The shooting pauses.
The talking heads flood in.
And suddenly—before the dust has even settled—the West is busy declaring defeat.
Especially, it seems, if your name is Donald Trump.
But let’s be honest: we’re not at the end of this war.
We’re at a timeout.
And trying to call the result now is like declaring the winner halfway through the third quarter.
The Fog of “Ceasefire”
What exactly is this ceasefire?
Depending on who you listen to:
It’s a diplomatic breakthrough
A humiliating climbdown
Or a temporary pause before something much bigger
Even the basics are murky.
As highlighted in the interview between Bill O'Reilly and Leland Vittert, we don’t actually know the ground truth yet.
Is the Strait of Hormuz open?
Are tolls being charged?
Is shipping moving freely—or under threat?
The honest answer: we don’t know.
And that alone should make anyone cautious about rushing to judgment.
Reality vs Rhetoric
Let’s strip away the noise.
On the battlefield:
Iran’s military capability has taken a hammering
Its infrastructure—especially energy—has been targeted
Its ability to project force has been sharply reduced
Yet, on cue, the Iranian leadership is claiming victory.
Of course they are.
Authoritarian regimes don’t lose wars publicly. They “resist,” “prevail,” or “teach lessons.”
Reality is optional. Narrative is everything.
The Strait of Hormuz – Ace or Illusion?
We’re constantly told Iran holds the ultimate trump card: the Strait of Hormuz.
Yes, roughly 20% of global oil flows through it.
Yes, disruption matters.
But here’s the part that gets exaggerated—especially by Western commentators eager to criticise their own side:
Control is not the same as influence.
Iran doesn’t “own” the Strait. It can threaten it. Harass it. Tax it—apparently even in crypto, according to reports.
But that’s not strategic dominance.
That’s economic blackmail.
And blackmail only works if the other side accepts it.
Iran’s Real Weakness Nobody Talks About
While everyone obsesses over Hormuz, they ignore Iran’s Achilles’ heel:
Kharg Island
Handles around 90% of Iran’s oil exports
Central to regime funding
A single point of catastrophic vulnerability
As Vittert argued, if you choke off the regime’s oil revenue, you don’t just weaken Iran—you threaten the regime itself.
Because this isn’t about ideology alone.
It’s about money.
Money to pay the military
Money to fund proxies
Money to keep the system loyal
Cut the flow—and the structure starts cracking from within.
Negotiation Theatre
Now we move to the next act: negotiations.
And here’s where it gets dangerous.
Iran doesn’t want a deal.
It wants time.
Time to:
Rebuild capability
Regroup politically
Extract concessions
Stretch the process indefinitely
And as Vittert pointed out, if Iran believes the US needs a deal, it will simply raise the price.
That’s negotiation 101.
What Does “Winning” Actually Look Like?
Let’s be clear about the minimum outcome:
Iran hands over its enriched uranium stockpile (~450kg)
Ends support for proxy terror groups
Dismantles ballistic missile capability
Fully reopens Hormuz—no tolls, no threats
Anything less?
That’s not a win. That’s a reset.
Leverage – Use It or Lose It
Right now, the US is in a position of strength.
That won’t last forever.
The logic is brutally simple:
Iran fears loss of revenue more than loss of infrastructure
Its regime stability depends on oil money
Its system is more fragile than it looks
So the leverage exists.
The question is whether it will be used.
Because threats only matter if they’re credible.
And credibility sometimes requires action—not just words.
The Western Self-Sabotage Machine
Meanwhile, back in the West, a familiar pattern:
Instant criticism
Declaring failure before outcomes are known
Undermining negotiating leverage in real time
It goes beyond disagreement.
At times, it borders on strategic self-sabotage.
As O’Reilly bluntly put it, declaring defeat before negotiations even begin isn’t just wrong—it’s subversive.
So Where Are We?
Not at the end.
Not even close.
We’re in the pause between rounds.
Iran is weakened—but defiant
The US is strong—but under pressure to “close the deal”
The outcome is still entirely in play
And the biggest mistake right now?
Pretending the game is already over.
Final Thought
Wars aren’t decided by headlines.
They’re decided by outcomes.
And right now, the only honest answer is this:
We don’t know who’s won.
But we do know this—
The side that uses its leverage best from here…
will.


