Phillips O’Brien (no relation I know of) is an American historian and professor of strategic studies at the University of St Andrews, Scotland. He was formerly at the University of Glasgow where he ran the Scottish Centre for War Studies. And this is what Professor O’Brien thinks of Trump’s cease fire deal.
Donald Trump yesterday showed how few cards the USA had to play in his war of choice, when he went from threatening to destroy Iranian people, culture and history, to agreeing to a two-week ceasefire and talks based on an Iranian ten point plan. The details of this plan (see below) amount to a comprehensive US defeat. If this indeed is the end of the war and that Iranian plan is the basis of a deal, it makes this if not the longest war in US history, the most pointless and a complete waste. Iran looks on the verge of emerging stronger, with the ability to generate massive new income, while the US looks, in a word, a busted flush.
This is no run of the mill TACO. This is complete US strategic failure.
Last night I was reading contradictory reports on the status of the Strait of Hormuz. I’m reading now that it’s still not safe until everyone has agreed to new protocols. Even whenever the Strait is safe I’m reading that it will be months before oil production is back to where it was, so there will be less oil on the world market for a while. And Iran wants control of the Strait from now on, which it didn’t have before. It plans to charge a fat fee $2 million a ship — for passage through it’s strait.
Iran state media published the ten-point plan that it says will be the basis of negotiations. Professor O’Brien calls them Iran’s “victory terms.” Do read O’Brien’s entire post; it will catch you up better than I can.
And then Trump promptly said that wasn’t the same list of ten points he agreed to yesterday, but he wouldn’t say what those other points were. Probably he just doesn’t remember what he was told yesterday. The cease fire doesn’t seem to be entirely holding, but I don’t think Pete Hegseth has bombed anybody today. But it looks like Trump will get nothing he wanted. Iran, on the other hand, will come out of this much stronger and more feared. See also A New Geopolitical Reality Is Here by Thomas Wright at The Atlantic and Ignorance and Ignominy by Paul Krugman.
Of course, we don’t know how this episode will end. Trump could throw a fit tomorrow and go back to threatening to destroy Iran. I don’t know if Trump realizes even now how badly he screwed up. Most Republicans in Congress are unlikely to do anything to rein him in. Yet. When they get closer to the midterms and they are facing an electoral abyss they may change their minds.
This episode also demonstrates that The World’s Biggest Military Power is no stronger than the intelligence of the people leading it. With Trump and Hegseth in charge, it’s clear we’d be better off with less military and more smarts. It’s the U.S. that’s looking like a paper tiger right now.


