doing the work on all three fronts at once.

The selective access for Chinese ships through Hormuz fits the same logic. It looks like a concession to Beijing. It is price suppression. Letting some supply move keeps the global price from going fully vertical while the broader squeeze holds. And China is getting the oil on American sufferance, which means Washington is deciding whether China gets the oil. That is not a concession. That is the same leash, just a longer one, on a larger dog.

Probability Tracker

Week 5. Previous week in brackets.

Scenario Probability Move
Negotiated deal, Hormuz reopens, Iran accepts revenue oversight framework 45% +15 from 30%
Extended conflict, partial normalisation, no clean end state 30% unchanged
Kharg oil infrastructure destroyed, Hormuz forced open by US Navy 15% -10 from 25%
Full Kharg seizure, ground operation, US forces on Iranian soil 7% -3 from 10%
Catastrophic escalation, regional war, third-party entry 3% -2 from 5%

What moved the numbers: deal language has gotten specific in a way that vague posturing does not. The April 6 extension rather than a strike order reads as a side that wants the exit ramp. Kharg infrastructure intact is a chip to trade. Kharg burning is a long reconstruction problem that makes the post-war revenue deal much harder to structure. Both sides appear to understand this.

Kharg oil infrastructure destroyed before April 10 20% before April 6. Rises to 55% if no deal by then.
Hormuz physically forced open by US naval action within 30 days 70%. The assets in theatre are not there for the weather.

Monday, March 23, 2026

Weekky update: where I was wrong, some debunks and how I made some money from the war

22 March 2026 Geopolitics & Economics Week 1 model update

A week ago I wrote that the US had structurally already won the Iran war. Five predictions, three-year horizon, go check back and hold me accountable. My working model going in had a four-week resolution as the modal scenario. That is now off the table. But I want to do something slightly different this week before getting to the probability update — because there are two narratives circulating in the press that are not just wrong, they are wrong in ways that reveal exactly how little the commentariat understands about how American military power actually works. Let us deal with those first.


Debunk #1: India Is "Non-Aligned." Its Samosas Say Otherwise.

Narrative being sold
"India is playing both sides. It won't condemn Iran. It has strategic autonomy. It is the classic non-aligned balancing act."

This is the foreign policy commentator's favourite India take. India condemned strikes on American bases without naming Iran. Modi met Gulf leaders. Congress called the trip to Israel "humiliating." The External Affairs Ministry asked all three parties for a ceasefire. Non-aligned, balancing, strategic autonomy — the usual vocabulary.

Meanwhile, in the real world: 90% of India's LPG imports pass through the Strait of Hormuz. India is the world's second-largest LPG importer. It produces about 40% of what it consumes domestically. The rest comes through that 21-mile chokepoint that Iran controls at both ends. When the Strait closed on March 1, India did not have a strategic reserve worthy of the name — roughly 25 days of crude, 10 days of LNG. The LPG crisis hit within the first week. Commercial gas cylinder prices in Karnataka shot above ₹5,000. Hotels and restaurants across Chennai, Bengaluru, Mumbai began shutting or scaling back. The government invoked the Essential Commodities Act. It asked Coal India — a coal company — to supply fuel to restaurants.

And here is the part that makes the "strategic autonomy" framing completely collapse: a US LPG tanker, the Pyxis Pioneer, loaded at Port of Nederland, Texas, docked at New Mangalore Port this morning. It departed February 14 — two weeks before the war began — carrying 16,714 tonnes of LPG for Aegis Logistics. Two more US-origin tankers are already inbound: the Apollo Ocean due March 25 with 26,687 tonnes for IOC and BPCL, and a third vessel March 29 with 30,000 tonnes for HPCL. India has signed contracts to import 2.2 million tonnes of LPG annually from the United States. The cargo sailed via the Cape of Good Hope, bypassing Hormuz entirely — loaded in Texas, unloaded in Mangaluru, no Iran permission required anywhere in that supply chain.

India's diplomatic posture is non-aligned. India's energy supply chain is telling a different story. You cannot cook a samosa on a press statement. The rupee has weakened to a record low of ₹92.34 to the dollar. Every barrel of replacement crude that comes from the US, Russia, or Norway instead of the Gulf costs more and lands the bill directly in Indian households. The strategic autonomy crowd should explain how that works in practice when your cooking gas comes from Texas.

This is not a criticism of India. It is a description of the structural reality the "both sides" framing papers over. India is being hurt by this war. It is buying American LPG to survive it. The geopolitical balance sheet does not lie even when the diplomatic communiqués do.


Debunk #2: The Okinawa Move Is Not What You Think It Is. On Either Reading.

Narrative being sold
"The US has pulled the 31st MEU from Okinawa, creating a dangerous gap in Pacific defences. And/or: this is slow-moving evidence of a coming ground invasion of Iran."

Two contradictory narratives, both wrong, both running simultaneously in different parts of the press. Let us take them in order.

The "Pacific gap" panic. The 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit — 2,200 troops based in Okinawa — departed March 11 aboard the USS Tripoli. The ship was tracked through the South China Sea, past Singapore, heading for the Middle East. Security analysts in Tokyo and Canberra immediately raised alarms about the gap left in Pacific defences. Some quoted Japan treaty obligations. Some worried about China and North Korea.

Here is the thing those analysts are not telling you. A C-17 Globemaster can put a company of troops anywhere on earth within 24 hours. The US Air Force operates roughly 220 of them. The entire 31st MEU — 2,200 troops with equipment — can be airlifted back to Okinawa, or anywhere else in the Pacific, faster than a Chinese or North Korean planning cycle can mature into an operational order. The ship takes two weeks to sail from Okinawa to the Gulf. C-17s do not. The "gap" framing assumes the only way to reinforce the Pacific is to keep assets physically parked in Okinawa. That is not how global airlift works. Okinawa is not a gap. It is a redeployment. There is a difference.

The "ground invasion" speculation. The other reading — that this MEU signals imminent boots-on-ground in Iran — is equally off. An MEU is a rapid-response raiding force, not an occupation army. 2,200 troops can seize a port, conduct a coastal raid, execute a non-combatant evacuation, or open a breach through which larger forces follow. They cannot hold Iranian territory. They cannot sustain a prolonged fight. If Trump wanted ground forces in the Gulf by next Tuesday, he would not be sailing a ship from Okinawa. He would be calling AMC and ordering C-17 sorties. The fact that this force is travelling by sea — a two-week journey — is itself evidence that this is positioning and optionality, not an imminent invasion timeline.

What the Okinawa move actually tells you: the administration is expanding its option set for Hormuz operations — coastal raids on Iranian fortifications, convoy escort surge capacity, amphibious contingencies for Kharg Island or other chokepoint infrastructure. The MEU is there to give the theatre commander more tools. It is not there because a ground invasion is scheduled. And it is not leaving a defenceless Pacific behind. The press is managing to get both the Pacific story and the ground troops story wrong at the same time, which is an achievement of sorts.


Now: What Has Actually Happened This Week

📍 Live tracking: iranstrikemap.com — the map I use daily. Everything below sourced from there and verified against open reporting.

Day 22. The conflict footprint has expanded beyond what most pre-war models — including mine — had sketched.

Hormuz: still closed. 21 confirmed attacks on commercial vessels and offshore infrastructure since March 1. Maritime threat level across the Gulf, Hormuz, and Gulf of Oman remains officially "critical." Iran has allowed exactly two Indian-flagged LPG vessels to transit — a political gesture, not a reopening. Everything else is being routed around the Cape of Good Hope or is sitting in anchorage.

The regional spread. Bahrain has intercepted 143 missiles and 242 drones since February 28. Saudi Arabia shot down 47 drones in a three-hour window over its eastern oilfields. Kuwait's Mina al-Ahmadi refinery — 730,000 barrels per day of processing capacity — was struck and caught fire. Iran fired two ballistic missiles at Diego Garcia, the US-UK base in the Indian Ocean, 4,000 kilometres away. This is not a localised Gulf conflict anymore. It is a multi-theatre campaign.

Tehran on Nowruz. Bombs fell on Iran's capital during the country's most important national holiday. The new Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei — not yet seen in public since his father was killed in the February 28 strike — had a written statement read on Iranian state television calling the campaign a "gross miscalculation" and praising Iranian steadfastness. That is face-saving language. But face-saving language from a new leader who needs to establish legitimacy is harder to trade away than face-saving language from an entrenched one. That matters for the off-ramp calculus.

Trump's 48-hour ultimatum. As of this morning, Trump has threatened to obliterate Iran's power plants unless the Strait is fully reopened within 48 hours. Iran's response: any strike on energy or water infrastructure will trigger retaliation against regional energy assets. We are now at the point where both sides are explicitly threatening civilian infrastructure. That is not a de-escalation posture.

Mixed messages from Washington. On Friday, Trump posted that the US was "getting very close to meeting our objectives" and considering winding down. The same day, the administration announced 2,500 additional marines deploying to the region and asked Congress for more war funding. "Winding down" and "more troops, more money" are not the same sentence. The administration is managing a domestic political audience and an operational military reality simultaneously. This is normal. It is not a contradiction worth much analysis on its own.


The Ford: A Ship, A Fire, And A Question Nobody Wants To Answer

The USS Gerald R. Ford — $13 billion, the most advanced warship ever built — caught fire on March 12 in its main laundry spaces. The blaze took over 30 hours to extinguish. More than 600 sailors lost their sleeping quarters. The ship has limped to Souda Bay, Crete for repairs, leaving the USS Abraham Lincoln as the only carrier active in the Red Sea theatre.

The US Navy is formally investigating whether the fire was deliberately set by its own crew.

Here is the context: the Ford left Norfolk on June 24, 2025. It was redirected to the Caribbean for the Venezuela operation. Then again to the Mediterranean. Then to the Red Sea for Operation Epic Fury. The crew was told in February they would be home by early March. Less than 12 hours later, that changed. By early May, the deployment could hit 330 days — longer than any carrier deployment since the Vietnam War. The Chief of Naval Operations had said explicitly in January he did not want to extend the Ford. The sewage system has been broken for most of the deployment, documented in FOIA requests obtained by NPR.

Whether or not sabotage is confirmed, the fact that it is plausible enough to investigate is itself a strategic data point. Morale is a supply chain. It can be exhausted. Wars of attrition are not decided only by missiles and oil prices. They are decided by which side runs out of will first — and will lives not in governments but in the people operating the equipment. A sailor on a $13 billion warship with broken toilets, nine months from home, who was told twice he was going home and twice told to keep sailing — that sailor is a data point the model needs to account for.


The Signals

Confirming the thesis

Oil at $112, Goldman projecting elevated prices through 2027 — structural energy advantage playing out
US LPG tanker docked in Mangaluru today — Hormuz bypass supply chain operational, Texas to India via Cape of Good Hope
19 ships, 1 submarine, ~2,000 targets destroyed — proxy network degradation on schedule
China delaying Xi summit — reading weakness, not projecting strength
Sanctions waiver on Iranian oil already at sea — US playing the macro board while fighting the tactical one

Moving the timeline out

Hormuz still closed week three — stickier than modelled
Mojtaba Khamenei off-ramp calculus unreadable — new leader, legitimacy to establish, harder to do a deal
Iran still generating salvo-rate strikes after three weeks — stockpile depth underestimated
Ford out of theatre — Red Sea carrier gap until Crete repairs complete
Non-market oil interventions (SPR, Jones Act waiver, sanctions relief) damped near-term energy trade upside

The Probability Update

The four-week scenario is dead. Here is where the model now sits:

Resolution in 6–8 weeks was: modal ~30% 55%
Negotiated pause, ceasefire, or military objectives declared met
Extended conflict 8–16 weeks new branch 30%
Partial Hormuz normalisation, attrition continues, no clean end state
Significant escalation new branch 15%
Ground operation, third-party entry, or civilian infrastructure exchange

What moved the numbers: Iran's ability to sustain salvo-rate strikes into week three indicates stockpile depth the pre-war consensus missed. The Mojtaba Khamenei factor is a genuine wild card — a new Supreme Leader reading his own situation as requiring defiance, not accommodation. And Hormuz has proven more durable as a leverage point than "Iran will exhaust its coercion quickly" models assumed.

None of that changes the strategic thesis. It changes the clock.


The Trade: What Happened

Two positions going in. The thesis and outcome are on the table. Sizes and instruments are not.

Energy exposure. The thesis: market was underpricing Hormuz closure duration, and domestic US supply chain names would benefit disproportionately versus internationally-exposed peers. Played out. Position trimmed into strength, not exited — Goldman's 2027 persistence call supports keeping residual exposure on. Trimmed, not closed.

Volatility on a defence name. The thesis: market was pricing this as a short-duration event when the real optionality — on escalation duration and the strategic procurement rethink that follows any major conflict — was being mispriced. Worked. Rolled forward.

The conceded miss. I undermodelled how aggressively the administration would manage oil prices through non-market mechanisms — SPR releases, Jones Act waivers, Iranian oil sanctions relief. That damped near-term energy upside relative to a clean free-market shock. The structural direction was right. The velocity was politically managed. Noted.


The Five Predictions: Week 1 Scorecard

On track Redollarization. Dollar strengthening into the conflict. The dedollarization narrative is losing its structural tailwinds as the axis fractures.
On track US GDP pulls away from China. Goldman's 2027 oil forecast is a direct energy-cost headwind for Chinese manufacturing. The gap is widening.
Watch 2026 as axis high-water mark. Directionally intact. Wild card: Mojtaba Khamenei as new Supreme Leader changes regime off-ramp calculus in ways not yet readable.
On track New Middle East, no Iranian veto. Proxy degradation data continues to support this. The Axis of Resistance is operationally hollow.
Pending Monroe Doctrine 2.0. No new developments this week. Slower-moving structural story — check back in a quarter.

The train is still on the same track. The track is longer than I measured. The two debunks above are not tangents — they are the model working in real time. The India LPG story is a live demonstration of what structural energy dependence on the Gulf actually looks like when the chokepoint closes. The Okinawa story is a live demonstration of how badly the press misreads American military logistics. Both matter for calibrating what comes next.

Check back next week. The map. The tree. The trade. Fire for effect.

Updated: 22 March 2026 · Week 1 model revision
Standard disclaimer: armchair strategist, no formal qualifications in economics, military strategy, or finance. This is opinion and analysis, not investment or policy advice. I have been wrong before and will be again. The trade section describes directional thesis and outcome only — no sizes, no specific instruments. Nothing here should be construed as a recommendation to buy or sell anything.