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.
Ernest Hemingway published Death in the Afternoon in 1932. It is ostensibly about bullfighting. It is actually about the only honest way to watch anything that ends in death — which is to understand exactly what is happening, name every part of it, and resist the temptation to look away.
Ernest Miller Hemingway wrote some of the most precise sentences in the English language. He covered wars, hunted big game, fished the Gulf Stream, ran with bulls in Pamplona, and understood that the only honest writing comes from watching difficult things without looking away. Death in the Afternoon was one of several of his books I borrowed from a hostel friend — I could not afford to buy it — and finished in a single night. By morning I understood something about death I had not understood the evening before. That is what the good ones do.
Jibah — the Islamic ritual slaughter. A single clean cut. Maximum yield from the sacrifice. Death with the full dignity the animal is owed. But understand what dies here. Not Iran the country. Not its people. Not its history. What dies is the Islamic Republic as it was — the Axis of Resistance Iran, the ideology-as-foreign-policy Iran, the Iran that ran proxy wars from Lebanon to Yemen as instruments of geopolitical leverage. What replaces it is an Iran integrated into the dollar ecosystem. Civil reconstruction agreements. Oil revenues clearing through New York. The same template applied to Iraq after 2003. The same template applied to Venezuela after Maduro. Iran as the third iteration. The Jibah is not a military event. It is a structural reorientation dressed as a peace deal. That is what this weekend's second round of talks in Islamabad is designed to produce. Whether it does is the prediction.
A brief note on the ganadero. Asim Munir is the only Pakistani army chief awarded for aerial combat. He flew into Tehran and kissed the cheeks of the Iranian delegation. He will land in Washington and kiss Trump's backside with the same lips. The Americans need crude — there is oil offshore in Gwadar. The Americans need rare earth — he and Shahbaz walked into Washington with samples in their briefcases. The ganadero does not raise bulls out of love. The plaza pays.
Tonight Iran's foreign minister declared the Strait of Hormuz completely open. The bull drank the water. It is calm. It is quiet. The corrida can proceed.
The Scorecard
I am tired of writing analysis after the event. Predicting before it happens — staking a position, then checking back when reality delivers its verdict — is incomparably more interesting. This post, like those before it, is written before the outcome is known.
No closure in Round 1, drama only, ceasefire held — Confirmed. Twenty-one hours of talks, three sessions, no deal. Both delegations left Islamabad without a framework. Iran arrived dressed in black carrying school bags. Exactly the theatre the post predicted.
Two emissaries who cannot say yes — Confirmed. Vance said publicly that Iran's negotiators had to return to Tehran to get approval for any deal. Ghalibaf said the US failed to gain Iran's trust. Neither man closed anything. Neither man was supposed to.
Vance 2028 casting call — Confirmed. Every dispatch had his name in the headline. Usha stayed home. The family photograph is being held in reserve for the closing night. This was still the audition.
Pakistan announces next round — Confirmed. Munir is in Tehran tonight carrying a US message. The second round is being arranged as this post is written. The ganadero never leaves the ring empty for long.
Brent below $85 Monday — Wrong. Called cleanly. Brent opened above $101 on Monday after Trump announced the Hormuz blockade following Round 1's collapse. The blockade announcement was the instrument, not the press release. The model correctly identified the mechanism but misjudged which instrument Trump would reach for. The press release failed to move markets because there was no press release — there was a blockade.
Running Prediction Tracker — Weeks 1–8
| Prediction | Week | Prob. | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| US objective is energy revenue control, not regime change | Wk 1 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| Hormuz reopens within 60 days of Feb 28 | Wk 1 | — | ⚠ At Risk |
| Iran accepts post-war revenue oversight framework | Wk 1 | — | ~ Pending |
| Redollarization accelerates as Axis fractures | Wk 1 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| US GDP pulls away from China through 2027 | Wk 1 | — | ✓ On Track |
| 2026 as Axis of Resistance high-water mark | Wk 1 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| New Middle East, no Iranian veto over anything | Wk 1 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| Four-week resolution as modal scenario | Wk 1 | — | ✗ Wrong |
| Kharg oil infrastructure struck before April 10 | Wk 5 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| Hormuz physically forced open by US naval action within 30 days | Wk 5 | — | ✓ On Track |
| Escalation to persuade, not destroy — ceasefire and talks follow | Wk 6 | — | ✓ Confirmed |
| Islamabad Round 1: no closure, drama only, ceasefire held | Wk 7 | 85% | ✓ Confirmed |
| Pakistan announces next round — both sides accept | Wk 7 | 80% | ✓ Confirmed |
| Nuclear framed as civilian cooperation — fatwa exit ramp used | Wk 7 | 70% | ~ Developing |
| Brent below $85 Monday | Wk 7 | 75% | ✗ Wrong |
| Vance 2028 — Islamabad is where his campaign began | Wk 7 | 90% | ✓ Confirmed |
| Round 2 produces a framework — not a final deal, but enough to extend the ceasefire past April 21 | Wk 8 | 75% | ● New |
| Nuclear framed as civilian cooperation with US investment — the fatwa exit ramp is taken this weekend | Wk 8 | 70% | ● New |
| Trump extracts maximum from the corrida — the Jibah is clean | Wk 8 | 65% | ● New |
| Hormuz fully open to commercial traffic within 10 days of Round 2 | Wk 8 | 60% | ● New |
Death in the Afternoon — What the Book Actually Says
Most people who have not read it assume Death in the Afternoon is a bloodthirsty exercise in macho nostalgia. Most people are wrong. Hemingway goes to the corrida expecting to be disgusted and finds something he cannot stop thinking about. The book is his attempt to explain why — to himself as much as to the reader.
His central argument is this: the bullfight is the only art form in which the artist is in genuine danger of death, and in which the degree of brilliance in the performance is left entirely to the fighter's honour. There is no safety net. There is no second take. The bull is real, the horns are real, and the crowd knows it. That reality is what makes the corrida art rather than spectacle. Strip out the genuine possibility of death and you have theatre. Keep it and you have something else entirely — something that forces both the performer and the audience into an honesty that most art forms happily avoid.
The outcome is predetermined. The bull dies. That is not the variable. The variable is whether it dies well — whether the matador executes with precision and courage, whether the bull charges with the nobility the Spanish call bravura, whether the crowd witnesses something true. A badly executed kill is a scandal. A cowardly bull is a disappointment. The corrida fails when either party refuses to play its role with full commitment to the form.
Hemingway also writes at length about the ganadero — the bull raiser — whose reputation depends entirely on the quality of the animal he delivers to the ring. A brave bull from a good ranch dies better than a cowardly one, and the crowd remembers who raised it. Pakistan has been raising this particular bull for seven weeks. Tonight Field Marshal Munir — Trump's favourite field marshal, as the American president has publicly called him — is personally in Tehran. Not sending a message through intermediaries. Going himself. Sitting in the pen. Making sure the bull arrives at this weekend's plaza in the correct state of mind for what comes next.
That is not a neutral act. That is the ganadero telling the matador: the animal is ready. The corrida can proceed.
Controlling the Animal — Why the Choreography Matters
Nothing in the corrida is accidental. Every instrument — the picador's vara, the banderillero's barbs, the matador's cape — is designed to do a specific thing to the bull's body and mind before the estoque is placed. The vara cuts the neck muscles so the bull cannot lift its head fully and hook upward at the matador's chest. The banderillas slow the charge and redirect the bull's attention. The muleta cape lures the eyes, fixes the line of charge, positions the animal exactly where the matador needs it for the kill. Done correctly, the bull arrives at the moment of death in precisely the posture the matador requires — head lowered, body forward, the killing channel between the shoulder blades open and clean.
Done incorrectly, or done hastily, the bull still dies. But the kill is ugly. The estoque goes in at the wrong angle. The bull circles, stumbles, takes time to fall. The crowd sees the incompetence. The afición — the knowledgeable ones, the ones who understand what they are watching — scores the quality mercilessly. A technically successful kill that lacks elegance is still a scandal to those who know the difference.
The Iraq template was clean. Saddam's Iraq entered the ring in March 2003 and was dead by April. Oil revenues through New York by 2004. Dollar ecosystem locked in within two years. The kill took twelve years of insurgency to fully settle but the structural outcome — US control over the revenue stream — was never in doubt after the first week. The afición scored it as workmanlike rather than brilliant. It got the job done.
The Venezuela template was faster and cleaner. Maduro in a Manhattan courtroom. Caracas oil revenues redirected. Gulf Coast refineries running on Western Hemisphere crude. The corrida lasted months, not years. Fewer marks on the matador. Better choreography.
Iran is the third bull in this series and the most dangerous of the three. It has nuclear proximity, proxy networks across four countries, and a Strait of Hormuz that it has been willing to weaponise against the entire global economy. That is why the choreography has been so deliberate — six weeks of varas, a round of banderillas in Islamabad, a blockade as the muleta, and now Munir in Tehran wetting the mouth before the final tercio. Each instrument in sequence. Each designed to bring the animal to exactly the posture required for a clean kill.
Could Trump have gotten a deal without this choreography? Probably. Iran was never going to fight a two-front war against the US military and the global oil market indefinitely. The outcome was predetermined from the moment the first Tomahawk left the USS Abraham Lincoln on February 28. But a rushed kill — a deal extracted through pure brute force without the careful preparation — would have been suboptimal. The bull would have died badly. The regional architecture would have been messier. The reconstruction agreements harder to enforce. The dollar ecosystem integration slower. The afición would have scored it as a win but a sloppy one.
What is being attempted this weekend is something more ambitious: the precise, dignified, maximum-yield kill that the corrida is designed to produce when run by professionals who know what they are doing. The Jibah, not just the death.
The Three Outcomes — How This Fight Can End
Hemingway is clear on this: even a weakened bull can kill. The vara has cut the neck muscles, the banderillas have slowed it, the blood has run. But the horns are still real. The charge is still possible. A distracted matador, a crowd that breaks the moment, a patch of bad sand — any of these can turn a predetermined tragedy into a scandal. Iran is weakened. Iran is not defanged.
Iran walks from Round 2 without an agreement, ceasefire expires April 21, US bombing resumes. Iran retaliates — not with the degraded military that entered the corrida on February 28, but with whatever asymmetric capacity remains: Hormuz mines, proxy attacks on Gulf infrastructure, cyber operations on regional energy facilities. The fight continues but the corrida has become a scandal. Markets price chaos. Brent above $120. Nobody wins cleanly. The matador has been gored. Probability: 15%
Round 2 produces language but not closure. Ceasefire extended past April 21 — possibly to a 45-day Phase 2 framework as Pakistan originally proposed. Hormuz partially open, commercial traffic resuming but Iranian sovereignty language still in the fine print. Nuclear suspended but not dismantled. The corrida continues into extra rounds. The crowd grows restless. The ganadero keeps earning fees. Trump claims progress. Iran claims dignity. Nobody has the Jibah yet. Probability: 25%
Round 2 produces a framework that both sides can sell domestically. Nuclear framed as civilian cooperation with US investment — the fatwa exit ramp taken with Ghalibaf's IRGC credentials providing the domestic cover. Hormuz reopened fully, Iranian sovereignty language cosmetic rather than operational. Sanctions relief timetable agreed. Ceasefire converts to a durable framework. Trump gets the deal he wanted without ever leaving Washington. Vance gets the resume line. Pakistan gets the legacy. Iran gets to survive with partial dignity. The crowd gets Brent below $90 by the following Monday. The Jibah is clean. Probability: 60%
The Prediction
The model says Trump gets the Jibah.
Here is why. The corrida has been run correctly from the first morning. The tercio de varas — six weeks of airstrikes — cut the neck muscles. The bull cannot lift its head the way it once did. The tercio de banderillas — Round 1 in Islamabad — planted the barbs. The bull is slowed, bleeding, circling. The tercio de muerte begins this weekend.
Munir in Tehran tonight is the tell. The ganadero does not personally visit the pen unless the corrida is proceeding to its conclusion. Trump calling him "my favourite field marshal" in public is the matador acknowledging the quality of the animal delivered. These are not diplomatic pleasantries. They are the corrida working as designed.
The nuclear chip — which I have been predicting since Week 7 would be used as an exit ramp rather than a red line — is now reportedly the specific subject of optimism among Pakistani mediators. The fatwa has always been there. The Ghalibaf IRGC credentials have always been the cover story for using it. The price was right at Round 1 but not quite right enough. By Round 2, with the blockade running and the ceasefire clock at nine days, the price is right.
Hemingway writes that the truly brave bull gives no warning before it charges — no pawing of the ground, no bellowing. Only the fixing of the eye, the raising of the neck muscle, the twitch of an ear. Iran has been pawing the ground and bellowing for seven weeks. That is not a brave bull. That is a bull that does not want to charge because it knows what the charge ends in. The Jibah comes to the bull that has run out of alternatives, not to the bull still trying to avoid the conclusion.
Iran has run out of alternatives. The blockade is running. The ceasefire expires in nine days. The ganadero is in the pen tonight. The matador is waiting.
The old Iran — Khamenei's Iran, the Axis of Resistance Iran, the Iran that ran its foreign policy as an ideology rather than a state interest — died on February 28. What is sitting across the table in Islamabad this weekend is the new Iran, still wearing its predecessor's clothes, trying to find a sentence it can say that sounds like victory while accepting the terms of its own corrida.
Trump will give them that sentence. That is the Jibah. Maximum yield from the sacrifice. The bull dies with full dignity. The crowd goes home satisfied. The ganadero collects his fee. The matador takes his ears.
Check the tracker next week.
The bull may need a couple more barbs before it returns to the table. It will come. The plaza pays and the bull has no other exit.
Update as this post goes live: Iran's foreign minister has declared the Strait of Hormuz completely open. Trump has told Bloomberg and Axios simultaneously that most points are finalised and a deal is expected in the next day or two. Delegations arrive in Islamabad this weekend. Talks begin Monday. The ganadero's water worked.
New Predictions — Week 8
Armchair strategist with no formal qualifications in geopolitics, economics, military strategy, or finance. Everything here is opinion and analysis — not investment advice, not policy recommendation, not prophecy. I have been wrong before, I will be wrong again, and the tracker exists precisely so there is nowhere to hide when I am. Nothing here should be construed as a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold anything.
Amusing Morose Musings · sweet-kandy.blogspot.com · April 2026