Monday, April 27, 2026

‘Art of the Deal’ Reversed: How Netanyahu Exploited Trump, Accelerated American Decline

 By Ramzy Baroud

Those who purchased and invested time in reading Donald Trump's 'The Art of the Deal' should exercise caution. (Design: Palestine Chronicle)

Those who purchased and invested time in reading Donald Trump’s ‘The Art of the Deal’ should exercise caution.

Though reading—even nonsensical material—has value, allowing us to broaden our intellectual horizons and prepare ourselves to understand all arguments, one must not elevate such “reading material” beyond its deserved scope.

Trump, born into a very wealthy family, was not shaped by the harsh realities that define genuine negotiation. His trajectory was cushioned by inherited capital, access, and a system designed to reward spectacle and excess. He did not emerge from struggle, but from insulation. This distinction is not incidental—it is foundational.

Even in his own mythology, Trump admits to the performative nature of his approach. In The Art of the Deal, he famously writes: “I play to people’s fantasies… I call it truthful hyperbole.”

This is not strategy in any classical sense—it is manipulation elevated to doctrine.

Trump does not fully understand how real deals in the world of politics are made. Even his deals as a developer and tradesman are highly specific to his environment. His success—or failure—is largely dependent on his ability to manipulate markets, dominate competitors, inflate brand perception, and weaponize media attention.

This is profoundly area-specific: New York, Florida, or anywhere else within the United States.

In these environments, rules are elastic, institutions are predictable, and the system ultimately protects capital. But in the realm of international politics, these assumptions collapse.

And yet, in American politics, the same tactics worked.

Americans, conditioned by spectacle, reward performance. Trump understood this instinctively. He is, fundamentally, a showman—a political impresario. He can sell brands—whether knives, steaks, ties, or lofty promises of “making America great again.” His success did not stem from wisdom or intellectual depth, but from his precise ability to exploit weakness: to lie convincingly, to mirror the anxieties of desperate voters, to recycle slogans like “drain the swamp,” and, above all, to entertain.

Unfortunately, in American politics—where political charlatans, backed by armies of lawyers, media figures, and professional entertainers, dominate the stage—such hollow performance often prevails. Ronald Reagan is often cited as a prototype of this phenomenon, but he was hardly alone.

Trump, however, made a critical miscalculation: he assumed that what worked in selling illusions to American consumers and voters would translate seamlessly into international politics.

For him, everything is about leverage.

And since the United States possesses, in his view, overwhelming force, he believed that military superiority could function as the ultimate negotiating tool. This belief has been repeated throughout his rhetoric, often framing the US as possessing “the most powerful military” in the world.

In his logic, power is not managed—it is displayed, exaggerated, and weaponized.

Thus, he invested heavily in militarization, rhetorically and politically, promoting a worldview where dominance replaces diplomacy. His political circle reflected this posture: figures selected not for strategic depth, but for performative aggression—individuals embodying a culture of intimidation rather than negotiation.

Even before escalating tariffs, Trump consistently invoked military strength as a bargaining chip—threatening invasions, casually proposing the acquisition of foreign territories, and even suggesting the renaming of geographical realities as though sovereignty itself were negotiable branding.

But intimidation failed.

The world did not respond as expected. States did not capitulate under theatrical displays of force. And so Trump turned—predictably—to tariffs.

He repeatedly framed tariffs not as economic instruments, but as ideological weapons, famously declaring that “tariffs are the most beautiful word… in the dictionary.”

This was not economic policy—it was branding masquerading as strategy. That tactic—using monopolistic leverage to pressure competitors—may function within Trump’s provincial business universe, where regulatory systems often favor corporations and their legal machinery over smaller actors.

Internationally, however, the system is far more complex.

Following World War II, the United States commanded roughly half of global economic output. Today, that dominance has significantly eroded, replaced by a multipolar system in which economic power is distributed, contested, and interdependent.

Even the remaining US share of the global economy does not operate independently. It is governed by interconnected realities: supply chains that span continents, energy dependencies that constrain policy, maritime routes that must remain secure, volatile markets, and access to raw materials controlled by other powers.

Trump either misunderstood—or ignored—this.

He began imposing tariffs aggressively, only to repeatedly reverse or delay them under pressure from markets, allies, and internal contradictions. His economic strategy mirrored his broader political method: escalation, spectacle, retreat—then repetition.

This pattern exposed the limits of his approach.

The attack on Venezuela was a continuation of this logic—a desperate attempt to manufacture leverage where none existed, to project strength amid mounting policy failures, and to revive the illusion of decisive leadership.

Trump needed a spectacle.

He needed Maduro captured, humiliated, displayed. He needed a short, decisive operation with immediate economic and political returns. He needed, above all, a performance—one that would validate his worldview.

This was framed as the ultimate manifestation of his promises: overwhelming military force, immediate economic gain, controlled chaos followed by stability, and the inevitable media spectacle—the image of victory carefully staged.

But Trump was not as strategic as he believed. He exists within an echo chamber—surrounded by loyalists, advisors, and media figures who constantly reinforce the myth of his genius. This insulation deepens the very flaw that defines him: an inability to distinguish between performance and reality.

The Venezuelan episode was not enough. He needed more—to reverse the trajectory of failure that defined both his first administration and the early stages of his second.

It was at this moment that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu entered the equation—armed not only with plans, but with a deep understanding of Trump’s psychology.

Netanyahu understood what many had already learned: Trump is not driven by ideology, strategy, or long-term geopolitical thinking. He is driven by praise, by spectacle, by the illusion of victory.

This is why Netanyahu consistently shielded Trump from criticism, reacting aggressively to even mild dissent within Israeli political circles. He understood that Trump’s loyalty is transactional—but his ego is absolute.

The objective was clear: draw Trump into a prolonged confrontation with Iran, particularly in strategically volatile arenas like the Strait of Hormuz. Not necessarily to win decisively, but to entangle.

For Netanyahu, all outcomes carried benefit: a weakened Iran, a destabilized region, and an opportunity for Israel to reassert dominance after the profound political and moral damage inflicted by the war on Gaza, the genocide, and the resilience of Palestinian and regional resistance movements.

The result, however, was catastrophic. What followed will likely be remembered as one of the most disastrous periods in modern US foreign policy—one that accelerated the erosion of American influence in the Middle East and exposed the limits of its global power.

Now, there can be no “art of the deal” for Trump—because there is no leverage left.

His choices are stark: withdraw from a confrontation with an Iran that has emerged more resilient and strategically entrenched, or sink deeper into a protracted conflict that will further weaken the United States and destabilize the region.

The choice should be obvious.

The real question is whether the United States possesses the political will—and institutional courage—to restrain Trump before he drags his country, and much of the world, further into the abyss.

– Dr. Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the Editor of The Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of eight books. His latest book, ‘Before the Flood,’ was published by Seven Stories Press. His other books include ‘Our Vision for Liberation’, ‘My Father was a Freedom Fighter’ and ‘The Last Earth’. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Islam and Global Affairs (CIGA). 

A Fragile Truce and Tense Negotiations: The Future of Iranian-American Talks

 By Hassan Lafi

The US delegation left Islamabad as talks with Iran collapsed. (Photos: video grab, social media. Design: Palestine Chronicle)

Iran does not perceive the primary threat as limited to its nuclear program, but as part of a broader strategy aimed at its geopolitical encirclement. It therefore operates with the logic of a state engaged in an existential struggle—seeking to preserve its political system while deterring external attempts to undermine its sovereignty.

The announcement of a temporary, two-week truce between Iran on one side and the United States and Israel on the other—reportedly mediated by Pakistan—initially suggested that the latest escalation might be contained, potentially opening a pathway toward renewed negotiations.

Yet subsequent developments quickly made clear that this was not a genuine settlement, but rather a fragile ceasefire designed to manage the conflict while allowing all parties to reposition themselves politically and militarily.

The first round of post-truce negotiations failed to produce any tangible breakthrough. Tensions persisted across both military and political fronts. On the military level, Washington escalated pressure by imposing a naval blockade on Iranian ports, tightening economic constraints and increasing the cost of diplomatic delay.

Tehran responded by briefly closing the Strait of Hormuz after announcing its reopening to navigation—an unmistakable signal that it retains strategic leverage and is willing to threaten global trade routes in response to economic coercion.

At the political and media level, the US president reverted to a familiar negotiating style: rhetorical escalation through public statements and social media. Within a single month, threats to target Iranian infrastructure and energy facilities alternated with calls for dialogue, illustrating a deliberate strategy of pressure through ambiguity.

In contrast, Iran refused to participate in a new round of talks in Islamabad, arguing that negotiations conducted under military threat and economic blockade lack both credibility and parity. Nevertheless, Washington announced an extension of the ceasefire and urged Tehran to present a “clear and comprehensive vision” for a solution—without specifying a timeline, thereby preserving strategic flexibility.

Tehran’s response was cautious but firm. Iranian officials rejected the notion that a unilateral ceasefire extension carries political or legal weight, while maintaining military control over key maritime routes. This reflects a consistent principle: reciprocity, and a refusal to accept unilateral management of the crisis.

This dynamic raises several fundamental questions. How should these negotiations be interpreted through the lens of international relations theory? What tools of power are being deployed by each side? And are these developments leading toward de-escalation—or merely postponing a larger confrontation?

The Nature of Negotiations: Pressure as Process

These negotiations diverge from traditional diplomatic frameworks, where a ceasefire precedes structured dialogue. Instead, what is unfolding is negotiation under sustained pressure.

Military, economic, and informational tools have not been suspended—they have been integrated into the negotiation process itself.

The United States employs sanctions, naval restrictions, military threats, and media messaging to extract concessions. Iran, in turn, leverages geography, energy chokepoints, and strategic patience to resist pressure and signal its capacity for escalation.

This is not diplomacy replacing force. It is diplomacy conducted through force.

Interpreting US Strategy

Political Realism: Reasserting Balance of Power

From a realist perspective, US actions reflect a clear objective: preventing Iran from converting its military resilience into long-term geopolitical influence.

Washington’s priorities include limiting Iran’s ability to weaponize maritime routes, curbing its regional reach, and imposing a stricter post-conflict framework—all while reassuring allies and reinforcing its own global standing.

This explains the dual approach of rhetorical de-escalation combined with operational escalation.

Coercive Diplomacy

US behavior also aligns with coercive diplomacy—using credible threats to force negotiations on favorable terms. Repeated warnings about targeting Iran’s energy infrastructure serve less as immediate war signals and more as instruments to raise the cost of defiance.

Dual-Level Negotiation

American messaging is not directed solely at Tehran. It also targets domestic audiences, Congress, allies, and the security establishment. This produces apparent contradictions between threats and flexibility, as each message serves a different political function.

Interpreting Iranian Strategy

Defensive Realism and Survival Logic

Iran operates under the assumption that external pressure is not limited to specific policies, but threatens the system itself. As a result, it rejects negotiations conducted under duress, refuses imposed timelines, and avoids unilateral concessions.

From Tehran’s perspective, yielding under pressure invites further demands.

Asymmetric Deterrence

Faced with conventional military imbalance, Iran relies on asymmetric tools: control over the Strait of Hormuz, missile and drone capabilities, regional alliances, and endurance under sustained pressure.

Its continued use of maritime leverage—even during a truce—reflects this strategy.

Political Identity

Iran’s posture is also shaped by political identity. Presenting itself as an independent actor resisting external domination, it views negotiations under coercion as a threat not only to policy, but to legitimacy.

The Role of Mediation

Pakistan’s involvement highlights the growing influence of middle powers in crisis management. Its ability to engage both Washington and Tehran positions it as a useful intermediary, capable of facilitating temporary de-escalation.

However, mediation alone cannot produce lasting outcomes without genuine political will from the primary actors.

Strategic Objectives

The United States seeks to neutralize Iran’s leverage over global energy routes, secure a new security framework that protects its regional allies, and demonstrate that sustained pressure yields results.

Iran, by contrast, aims to lift sanctions, secure recognition of its regional role, obtain guarantees against future attacks, and ensure that negotiations occur on equal footing.

Israel’s position remains more uncompromising, favoring the degradation of Iran’s capabilities and opposing any agreement that could consolidate Tehran’s strategic gains.

Possible Scenarios

The most likely outcome is a limited interim arrangement—partial easing of pressure, controlled reopening of maritime routes, and continued negotiations without resolving core disputes.

A prolonged truce without agreement is also plausible, reflecting ongoing crisis management rather than resolution.

A breakdown leading to renewed escalation remains a constant risk, particularly in the event of miscalculation or a triggering incident in the Gulf.

A comprehensive agreement, while possible, appears unlikely in the current climate of deep mistrust.

Conclusion

The current trajectory suggests that neither side seeks full-scale war, yet neither is willing to make decisive concessions. What emerges instead is a pattern of managed confrontation—temporary ceasefires interspersed with calibrated escalation.

In this context, negotiation is no longer separate from power; it is an extension of it.

The future of Iranian-American engagement will not be determined solely at the negotiating table, but across strategic waterways, energy markets, deterrence calculations, and domestic political arenas.

This is not merely a dispute over policy. It is a struggle over the shape of the regional order to come.

(This article was originally published in Al-Mayadeen Arabic. It was translated and edited by the Palestine Chronicle)

Iran, “Do or Die” Ultimatums: Trump May Need a Morning-After Pill for Standing Down Over Iran!

 The sharp shift in rhetoric surrounding a war between the United States, Israel, and Iran highlights how fragile and contradictory the balance of power in the Middle East remains, where loud threats can quickly give way to diplomatic retreat.

Jeffrey Silverman

Well, that escalated quickly—then awkwardly de-escalated even faster. One minute it’s apocalyptic end-of-civilization threats and late-night “do or die” ultimatums, and the next it’s a diplomatic shrug and a rhetorical “nothing to see here.”

If geopolitics had a morning-after pill, this would be the moment someone’s reaching for damage control and a shot of the hair of the dog that bit you.

In this latest episode of brinkmanship-meets-backpedaling, the question isn’t just why the tough talk suddenly softened but who’s left holding the bill, who is still spoiling for a fight, and whether anyone involved actually meant what they said in the first place. As Mark Twain might have appreciated, it’s not the threat that lingers—it’s the uncomfortable translation of what those threats really imply once the cheering stops.

Stand-down and Ceasefire!

Economic realities, especially how the price of a fill up at the gas station has more influence over the voting habits of Americans than any of Trump’s rhetoric and empty promises, will continue to bind Trump in a net of his own making

It is obvious that, in the face of unexpectedly strong Iranian resistance, Trump backed down; however, what will Israel do next to spoil the stand-down and ceasefire? Not to insinuate that any ceasefire would hold for long, as real war is still very much on the horizon!

Trump’s threatening and genocidal posts are still fresh in the minds of not only Iranians: “A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back … I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will.”

The trouble with Trump’s war ultimatum is that if you don’t follow through, it will backfire, the US will lose face, and America’s credibility as an ally will be tarnished, to put it nicely. This is something the Gulf States know very well and an indication that Trump is not fully in the Zionist camp either, a realization that Israel may soon have to deal with.

If Trump had made good on his genocidal threats, which is still a very real possibility, and ended his threats, like Mark Twain’s War Prayer, with God bless the great people of Iran.

And then, as in The War Prayer, there came—if not in flesh, then in meaning—a stranger to interpret what had been said. For when a man proclaims power over another nation, when he hints at fire and ruin, yet ends with “God bless the great people of Iran,” the Stranger would rise and say:

“You have heard the words as they were spoken. Now hear them as they are meant!”

If Trump even tries what he threatens, the whole world will hate him. I guess he would blow up everybody then. Did you see when he talked to the astronauts and only talked about himself? They ignored him and sat there for a long time not saying anything. The astronauts don’t like him. They’re supposed to meet him at the White House after they come back. I think they are dreading that.

Israel is already claiming Lebanon is not included in the cease-fire, launching indiscriminate attacks on Beirut that have killed over 200 and wounded thousands more. Iran also confirmed it will be charging a transit fee through the strait, while the UAE and Kuwait have attacked Iranian oil facilities, triggering Iranian retaliation. So already a lot of problems for the ceasefire and negotiation, as good intentions may not be enough.

Why did Trump back down?

The first reaction is to give time for the Americans to lick their wounds and start again. Trump knew it would be a ‘shit show,’ and Iran was prepared for a fight, and too many Americans would die.

Now it is better to let Israel do the fighting, at least carry out the bombing, so as to allow Trump to save his face (and another part of his anatomy), and not to forget the plight of his minions, i.e., their political ambitions, especially for those closest to the opportunist family business and the cash flow.

But there are other factors, economic and geopolitical, as once staunch allies, including those in Asia, NATO, etc., are being transformed into disgruntled victims, as US policy harms them more than it inflicts hellfire on the claimed wicked Iranian regime. It puts the economies of friends into a freefall.

Israel may end up the most damaged in the near future, having been tossed under the bus out of political expediency. Its hands are already full in Lebanon and may be left fighting Iran’s proxy, Hezbollah, on its own. Iran will remain all too willing to continue to direct materials and financial support to keep Israel bogged down in its ill-advised invasion and attempted permanent occupation (annexation) of South Lebanon as part of the Greater Israel Project, while the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is threatening military action against Israel in retaliation for strikes on Lebanon.

Economic realities, especially how the price of a fill-up at the gas station has more influence over the voting habits of Americans than any of Trump’s rhetoric and empty promises, will continue to bind Trump in a net of his own making. It is worth mentioning, as former Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene recently shared,

“It is time for the 25th Amendment, as not a single bomb has been dropped on America. We cannot kill an entire civilization. This is evil and madness!”

The ‘petrodollar’ has been weakening for years, and economists have been warning of its continued downward spiral. The Iran war put a spotlight on it. Two years ago, Saudi Arabia quietly refused to renew the ‘petrodollar’ deal with America that wired the world economy for 50 years. Soon the dollar may be dead in the water.

The USA is not facing so many problems; however, for the rest of the world, WATCH OUT, especially Europe and Asia. Are you more on the receiving end, e.g., are you the very regions that will suffer the most from the blowback of the US and Israel playing a high-stakes game of chicken with Iran?

Meanwhile, it is as if Trump wants the whole world to bow down and worship him. But he is only a Wannabe AntiChrist, not the full-fledged one. He is threatening every person on earth. It is him vs. the 8.3 billion of the rest of us.

Meanwhile, Vice President JD Vance and White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt continue to try and gaslight by claiming that Lebanon was “never part of the ceasefire,” in direct contradiction of clear statements by both Iran and the Pakistani mediators who confirm that it most certainly was. The secretary of war, the psychopathic Pete Hesgith, meanwhile claims “total victory,” a claim that defies any form of rational thought.

It is like a coup d’étàt of a brainwashed cult, as if Charles Manson or Jim Jones took over the US and became king, and the future does not look peaceful at all.

Jeffrey K. Silverman is a freelance journalist and international development specialist, BSc, MSc, based for 30 years in Georgia and the former Soviet