Monday, May 18, 2026

Empire in freefall: Desperate sabre-rattling against Iran shows US has completely lost the plot

By Press TV Strategic Analysis Desk

The threatening rhetoric emanating from Washington these days is not merely the product of a clueless and embattled administration or election-year posturing.

It is a calculated instrument of psychological warfare – wielded after disastrous performance on both the battlefield and the negotiating table.

As a senior advisor to the Leader of the Islamic Revolution succinctly put it, the enemy's menacing tone serves a singular purpose: to frighten Iran into a partial – or complete – retreat from conditions that Iran has presented to end the unprovoked and illegal war.

But beneath the bluster lies a deeper, more profound reality. The United States no longer threatens from a position of unchallenged supremacy that it once enjoyed. It is resorting to sabre-rattling now from the precipice of decline and decay.

Having suffered successive military and strategic defeats – from the 12-day war last year to the Ramadan War this year – the American Empire finds its once-mighty image in tatters. These hollow threats are not a sign of strength but the final, desperate convulsions of a so-called “superpower” trying to blackmail its way back to relevance.

The weapon that failed: Why threats now outperform action

The enemy's most critical element for imposing its diktats has never been merely its military arsenal. It has been how Iran reacts to the very concept of war.

After imposing two unprovoked, devastating wars on the Islamic Republic within ten months, inflicting heavy human and economic losses, the enemy now seeks to weaponize the very pain the Iranian people have endured.

The strategy is brutal but simple: brandish the threat of even more death and destruction, then demand a retreat from Iran’s very logical and principled positions.

Yet here lies the enemy's fatal miscalculation. In both imposed wars, neither the United States nor its Zionist proxy secured a single military victory over Iran. They pummeled civilian neighborhoods, hospitals, and research centers. They assassinated the Leader of the Islamic Revolution and murdered nearly 170 children inside a single classroom – acts of such unparalleled cowardice and criminality that every remaining red line was erased.

But on the battlefield, where material strength meets the will of a nation that has been wronged, they achieved nothing. Absolutely nothing. The Iranian nation resisted with all its might, and the enemy suffered unimaginable losses.

Consequently, the threat of war has proven more effective for the enemy than war itself. For years, Washington has blackmailed Iran by keeping the sword of war suspended overhead.

And in some instances, most notably the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), this psychological extortion succeeded, extracting concessions the battlefield never could.

But those days are ending, and even Americans know it. 

The last arrow in the quiver

Today, the enemy's need to keep that sword raised above Iran's head is greater than ever before. And paradoxically, that urgency is a sign of profound weakness.

If the United States fails in its current round of blackmail against Iran – and it surely will – it will lose the last remnants of its credibility and prestige. Consider the arithmetic: Washington has already fired its last arrow: full-scale military aggression. That arrow did not achieve any of its objectives. It did not dismantle Iran's nuclear rights. It did not bring the Islamic Republic to its knees. It did not even meet basic military objectives.

If extortion also fails, the Empire will have nothing left. No military victory. No diplomatic surrender. No economic collapse in Tehran. The United States will have squandered its last asset: the illusion of being a power to reckon with. It is already teetering on the brink.

Thus, the current threats are not about Iran at all. They are about defending the tattered remnants of America's global image. Washington fears a domino effect. If Iran stands firm – if it refuses to blink – then America's satellites and regional allies will watch in real time as the emperor loses control completely.

One by one, they will recalibrate their loyalties. The threat of war this time is not an offensive lunge. It is a defensive crouch – the last gasp of a failing Empire trying to prevent its own staggering, irreversible collapse.

In truth, these threats represent the final attempts of a so-called "superpower" to avoid complete collapse. Should they succeed – and should Iran retreat even tactically from its logical and lawful positions – the United States would gain a temporary lifeline. It would secure survival and breathing room. It would rush to compensate for its material weaknesses and, more importantly, repair the reputational damage inflicted by its failed confrontations with Iran. It would then wield that rebuilt credibility in future rounds of war.

But Iran's decision-makers understand this trap perfectly. Any retreat from firm, principled positions will not prevent further losses. It will accelerate them. Because the enemy's calculations are brutally simple: every retreat by Iran validates the strategy of threat.

Existential threat requires existential resistance

For the United States and Israel, this war is an existential threat. They have staked their regional hegemony, their deterrence credibility, and the survival of their preferred order on forcing Iran to surrender. But the same is true in reverse. Just as war is an existential threat to the enemy, it is also an existential threat to Iran.

And an enemy that has already committed the most heinous crime – the assassination of a Leader – has no remaining red lines. When someone crosses that threshold, it announces to the world that it is capable of anything. No negotiation, no concession, no partial retreat will satisfy such an adversary. Concessions will not buy peace. They will only invite greater aggression. It has been fully demonstrated in the last two imposed wars.

Therefore, existential threat demands existential resistance. That means the highest degree of steadfastness. It means no retreat – not even verbal – in protecting the system. It means maximum deterrence achieved not through bargaining, but through unbreakable will.

In contrast, resistance against an existential threat – and the consequent disappointment of the enemy – leads to the highest form of deterrence: intrinsic power. Not borrowed power. Not power dependent on American permission or European mediation. Intrinsic power flows from the nation's own resilience, its military ingenuity, and its refusal to submit.

And here is the strategic payoff that Western analysts consistently miss. Reaching the highest level of deterrent power brings security. Security brings capital and investment. Investment neutralizes economic pressures. The very resilience that frustrates Washington's blackmail is the key that unlocks Iran's economic future.

These are not separate tracks. They are a single, integrated reality.

Asymmetry: Iran’s choicest weapon

The conventional military gap between Iran and the US-Israeli alliance remains vast in terms of equipment, technology, and visible firepower. This is not a secret. But war is not a spreadsheet. Facing this disparity, Iran adopted asymmetrical warfare methods, and those methods have proven overwhelmingly effective in the recent war.

In the face of massive, heavy aerial barrages, Iran did not attempt to match the enemy plane for plane, bomb for bomb. Instead, it deployed impact-oriented defense and offense, using minimal and low-cost equipment to achieve disproportionate strategic effects.

This is not a sign of weakness, but a demonstration of strategic intelligence.

Moreover, a new element has now entered the war equations: the mobilized Ummah. For decades, the United States assumed it could fight Iran in isolation. The resistance front – stretching from Lebanon to Yemen, from Iraq to Palestine – has transformed asymmetrical warfare into a regional force multiplier.

In both recent imposed wars, this element tipped the scales decisively in Iran's favor.

This same logic applies to countering classical threats. Non-classical, asymmetrical responses are always more effective against a rigid, technologically dependent superpower. And make no mistake: if the enemy turns its threats into action once again, Iran will deploy options it has deliberately withheld until now.

Those options are not secrets. They include engaging other vital global economic arteries in the region, not just the Strait of Hormuz. They include deploying new-generation strategic weapons that have been developed precisely for such a contingency. And they include the "greening" or activation of all red lines and military considerations that were respected or held back during the Twelve-Day War and the Ramadan War.

A second round, if it comes, will not look like the first. And the enemy knows this.

Two fronts, one unbreakable will

The path of strength forged by Iran's armed forces on the battlefield and its people in the streets must now continue on two critical fronts: diplomacy and economic resilience.

Iran's executive and diplomatic apparatuses are currently like fighters standing behind a missile launch system. They are not backstage administrators but frontline defenders, obliged to fight to the death for their country's existence.

There is no room for fatigue and no room for tactical surrender dressed up as pragmatism.

The resilience of both the government and the people is not merely a political slogan. It is the material requirement for getting through this phase, to preserve Iran's existence, to create lasting deterrence, and to remove the shadow of war for all times to come.

Iran's diplomacy, with a clear and correct understanding of the fateful nature of this moment, must leave no path open for the enemy to achieve its goals. That means no ambiguous compromises, no backdoor concessions, and no subtle signals of weakness that can be read in Washington and Tel Aviv as cracks in the Iranian will.

The Empire cannot afford another major defeat

US is threatening Iran today not because it operates from a position of strength, but because it is weak and failing. The threats are meant to extract what the battlefield could not secure: a symbolic Iranian retreat that would allow the Empire to patch up its tattered image.

The Iranian leadership understands this calculus perfectly. They know that any retreat – even a temporary or partial one – will not prevent another war, but will guarantee one. Because the enemy's only remaining path to saving its credibility is to break the Iranian will.

But the enemy will fail. Iran has no choice but to stand firm. Existential threat requires existential resistance and resistance, in the end, is the only path to security, to investment, to economic relief, and to lasting peace in the country and the region.

The sword of war still hangs overhead, but the hand gripping it trembles. Iran has learned a simple truth: a shaking hand cannot strike deeper than a nation that refuses to bend.

The war of wills: Iran’s principled stance remains unshakeable as America’s options fade away

By Press TV Strategic Analysis Desk

In the high-stakes confrontation between Iran and the United States, triggered by the unprovoked and illegal war of aggression against the Islamic Republic, the battlefield has shifted from sheer military might to a far more complex arena: a war of wills.

While President Donald Trump continues to indulge in sabre-rattling, Iran has laid out a clear, principled, and – by any rational measure – logical framework for ending the war that has already exacted a heavy toll on the aggressors, according to US media reports

Tehran’s core message is simple yet profound: the fundamental principles of the Islamic Republic are non-negotiable, and the natural conditions for ending the unprovoked and illegal war are immutable. This is not a bargaining position but a strategic reality.

40 days that changed everything

To understand Iran's unwavering and unshakable stance today, one must revisit the 40-day trial of no-holds-barred military aggression imposed upon the Islamic Republic by the United States, several of its Arab allies, and the Zionist regime

By all accounts – and with irrefutable evidence – that aggression failed. The initiators, America and its partners, achieved none of their stated war objectives.

Through sheer resistance and remarkable steadfastness, Iran not only survived a full-scale imposed war but emerged stronger, fortified, and armed with new strategic advantages – most notably, consolidated influence over the Strait of Hormuz.

That episode carried a critical lesson: when an aggressor fails to break a nation's will, the victor dictates the terms. America and its allies were defeated not merely militarily, but by Iran's indomitable will. Therefore, any negotiation today that ignores this reality is not diplomacy, but an attempt to compel Iran, through siege and strangulation, to surrender what it refused to yield through a full-scale imposed war.

The illogic of US approach: Negotiation under blockade

The current American strategy of offering negotiations while simultaneously imposing a naval and economic blockade is logically incoherent and legally flawed.

Why would any sovereign nation accept “talks” under the duress of an illegal siege designed to strip it of its principles, strategic assets, and national wealth?

The United States is essentially asking Iran to concede in peacetime what it successfully defended in wartime. That is not a path to peace but a dangerous recipe for prolonged war.

Iran has made a clear calculation, grounded in bitter historical experience: yielding to American demands would only inflict far greater harm than enduring another war or continued economic pressure. The history bears testimony to this fact.

Any retreat – any softening of its principled positions – would bring no relief whatsoever. It would only invite a bloodier war in the near future, aimed at seizing more of Iran's national wealth, following the same pattern previously used to target its nuclear energy program.

Iran’s golden triangle

Here is where Iran's strategic posture becomes most compelling. In one hand, Tehran holds a closed fist of rational, logical conditions for ending the third imposed war. In the other, it holds an even larger package of untapped options should diplomacy fail. This is not bluff, but a calculated posture rooted in genuine strength and deep regional asymmetries.

Iran's logic is understandable to any fair-minded observer anywhere in the world. The aggressor must pay damages and compensation. The party that was aggressed upon owes the aggressor nothing. This principle is so basic that even in the wild, the strong victor imposes its terms on the defeated, not the reverse. Yet Iran, true to its values, does not base its conditions on the law of the jungle. It bases them on justice and fairness.

So, what does Iran demand? Only its own legitimate and inalienable rights: complete sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz; compensation for damages and the release of frozen assets; guarantees of non-aggression against its allies; the lifting of oppressive sanctions; and the annulment of unjust UN resolutions.

These are not unreasonable or expansionist demands. They are rights that were stripped from the Iranian people by force. And by every logical and legal standard, a victor in a defensive war is entitled to have those rights restored.

The unused arsenal: Asymmetric power in reserve

Iran demonstrated during the third full-scale imposed war that it can resist, endure, and outlast. But that was then. Today, Iran has developed an array of unused asymmetric warfare options – to be deployed at the appropriate time and only if necessary.

From the outset, Iran's military planners understood the imbalance between its defensive tools and the enemy's offensive capabilities.

That awareness has driven a disciplined, patient strategy: preserve resources, budget carefully, and avoid premature use of asymmetric options.

Those options are both diverse and formidable. They include advanced weapon systems, unrevealed capabilities of the Axis of Resistance stretching from Yemen to Lebanon to Iraq to Palestine, additional geographical leverage in the Strait of Hormuz, and evolving methods of engagement. If pressure continues – whether through war, naval blockade, or economic siege – these options will be activated. And when they are, the United States will discover that the battlefield has expanded far beyond its calculations.

Time, geography, and public opinion: Iran’s silent allies

Perhaps the most overlooked dimension of this war is the role of time – and its management. Every passing day erodes the myth of American superpower invincibility. The longer this standoff continues, the more the American and global economies deteriorate, increasing pressure on Washington and its allies – not Tehran.

Consider the calendar. The 2026 FIFA World Cup is approaching, co-hosted by the United States. If the current crisis persists, American streets during the world's biggest sports carnival could become scenes of mass public outrage against the Trump administration.

Likewise, the November midterm elections loom. Trump needs a victory narrative months before the vote to fuel his campaign advertising. Every day that passes without a decisive outcome narrows his window for a political triumph. Time is not on America's side.

Geography is another decisive factor. The Strait of Hormuz, the Persian Gulf, US-allied Arab states, Israeli-occupied territories, American occupation bases, Iran's vast land borders with multiple neighbors, the Caspian Sea – all of these are sources of Iranian power.

They are not liabilities but assets waiting to be leveraged.

And public opinion? Across the world, and especially within the United States and its Western allies, sentiment is gradually shifting against the American position of war. Governments will increasingly feel pressure to distance themselves from Washington's strategy. The longer the crisis drags on, the more isolated the United States becomes.

The nuclear pretext no longer exists

Trump’s demagoguery on Iran’s hypothetical nuclear weapons capability is no longer effective. The pretext is worn out. The same country that used the nuclear file to justify years of illegal and draconian sanctions, sabotage, and threats of “regime change” cannot now claim moral high ground.

Iran remains a member of all relevant international nuclear treaties and organizations, including the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), faithfully adhering to global norms.

The US, by contrast, is the only country to have used nuclear weapons in wartime, causing mass civilian casualties. And America’s closest regional ally – the Zionist regime – possesses hundreds of nuclear warheads while belonging to no treaty or international oversight body.

The crimes committed by the US during the two imposed wars against Iran in the past year, including the Minab school massacre, outweigh any hollow pretexts Washington can invent.

The world has seen this movie before. Few are buying tickets anymore.

America’s internal divide: Tactical differences, strategic unity

At the same time, it would be a strategic mistake to interpret Washington's internal political battles as a weakness in America's overall hostility toward Iran.

Trump's rivals in both Democratic and Republican circles may differ on tactics, but they share the same strategic objective: the overthrow and destruction of the Islamic Republic.

The methods vary – one faction prefers direct pressure, another favors stealthier approaches – but the goal remains identical. Iran's leadership understands this clearly. There is no "good cop" waiting in the wings. There is only a unified enemy with tactical disagreements.

Military, people, diplomacy

Ultimately, Iran's strength lies in the cohesion of three interconnected pillars: the battlefield (armed forces), the streets (public resilience), and diplomacy (negotiators). This is the golden triangle that guarantees final victory for the Islamic Republic of Iran.

The readiness of Iran's armed forces gives its diplomats the confidence to speak firmly and without compromise. The people – standing steadfast through economic hardship for over seventy nights now – both support and demand that diplomacy resist any agreement that sacrifices national rights. And the military, backed by a resilient populace, provides the material power that makes diplomatic language credible.

Iran is not asking for anything unreasonable. It is not seeking to exploit a defeated enemy. It is simply demanding the return of its own legitimate rights – rights stripped by force, maintained by pressure, and now recoverable through steadfastness. The conditions for ending the war are logical, just, and by any definition, unchangeable.

The United States entered this war of wills believing its superior firepower would force a quick submission. Instead, it faces a nation that has mastered strategic patience, asymmetric power, and time-based leverage. The options left for Washington are narrowing by the day. The options available to Tehran remain vast – and largely unused.

In the end, this is not a war over nuclear enrichment or regional influence. It is a war over a far more fundamental question: Can a sovereign nation refuse to bow to superior force and still prevail?

Iran's answer – supported by logic, history, and the material facts on the ground – is an emphatic yes. And the world is watching, learning, and preparing to welcome a new global power shaping the emerging multipolar order.

Trump’s China visit and Washington’s failure to bring Beijing into alignment on Iran

 By Maedeh Zaman Fashami

TEHRAN - The recent visit of Donald Trump to China can be seen as one of the most complex moments in Washington–Beijing relations in recent years. On the surface, the trip was framed around recalibrating bilateral ties, managing strategic competition, and discussing global stability.

 However, in its deeper layers, it also carried a set of geopolitical objectives, one of the most important being Washington’s effort to secure China’s cooperation on the Iran file and the broader security architecture of the Middle East. Yet a careful reading of official Chinese statements and the broader tone of politically aligned commentary indicates that this objective was not only left unfulfilled but also fundamentally met with structural non-acceptance by Beijing.

At the first level of analysis, it is important to understand how China itself frames the visit. From Beijing’s perspective, the meeting was neither a turning point for reshaping the global order nor a platform for bargaining over regional dossiers. 

Rather, it was seen as part of an ongoing process of managing competition between major powers. In this framework, China–US relations are inherently dual in nature: on one hand, a long-term structural rivalry, and on the other, the necessity of maintaining stability and preventing escalation beyond controllable limits. Accordingly, any attempt to introduce third-party issues—particularly sensitive regional files such as Iran—into direct bilateral bargaining is inherently constrained.

At the second level, the political and diplomatic language used to describe international issues plays a crucial role. In this discourse, regional crises, including the situation surrounding Iran, are not framed as bilateral matters between Tehran and Washington, but rather as structural disruptions within the global order. These disruptions are linked to broader domains such as energy security, supply chain stability, global trade, and international economic growth. Such framing effectively shifts the issue away from the realm of bilateral political alignment with the United States and elevates it into a multilateral and structurally complex domain that cannot be reduced to a single bilateral negotiation.

Within this framework, the logic of solutions also changes. Whereas the American approach is generally grounded in instruments such as political pressure, sanctions, or coalition-building, the Chinese perspective emphasizes dialogue, de-escalation, and the avoidance of military confrontation. This difference is not merely tactical; it reflects fundamentally different understandings of how the international order should be governed. On one side lies an approach centered on strategic alignment through targeted coalitions, while on the other lies an emphasis on multilateralism and opposition to unilateral action. 
The natural outcome of this divergence is that China does not enter into coalition logic against Iran, as such a framework is seen as inconsistent with its core foreign policy principles.

At the third level, Iran’s position within China’s strategic calculations must be considered. Iran is not merely a negotiable foreign policy file at the bilateral level; rather, it is embedded within a broader network of geopolitical and economic considerations. These include energy security, international trade routes, regional balance in the Middle East, and the broader effort to consolidate a multipolar global order. Within this structure, relations with Iran are not a variable dependent on China–US relations, but rather a relatively independent component of China’s foreign policy architecture. This relative autonomy ensures that even under conditions of high-level dialogue or external pressure, no fundamental shift in this relationship is likely to occur.

From another perspective, although a significant portion of Trump’s visit appeared to focus on economic, technological, and bilateral competition management issues, this emphasis does not imply that the Iran file was peripheral. On the contrary, Iran remained one of the key and determining elements of the broader agenda. From Washington’s point of view, China is one of the few actors capable of exerting real influence over Iran, whether through energy channels, political leverage, or its regional role in the Middle East order. 

Consequently, the United States expected at least a degree of tactical flexibility or limited alignment from Beijing on Iran-related policies within the broader framework of high-level discussions.

However, what ultimately unfolded indicates that this expectation did not translate into any meaningful level of agreement or even convergence. China did not offer any concrete commitments regarding changes in its approach toward Iran, nor did it allow the Iran issue to be structurally linked to other areas of negotiation. As a result, the Iran file shifted from a potentially negotiable issue to a structural point of divergence, eliminating any possibility of transforming it into a shared diplomatic outcome.

In this context, one of the implicit objectives of the visit appears to have been the creation of a form of multilateral pressure mechanism on Iran through coordination with China. 

Yet the outcome of the trip demonstrates that such a mechanism failed to materialize. Beijing showed no indication at either the rhetorical, diplomatic, or behavioral level of accepting such a role. Even when broader discussions touched on the Middle East or regional security, China consistently maintained its position within the general framework of “political resolution of crises,” avoiding any specific or interpretable commitment aligned with a pressure-based approach.

This lack of alignment was not merely a tactical disagreement, but rather reflects a structural limitation in China–US relations. From Beijing’s perspective, Iran does not fall within the category of issues that can be traded within bilateral bargaining with Washington. Instead, it is directly tied to China’s long-term interests in energy security, trade connectivity, and its role in a multipolar international system. Therefore, even at the height of high-level negotiations, there was no space for redefining China’s position on Iran in line with US expectations.

As a result, contrary to Washington’s initial expectations, Trump’s visit did not lead to the establishment of any shared framework regarding Iran. It instead highlighted the limited potential for converting this issue into a bilateral bargaining tool. China effectively demonstrated that it is unwilling to define its foreign policy toward Iran as a function of its relationship with the United States even at the highest levels of diplomatic engagement.

At a deeper level, this outcome reflects a broader divergence in the logic of decision-making between the two powers. From the American perspective, great power relations can simultaneously include economic cooperation and coordinated action on regional security issues. From the Chinese perspective, however, these domains are strictly separated. Economic and technological cooperation can expand, but it does not translate into participation in the geopolitical or security strategies of the other side. This separation ensures that even when bilateral relations are managed and stabilized in certain areas, files such as Iran remain outside the logic of mutual bargaining.

At the broader systemic level, the current structure of the international order further reinforces this limitation. In a multipolar system, great powers are no longer able to easily shape each other’s behavior in regional dossiers. This reduces the capacity of the United States to transform global issues into binding coalition frameworks. In such an environment, even when a major power seeks coordination on a file such as Iran, it inevitably encounters the structural resistance of another power’s independent strategic interests and decision-making autonomy.

Therefore, the final outcome of the visit in this dimension is clear: the Iran file did not enter the realm of agreement, did not reach the level of understanding, and was not even defined within a shared future pathway. What remains is the persistence of two distinct and independent perspectives on a single regional crisis, one in which the United States seeks multilateral pressure coordination, and another in which China insists on strategic autonomy and non-participation in pressure-based coalitions. And as analysts and broader commentary have also suggested, Trump ultimately returned to the United States without achieving any tangible breakthrough, marking yet another moment in the broader narrative of shifting global influence.

Trump's deadly trap: By rejecting Iran's proposal, US enters a strategic nightmare with no escape

By Press TV Strategic Analysis Desk

In a theatrical move that fooled no one, US President Donald Trump rejected Iran's comprehensive plan to end the war he illegally imposed on the country 70 days ago.

The US president postured as a victor, dismissing Tehran's proposal with the bluster of a leader who expects capitulation. But the reality on the ground tells a starkly different story.

By every measurable metric, America is the defeated party in the asymmetric war that was imposed on Iran amid the nuclear talks in Geneva on February 28. And his rejection of Iran's terms in a social media post has not opened new options for Washington, but it has only trapped the US in a deadly three-way crossroads from which there is no easy escape.

Trump's rejection of Iran's plan, which was submitted early on Sunday through Pakistani mediators, is a grave strategic error as Americans hold no winning cards.

Iran's proposal: Fundamental, natural, and uncompromising

Iran's plan to permanently end the war was never meant to please Washington. It was designed to restore justice, recognize strategic realities, and secure Iran's undeniable rights after the unprovoked military aggression against the country and maritime banditry.

The core elements of Iran's proposal are not maximalist. They are rooted in natural and fundamental principles that any nation subjected to unprovoked aggression and holding the upper hand would rightfully insist upon:

  • War reparations – Payment of damages and reparations by the aggressor for the destruction inflicted on Iran's infrastructure, economy, and civilian population.
     
  • Management of the Strait of Hormuz – Recognition of Iran's sovereign control over this vital waterway, based on the mechanism already announced by Tehran.
     
  • Lifting of sanctions – The complete removal of all oppressive and illegal sanctions that have targeted the Iranian people for decades.
     
  • Release of frozen assets – The return of billions of dollars of Iranian assets illegally seized by the United States.
     
  • Permanent end to the war – A cessation of hostilities not only against Iran but also against the entire resistance front, including Hezbollah in Lebanon and other allied forces across the region.

None of these demands is unreasonable or impractical. They are the basic entitlements of a nation that has been attacked, bombed, and subjected to economic warfare for nearly half a century. What Iran is asking for is not special treatment but justice.

The American non-offer: Irrelevant demands and nuclear obsession

In stark contrast to Iran's focused, reasonable and practically sound proposal, the American counteroffer reads like a wish list written by someone who has lost sight of reality.

Washington's plan has nothing to do with ending the war. Instead, it resurrects the long-dead nuclear file – demands that were irrelevant before the war and are absurd now.

The United States insists on:

  • Closure of Iran's nuclear sites – A non-starter that Iran has rejected for decades.
     
  • Long-term halt to enrichment – Effectively disabling Iran's nuclear program for years to come, which is totally unacceptable to Iran.
     
  • Transfer of enriched uranium to America – A humiliating demand that no sovereign nation would accept, least of all Iran.

What is striking about the American proposal is what it omits. There is no mention of the American responsibility for starting the war in the middle of nuclear diplomacy.

There is also no acknowledgment of the thousands of Iranian civilians killed in the 40-day aggression. There is no offer of reparations. There is no commitment to withdraw the occupation forces from the region. There is no guarantee against future aggression.

Washington simply pretends the war never happened and pivots back to its failed nuclear fixation to deflect attention from the real issue.

The posture of defeat: Trump's fake victory pose

Trump rejected Iran’s plan while posing as the victor. But this is pure theater. International experts, military analysts, and even sober voices within Western capitals acknowledge what Trump refuses to admit – the United States lost the asymmetric war against Iran.

Consider the evidence. The US entered this war with ambitious objectives: “regime change,” destruction of Iran's missile program, dismantling of nuclear facilities, and unrestricted access to the Strait of Hormuz.

None of these objectives has been achieved. Iran's missile cities remain intact. Its nuclear program continues to make progress. Its control over the Strait of Hormuz has been consolidated. And the Iranian people, far from rising against their government, have poured into the streets by the millions to support the leadership and the armed forces.

Trump's hallucinatory "victory" exists only in his own press releases. In the real world, the United States has been defeated on every front. And rejecting Iran's proposal does not change that fact – it only prolongs Washington's agony.

The three-way crossroads: All paths lead to disaster

By rejecting Iran's plan, Trump has trapped the United States in a deadly strategic dilemma. He now faces three options and none of them are good:

  • Resume full-scale war

This is the most dangerous path. Starting the war again would plunge the United States and its Israeli proxy into a "dark corridor" from which there may be no return.

Iran has not yet deployed all its strategic cards. Throughout the 40 days of war, Tehran fought with its eyes fixed on the possibility of an even larger confrontation. The weapons systems, tactics, and capabilities that Iran deliberately held back would be unleashed in a second round, if that actually happens.

The result would likely be far heavier defeats for the US-Israeli war machine, defeats that could become irreversible. Iran's unrevealed cards, combined with the lessons learned from the first phase of the war, would make any renewed American military campaign a gamble with catastrophic odds.

  • Accept Iran's terms

This is the only path to ending the imposed war, but it requires Trump to swallow his pride and acknowledge defeat like someone who understands the ground realities.

The United States would have to pay reparations, accept Iran's complete and sovereign control of the Strait of Hormuz, lift illegal sanctions, release frozen assets, and agree to a comprehensive end to the war on all fronts.

For a president who has built his political identity around "maximum pressure" and "America First," this option is politically toxic. But rejecting it does not make it disappear. It remains the only sustainable exit from a war that Washington cannot win.

  • Continue the naval blockade

An ambiguous, indefinite naval blockade that neither ends the war nor escalates it decisively is the current situation. But this option is also unsustainable. Iran’s top military command has already made its position clear that for every vessel intercepted or attacked, American centers and American vessels will be struck.

The Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters has announced this equation publicly. It is not a threat but a binding warning. The continuation of the naval blockade will trigger Iranian responses that escalate incrementally but inevitably. There is no "safe" stalemate.

The economic dimension: A losing battle for Washington

The closure of the strategic waterway due to the war imposed on war and US maritime banditry and piracy has already sent shockwaves through global energy markets.

Oil prices have surged past $110 per barrel. Inflationary pressures are mounting across Europe, Asia, and the Americas. The continued naval blockade of Iran, coupled with Iranian retaliatory strikes on regional energy infrastructure, will only worsen these trends.

And who bears the blame? Global public opinion increasingly points to Washington. The United States started this war, and the United States rejected a reasonable peace plan.

The United States continues to strangle Iran's economy while Iranian civilians suffer. The further economic indicators deteriorate, the more pressure will mount on Trump from domestic constituencies and international allies alike.

Iran understands this dynamic perfectly. Continued economic disruption is not a bug in Tehran's strategy but a feature. Every day the war continues, the United States bleeds economically and reputationally.

Iran's trap: No escape for the United States

World media have accurately described the current situation as "Iran's trap" for the United States. It is a trap with no exit and Trump is yet to wrap his head around this reality.

Trump can neither win the war nor end it on acceptable terms. Resuming full-scale war invites catastrophic defeat. Accepting Iran's proposal requires humiliating capitulation. Maintaining the status quo triggers escalating Iranian retaliation that systematically degrades American interests in the region.

This is the strategic nightmare that Trump has created for himself and his country. He started a war he could not win. He rejected a peace that would have ended it. And now he stands at a deadly three-way crossroads, with every direction leading to danger.

Iran, meanwhile, holds the strategic advantage. Tehran's proposal remains on the table -- reasonable, principled, and rooted in natural rights. But if the US chooses not to accept it, Iran is prepared to continue the war, escalate it, and inflict far heavier costs than anything seen in the first 40 days.

The choice is Washington's. The consequences will be for Iran to impose. And history will record who acted with wisdom – and who walked willingly into a trap of their own making.