Compared to where we were before February 28, it's a terrible failure
Trump again claims victory in Iran. He’s claimed victory before, but now he has a so-called “agreement” with Iran.That agreement, which appears to be no more than a memo of
understanding — that is, a set of principles to which Iran and the United
States have agreed — stops the fighting and reopens the Strait of Hormuz but it
does not deal with the issue that caused Trump to initiate the conflict: Iran’s
nuclear program.
Keep that in mind as you hear various renditions of what’s been decided. Recall that the Strait of Hormuz was open before Trump began bombing Iran.
At best, the agreement Trump is touting restores the status
quo to where it was when he commenced hostilities. Remember also that Iran had
agreed to limit its development of nuclear-grade materials in its treaty with
the Obama administration, which Trump revoked in 2018.
Oil prices are far higher, and will take some time to return to where they were before it began (if they ever do).
Meanwhile, Trump has caused the United States to be more
dependent on fossil fuels than we were prior to his inauguration for a second
time, and the high oil prices brought on by his war has enriched Vladimir
Putin’s regime.
The war with Iran has cost the United States an estimated $90 billion, and that’s a conservative estimate. It has caused widespread suffering throughout the Middle East.
It has put Israel in a more precarious
situation than it was before — and much of that is due to Benjamin Netanyahu,
who is not a party to, and has not approved, the agreement.
This doesn’t look like a victory. Compared to where the
United States and the Middle East were on February 28, when Trump began this
war, it’s a terrible failure.


