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.
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.
| Prediction | Week | Status |
|---|---|---|
| US objective = revenue control not regime change | Wk 1 | ✓ Cleared |
| Hormuz reopens within 60 days of Feb 28 | Wk 1 | ✗ Wrong (timing) |
| Iran accepts revenue oversight framework | Wk 1 | ✓ Cleared |
| Redollarization accelerates | Wk 1 | ✓ On track |
| US GDP pulls away from China through 2027 | Wk 1 | ✓ On track |
| 2026 as Axis of Resistance high-water mark | Wk 1 | ✓ Cleared |
| New Middle East, no Iranian veto | Wk 1 | ✓ Cleared |
| Four-week resolution as modal | Wk 1 | ✗ Wrong (timing) |
| Kharg struck before April 10 | Wk 5 | ✓ Cleared |
| Hormuz forced open by US naval action | Wk 5 | ✓ Cleared |
| Escalation to persuade not destroy | Wk 6 | ✓ Cleared |
| Round 1: drama only | Wk 7 | ✓ Cleared |
| Pakistan announces next round | Wk 7 | ✓ Cleared |
| Nuclear framed as civilian cooperation | Wk 7 | ✓ Cleared |
| Brent below $85 Monday | Wk 7 | ✗ Wrong (timing) |
| Vance 2028, Islamabad | Wk 7 | ✓ On track |
| Round 2 framework, ceasefire extended | Wk 8 | ✓ Cleared |
| Trump extracts maximum, clean Jibah | Wk 8 | ✗ Wrong (dirty kill) |
| Hormuz fully open within 10 days of Round 2 | Wk 8 | ✗ Wrong (timing) |
| Friday market close trigger | Wk 9 | ✓ Cleared |
| Dirty kill completes within 3 weeks | Wk 9 | ◐ Structure right |
| GCC requests accelerated resolution | Wk 9 | ✓ Cleared |
| Iran signs on Trump's terms, not Iran's | Wk 10 | ✓ Cleared |
| The UAE backstop gets used | Wk 10 | ✗ Unproven |
| Iran does not use its remaining denial weapons | Wk 10 | ✓ Cleared |
| MOU extends beyond 60 days, repeatedly | Wk 11 | ∼ Open |
| Gulf coalition holds publicly | Wk 11 | ∼ Open, holding |
| Netanyahu stays in managed acquiescence | Wk 11 | ∼ Open, under stress |
| IRGC-attributable incidents accumulate | Wk 11 | ∼ Open, loading |
| Any IRGC action framed as MOU enforcement | Wk 11 | ∼ Open |
| Nuclear continues; Russia custody of uranium | Wk 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
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