Alan RM Jones

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Alan RM Jones

Alan RM Jones

@AlanRMJones

Dad, ex-politico, political privateer, hockey tragic, doggo servant. Views are mine unless I steal them but you're welcome to them. RP/follow ≠ endorsement.

Sydney เข้าร่วม Haziran 2012
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Alan RM Jones
Alan RM Jones@AlanRMJones·
@yarotrof The Pentagon has been preparing for a war with Iran for decades. The US Navy blockade, for example, wasn’t dreamt up yesterday.
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Yaroslav Trofimov
Yaroslav Trofimov@yarotrof·
America blowing up Gulf nations’ economies by launching an ill-prepared war on Iran means that Gulf nations won’t have the money to spend on America in years to come.
Mark D. Levine@MarkLevineNYC

Saudi Arabia has just backed out on a deal to provide $200M in much-needed funding to @MetOpera. The reason: Because of the war’s impact on the Saudi economy, they are pulling back on funding commitments. This is a terrible blow to one of our nation’s great cultural pillars. nytimes.com/2026/04/23/art…

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Alan RM Jones
Alan RM Jones@AlanRMJones·
A strong argument to finish off the regime.
Mark Dubowitz@mdubowitz

If you’d told me a few years ago this is where we’d be on Iran, I’d have said you were high: 1. Nuke program set back years. Enrichment and reprocessing gutted, weaponization sites destroyed, Fordow inoperable, Natanz in ruins, a generation of senior nuclear scientists eliminated. 2. Ballistic missile program crippled. Monthly production down from 100 to near zero. Roughly half the regime’s missiles and launchers destroyed. The IRGC Aerospace Force commander who ran the missile enterprise dead. 3. Air defenses devastated. American and Israeli airpower dominating Iranian skies, with strike aircraft operating over the country with near impunity. 4. Full economic warfare. Not just OFAC sanctions anymore, but military pressure layered on top: naval blockade, near-zero oil exports, choked imports, wrecked steel and petrochemical sectors, triple-digit inflation, and a currency that is effectively worthless. 5. Regime decapitation. Khamenei dead. Larijani dead. Hundreds of senior IRGC, intelligence, military, and Basij commanders dead including the IRGC commander-in-chief, the armed forces chief of staff, and the Aerospace Force commander. Mojtaba Khamenei inheriting a hollowed-out regime with no supreme authority and a gutted command structure. 6. The region turning on Tehran. Gulf states shutting down the sanctions-busting, money-laundering, and financial escape routes the regime has relied on for years. No Arab capital willing to throw Iran a lifeline. China and Russia providing limited support. 7. Proxy network shattered. Hezbollah and Hamas heavily degraded. Houthi political leadership taking direct Israeli strikes. The “Axis of Resistance” and “ring of fire” are now more slogans than real threats. 8. Syrian corridor severed. Assad is gone. The new government in Damascus is actively blocking Iranian arms transfers to Hezbollah: arresting smugglers and publicly declaring Syria will no longer serve as a transit corridor for Tehran’s terrorists. The land bridge to the Mediterranean that took decades to build is effectively closed. 9. Lebanon pivoting west. With Hezbollah battered and resupply choked, Israel and Lebanon have opened direct peace talks for the first time since 1983, aimed at a permanent agreement and Hezbollah’s disarmament. Beirut now asserting that the Lebanese armed forces alone are responsible for national defense. This is a direct repudiation of Hezbollah’s “resistance” claim. TBD. 10. Deterrence exposed as a bluff. Four direct attacks on Israel — April 2024, October 2024, June 2025, March 2026 — failed to impose strategic cost and instead triggered heavy retaliation. Iran couldn’t even use Syria as a launchpad. 11.Economy hollowed out from within. Power shortages, water crises, factory shutdowns, pension unrest, and mass protests. Nationwide demonstrations erupted in December 2025 after a year of economic freefall, with bazaaris, oil workers, and truckers, the regime’s traditional support base, joining strikes across all 31 provinces. Running out of oil storage space. Fuel shortages. The worst crisis since 1979. 12. Scientific and technical brain drain. Beyond the nuclear experts, Iran has lost a generation of irreplaceable expertise in missile design, centrifuge engineering, and weapons development. The survivors are harder to recruit and easier to deter. 13. Naval power decimated. The regular navy shattered, IRGC navy taking growing losses as CENTCOM moves to reopen Hormuz. And against all of this: the regime forced to play its Hormuz card at its weakest possible moment when the U.S. has options instead of when we didn’t: namely, Tehran with nuclear-armed ICBMs, 10,000 ballistic missiles, a Chinese- and Russian-built military, hundreds of thousands of attack drones, a fully operational terror network, and hundreds of billions of dollars to harden its economy. That’s the strategic picture. It’s extraordinary. Much more to do but I can’t comprehend how much has been achieved.

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Alan RM Jones
Alan RM Jones@AlanRMJones·
Michael Baume: ‘It’s energy, stupid’. Indeed.
Alan RM Jones tweet media
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Alan RM Jones
Alan RM Jones@AlanRMJones·
Lord Denning, please call the office.
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Alan RM Jones รีทวีตแล้ว
Andrea Stricker
Andrea Stricker@StrickerNonpro·
The Trojan Horse JCPOA — a temporary setback at best to Iran’s nuclear program that legalized enrichment and an advanced centrifuge-powered program, ended UNSC resolutions stipulating a suspension to enrichment, and freed up the missile and military programs, while ushering in billions in sanctions relief — would be sunsetting as we speak. But its proponents don’t ever admit to that part. It’s on you to explain how we would not be in the same situation — or much worse — in confronting the growing threat from the regime. But why ruin our Saturdays debating for the 5,000th time an agreement that has been dead for eight years and collapsed almost immediately due to these flaws?
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Daniel DePetris@DanDePetris

The funny thing is that the Iranian enrichment facility you’re so concerned about only came into existence after the U.S. withdrew from the JCPOA, which you and the rest of your organization loudly recommended. Maybe look in the mirror and ask: how did we get here?

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Alan RM Jones
Alan RM Jones@AlanRMJones·
You know you’re over the target when…
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Alan RM Jones
Alan RM Jones@AlanRMJones·
You would like to think Lloyd’s List would have informed itself how the Iran blockade operates ie not in the Straight, and that the ship was turned around as it approached the Gulf of Oman, where the US Navy is operating.
Lloyd's List@LloydsList

A US‑sanctioned Chinese‑linked tanker, Rich Starry, sailed out of the Strait of Hormuz apparently unchallenged, despite a US blockade targeting Iranian maritime traffic lloydslist.com/LL1156893/Sanc…

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TV News Now
TV News Now@TVNewsNow·
🚨 NEW: Fox’s @BritHume says Iran’s stance in the peace talks shows President Trump was CORRECT on their nuclear ambitions: “Here Iran is, badly battered, militarily crushed. They really don’t have any cards here other than the Strait of Hormuz which we are acting on.” “Yet they came into this negotiation absolutely refusing to give up their nuclear weapon ambitions which was the bottom line for the President and his negotiators.” “If that doesn’t emphasize that President Trump was correct in assessing in the beginning of this that Iran was still going for a nuclear weapon and it was something the world could not afford, then I don’t know what could.”
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Alan RM Jones
Alan RM Jones@AlanRMJones·
Whatever your Monday was like, it was not like being the ambassador to the Holy See. There was no course at the School of Foreign Service to prepare for this.
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Alan RM Jones
Alan RM Jones@AlanRMJones·
All pass or no pass isn’t a bad starting point, though it could get sticky if, in the unlikely event, a China merchantman rocked up for a fill with a PLAN escort. Now, who amongst the nations who depend on Gulf oil is going to help re-establish freedom of navigation in the vital international waterway?
TV News Now@TVNewsNow

🚨 NEW: President Trump announces an immediate U.S. naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz after negotiations with Iran in Pakistan collapse.

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Alan RM Jones
Alan RM Jones@AlanRMJones·
It would be a paradox if it were true, which Petreaus does not say (not clear in this edited version); he merely poses the question. But Iran threatened the Straight before it lost much of its military capability, so it’s hard to see how they are stronger threatening shipping now. They are much weaker.
Tymofiy Mylovanov@Mylovanov

Former CIA director Petraeus: Iran paradoxically emerged from this strengthened. Just by disrupting traffic, they do control the Strait of Hormuz. The measure of merit for shipowners is the lives of their crews. They have to have confidence that ships won't be struck. 1/

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