CriticalGuides
904 posts



🇺🇸🇮🇷 Trump said last year's Operation Midnight Hammer "obliterated" Iran's nuclear program. Natanz, the main enrichment plant, is 75% damaged. But Fordow, the deep bunker, is only 30% damaged. The core facility may be intact. Fordow was always the hard one. It's buried under a mountain. The U.S. used its biggest bunker-busters and still didn't finish it. That's the facility Iran has been quietly protecting in every negotiation. It's also why Trump's "we can take Iran out in one day" rhetoric runs into physics. You can't bomb what you can't reach. Iran has insisted it has the right to continue enriching uranium for civilian purposes, while Washington wants a cast-iron commitment that the country will never obtain a nuclear weapon. Those two positions have no overlap. That's not a negotiating gap. That's a different understanding of what this conflict is fundamentally about. Iran thinks it's fighting for sovereignty. The U.S. thinks it's fighting to prevent proliferation. Both are right. That's the problem.





🇸🇦🇶🇦 Before the war, at least 100 ships passed through the Strait of Hormuz every single day. In the last 24 hours, three made it through. Two more tried today and turned back. But the Gulf states aren't waiting for Washington or Tehran to figure it out. They're building around it. Saudi Arabia just announced it has repaired its East-West pipeline back to full operational capacity. That pipeline was hit in Iranian strikes and has been running damaged for weeks. At full capacity it carries up to 7 million barrels of oil per day directly to the Red Sea port of Yanbu, bypassing the Strait of Hormuz entirely. That's significant. Before the war, roughly 17-18 million barrels a day were moving through the Strait. Seven million through a single pipeline doesn't close that gap, but it changes the calculus. Riyadh also announced it's bringing the Manifa oil field on the southeast coast online, adding another 300,000 barrels per day to what can move without touching the Strait. Qatar, whose LNG exports had effectively frozen, issued a statement yesterday lifting maritime restrictions on its end. The moves are real but they expose something uncomfortable. The Gulf states are quietly accepting that the Strait may stay closed for a while. You don't rush to repair pipelines and activate reserve fields if you believe the situation resolves itself in days. 3 ships passed through yesterday. 2 with Chinese flags, one Liberian. Combined capacity roughly 6 million barrels. Before the war that was one hour of normal traffic. Iran is denying any U.S. military vessel has successfully transited the Strait and threatening consequences if they try. Trump is threatening to bomb desalination plants. The GCC countries, whose populations drink water from those same plants, are stuck between two sides making threats that would devastate the region regardless of who carries them out. The pipeline workaround buys time. It doesn't solve the problem. And every day the Strait stays at 3 ships instead of 100, the pressure for someone to do something drastic gets harder to contain.


NEW I’m told these are the US red lines for Iran: A U.S. official tells me: - End all uranium enrichment - Dismantle all major nuclear enrichment facilities - Retrieve highly enriched uranium - Accept a broader peace, security and de-escalation framework that includes regional allies - End funding for terrorist proxies Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis - Fully open the Strait of Hormuz, charging no tolls for passage






🇺🇸🇮🇷 JD Vance is the frontrunner for the 2028 presidential election That makes him the wrong person to be leading Iran negotiations A politician with his eye on the White House has two incentives in that room: (1) end the war and (2) make sure the deal doesn't hurt him politically What these talks need is a negotiator with exactly one job: end the war, whatever it takes, however it looks



🇺🇸🇮🇷 Trump's last line on Truth Social isn't getting enough attention "At an appropriate moment, our military will finish up the little that is left of Iran." - The blockade and the war are not mutually exclusive - Trump left the door to resuming strikes wide open - This was the closing sentence of his post, not a throwaway line Trump is making it very clear that strikes are still on the table, and if we’ve learned one thing this year, it’s to take Trump’s threats seriously













🇮🇷🇺🇸 Trump: Iran refused to agree not to develop nukes He called this 'the single most important issue'. "In many ways, the points that were agreed to are better than us continuing our Military Operations to conclusion, but all of those points don’t matter compared to allowing Nuclear Power to be in the hands of such volatile, difficult, unpredictable people."
















