Friday, 24 April 2026

Recasting Failure in US–Iran Talks

My conclusion is stark - the United States must accept its defeat, ensure the full reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, withdraw the economic sanctions imposed on Iran, and pay for the damages caused during this war. Anything less would not be diplomacy—it would be denial repackaged as success.

The ongoing negotiations between the United States and Iran are increasingly shaped by narrative management rather than strategic success. What began as a forceful campaign—closely aligned with Israel—to curb Iran’s regional influence and nuclear trajectory has delivered outcomes far removed from its declared objectives.

Washington promised deterrence, rollback, and compliance. Instead, Iran’s regional posture remains intact, its negotiating leverage has hardened, and its capacity to absorb economic pressure has proven more resilient than anticipated. Even after weeks of conflict, talks remain “far from a breakthrough,” with fundamental disagreements unresolved.

Meanwhile, the situation around the Strait of Hormuz underscores the scale of miscalculation. Shipping through the strait has collapsed dramatically—from around 140 vessels a day to barely a handful—disrupting nearly a fifth of global oil and LNG flows and sending shockwaves through global markets.

The fallout has been indiscriminate: oil-exporting Arab states face revenue uncertainty, while energy-importing economies grapple with inflationary pressure and supply disruptions.

Yet, despite these outcomes, the language from Washington has shifted toward “progress” and “opportunity.” This is less a reflection of facts and more an attempt to reframe strategic underperformance as diplomatic achievement. The absence of a clear exit strategy, coupled with rising global economic costs, only reinforces the perception of a policy that has drifted without delivering.

This brings the debate to its unavoidable conclusion. Strategic overreach, when left unacknowledged, does not fade—it compounds. The longer reality is denied, the greater the cost imposed on others.

My conclusion is stark - the United States must accept its defeat, ensure the full reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, withdraw the economic sanctions imposed on Iran, and pay for the damages caused during this war. Anything less would not be diplomacy—it would be denial repackaged as success.

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