âBreak-a-Legâ (that old Mafia warning) â Trump has threatened Iran over an ultimatum that likely cannot be met
What is understood now is that âweâre no longer playing chessâ. There are no rules anymore.
Trumpâs ultimatum to Iran? Colonel Doug Macgregor compares the Trump ultimatum to Iran to that which Austria-Hungary delivered to Serbia in 1914: An offer, in short, that âcould not be refusedâ. Serbia accepted nine out of the ten demands. But it refused one â and Austria-Hungary immediately declared war.
On 4 February, shortly after his Inauguration, President Trump signed a National Security Presidential Memorandum (NSPM); that is to say, a legally binding directive requiring government agencies to carry out the specified actions precisely.
The demands are that Iran should be denied a nuclear weapon; denied inter-continental missiles, and denied too other asymmetric and conventional weapons capabilities. All these demands go beyond the NPT and the existing JCPOA. To this end, the NSPM directs maximum economic pressure be imposed; that the U.S. Treasury act to drive Iranâs oil exports to zero; that the U.S. work to trigger JCPOA Snapback of sanctions; and that Iranâs âmalign influence abroadâ â its âproxiesâ â be neutralised.
The UN sanctions snapback expires in October, so time is short to fulfil the procedural requirements to Snapback. All this suggests why Trump and Israeli officials give Spring as the deadline to a negotiated agreement.
Trumpâs ultimatum to Iran appears to be moving the U.S. down a path to where war is the only outcome, as occurred in 1914 â an outcome which ultimately triggered WW1.
Might this just be Trump bluster? Possibly, but it does sound as if Trump is issuing legally binding demands such that he must expect cannot be met. Acceptance of Trumpâs demands would leave Iran neutered and stripped of its sovereignty, at the very least. There is an implicit âtoneâ to these demands too, that is one of threatening and expecting regime change in Iran as its outcome.
It may be Trump bluster, but the President has âformâ (past convictions) on this issue. He has unabashedly hewed to the Netanyahu line on Iran that the JCPOA (or any deal with Iran) was âbadâ. In May 2014, Trump withdrew the U.S. from the JCPOA at Netanyahuâs behest and instead issued a new set of 12 demands to Iran â including permanently and verifiably abandoning its nuclear programme in perpetuity and ceasing all uranium enrichment.
What is the difference between those earlier Trump demands and those of this February? Essentially they are the same, except today he says: If Iran âdoesnât make a deal, there will be bombing. It will be bombing the likes of which they have never seen beforeâ.
Thus, there is both history, and the fact that Trump is surrounded â on this issue at least â by a hostile cabal of Israeli Firsters and Super Hawks. Witkoff is there, but is poorly grounded on the issues. Trump too, has shown himself virtually totalitarian in terms of any and all criticism of Israel in American Academia. And in Gaza, Lebanon and Syria, he is fully supportive of Netanyahuâs far-right provocative and expansionist agenda.
These present demands regarding Iran also run counter to the 25 March 2025 latest annual U.S. Intelligence Threat Assessment that Iran is NOT building a nuclear weapon. This Intelligence Assessment is effectively disregarded. A few days before its release, Trumpâs National Security Adviser, Mike Waltz clearly stated that the Trump Administration is seeking the âfull dismantlementâ of Iran's nuclear energy program: âIran has to give up its program in a way that the entire world can seeâ, Waltz said. âIt is time for Iran to walk away completely from its desire to have a nuclear weaponâ.
On the one hand, it seems that behind these ultimata stands a President made âpissed off and angryâ at his inability to end the Ukraine war almost immediately â as he first mooted â together with pressures from a bitterly fractured Israel and a volatile Netanyahu to compress the timeline for the speedy âfinishing offâ of the Iranian âregimeâ (which, it is claimed, has never been weaker). All so that Israel can normalise with Lebanon âand even Syria. And with Iran supposedly âdisabledâ, pursue implementation of the Greater Israel project to be normalised across the Middle East.
Which, on the other hand, will enable Trump to pursue the âlong-overdueâ grand pivot to China. (And China is energy-vulnerable â regime change in Tehran would be a calamity, from the Chinese perspective).
To be plain, Trumpâs China strategy needs to be in place too, in order to advance Trumpâs financial system re-balancing plans. For, should China feel itself besieged, it could well act as a spoiler to Trump's re-working of the American and global financial system.
The Washington Post reports on a âsecretâ Pentagon memo from Hegseth that âChina [now] is the Departmentâs sole pacing threat, [together] with denial of a Chinese fait accompli seizure of Taiwan â while simultaneously defending the U.S. homelandâ.
The âforce planning constructâ (a concept of how the Pentagon will build and resource the armed services to take on perceived threats) will only consider conflict with Beijing when planning contingencies for a major power war, the Pentagon memo says, leaving the threat from Moscow largely to be attended by European allies.
Trump wants to be powerful enough credibly to threaten China militarily, and therefore wants Putin to agree speedily to a ceasefire in Ukraine, so that military resources can quickly be moved to the China theatre.
On his flight back to Washington last Sunday evening, Trump reiterated his annoyance toward Putin, but added âI donât think heâs going to go back on his word, Iâve known him for a long time. Weâve always gotten along wellâ. Asked when he wanted Russia to agree to a ceasefire, Trump said there was a âpsychological deadlineâ â âIf I think theyâre tapping us along, I will not be happy about itâ.
Trumpâs venting against Russia may, perhaps, have an element of reality-TV to it. For his domestic audience, he needs to be perceived as bringing âpeace through strengthâ â to keep up the Alpha-Male appearance, lest the truth of his lack of leverage over Putin becomes all too apparent for the American public and to the world.
Part of the reason for Trumpâs frustration too, may be his cultural formation as a New York businessman; that a deal is about first dominating the negotiations, and then quickly âsplitting the differenceâ. This, however, is not how diplomacy works. The transactional approach also reflects deep conceptual flaws.
The Ukraine ceasefire process is stalled, not because of Russian intransigence, but rather because Team Trump has determined that achieving a settlement in Ukraine comes firstly through insisting on a unilateral and immediate ceasefire â without introducing temporary governance to enable elections in Ukraine, nor addressing the root causes of the conflict. And secondly, because Trump rushed in, without listening to what the Russians were saying, and/or without hearing it.
Now that initial pleasantries are over, and Russia is saying flatly that current âceasefireâ proposals simply are inadequate and unacceptable, Trump becomes angry and lashes out at Putin, saying that 25% tariffs on Russian oil could happen ANY moment.
Putin and Iran are both now under âdeadlinesâ (a âpsychologicalâ one in Putinâs case), so as to enable Trump to proceed with credibly threatening China to come to a âdealâ soon â as the global economy is already wobbling.
Trump fumes and spits fire. He tries to hurry matters along by making a big show of bombing the Houthis, boasting that they have been hit hard, with many Houthi leaders killed. Yet, such callousness towards Yemeni civilian deaths sits awkwardly with his claimed heart-rendering empathy for the thousands of âhandsomeâ Ukrainian young men needlessly dying on the front lines.
It all becomes reality-TV.
Trump threatens Iran with âbombing [the] likes of which they have never seen beforeâ over an ultimatum that likely cannot be met. Simply put, this threat (which includes the possible use of nuclear weapons) is not given because Iran poses a threat to the U.S. It does not. But it is given as an option. A plan; a âthingâ placed calmly on the geo-political table and intended to spread fear. âCities full of children, women, and the elderly to be killed: Not morally wrong. Not a war crimeâ.
No. Just the ârealityâ that Trump takes the Iranian nuclear programme to be an existential threat to Israel. And that the U.S. is committed to using military force to eliminate existential threats to Israel.
This is the heart to Trumpâs ultimatum. It owes to the fact that it is Israel â not America, and not the U.S. intelligence community â that views Iran as an existential threat. Professor Hudson, speaking with direct knowledge of the background policy (see here and here) says, âit's NOT just that Israel as we know it â must be safe and secure and free from terrorismâ. That's Trump and his Teamâs âlineâ; that's the Israeli and its supporters narrative too. âBut the mentality [behind it] is differentâ, Hudson says.
There are some 2-3 million Israelis who see themselves as destined to control all of what we now call the Middle East, the Levant, what some call West Asia â and others call âGreater Israelâ. These Zionists believe that they are mandated by God to take this land â and that all who oppose them are Amalek. They believe the Amalek to be consumed with an overwhelming desire to kill Jews, and who therefore should be annihilated.
The Torah records the story of Amalek: Parshat Ki Teitzei, when the Torah states, machoh timcheh et zecher Amalekâthat we must erase Amalekâs memory. âEvery year we [Jews] are obligated to read â not how God will destroy Amalek â but how we should destroy Amalekâ. (Though many Jews puzzle how to reconcile this mitzvah with their ingrained contrarian values of compassion and mercy).
This commandment in the Torah is in fact one of the key factors that lies at the root of Israelâs obsession with Iran. Israelis perceive Iran as an Amalek tribe plotting to kill Jews. No deal, no compromise therefore is possible. It is also, of course, about Iranâs strategic challenge (albeit secular) to the Israeli state.
And what has made the Trump ultimatum so pressing in Washingtonâs view â apart from the China-pivot considerations â was the assassination of Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah. That assassination marked a big shift in U.S. thinking, because, before that, we inhabited an era of careful calculation; incremental moves up an escalator ladder. What is understood now is that âwe're no longer playing chessâ. There are no rules anymore.
Israel (Netanyahu) is going hell-for-leather on all fronts to mitigate the divisions and turmoil at home in Israel through igniting the Iranian front â even though this course might well threaten Israelâs destruction.
This latter prospect marks the reddest of âred linesâ to ingrained Deep State structures.
No comments:
Post a Comment