Friday, June 19, 2026

I Bring Receipts

Amusing Morose Musings · Geopolitics & Economics

Wednesday · June 17, 2026 · Gulf Conflict Series · Week 12

Disclaimer

People are dying. Families across Iran, the Gulf, and Lebanon are living through things no analytical framework can adequately price. One hundred and twenty girls went to school in Minab on the first morning of this war and did not come home. I acknowledge that, and carry it, and move on to do what I do here — which is read the mechanism.

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.

On Method Written in collaboration with my favourite LLM. Editorial direction and final judgement are mine.

A Rubin vase: the same outline reads as a goblet or as two faces in profile, depending on what the eye holds as figure.

Rubin's vase, 1915. The same outline is a goblet or two faces. Nothing in the ink changes. Only the eye moves.

Two films are playing on one screen. One is America winning a war. The other is Iran winning the same war. Same footage, same fourteen points, same dead. Which one you see depends on what your eye holds as the figure and what it lets fall to the back.

And the trap is sharper than it looks. The two films do not come from the facts being unclear. They come from the certainty each mind brings to them. A fully known, run-of-the-mill truth still splits into two pictures, one for each conviction. The ambiguity is never in the ink. It is in the eye that is sure.

Scott Adams names the only way out, and it is the method this blog already runs on. You cannot win a figure-ground war from the inside, because being surer of what you see only paints the other film brighter. So you stop arguing the image. You make each film say what it predicts next, out loud and in advance, and you write it down. Then the tracker does what the eye cannot. It waits. The screen holds one face only when the predictions come due. You do not resolve what you see by seeing harder. You make the prediction and you keep the receipt.

I will tell you which film I see. But the screen waits on the predictions, and the predictions wait on the record. So first I answer for everything I said before this picture was developed. First the receipts.

The text is out. The Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding was read out to reporters today, fourteen points, and the signing ceremony is Friday in Switzerland. So this is the reckoning. I made calls for eleven weeks against a deal nobody had seen. Now there is a document. This post walks five things. The misses, clean, no excuses. The timing calls I got wrong and the rule they forced. The calls that cleared against the released text. The slow ones still running on a longer clock. And the fork ahead, three movies of it, which the receipts cannot settle, because the deal is not finished.

This Is Where I Screwed The Pooch

Start with the worst one, because a receipts post that opens with a win is a victory lap, and you should close the tab on a victory lap.

Week 8. I said Trump would extract the maximum and take a clean kill. A clean jibah, the single decisive cut. I wrote it with confidence. I was wrong. The kill was dirty. It took months, not the clean stroke I described. The bull bled out slowly through a blockade and a siege and a decapitation strike, and the matador hacked where I said he would thrust. I marked it dirty in Week 9 and I am marking it dirty again here. The aesthetic call was wrong. The man does not kill clean. He grinds.

Week 10. I said the UAE backstop gets used. The oil-supply guarantee MBZ spent April positioning for. It never triggered. The deal prevented the supply spike the backstop was built to absorb, so the backstop sat there, unused. I dressed this up at the time as "latent," as a silent guarantor still doing structural work. That was me protecting a call. The honest word is unproven. The thing I predicted would happen did not happen. I do not get to keep the prediction because I can imagine a world where it mattered.

Russia. Across the IRGC and nuclear sections I put Russia as the custodian of Iran's enriched uranium at sixty percent. The released text defers the fate of the enriched material to the final deal and names no custodian at all. The option that surfaced in the briefing was down-blending the stockpile inside Iran, under inspection. If that is where it lands, the uranium never leaves, and Russia-as-custodian is a clean miss. I am not waiting for the final deal to start admitting this one is going against me. It is going against me.

Three misses. One structural, one I tried to launder, one heading for the rocks. That is the floor of this post. Everything above it now has to be earned.

The Timing Graveyard

Here is the pattern I could not see until the calls stacked up. I read structure well. I read clocks badly.

Week 1. Hormuz reopens within sixty days of February 28. Wrong. It reopens this week, in the middle of June, months past my window.

Week 1. Four-week resolution as the modal scenario. Wrong. It took fifteen.

Week 7. Brent below eighty-five by Monday. Wrong.

Week 8. Hormuz fully open within ten days of Round 2. Wrong.

Week 9. The dirty kill completes within three weeks. Structure right, timing wrong. The kill did complete. It completed nowhere near three weeks later.

Look at that column. Four outright misses and a partial, and every single one is a clock. Not one of them is a structural error. Hormuz did reopen by US naval pressure. The resolution did come on Trump's terms. The kill was dirty exactly as the partial conceded. I had the mechanism right every time and the calendar wrong every time. The bull always did what I said. He just did it on his own schedule, not mine.

This is the most useful thing the series has taught me about itself, so I want to be exact about what I did with it. In Week 10 I dropped timing windows from new predictions. Not as a dodge. As a correction to a diagnosed weakness. The matador controls the clock. Any date I attach is a guess about his preference, not a read of structural pressure, and structural pressure is the only thing I have any edge on. So the rule changed. Predictions 04 through 09 carry no dates. They cannot miss the way the early ones did, because I stopped writing the kind of claim I kept getting wrong.

The receipts prove the fix was right. Every timing miss predates the rule. Every call after it is still standing.

Where The Receipts Clear

Now the hits. With one caveat I am putting up front, because the title of this post does not permit me to hide it. The MOU is not the final deal. The signing is Friday. The text can still collapse into the second movie I describe below. So these are confirmed against a real document, not confirmed forever. Confident, not closed.

Week 10. Iran signs on Trump's terms, not Iran's. Cleared. Iran walked in with a fourteen-point maximalist brief in April: funds unfrozen up front, comprehensive sanctions relief, recognition of its regional role. The document signed this week is Trump's structure. Relief metered to performance. Nuclear deferred. No recognition language anywhere. Iran's name is on the matador's draft, not its own.

Week 1. The US objective is revenue control, not regime change. Cleared. The regime survives intact. The deal is about oil waivers, the Strait, sanctions, and a reconstruction fund. Nobody is changing the government in Tehran. They are putting it back to work selling oil under supervision.

Week 1. No Iranian veto over the new Middle East. Cleared. Paragraph 2 is mutual sovereignty and non-interference. It is not the recognition of Iran's regional standing that Iran spent eight weeks demanding. The veto Iran wanted written down is precisely the thing that is not in the text.

Week 7. The nuclear question gets framed as civilian cooperation. Cleared. Iran reiterates it will never produce a weapon. The fate of the enriched material is pushed to the final deal. The hard part is deferred and the framing is compliance, not confrontation.

The funds. Two turns of my own analysis went into a single distinction: relief for performance, Iran obeys first and gets paid later. The text splits exactly along that line. Paragraph 10 issues the oil-export waivers immediately on signing. That is Iran's fast trophy. Paragraph 11 ties the release of the frozen cash to the progress of negotiations. That is the leverage the US kept in its pocket. The quick win is the oil. The slow win is the money. Performance-first held where the money was.

And the receipt I did not have to argue for, because it is printed on the document. The thing is titled the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding. I spent Week 11 on the peón de confianza, the assistant who works the bull between passes and absorbs the wounds the matador cannot be seen taking. I named Pakistan. I named Munir. The deal is named after the mediator in its own title. I do not need to make the case. The case is the letterhead.

The $300 billion reconstruction fund is in there too, which I called as a referenced vehicle with its mechanism deferred behind the final deal. That is exactly how it sits. The fund is named. The mechanism is parked in the final agreement. And Trump said the US will not pay into it. The carrot is on the document. The cash is somebody else's and the timing is later. Collectible, not collected. That was the thesis.

Here is the full ledger as it stands today.

PredictionWeekStatus
US objective = revenue control not regime changeWk 1✓ Cleared
Hormuz reopens within 60 days of Feb 28Wk 1✗ Wrong (timing)
Iran accepts revenue oversight frameworkWk 1✓ Cleared
Redollarization acceleratesWk 1✓ On track
US GDP pulls away from China through 2027Wk 1✓ On track
2026 as Axis of Resistance high-water markWk 1✓ Cleared
New Middle East, no Iranian vetoWk 1✓ Cleared
Four-week resolution as modalWk 1✗ Wrong (timing)
Kharg struck before April 10Wk 5✓ Cleared
Hormuz forced open by US naval actionWk 5✓ Cleared
Escalation to persuade not destroyWk 6✓ Cleared
Round 1: drama onlyWk 7✓ Cleared
Pakistan announces next roundWk 7✓ Cleared
Nuclear framed as civilian cooperationWk 7✓ Cleared
Brent below $85 MondayWk 7✗ Wrong (timing)
Vance 2028, IslamabadWk 7✓ On track
Round 2 framework, ceasefire extendedWk 8✓ Cleared
Trump extracts maximum, clean JibahWk 8✗ Wrong (dirty kill)
Hormuz fully open within 10 days of Round 2Wk 8✗ Wrong (timing)
Friday market close triggerWk 9✓ Cleared
Dirty kill completes within 3 weeksWk 9◐ Structure right
GCC requests accelerated resolutionWk 9✓ Cleared
Iran signs on Trump's terms, not Iran'sWk 10✓ Cleared
The UAE backstop gets usedWk 10✗ Unproven
Iran does not use its remaining denial weaponsWk 10✓ Cleared
MOU extends beyond 60 days, repeatedlyWk 11∼ Open
Gulf coalition holds publiclyWk 11∼ Open, holding
Netanyahu stays in managed acquiescenceWk 11∼ Open, under stress
IRGC-attributable incidents accumulateWk 11∼ Open, loading
Any IRGC action framed as MOU enforcementWk 11∼ Open
Nuclear continues; Russia custody of uraniumWk 11✗ Leaning wrong

The Long Clock

Two calls on this board are not events. They are trends, and a trend does not clear on a Friday. Grading them with a tick or a cross would be the same timing error this whole post is built around. So they get a status and a tell, not a verdict.

Redollarization. On track, and strengthening. The call was that the war pulls Gulf oil revenue back under dollar supervision, against the loud story that the dollar is dying. The loud story stalled exactly there. Putin said in public that Russia never tried to abandon the dollar. India said flatly it has no policy to replace it. The Rio summit produced no currency and no plan for one. And the MOU is the call with a signature on it: oil waivers, sanctions relief, and reconstruction, all denominated in dollars, routing the crude revenue straight back through the system it was supposed to leave. The honest caveat is gold. Central banks are buying it at a pace they have not matched in years, and a rising share of trade now settles outside the dollar. So the dollar's reserve crown is secure and the call is winning. Its grip on settlement is loosening at the edges. Both are true, and I am writing both.

The US-China gap. On track, with a caveat I will state before a reader states it for me. In dollar terms the gap widened, from America being about one and a half times China's size at the start of the decade to a little over that now, and the forecasts of China overtaking keep getting pushed back. But that is the dollar talking, not the factory floor. China is still growing at roughly twice the American rate in real terms. The gap widened because the yuan is weak and American prices rose, not because America out-produced anyone. For a thesis about the dollar, that is the right lens. I am not going to dress a currency move up as a productivity verdict.

One pointer, then I move on. The longest calls I have made here are the four ten-year bets in the Supercycle piece, and they sit on a 2036 clock with no partial credit. They are six days old. There is nothing to grade and I will not pretend there is. They keep their own ledger, and they stay on it.

Three Movies On A Screen

Everything above is graded, cleared, or trending. This is none of those. Here the receipts run out and the staking begins, and I am keeping a hard line between the two. What follows is unproven. It is the fork.

Back to the two films from the top, because the image is doing real work. Picture them projected onto one screen at the same time. Every frame holds both pictures at once. Your eye can lock onto only one, and the one it locks onto feels like the whole truth of the image, though the other is sitting right there in the same light. That is what reading this war has become. One set of facts, more than one film. The MOU is on the screen. So is its opposite. The projector does not tell you which you are watching.

Three films could be playing. I lead with mine, then the one where the matador is just slower than I think, then the one where the bull won and I missed it.

The whole series has read this as one movie. The United States in control, extracting on a schedule of its choosing, the matador working a bull he has already broken. Call it Movie 1. In Movie 1 the MOU is not the end. It is the middle. The estocada that was deliberately not a kill.

That is the doctrine I want to plant this week, and the document hands me the evidence. The matador does not overpower the bull. The kill is one thrust to one spot, and Hemingway spends half his book despising the men who could not manage it and hacked the animal apart instead. Economy of force is the entire aesthetic. The MOU is that thrust. Small force, applied at the one point where the bull was already weakest, because the clock had loaded the target before the blade arrived. The 2026 campaign was not small. Decapitation strikes, a months-long blockade, a billion dollars a day. The pressure was heavy. The footprint was light. Those are different axes and the deal lives in the gap between them. Air, not boots. Standoff, not occupation. The warship pulled back out of missile range rather than daring the shot. You do not pay to take the thing. You pay to make him hand it over, and a cornered economy does the rest of the work itself.

The document writes the rest of the play into its own body. Paragraph 3 sets a sixty-day negotiation for a final deal. Paragraph 13 holds that negotiation hostage to Iran first implementing the easy clauses. Paragraph 14 says the final deal gets a binding Security Council resolution. So act three is not my invention. It is clauses 3 through 14. The hard bills are all deferred into it. The enriched material. The sanctions schedule. The reconstruction mechanism. The withdrawal of US forces, which paragraph 4 holds back until thirty days after the final deal, so the gun stays on the table through the entire window. And paragraph 12 builds an executive mechanism to monitor compliance, which is the institutional hook through which a later action against the IRGC gets framed as enforcement rather than war. The deal made the bill collectible. The text schedules the collection.

So here are the stakes, clearly marked as stakes.

Prediction 10. The MOU is not terminal. Within twelve months the framework escalates into a new coercive phase, or is renegotiated under pressure into a materially different settlement. It does not stabilise into static peace. Trump has already said the quiet part: if the final deal is not done in sixty days, in his words, we go back to bombing. Coercion resumption is stated policy. Confidence ~70%.

Prediction 11. Act three is the joint discharge. The IRGC question and the nuclear endgame, both deferred in this text, get forced toward resolution together, under coercion framed as enforcement of the MOU. Confidence ~50%.

Prediction 12. Act three does not open before the November midterms. The political cost of renewed coercion does not drop until the oil-price relief is banked as votes. Most likely the first half of 2027. Confidence ~50%.

And the falsifier I trust most, because it is the cleanest line in the series. Footprint. If the next phase is air, standoff, and framed enforcement, the doctrine holds. If US ground forces deploy into Iran to hold territory, the doctrine is wrong, flat, no wriggle room. Boots on Iranian soil is the disconfirming world. I would rather stake the whole thesis on something that simple than hide behind something that cannot be checked.

Now Movie 2, because I do not get to assume my own film. In Movie 2 there is no act three. The thing froze. Iran kept enough asymmetric capability that this settled into a cold, ugly armistice, Korea on the Gulf, durable precisely because nobody can afford to reopen it. The heavy deferral in this text cuts both ways. It can mean the hard bills are scheduled for collection. It can also mean they are never paid, the sixty days lapse into permanent extension, the bombing threat was a bluff, and Hormuz stays open over a standoff that simply never resolves. Under Movie 2, Prediction 10 fails, and "still waiting for act three" becomes the excuse that never comes due. I am not allowed that excuse. So I am naming the world that kills my call.

Two tells adjudicate Movie 1 from Movie 2, and they are the same two the series has watched all along. The Strait, and the Iranian voice. If Hormuz stays fully open and Tehran speaks with one voice through the window, that is a frozen act two, and Movie 2 is winning. If Hormuz reopening keeps slipping or stalling, and the Iranian voice fractures, the deal is dynamic, not frozen, and act three is loading. But those two tells only sort frozen from moving. They do not tell you whose win the moving one is. For that there is a third movie and a third tell.

So Movie 3. Iran won this, decisively, and everything I have called a US victory is the United States saving face on the way out. I want to give this real weight, because parts of it are sitting in the text. The regime survived an openly existential war, including a strike that killed Khamenei, and it is still standing. The enrichment program survived. The stockpile is still in the country. Iran is being paid to stop, frozen funds released, oil waivers, a reconstruction fund somebody else finances. Hezbollah survived the ceasefire Israel wanted in order to finish it. No regime change. No occupation. No boots. On that ledger Iran absorbed the worst the United States could do without ground forces, kept both crown jewels, the regime and the program, and collected on the way out. That is not a strawman. Read the fourteen points and a great deal of that world is on the page.

Now hold it to the standard, because the standard is the whole point of this blog, and most of Movie 3 does not survive it.

The people who called an Iranian victory called it in real time, and their predictions are gradeable the same way mine are. Here is roughly what they staked. Fedayeen waves, martyrdom operations against US assets and Gulf soft targets. Mass American casualties, Al Udeid and the Iraq and Syria bases turned into a ring of fire. Hormuz shut and staying shut, a chokehold strangling the world economy. Full proxy activation, Houthis and Iraqi militias and Hezbollah mobilised at once into a multi-front quagmire. Oil to a hundred and fifty, two hundred, global recession, US domestic political collapse over the price at the pump. A Saigon exit, helicopters off the roof.

Grade it. The Fedayeen wave did not come. The mass casualties did not come. Hormuz is reopening, which is an American deliverable, not an Iranian chokehold. The proxies were degraded, not activated, and Hezbollah is under a ceasefire rather than mobilised. Oil spiked and moderated. No two hundred, no recession, no political collapse. No Saigon, because US forces stay through the final deal. The loud Iranian-victory script failed almost line for line. And it failed partly because of a call I got right. Week 10, Prediction 03, Iran does not use its remaining denial weapons. Cleared. The asymmetric sword the Iran-wins camp said would do the cutting is the exact thing that never came out of the sheath. When an outcome only looks like victory after you have discarded every prediction its own believers made, that is not a reading. That is relabeling the scoreboard after the game, and the tracker exists to catch exactly that.

So the loud Movie 3 is dead on its own predictions, and I will not pretend otherwise to be fair to it. Being fair to it means grading it, and it failed.

But there is a quiet Movie 3, and the quiet one is alive, and I owe it the weight. Iran's victory condition was never kinetic. It was preservation. Survive the regime, preserve the nuclear latency, avoid the Iraq fate. On that scoring, holstering the denial weapons was not surrender. It was the strategy. Iran played rope-a-dope, soaked a brutal campaign, kept the regime and kept the program, and is being paid to stop shooting. The deferred nuclear question, which I have been reading as the matador's collectible, reads the other way in this film. It is Iran's asset. Every extension where the stockpile stays in country is a month Iran keeps its latency while banking sanctions relief. The down-blend that was floated stays cosmetic or never happens. The IRGC rides out the storm and reconsolidates. The final deal either never closes or closes on terms that leave Iran stronger than February 28, and the sanctions come off anyway. The quiet Movie 3 needs no Fedayeen. It needs one thing only. At the twelve-month mark, is Iran's strategic position better or worse than the morning the war started. If better, Iran won, however quiet the kill looked.

That version is serious and it is hard to kill, so it gets a forward tell like everything else. The discriminator is the IRGC and the uranium, watched across the next year, and it is the cleanest fork in the whole post. Movie 1, my film: the Guard gets selectively dissected, the stockpile leaves or down-blends for real under the final deal, Iran becomes the metered vassal. Movie 3, the quiet one: the Guard survives intact and reconsolidates, the uranium stays and the down-blend is theatre, the final deal leaves Iran stronger and the sanctions lift regardless. Same sixty days, opposite endings. Whether the IRGC actually loses assets in the next twelve months is the fact that decides which film I was watching.

One trap inside this, and it is the good kind. The hardliner fracture in Tehran reads opposite ways depending on the movie. Hardliners are chanting death against Araghchi and Ghalibaf in the streets this week, the Paydari Front leading it, furious at a deal the ruling elite signed because it sees the deal as survival. In my film, those chants are the regime-versus-Guard split that makes the dissection possible. In the quiet Movie 3, the same chants are theatre, the system performing rage to protect the IRGC's standing at home while it pockets the deal and works for better terms. Same footage, two films. The thing that disambiguates is not the volume of the chanting. It is brute fact. Does the Guard lose assets, or doesn't it. Until that resolves, the fracture is ambiguous evidence and I am not banking it for either side.

And the reframe that I think is the real insight, the one that makes three movies deeper than two. Who won is underdetermined because the war aims never collided on the axis everyone assumes. The American aim, by my own Week 1 thesis, was revenue control, a nuclear ceiling, and no Iranian veto. It was never regime change. Iran's aim was survival and program preservation. Those two can both be satisfied at once, because they do not sit on the same axis. So about the past, Movie 1 and the quiet Movie 3 can both be true. The US got its revenue control and its deferral. Iran got its survival and its latency. The party that wanted the thing nobody got, regime gone, program eliminated, Hezbollah destroyed, was Israel, and Israel is outside the room and furious. The loudest loser in this war may be the actor who was not at the table.

I will not let that collapse into everyone-won mush, because the past being compatible does not make the future compatible. Act three forces the choice. The IRGC and the stockpile can only go one way. The moment they move, Movie 1 and Movie 3 stop both being true and one of them becomes my next entry in the screwed-the-pooch column. I should say that plainly. If the quiet Movie 3 is the film that plays, my selective-dissection thesis is the miss, and the Guard outlasting the matador is the receipt that indicts me a year from now. I am writing the movie that, if it runs, proves me wrong. That is the price of the title.

My honest weights. The loud Movie 3 is dead, and I scored it dead. The quiet Movie 3 is live and I give it real probability, call it a third. Movie 1 is still my lead. Movie 2 is the residual, the world where nothing moves and the question never resolves. I would rather hold three films honestly than force the ending I want onto a deal that has not finished signing.

One hinge sits under all of it, and it is not Trump's to control. Israel. The framework was signed over Netanyahu's objection. He was shut out of the talks. He will not pull back from the Lebanon border. The Lebanon clause is the thing he hated most and it is in the text anyway. Act three is the matador's to direct only if Bibi does not detonate the ring first. My Week 11 call that Netanyahu stays in managed acquiescence is the load-bearing prediction for this entire three-act reading. If it fails, act three is not an extraction the matador schedules. It is a rupture somebody else triggers, on a clock the matador does not hold. That prediction is open, it is under stress, and I am watching it harder than any other line on the board.

Closing

The receipts are in, so let me say the thing I have earned the right to say, and not one word past it. I was mostly right. The mechanism calls cleared, week after week. Revenue not regime change. Hormuz forced open by naval pressure. Iran signing on Trump's terms. The peón named in the title. And where I was wrong, it was the clock far more often than the structure. Hormuz by day sixty. Four weeks. Brent by Monday. Ten days after Round 2. Wrong on when, right on what. I will not round that up to flawless, because section one of this post will not let me. The dirty kill was a structural miss. The UAE backstop never fired. Russia is going against me. Strip those three out and the pattern is plain enough to state without flinching. I read this war's mechanism well, and I could not time it to save my life. The tracker says it for me, so I do not have to oversell it.

Which leaves the picture from the top. Stare at this war and it is an American win, revenue control and a nuclear ceiling and a bull kept alive and paying rent. Shift your eye and it is an Iranian win, a regime that survived the unsurvivable and kept its program and got paid to stop. The paint is identical. The reading is a choice, and being sure of mine does not make the other face go away. I have told you which figure I see. I have also told you the one fact that overrules the eye, the Guard and the stockpile over the next year.

So I am not closing on a verdict. I am closing the way the blog always closes. The MoU is already signed. Then the sixty days start, the predictions come due, and the screen finally holds one face. I made the calls. I keep the receipt.

People are dying. Families across Iran, the Gulf, and Lebanon are living through things no analytical framework can adequately price. One hundred and twenty girls went to school in Minab on the first morning of this war and did not come home. I acknowledge that, and carry it, and move on to do what I do here — which is read the mechanism.

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 · June 2026

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Rail, gold, copper, oil, glass: Atoms before the milkshakes

Amusing Morose Musings · Economics & Technology
Supercycle Series · No. 1

Written in collaboration with my favorite LLM. Editorial direction and final judgement are mine.

Amusing Morose Musings · sweet-kandy.blogspot.com

I am addicted to predictions that land. I have said this before and the tracker keeps me honest about it. The Gulf series is a war and I read it like a war. This is something else. This is the longest call I have ever made here, and I am making it at full confidence, in absolutes, on a ten-year clock. There is no partial credit on what follows. In 2036 these are graded pass or fail. That is the point.

So here is the whole bet, up front, no working shown yet. Four calls. Read on if you want to know why I am reckless enough to make them.

One. US real output rises by fifty percent, dollar-adjusted, against a 2026 base, by 2036 but there will be a crash before that. The World Bank settles it. There is no argument about the scoreboard.

Two. The firm shrinks and work is redefined. The median firm gets smaller by headcount. Tiny firms take a rising share of output. A company worth a billion dollars ships in this window run by fewer people than a single department used to hold.

Three. The individual is multiplied. Output per person at the frontier breaks past anything the org-chart era could produce. One person does what a team did.

Four. Freedom beats the cheque. No major developed economy adopts a structural universal basic income in answer to AI unemployment within the decade. Participation does not collapse. Self-directed and solo work rises instead. The end-of-work call misses for the fourth time, and the humane response turns out to be agency, not alms.

No priorities. No percentages. No timing windows inside the decade. One clock, and it runs out in 2036. I have left myself nowhere to hide, and that is the only kind of prediction worth making. If you want to know how I get to four absolutes off a pile of rotting computer chips, read on. If you only want the scoreboard, clip this and find me in 2036.

A note before I start. While researching this, my favorite LLM introduced me to a handful of friends I should have made long ago. I am putting them up front so you can chase them down yourself. Each is worth an afternoon.

  • Carlota Perez, who wrote down the shape of these cycles.
  • Paul David, who explained why the payoff always arrives late.
  • Ronald Coase, who explained why companies exist at all.
  • Wassily Leontief, a Nobel economist who predicted the end of work and was wrong.
  • Jeremy Rifkin, who predicted it again, in a book, and was also wrong.
  • Ned Ludd, who has the oldest konwn claim to being wrong about this.

Daniel Plainview turns up too. He is fictional. You will know him when he arrives.

Here is the whole claim. Infrastructure and the services built on it move in a wave. The atoms get built first, fast and overbuilt, on money that has lost its mind. The build busts. The people who built it mostly die. Then the cheap leftover atoms power a long services boom that runs two or three times longer than the build did. We are two years into the atoms phase of the largest one of these the world has seen. I am going to tell you what the services phase does, and it is not what the clever people are telling you.

The shape is not mine. Carlota Perez wrote it down properly, and I am borrowing her frame the way I borrow Hemingway for the bull. She calls the first phase installation and the second deployment. Installation is the frenzy. Deployment is the golden age. A crash sits in between and clears out the speculators. I will use her words because they are good words. But I want to earn the optimism, so I am going to walk a few cycles where the shape held, and only then tell you the one way this one breaks the rules.

The atoms came first

Start with gold, because it is the purest version. The miners mostly went broke. The men who sold them shovels and sieves and stiff denim trousers got rich, and one of them was named Levi Strauss. You are probably wearing his idea right now. The dig is the atom. The pick and the bank that wired the money home are the services. The man who sold the shovel never once swung it.

The railways ran the same play at scale. Britain and then America laid track for half a century like men possessed. The railway mania in England was a textbook bubble. Shares in lines that would never be built. Schemes drawn over towns that did not want a station. America did it bigger, on borrowed money, and the bill came due in one panic and then another. The men who laid the track got carried out. Jay Cooke went under and took the economy with him. And then the track sat there, paid for, and the country that ran commerce over it for two generations got rich. Sears mailed a house to a farmer in Nebraska because the track existed. The builders financed the harvest. They did not eat it.

Electrification is the cycle that tells you how long the services tail really runs. Edison and Westinghouse and Insull built the grid in one long tear. The grid was made of copper, and the men who dug that copper out of Montana and Chile were not the men who got rich when the lights came on. Factories were wired early. And then, for a generation, nothing happened. Productivity did not move. Paul David worked out why. The factory did not get more productive when you dropped an electric motor where the steam engine used to sit. It got more productive when somebody finally tore the factory down and rebuilt it around the motor. The old factory was a tall building with one steam engine in the basement and shafts carrying power up through the floors. The electric motor let you put power anywhere. But you had to imagine a flat factory built around the work instead of around the driveshaft, and that took a generation to imagine. The atoms arrived. The deployment arrived twenty years later. The gap is the pattern, not an accident of it.

Oil is the one with the gusher. Spindletop blew and the world had never seen anything like it. One well in Texas produced more in a day than every other well in America combined. The derricks went up faster than anyone could drink the crude. The price fell to three cents a barrel in the fields. Three cents. Water cost more. The wildcatters drowned in their own gusher. And the men downstream, who refined it and shipped it and sold it back to you as something useful, ran the next century on it. If you have seen There Will Be Blood you have watched this happen to one man. Daniel Plainview drills the atoms, drinks everyone's milkshake, and ends up alone in a bowling alley with all the money and nothing else. He is the leveraged builder. He is every man who confused owning the well with owning the century. The refiner ate his lunch and slept fine.

Oil shows one more thing, which I will need later. The drilling moved. Pennsylvania, then Texas, then out of the country entirely, to the Gulf and the Caspian and Arabia. It went where the rock was cheap and the labor cheaper, but only after the easy domestic oil got expensive and tapped. The work left home late, not early. Hold that.

Highways are the cycle where the state laid the atoms. The American government poured the interstate system across the country in a few decades, the largest public works anyone had attempted. The road is the atom. The state laid it and the state did not get rich. What got rich was everything the road made possible. Suburbia. Trucking. The shopping mall. The motel. The drive-through hamburger that only works if a family has a car and a road and a reason to be on it. Walmart is a logistics company that happens to sell things, and it cannot exist without a road the government paid for. The builders laid the atoms. The truckers and the retailers drank the milkshake.

The car itself ran the loop on a delay. America built the car at home, at the fat margins of Detroit, while the skill was scarce and the union strong. Then the skill hardened into a process, and a process can be shipped, and the car went to Japan once Detroit got slow and sure it would always win. Premium at home, then offshore once it commoditized. Same shape, one layer up.

Glass is the one you remember. The telecom companies laid fiber across the oceans and under every American street as if bandwidth were about to become oxygen. WorldCom. Global Crossing. They borrowed to do it, they lied about the demand, and most of what they laid was dark, meaning lit by nobody. Then the whole thing fell over. Global Crossing went bankrupt. WorldCom went to prison. The greatest overbuild of atoms in living memory, and the men who did it got nothing.

And then the glass sat there. It did not rot. And over the next twenty years somebody lit it. That dark fiber is why you stream video. It is why the cloud exists. It is why a website in California serves a customer in Lagos without anyone thinking about it. Google did not lay that fiber. Netflix did not lay that fiber. They lit it. They drank the milkshake the dead men drilled.

That is the bench. Gold, rail, copper, oil, the road, glass. The shape holds every time. Atoms first, overbuilt, on bad money. A crash that kills the builders. Then a deployment phase, longer than the build, where different people get rich off infrastructure they never paid for.

The part nobody says out loud

Now the second act, because it is the most consistent signal in the pattern.

The services run at home first, while the margins are fat. A new industry pays its people well because the work is hard and the people who can do it are rare. Detroit paid the autoworker a wage that built a house and a boat. American programmers priced themselves like surgeons. The premium is real and it lasts exactly as long as the skill is scarce.

Then the skill stops being scarce. The work gets written down into a process. A process can be taught, and a process taught can be shipped. The moment the home version gets expensive enough, the work leaves. Cars to Japan. Software to India. Call centers, back offices, tax returns, X-ray reading, all of it, and it left late. Offshoring is not how a cycle begins. It is how you know a cycle has aged into a commodity.

And here is the loop closing. Remember the dead fiber. The same glut that bankrupted WorldCom is the reason the work could leave at all. You cannot run a Bangalore office for an Ohio insurer until transoceanic bandwidth is nearly free. The bankrupt builders made it free. The fiber glut built the Indian services economy. One cycle's overbuild becomes the next country's livelihood, and the bridge between them is the bankruptcy of the men who laid the glass.

That is the full pattern. Atoms at home. Crash. Services at home while premium. Commoditization. Offshore. Repeat. It has run for two centuries and I would have bet on it running again.

I am about to bet on it breaking.

Where we are now

Two years ago this started. The hyperscalers began spending money that does not look like technology money anymore. It looks like utility money. It looks like the railways. The five biggest are now guiding past six hundred billion dollars in a single year, three quarters of it AI, and the whole effort is running near five percent of American output, larger than the fiber overbuild and larger than the electrification peak. They are funding it with debt now, because the spending has run past what they earn. This is the railway mania with better balance sheets. For now.

So the installation phase is here and it is enormous, and on that everyone agrees. The argument is only about what comes after. I am going to give you the after. But first, the one rule this cycle does not obey.

The thing that breaks

Every cycle I walked built atoms that lasted. That is the reason deployment worked.

The canal lasts a century. The railway lasts longer. The grid runs fifty years on the same copper. The glass laid in the boom was still carrying your video twenty years on. The atom waited patiently for demand to arrive and find it. That patience is what let deployment run two and three times longer than the build. The infrastructure could wait because it did not decay while it waited.

The AI atom does not wait. A GPU loses about a fifth of its value every year and is economically dead in three or four. The chip you buy today is a paperweight before deployment has properly begun. The hyperscalers are about to carry depreciation larger than their profit. They are not building a railway. They are building a railway that rusts to nothing every four years and has to be re-laid from scratch, forever, while they are still waiting for the towns to appear along the line.

There is a flip side to the rot, and it is the reason I am putting a ten-year clock on what comes next. Every prior deployment ran slow because the rewiring was physical. Electrification waited a generation because somebody had to tear the factory down and pour a new floor around the motor, and concrete takes a generation. This time there is no concrete. The rewiring is software. You do not demolish a building to drop a model into a workflow. The thing that made every prior lag long is the thing this cycle removes. So the payoff that took twenty years after the lights came on does not get twenty years this time. That is a claim, and I am about to bet on it.

This breaks the pattern in two places.

Break one. The build never stops. In every prior cycle there was a moment when building ended and harvesting began. You finished the track. You finished the grid. You let the fiber sit. A clean handoff from atoms to services. There is no handoff here. Because the atoms rot, the builders are trapped re-buying them in perpetuity. There is no year when the capex ends and the milkshake starts. The men who own the wells re-drill them every four years just to stand still, and the man downstream still drinks the milkshake. NVIDIA sells the shovels forever. The hyperscalers re-buy them forever. The value still leaks downstream to whoever builds the thing that uses all this, which does not exist at scale yet, the way Google did not exist when the fiber went in.

Break two. The offshoring valve closes. Every prior cycle, when the services got expensive at home, the work moved to cheaper people somewhere else. The arbitrage was geographic. Find a cheaper human in a cheaper country and ship the work over. That is how India got the back office and Japan got the cars. The work left, but it went to other people, and it built the next economy somewhere else.

AI changes the arbitrage from geography to automation. When the AI services get expensive at home, the cheaper alternative is not a human in another country. It is the model. The model is already cheaper than the cheapest offshore human, and it sits nowhere and everywhere at once. So the work that, in every prior cycle, would have left home and built the next India, does not leave. It gets eaten in place. The valve that used to read send it to Manila now reads give it to the model.

Put the two together and you see why this cycle is genuinely different, and I do not use that phrase lightly, because that phrase is how people lose money. The fiber glut built the Indian services economy. The AI deployment removes the reason to offshore at all. Same shape, opposite sign. The previous overbuild created a services class in a poorer country. This deployment eats that class and does not seed another one anywhere cheaper, because there is nowhere cheaper than a machine.

Every infrastructure before this was a platform for labor. The rail carried goods people made and moved. The grid powered factories full of people. The fiber carried work done by people in Bangalore. Each one amplified human work, so each one eventually needed more humans, in more places, doing more things. AI is the first infrastructure that is a substitute for labor rather than a platform for it. That is the difference.

So why am I optimistic

Because a substitute for labor is also a multiplier of the person who holds it.

Here is where I leave the consensus, and the consensus is loud, so let me be exact about what I am rejecting. The clever and the well-meaning have decided that AI ends work, and that the humane response to the end of work is a cheque. Universal basic income. A salary for existing, paid by the machines, handed out by the state. I think that is wrong in the way the loudest predictions are usually wrong, and I have history on my side, so let me show the work before I make the call.

The end of work has been called three times, loudly, by serious people, and it has missed three times.

The Luddites broke the looms because the looms would end weaving. Weaving employed more people two generations later than it ever had. The work changed. It did not end.

Leontief said automation would do to human labor what the tractor did to the horse. He meant it literally. He thought we were the horse. His era produced government commissions on what to do with the permanently unemployed. The permanently unemployed never arrived. Employment hit records.

Rifkin wrote a book called The End of Work, and it sold, and it was wrong. The decades since produced more work, more kinds of work, work nobody could have named at the time.

Every time, the deployment phase of a new infrastructure produced more human capability and more human work, not a permanent jobless class on a stipend. The doom call is the oldest call there is, and it has the worst record in economics. I am betting it misses a fourth time, and I am betting against the cheque.

The mechanism runs through Ronald Coase, who asked the only good question anyone has asked about why companies exist. A firm exists only because doing things through the open market is expensive. Finding people, negotiating, coordinating, checking the work. When coordination is cheaper inside a hierarchy than out in the market, you get a firm. The size of the firm is set by the cost of coordination. Drop that cost and the firm shrinks.

AI is the largest single drop in the cost of coordination in human history. So the firm shrinks. Not as a metaphor. The median firm gets smaller. The share of everything made by tiny firms rises. And somewhere in this window somebody ships a company worth a billion dollars run by a handful of people, because one person now wields what used to take a department, and a handful now wields what used to take a corporation. That is not the end of work. That is the redefinition of the firm, and through it the redefinition of work.

I want to be honest about the shape of this, because uplift is never evenly spread. Most of humanity does not rocket. Most of humanity does what it has always done, which is grind slowly upward along the path of progress, a little better off each generation than the one before. That grind is real, and it is most of the story, and it is not nothing. But every cycle a few people hit escape velocity. The ones who caught the railway. The ones who caught the oil. The ones who lit the fiber. They did not inch upward. They left the ground. This cycle will mint its own, and the multiplier is the launch pad. The only thing different this time is that the launch pad is portable, and it fits in one pair of hands.

The person at the center of this is not a horse being retired. The person is a foreman who used to run ten people and now runs ten thousand instances of a capability. Individual capacity expands by an order of magnitude. That expansion is the deployment phase. It is the milkshake, and for once it does not all pool in one company downstream. It distributes, unevenly, the way it always has, broadly to the patient and steeply to the few who seize it.

So I do not want the cheque. The cheque is what you offer the horse. It assumes the person is finished and needs feeding. I am claiming the opposite. The person is about to be more capable than any person in history, and the right answer to a more capable person is more freedom, not more welfare. Agency, not alms. You do not put a population whose capability just multiplied tenfold on a stipend. You get out of its way. The UBI consensus is the most pessimistic reading of the most empowering tool, and in ten years I think it will look the way the automation commissions look now. A serious answer to a question that turned out to be wrong.

How the sunny and the dark fit

These two things look like they cannot both be true. They can, and they fit together the oldest way in the pattern. The treadmill is the grim part. The atoms rot, the builders are trapped re-buying them, somebody gets carried out. The fifty percent more global output and the far more capable individual are the sunny part. Both are true at once.

The pain concentrates on the builders. The gain distributes across everyone else. The men who laid the GPUs eat the depreciation and the debt and the write-down, the way WorldCom ate the fiber and Plainview ate the wells. The broad economy and the individual harvest the deployment surplus, the way the world got cheap bandwidth and cheap oil and a wired factory floor off the backs of dead builders. Concentrated pain, distributed gain. That is how global output can rise by half in a decade while the people who built the thing that caused it get carried out of the building. There is no contradiction. There never was. The milkshake was always drunk by someone other than the man who drilled.

Closing

The atoms always come first. They came first for gold and rail and copper and oil and the road and the glass, and they are coming first now, six hundred billion dollars a year of them, rotting as fast as they are laid. The men building them will mostly not be the men who get rich, because they never are. Plainview drilled the well and died alone with the money. Google lit the fiber it never paid for. The pattern is two centuries old and on most of it I am simply reading the meter.

What is new is the one rule this cycle breaks. Every infrastructure before this was a platform for human work, so each one made more room for people, somewhere, eventually. This one is a substitute for human work, so the work does not move to a cheaper country this time. It does not move at all. The valve is closed.

The consensus reads that closed valve and reaches for the cheque. I read the same closed valve and reach for the opposite, because a tool that substitutes for labor multiplies the person who holds it, and you do not put a multiplied person on welfare. You set them free. Most will grind upward as they always have. A few will leave the ground entirely. The cheque is what you offer a horse, and we are not the horse. We are the foreman who just got handed ten thousand hands.

Four predictions, full confidence, no exits. In ten years the tracker tells me whether I read the mechanism or fell for the oldest mistake there is, which is believing that this time is different. I believe it is different. I have shown the one way it is, and the many ways it is not. If I am wrong, the tracker will say so plainly, the way it always does. I would rather be wrong in public on a real claim than right in private on a hedge.

Armchair strategist. No formal qualifications in economics, technology, or finance. Opinion and analysis only. Not investment advice. I have been wrong before and will say so when I am, and the tracker exists so there is nowhere to hide when I am.

Written in collaboration with my favourite LLM. Editorial direction and final judgement are mine.

Amusing Morose Musings · sweet-kandy.blogspot.com

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Art of the Deal : Pacing, leading, and the asymmetric clock

Art of the Deal — Amusing Morose Musings
Amusing Morose Musings · Geopolitics & Economics
Gulf Conflict Series · Week 11
Pacing, leading, and the asymmetric clock.

Disclaimer. People are dying. Families across Iran, the Gulf, and Lebanon are living through things no analytical framework can adequately price. One hundred and twenty girls went to school in Minab on the first morning of this war and did not come home. I acknowledge that, and carry it, and move on to do what I do here — which is read the mechanism.

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.

On Method. Written in collaboration with my favourite LLM. Editorial direction and final judgement are mine.

The Tracker, First

Evidence before argument. Three weeks back, Week 10 put six items on a watch list and made three new predictions. Most of them resolved this week, between Wednesday and Saturday. The series exists to be wrong in public when I'm wrong. It also exists to be right in public when I'm right. Here's the scorecard before I get into the rest.

Saudi or Emirati public statement requesting accelerated resolution. ✓ Resolved.
MBZ was on Trump's Saturday conference call. He publicly endorsed the framework. The Saudi position is encoded in the same call. Week 10 said this would be the signal the kill was in its final phase. The signal arrived.
Single unified Iranian voice. ◐ Mostly resolved, with one visible crack.
Araghchi and Vahidi are visibly aligned through the Pakistani channel. PressTV stopped contradicting the foreign ministry. The Supreme Leader's office is silent in the way that signals consent. The crack: an Iranian source publicly pushed back on the uranium-handover framing the US side put into the reporting. That's a real signal of friction that isn't fully suppressed. The architecture has metabolised most of the decision. Not all of it.
Vance boards a plane. ◐ Partial.
Vance was called back from Ohio to Washington for the Saturday cabinet meeting. Not the Islamabad campaign launch I was watching for. But the convening that precedes it.
Russian custody of Iranian uranium. ∼ Pending.
The MOU has language on removing the highly enriched uranium stockpile. The custody arrangement isn't specified yet. Russia remains the most plausible custodian.
Gold spike down. ◐ Mixed.
Monday gold rose about 1% on deal optimism to roughly $4,559. Tuesday gold fell about 1.1% back to roughly $4,521 on news of overnight US strikes on Iranian missile launchers in the Strait. Net basically flat across two trading days. No clean directional signal yet. The structural call was spike down on resolution — resolution hasn't landed, so the spike hasn't either. Reasonable.
Second redistricting cascade. ∼ Not yet.
Texas, Florida, Georgia not visibly moving.

Four of six watch-list items resolved or substantively resolved in the predicted direction within three weeks. The fifth is testable Monday. The sixth hasn't happened and may not.

The Week 10 predictions themselves are mostly landing. Prediction 01 — Iran signs on Trump's terms, not Iran's — is heading toward confirmation. The MOU draft is one page. Verbal enrichment commitments. Conditional sanctions waivers. No recognition language. The signing hasn't happened yet — more on that below — but the contents are settled. Prediction 03 — Iran doesn't use its remaining denial weapons — confirmed. No sustained Strait closure. No destruction of trapped inventory at Kharg. No serious military escalation. The querencia has held through Tuesday. Prediction 02 — the UAE backstop gets used — is technically latent. The deal prevents the spike scenario the backstop was meant to absorb. But the structural reading still stands. The backstop is the silent guarantor of the post-deal oil market.

Prediction Week Status
US objective = revenue control not regime changeWk 1✓ Confirmed
Hormuz reopens within 60 days of Feb 28Wk 1✗ Wrong
Iran accepts post-war revenue oversight frameworkWk 1◐ MOU lands
Redollarization acceleratesWk 1✓ Confirmed
US GDP pulls away from China through 2027Wk 1✓ On Track
2026 as Axis of Resistance high-water markWk 1✓ Confirmed
New Middle East, no Iranian vetoWk 1✓ Confirmed
Four-week resolution as modal scenarioWk 1✗ Wrong
Kharg infrastructure struck before April 10Wk 5✓ Confirmed
Hormuz forced open by US naval actionWk 5✓ Confirmed
Escalation to persuade not destroyWk 6✓ Confirmed
Round 1: no closure, drama onlyWk 7✓ Confirmed
Pakistan announces next roundWk 7✓ Confirmed
Nuclear framed as civilian cooperationWk 7✓ Confirmed
Brent below $85 MondayWk 7✗ Wrong
Vance 2028 — Islamabad where campaign beganWk 7✓ On Track
Round 2 produces framework, ceasefire extendedWk 8✓ Confirmed
Trump extracts maximum — clean JibahWk 8✗ Dirty Kill
Hormuz fully open within 10 days of Round 2Wk 8✗ Wrong
Friday market close triggerWk 9✓ Confirmed
Dirty kill completes within 3 weeks (structure right, timing wrong)Wk 9◐ Partial
GCC formally requests accelerated resolutionWk 9✓ Confirmed
Iran signs on Trump's terms, not Iran'sWk 10◐ MOU on track
The UAE backstop gets usedWk 10∼ Latent
Iran does not use its remaining denial weaponsWk 10✓ Confirmed

New predictions for Week 11 sit at the end of the post, after the analysis they come from. The scorecard above is what the series has earned the right to claim.

The Book

The Art of the Deal — book cover

The cover. Tony Schwartz ghostwrote it. He's spent the last decade publicly insisting he wrote down a method the subject doesn't actually have. I'll come back to him.

The book came out in November 1987. It sold about a million copies in hardback. It established the persona that has carried the man through six bankruptcies, two failed airlines, a defunct university, a defunct steak line, a defunct vodka, a reality TV show, two presidential campaigns, one defeat the man refused to acknowledge, and the second term I'm writing this in. The persona is older than most of the people who voted for him in 2024. On substantially all the evidence, the persona has been marketing. Not description.

Forty years of evidence. Plaza Hotel — bankruptcy. Taj Mahal — bankruptcy. Trump Castle — bankruptcy. Plaza Hotel again, creditors taking control. Trump Airlines — assets repossessed. Trump University — settled fraud claims for twenty-five million. Trump Steaks, Trump Vodka, Trump Mortgage, Trump Magazine, Trump Ice — folded, all of them, mostly inside two years. The board game. The bottled water. The cologne. The neckties manufactured in China while the wearer campaigned against China.

The Apprentice worked. The Apprentice was television. Television rewards a particular kind of performance and the man performed it well. None of that translated into the outcomes the book had described. The deals that closed favourably. The counterparties who walked away believing they got what they wanted. The leverage applied so artfully the application itself was invisible. Those were the book's claims. None of them showed up in the ledger across the four decades since.

The 2016 campaign worked. The 2016 campaign was a marketing operation against an opponent who hadn't noticed the country was tired of being marketed to. Once he was in office the first time, the dealmaking specifically — the wall Mexico would pay for, the trade deals that would be the best deals, the North Korea summit that would denuclearise the peninsula, the Israeli-Palestinian deal of the century — produced photo ops and not much else. Infrastructure week became a joke that ran four years.

The second term has been more disciplined. The team is better. The man has aged and the aging has imposed a focus the younger version didn't have. The early-2026 trade frameworks have been more substantive than the 2017 versions. Greenland and Canada-as-51st-state were performance for a domestic audience that wants performance. The Gaza Riviera plan was the kind of thing the book would have called a deal and would have lost money on if anyone built it. The Ukraine framework is either close to closing or has been abandoned, depending which week you check.

That's the ledger. Forty years of a book claiming a method, forty years of the method not showing up at any scale that would have justified the claim. Schwartz has said this in plain English since 2016. He's said the techniques in the book were composited from other dealmakers he'd watched, generalised into a framework, attached to a subject who in his direct experience couldn't focus long enough to use them. Schwartz has said he regrets writing the book. He's said it should be reclassified as fiction. He's said on the record, more than once, that the subject couldn't have read his own book if asked.

And Yet

Something is happening this weekend in Washington that the book described and that Schwartz has spent ten years saying was invented.

The thing happening is good dealmaking. I'm going to spend the rest of this post describing it. Before that, what I am and am not saying.

I'm not saying the four decades of bluster were secretly competent and we were all wrong about them. They were what they looked like.

I'm not saying the man has changed. He is what he has always been.

I am saying that this specific deal, against these specific counterparties, under the specific structural conditions of May 2026, is the kind of deal the book claimed the man specialised in. The book's vindication doesn't retroactively legitimise four decades of marketing. It does, however, force me to call this deal what it is. Regardless of what that does to my prior assessment of the dealmaker.

Schwartz wrote down a method. The method was, by his own account, not the subject's. The subject is now executing it. Whether he learned it, was always capable of it and chose not to use it until now, or has fallen into it by accident — none of that is something I need to resolve here. What I need to do is read the mechanism. The mechanism this weekend is the book.

What Is Actually Happening

Sunday came and went. The deal didn't sign. The reporting on Saturday had it close to closing within hours. By Sunday afternoon, US officials were telling reporters the deal wouldn't sign that day — the Iranian system didn't move fast enough, as one of them put it. Monday brought Iran's Speaker of Parliament, Ghalibaf, to Qatar for further negotiation. Tuesday is here. Still no signature. Trump and his aides say the deal is 95 percent complete. The press reads it as a continuing battle over the last 5 percent. I read it as the dealmaker letting the bull bleed for another few days because every additional day produces more concessions.

Here's what's in the draft, per the Axios reporting and what's been confirmed by various regional and US sources since.

Both sides sign an MOU for sixty days, extendable by mutual consent. During the window, Hormuz reopens with no tolls. Iran clears the mines it deployed. The US lifts its naval blockade and issues sanctions waivers letting Iran sell oil on the international market. The blockade lifts in proportion to mine-clearing speed. The US calls this relief for performance. Iran wanted funds unfrozen up front and permanent sanctions relief. The US said no on both, conditional on tangible concessions.

The MOU has Iranian commitments to never pursue nuclear weapons and to negotiate over suspending uranium enrichment and removing the highly enriched stockpile. Verbal commitments on enrichment scope have already gone through the mediators. The uranium handover is the sticking point that pushed the signing past Sunday — an Iranian source publicly pushed back on the framing that Iran had agreed to give up its stockpile. The mechanics of how the handover happens are still being negotiated. Qatar is reportedly involved in this piece specifically. Qatar holds about $6 billion in frozen Iranian assets through Qatar National Bank, and Qatari officials have been in Tehran on the unfreezing arrangement. The US agrees to negotiate over lifting sanctions and unfreezing funds, but those only kick in as part of a final deal that's actually executed. US forces in the region stay through the sixty days. They only withdraw if a final deal lands.

The MOU also ends the Israel-Hezbollah war. This is what Bibi objected to most. The reported wording: Israel keeps the right to act against Hezbollah if Hezbollah rearms or instigates. A US official put it to Axios as if Hezbollah behaves, Israel will behave.

The deal was assembled through a Saturday conference call between Trump and the leaders of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Egypt, Turkey, Jordan, Bahrain, and Pakistan. All eight publicly supported the framework on that call. MBZ — who ran the UAE out of OPEC and OPEC+ earlier this month and was the regional voice for hitting Iran hard — was on the call endorsing the diplomatic outcome. Pakistan, led by Asim Munir, has been the primary mediator. Munir was in Tehran last week pushing the draft through. Pakistan's foreign minister Ishaq Dar said Sunday the negotiation offered grounds for optimism that a positive and durable outcome is within reach. Sharif, the Pakistani PM, said the next round of negotiations would happen very soon. None of these statements told you when the deal would actually sign. That was the point.

Bibi spoke to Trump separately Saturday evening. The reporting describes him, who had been hair on fire the week before, as making his case in a respectful and deferential way. Still expressing concerns. No longer threatening unilateral action.

That's the state of play as of Tuesday. The MOU is expected to be announced this week. Maybe. Some wording differences remain, particularly on the uranium piece. Either it lands or another round of strikes is on the table. Trump told Axios last weekend he was 50/50 between the deal and what he called blowing them to kingdom come. The framing is the bluster the book taught. The structure underneath is what the rest of this post is about. The two days of slippage between Sunday's expected signing and Tuesday's still-unsigned reality aren't a problem for the structural reading. They are the structural reading.

Pacing And Leading

The book described a technique. The persuasion literature has a name for it. Scott Adams, who used it to call 2016 and has been applying it to everything else since, calls it pacing and leading. The technique runs like this. You start by matching your counterparty's current position closely enough that they recognise you as someone who understands them. Once recognised, you start moving — slowly, in directions they haven't consented to — and the counterparty follows. The relationship of being understood is more valuable to them than the specific positions they're abandoning. Done well, the counterparty arrives at your destination believing they walked there themselves.

I covered this in Week 6 when Trump used it on Gulf publics during the early campaign. That was the standard 2016 vintage — persuasion directed at the adversary's audience. What's happening this weekend is more sophisticated. The pacing-and-leading is being run on Trump's own allies. The counterparties being moved aren't Iranian publics or Russian negotiators or European fence-sitters. They're Bibi. MBZ. MBS. The Qatari emir. The Egyptian president. The Turkish president. The Pakistani field marshal. People who are nominally on Trump's side, who every analyst — me included — has been treating as cooperating partners. They aren't cooperating. They're being moved.

Walk through each arc. The pattern repeats with variations.

Netanyahu. Earlier in the week he was “hair on fire” — that's the phrase I saw in the reporting, sourced from a US official in the room. His objection was specifically to bundling the Hezbollah ceasefire into the Iran MOU. Israel hadn't finished what it considered necessary against Hezbollah. The bundling tied Israeli hands. Four days later, Bibi was “respectful and deferential” — the next phrase from the next round of reporting. The substantive content of his objection hadn't changed. The presentation had. He was now expressing concerns about a deal he couldn't stop, in the register of a junior partner registering disagreement for the record. The Hezbollah provision is still in the MOU. Bibi went from total opposition to managed acquiescence in four days.

Mohammed bin Zayed. Through April and early May, MBZ was the most hawkish Gulf voice on Iran. The UAE exit from OPEC and OPEC+ this month — covered in Week 10 — was alignment with US supply policy in advance of whatever came next. I read it at the time, and the series read it, as the UAE positioning to backstop a harder kill. By Saturday MBZ was on a conference call with Trump publicly endorsing the diplomatic outcome. The position he's now publicly committed to is several steps softer than what he was preparing for three weeks ago. He's been moved.

The Gulf coalition collectively. Mid-May, multiple Gulf leaders publicly asked Trump to pause strikes and give negotiations another chance. Trump paused. He framed the pause in real time as a concession to their request. The Gulf leaders accepted the framing. They weren't paying close enough attention to notice the pause had moved them from suppliers of regional context to co-owners of the diplomatic process they had requested. They can't now defect from a process they asked for. The pacing happened in two moves — pause at your request, deal with your endorsement — and by the time the second move landed, the first had locked them in.

The Gulf's susceptibility didn't start in May 2026. It started in 2020 with the Abraham Accords. The Accords are the prior financing this dealmaking is drawing on. The UAE, Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan — and the extended-discussions Saudi case — each accepted formal relations with Israel for substantial bilateral packages from Washington. Defense procurement. Technology transfer. Civil nuclear cooperation in the Saudi case. Sovereign-wealth-fund access to US markets. The packages were valuable. They were also conditional, the way every bilateral with Washington is conditional, on continued alignment with American regional priorities. Defecting from the Iran framework wouldn't technically violate the Accords. It would signal that the bilateral relationships the Accords inaugurated are no longer reliable. The conditional benefits would become reviewable. No Gulf monarchy wants their benefits reviewed. MBZ in particular took real domestic political risk for the UAE Accord. The payoff has been concrete enough that he can't put it back on the table. The pacing-and-leading works in 2026 because the leverage was installed in 2020. The first-term dealmaking I've otherwise treated as performance produced this one real asset. The second-term dealmaker is calling the loan.

Pakistan. Asim Munir is the primary mediator, shuttling between Tehran and Washington and producing the draft text. The mediator who delivers the deal is bound to the deal's success. Munir is now structurally invested in pressing Iran to comply. Trump has effectively conscripted Pakistani security policy into his Iran framework for the duration of the MOU. Why Pakistan specifically gets its own section below.

Iran itself. Through April Iran was working from a fourteen-point proposal — immediate unfreezing of funds, comprehensive sanctions relief, substantial recognition of Iran's regional role. The MOU is a one-page document with verbal commitments on enrichment, conditional sanctions waivers, and no recognition language at all. Iran has moved from maximalist position to compliance position in under eight weeks. The pacing was different here — driven by attrition rather than by relationship — but the technique is recognisable. Each round met Iran where it was, accepted the negotiating premise, then moved the goalposts incrementally. Iran's negotiators ended up defending positions much closer to the American one than to their own original brief.

The pattern across five different counterparties is the same. Each starts at their preferred position. Trump moves the frame just enough that their position becomes untenable without being humiliating. They shift. The shifted position becomes the baseline for the next round. Over four to eight weeks, depending on the counterparty, the cumulative shift is large. Each individual move is small enough that the counterparty's pride doesn't require them to fight it. The total displacement is much larger than any single counterparty agreed to.

This is the book. Chapter three, if I'm remembering right. The chapter where Schwartz, writing as Trump, explains that the worst thing you can do in a negotiation is force your counterparty into a position they can't retreat from. The technique is to leave them an exit at every step that lets them say yes, this is fine, this is what I wanted. The exits accumulate. The accumulation is the deal. Every individual step was their own choice.

Schwartz says he made up the chapter. He says the subject couldn't have executed the technique under any conditions he observed. Schwartz may have been right about everything he saw. He's wrong about this weekend.

The Asymmetric Clock

Pacing and leading is the visible move. The reason it works at scale this weekend, against five counterparties at once, is something else. The structural mechanism underneath is that every counterparty has a clock running against them and Trump doesn't.

List the clocks.

Iran: Economy in freefall. Oil revenue effectively zero through the blockade. The rial collapsing. Regime legitimacy bleeding daily. Internal dissent ticking under the surface and sometimes above it. Summer fuel shortages coming. The longer the standoff runs, the worse Iran's position gets. Every week is a transfer of national resilience from Iran's account to the matador's.

The Gulf states: Hormuz closed costs them billions weekly in shipping insurance, LNG routing, oil revenue, and the political risk premium on every regional asset they own. The UAE has nearly 5 million barrels per day of capacity that can't reach market through a closed strait. Qatar's LNG flows are constrained. Saudi infrastructure has been bleeding from Iran-linked strikes. The Gulf can't afford the standoff to continue. The longer it does, the more they'll pay for almost any deal that ends it.

Europe: Brent in the high nineties was already recessionary for German industry, French refining margins, Italian gas markets. Every additional week transfers European industrial competitiveness to whoever can hold cheaper energy. The European political class needs the oil price down before whatever's left of the German export economy finishes deteriorating.

Israel: Domestic patience for an open-ended Hezbollah front is finite. Reservist mobilisation has real costs. Bibi's coalition needs an off-ramp it can sell to the religious-Zionist parties as a victory. Every week without resolution raises the political cost of resolution when it eventually comes.

Asia: India, Japan, Korea importing crude at the war premium. Every week is a transfer of national wealth from Asian importers to Gulf producers and to whoever holds the price-setting power. Indian reserves bleeding. Japanese current account under pressure. Korean refiners renegotiating long-term contracts at unfavourable terms.

The American consumer: This is the only clock that runs differently. American gas prices rose during the standoff but the rise was moderated — strategic petroleum reserve, Canadian and Mexican supply, no true global supply crisis. The American consumer has been mildly inconvenienced. The American consumer also stands to benefit massively from a resolution that reopens Hormuz and pulls Brent back below eighty. The benefit will arrive in time to be felt before the November midterms. This is the only major actor whose clock works for the matador rather than against him.

The asymmetry is the engine. Hormuz reopening isn't a concession Trump is making to Iran. It's a concession every other major economy is paying Trump to extract. The Gulf, Europe, Asia all want it reopened more urgently than Trump does. The MOU's central deliverable is something only Trump can dispense, while every other party in the system is desperate for him to dispense it. He charges admission. The admission is paid in nuclear concessions from Iran, coalition discipline from the Gulf, deference from Netanyahu, mediator loyalty from Pakistan, and oil-market relief the American consumer takes credit for at the polls.

This is what the bluster obscures. Trump frames the MOU as a generous offer he might or might not accept. The structural position is the inverse. The MOU is a generous offer the world is making to him, in exchange for a thing only he can deliver. He gets to look reluctant. The reluctance is the leverage. Every other party negotiates against his reluctance by sweetening the terms of what they'll pay to make him stop being reluctant. The book described this. Schwartz called it impossible for the subject to execute. Here it is, executed.

The principal said it himself this past weekend, through Rubio in New Delhi. Time is on our side. That's the thesis of this section in the dealmaker's own words. The Sunday-to-Tuesday slippage is the same point in action. Trump has nothing forcing him to close. Every other party does. Each day the deal doesn't sign is a day of more concessions extracted. The 95-percent-completed framing is the cover for the deliberate stretch. The last five percent is the rent. The dealmaker can charge it because everyone else is paying interest while he negotiates.

The Indispensable Liar

The pacing-and-leading and the asymmetric clock produce the deal together. They don't run themselves. The thing that stretches the negotiation long enough for the pacing to land on each counterparty — and absorbs the contradictions between what each counterparty is being told — is the mediator. The mediator is Pakistan. Not an accident. Not a default. Pakistan was the right mediator because Pakistan has spent forty years cultivating exactly the qualities the Western foreign-policy establishment finds disqualifying. Those qualities are the qualifying criteria for the kind of mediation pacing-and-leading at scale needs.

Consider the ledger. Pakistan harboured bin Laden in a garrison town a mile from its military academy while taking US counterterrorism aid. Pakistan armed and sheltered the Taliban while taking Pentagon money to fight them. Pakistan ran the A.Q. Khan proliferation network while signing nonproliferation declarations at the UN. Pakistan sponsors Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed across the Indian border while presenting itself in Geneva as a victim of terrorism. Pakistan has maintained a forty-seven-year strategic relationship with Iran while serving as the primary Saudi client state in the region. Pakistan has been simultaneously aligned with China and dependent on the IMF. On substantially every issue where Western diplomacy treats truth-telling as a baseline requirement, Pakistan has treated truth-telling as one option among several. Rarely the optimal one.

The Western tradition reads this as a defect. Pakistan-as-spoiler. Pakistan-as-double-dealer. Pakistan-as-the-friend-who-can't-be-trusted. The tradition assumes good faith is the qualifying criterion for serious diplomatic work. Mediators must be neutral, transparent, consistent. Otherwise the negotiation collapses under the weight of accumulated bad faith.

The tradition is wrong about this case. Bad faith is the qualifying criterion for the kind of mediation pacing-and-leading needs. A mediator whose word can be trusted by all parties is useless for moving any party. Moving a counterparty requires telling them something the other counterparties aren't being told and would object to if they heard it. A scrupulous mediator — Switzerland, Norway, the EU — creates transparency that collapses the pacing. Each party sees what the others are being shown. Pakistan's mediation does the opposite. Each party gets told what Pakistan calculates they need to hear in that moment. The contradictions accumulate but are never reconciled. Pakistan never brings the parties into the same room with the same draft. The parties have learned from forty years of dealing with Pakistan not to expect it.

This is the engine that stretches the negotiation. Each counterparty believes they're being approached on terms favourable to their position. Each counterparty is, in fact, being approached on terms calculated to move them an inch in the direction Pakistan's principal — for this deal, the matador — wants them moved. The inch adds up. After eight weeks of inches, each counterparty has been displaced substantially. None of them has compared notes carefully enough with the others to notice the shared displacement. By the time they do, the deal is signed. The question of who was told what is moot.

Pakistan's institutional culture treats contradiction as a resource. The ISI runs the Taliban file. The foreign ministry runs the Washington file. The army runs the Saudi file. The civilian government runs the IMF file. The Iran file has historically been handled across multiple of these channels at once, each presenting a different face of Pakistan to its counterpart. The West reads this as institutional dysfunction. In the Pakistani strategic vocabulary it's gunjaish — manoeuvring room, the deliberate cultivation of multiple non-reconciled positions that can be drawn on as the situation demands. The forty-year reputation for duplicity is not the byproduct of incoherent policy. It is the policy.

Sunday's Pakistani statements are the technique in real time. Foreign minister Ishaq Dar said the negotiation offered grounds for optimism that a positive and durable outcome is within reach. Prime minister Sharif said the next round would happen very soon. These statements were made while the deal was visibly not closing. They were made anyway. They sound like progress reports. They don't have to be true to be functional. The audiences for the statements — Iran, the Gulf, Washington, Tehran's hardliners, Riyadh's hawks, the global oil market — each hear what they need to hear to keep negotiating. None of them is the same audience. None of them is being told the same thing privately. The public statement is the cover that keeps the parallel conversations alive. That's the work. The Pakistani mediator is doing it.

Munir is uniquely placed to run this for Trump. He's run the army for nearly four years. He's consolidated ISI control in ways his predecessors didn't. He commands the institutional channels that manage Pakistan's contradictions. He's also personally close enough to the Trump operation — the dynamic at last year's Washington lunch that nobody on either side has properly explained — that the principal-mediator relationship runs cleanly when needed and goes silent when needed. The combination produces a mediator who can deliver inconsistent messages to Tehran, Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, Jerusalem, and Washington across the same week, absorb the friction inside his own command structure, and stop the parties from comparing notes effectively. No other regional actor can do this. Turkey has the institutional capacity but its alignments are too transparent. Oman has the discretion but lacks the leverage. Qatar has the resources but is too compromised by its Hamas portfolio. Pakistan, alone in the region, combines the institutional duplicity, the leverage across the relevant parties, and the operational discretion the matador's strategy requires.

There's a related point about the longer arc. The selective dissection of the IRGC, when it comes, will require intelligence cooperation no scrupulous mediator would tolerate. Laundering inconvenient operational relationships. Presenting strikes as enforcement actions framed differently for different audiences. Absorbing diplomatic protest from parties who are being privately briefed otherwise. Pakistan has been doing exactly this for forty years across multiple files. Pakistan will do it for the IRGC file with no friction the matador needs to manage. Munir isn't a temporary mediator for the MOU phase. He's the entire diplomatic-cover apparatus for the multi-year framework the MOU is setting up.

Hemingway has a phrase that fits, though he wasn't talking about mediators. He used it for the peón de confianza — the assistant who works the bull between the matador's passes, who absorbs the dangerous work the matador can't be seen doing, who takes the wounds the matador's reputation can't survive. The peón isn't glamorous. The peón is essential. The matador's art is impossible without him. Pakistan is the peón de confianza for this corrida. Munir is the peón. The wounds are absorbed by the appropriate body. The matador stays clean.

The Framework Applied

I shipped a framework piece Saturday — On Dead Children. It governs how I'm reading the deal. The discipline is simple. Every state owes accounting for every death within its jurisdiction. The two legitimate instruments are the legal system for internal causes and the armed forces for external causes. Anything else is the state failing at its one job. I demanded symmetry from myself. No party gets a pass because the reader's sympathies are with them.

Apply it to the deal.

The United States is discharging through the armed-forces instrument and the diplomatic instrument at the same time. That's what a functioning Westphalian state does. The blockade and the carrier groups were the armed-forces instrument. The MOU is the diplomatic instrument. The discharge is in progress. I read this as competent statehood. Regardless of whether I like the statesman.

Iran-the-regime is on the patch Week 10 described. Querencia. The regime has accumulated obligations to Iranian citizens across forty-seven years of Axis of Resistance policy. Obligations it can't discharge through either of the two legitimate instruments — because the regime built its legitimacy on the refusal to discharge them through normal politics. The deal lets the regime survive. The deal doesn't let the regime discharge. The Iranian voter, who under my framework has the duty to demand discharge through the ballot, hasn't been given the ballot to demand it. My harsh reading is that the regime is using the deal to perpetuate the conditions under which the ballot remains unavailable. The discharge is being deferred to a future generation of Iranians who don't yet exist.

The Gulf coalition is doing something more interesting. Each Gulf state has its own ledger of grievances against Iran — Houthi support, Saudi infrastructure attacks, UAE shipping interference, Bahraini sectarian agitation, Qatari diplomatic blackmail. My framework would say each Gulf state should discharge through legal or armed-forces instruments against the specific Iranian actors responsible. None of them has the capability to do this unilaterally. The MOU is the framework under which the discharge gets outsourced to the United States. The Gulf pays the political cost of coalition discipline rather than the operational cost of action. I'm neutral on whether this counts as a clean discharge. It's at least a discharge through a recognisable instrument. Which is more than abdication.

Israel is the cleanest application. October 7 was an external attack on Israeli citizens inside Israeli sovereign territory. The military response against Hamas and Hezbollah was the prescribed instrument. The MOU ends the Hezbollah portion on terms Bibi didn't write. I don't endorse and don't condemn — I ask whether the discharge was complete. The answer depends on whether Hezbollah's degraded post-MOU position is enough to discharge the obligation Israel incurred on October 7. That's for Israel's own democratic instruments to resolve. I don't have to take a position. I do have to recognise the scoring is happening. Bibi will be judged by Israeli voters on whether the deal he accepted is a discharge or an abdication.

The IRGC is the hardest case in this deal. Holding the question. Next section.

The framework's neutrality is what makes the deal readable. The deal is good for the United States because the United States is discharging through legitimate instruments. The deal is bad for the IRGC — the IRGC has never accepted that it owes discharge through either of the two instruments, and the deal narrows its room to keep refusing. Every other party's discharge or abdication is a question internal to their politics. I don't have to score each one. I do have to recognise the scoring is happening, that it has consequences, and that the consequences arrive at the ballot or at the barricade depending on whether the ballot is available.

Iraq 2005, Inverted

Previous section deferred the IRGC question. Here it is.

In 2003 the US invaded Iraq, dismantled the Iraqi state, and disbanded the Iraqi army through de-Ba'athification. The state collapsed. The army didn't. It dispersed. The dispersed personnel — trained, networked, ideological, armed, suddenly unemployed, humiliated — became the recruitment base for the insurgency that took the next eight years to suppress, and the structural conditions under which ISIS formed by 2014. The lesson of Iraq 2005 isn't that invading Iraq was wrong. The lesson is more specific. Destroying the state while leaving the parallel armed structures intact is the worst possible outcome. The state was the only entity that could constrain the armed structures. Without the state, the structures became autonomous, then radicalised, then proliferated.

Apply this to Iran in 2026. The IRGC isn't the Iranian state. It's a parallel armed structure that coexists with the state, funded through opaque economic channels — the bonyads, the construction empires, the smuggling networks — that the state doesn't control. It's ideologically committed beyond the regime's secular survival interests. It runs the proxy network across Lebanon, Yemen, Iraq, Syria. It conducts foreign operations the regime doesn't always authorise. It's been the principal instrument of Axis of Resistance policy and the principal beneficiary of Axis of Resistance ideology.

The MOU is structurally incentive-incompatible for the IRGC, even as it's incentive-compatible for the rest of the regime. The regime gets oil revenue, sanctions relief, survival. The IRGC gets its proxy network dismantled (Hezbollah ceasefire bundled in), its regional adventurism budget reduced as Iran complies, its ideological mission publicly humiliated by the deal its own state is signing. The IRGC's losses are the price the regime is paying for its own survival. The IRGC won't consent to paying that price. It has guns, networks, training, foreign operating space, and now a grievance against its own state.

This is the Iraq 2005 setup with the variable swapped. In Iraq the state collapsed and the armed structures radicalised into the void. In Iran the state is being preserved and the armed structure inside it is being squeezed by the preservation deal. The mechanism is different. The residual radicalisation risk is the same. Possibly worse — the IRGC is more coherent, better resourced, and more ideologically committed than the dispersed Ba'athist remnants were.

My framework applies here too. The IRGC has operated as a state-within-the-state for forty-seven years. It has collected taxes through its economic empire. It has monopolised certain forms of violence through its parallel command structure. It has refused accountability to either the ballot or the regime. The arrangement has been accumulating an unpaid bill the whole time. The deal doesn't retire the bill. The deal makes the bill collectible.

What the deal does is create the political and operational conditions under which the IRGC can be addressed separately from Iran-the-state. The regime stays. The proxy network is dismantled by treaty rather than by force. The Gulf coalition is bound into the framework. Intelligence cooperation expands as Iran complies. The IRGC's operational geography narrows. At some point the IRGC either accepts subordination to the state — which means giving up everything that has made it the IRGC — or it refuses, which means generating the incidents that justify direct action against it.

If direct action comes, it won't be framed as war against Iran. It'll be framed as enforcement of the MOU's anti-proliferation terms against an internal Iranian actor the regime can't or won't control. The Iranian state issues pro forma protest. The Gulf coalition publicly criticises and privately welcomes. Oil prices spike briefly and settle as Hormuz stays open. The regime in Tehran quietly tags the targeted IRGC infrastructure as expendable in advance. The regime has been waiting fifteen years for a way to defang the IRGC without splitting the system.

This is the selective dissection. The bull is kept alive and paying rent. The bull's horns are surgically removed in a separate operation framed as veterinary care the bull's owner consents to. The empresa keeps the bull. The corrida continues. The dangerous part of the bull is gone.

I'm not predicting when this happens. Week 10 dropped timing windows from new predictions for a sound reason — the matador controls the clock, and any timing claim is now a claim about his preference rather than about structural pressure. The structural pressure points toward the selective dissection. When Trump pulls the trigger is his clock to read. The predictions section reflects this.

What I am claiming, structurally, is that the MOU's value to Trump isn't the MOU itself. The MOU's value is that it creates the conditions under which the IRGC can be addressed as an internal Iranian problem rather than as the spearhead of a state at war. The deal isn't the avoidance of further violence. The deal is the prerequisite for the right kind of violence — surgical, framed, coalition-backed, regime-tolerated, oil-market-neutral, voter-uncostly violence. Iraq 2005, inverted.

New Predictions

The historical scorecard is at the top. These are the analytical commitments coming out of this week's reading. Per Week 10's methodological sharpening: no timing windows. Structural confidence only.

Prediction 04. The MOU extends beyond sixty days, repeatedly. The sixty-day window is the entry condition. The actual relationship Trump is building is open-ended. Each extension is conditional on more Iranian concessions. Each extension extracts more than the prior period yielded. The MOU is the structure under which Iran becomes a long-term low-grade vassal. Confidence ~75%.

Prediction 05. The Gulf coalition holds publicly through the extension period. The Saturday alignment is now structural rather than contingent. They've publicly endorsed. They can't defect without burning their own diplomatic capital. The coalition becomes the platform for the next phase of the matador's work. Confidence ~80%.

Prediction 06. Netanyahu stays in managed acquiescence. No Israeli unilateral action large enough to break the MOU framework. The Bibi-to-deferential arc of the past five days isn't a tactical retreat. It's the new equilibrium. The religious-Zionist parties in the coalition will scream. They won't bring down the government — the alternative is an election they'd lose. Confidence ~70%.

Prediction 07. Incidents attributable to the IRGC accumulate during the MOU period. Not large enough to break the MOU. Large enough to build the case file. Attacks on shipping the Iranian regime publicly disavows. Probes against US assets in Iraq the regime can't satisfactorily explain. Hezbollah testing the ceasefire's edges. The case file is being assembled in real time. Confidence ~65%.

Prediction 08. If, at some point, the US conducts military action against IRGC-specific infrastructure during the MOU period or after it, the action is structured as enforcement of the MOU rather than war against Iran. The Iranian state issues pro forma protest. The Gulf coalition publicly criticises, privately welcomes. The MOU framework isn't formally exited. Oil price spikes briefly and settles within weeks because Hormuz stays open. No timing on this. Structural confidence only. Confidence ~55%.

Prediction 09. Nuclear negotiations continue through any IRGC-specific action. The civilian-cooperation framing is durable enough to absorb operational shocks. The uranium custody question gets resolved during the sixty-day window or its first extension. Russia is the custodian. Confidence ~60%.

Closing

The book was mostly fiction. Schwartz wrote down a method. He's said for ten years that the subject couldn't have used the method. Forty years of evidence supported him. The Plaza, the casinos, the airline, the university, the steaks, the first term, the failed dealmaking the second term's dealmaking has only sporadically corrected.

There's a refinement I owe the reader before the closing lands. The four decades weren't uniformly empty. The first term produced two genuine deposits — the Supreme Court appointments and the Abraham Accords — and both are paying off this weekend. The Court appointments produced the redistricting cascade Week 10 documented. That extends the matador's political clock through 2026 and into 2028. The Accords produced the bilateral leverage over Gulf monarchies that the Saturday conference call activated. Two real assets. Both deposited under conditions of considerable bluster, in among the failed steaks and the failed vodka and the failed dealmaking the first term mostly produced. Both held their value while almost everything else from the first term decayed. Both are being drawn on now. The man who lost the casinos kept the Court and the Accords. The two things he kept are what's making this deal possible.

This doesn't vindicate the four decades. The two retained assets don't erase the six bankruptcies, the failed brands, the dealmaking that was mostly photographs. They do complicate the “uniformly fictional” reading the opening leaned on. There were real deposits. The deposits have matured. The maturation funds the current deal. The analyst who refuses to see this is reading the ledger as ideology, not as ledger.

And then, this weekend, the method is being used. On five counterparties at once. Producing a deal the dealmaker's harshest critics would have to score as competent. The deal extracts what Trump wants. The deal preserves what Trump wants to be able to do later. The deal creates the conditions for the selective dissection of the IRGC at a time of the matador's choosing. The deal achieves all this while every other party in the system pays Trump for the relief of the very pressure he's generating. The asymmetric clock makes it work. The pacing-and-leading executes it. Pakistan absorbs the wounds the matador's reputation can't survive. The Accords pre-financed the Gulf's susceptibility to the pacing. The Court appointments cushioned the political timeline. The deal arrives as something the book would have called a deal. The man whose face is on the cover is, finally, executing the chapter Schwartz claims he invented.

One more observation worth flagging. The 1987 version of the dealmaker would have insisted the deal sign on the day he announced it. The show would have been the deadline, the deadline would have been the point, and the deal would have collapsed under the weight of the show. The 2026 version watched Sunday come and go without panicking. Tuesday is here. The deal still hasn't signed. The dealmaker is letting it slip because the slip produces more leverage. Each day the Iranian system is too slow is a day Iran's negotiators are more exposed to their own internal critics, more dependent on the deal closing on terms they didn't write, more locked into the framework. The man who once needed the photograph more than the deal now seems to understand that the deal without the photograph is worth more than the photograph without the deal. That's a real behavioural shift from the version Schwartz tried to describe. Whether it's growth, age, the team, or accident — I don't have to decide. The behaviour is what it is.

This doesn't retroactively legitimise the four decades. The four decades were what they looked like, with two specific exceptions that have now matured. The 2026 deal is what it is. Both are true at once. The reader's job is to hold both without letting either collapse into the other.

The framework I shipped Saturday says: credit competent statehood when you see it, regardless of your priors about the statesman. The deal is competent statehood. The framework also says: name what's being deferred when something looks discharged. What's being deferred here is the IRGC question. The deal doesn't solve it. The deal relocates it. The selective dissection is the deferred discharge made operational. The reader who comes away thinking the deal is the end of the story is missing what the deal is for.

The book described a method. The method is being executed. The book didn't describe what comes after the deal closes. The book never did. Schwartz, who wrote it, said he was always nervous about what would happen if the subject ever did execute the method — because the book didn't address what its executor would do once he'd won.

This week or next week, the MOU signs. Or it doesn't and the strikes come back on the table. Either way, we're about to find out what the executor does next.

People are dying. Families across Iran, the Gulf, and Lebanon are living through things no analytical framework can adequately price. One hundred and twenty girls went to school in Minab on the first morning of this war and did not come home. I acknowledge that, and carry it, and move on to do what I do here — which is read the mechanism.

The mechanism this weekend is the book. The book is being executed. The execution is good. The forty years that preceded it don't become true because the execution is. Two specific deposits inside the four decades did, however, become valuable. They're funding the deal. I note this and move on.

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'll be wrong again, and the tracker exists precisely so there's 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 · May 2026