Iran war tidbits. A collection of interesting items the mainstream press mostly ignores.
By the way, the hypothesis that Trump is going slow and is using the situation as leverage to get the Europeans to improve their navies and yield to Trump over several naval issues (e.g. Greenland) seems to be on course so far.
Stephen Hou:
It turns out the whole Iran conflict is a loyalty test for the Europeans and everybody failed.
Commenter:
Europe did NOT fail the loyalty test.
They demonstrated conclusively that they are not at all loyal to the US. Or each other. Or their ancestors. Or their children.
Flat White in The Spectator.
What we are seeing is a frustrated superpower that has been carrying the weight of responsibility for global stability since the second world war. European nations, in particular, have used the money they should have assigned to defence to gold-plate their bureaucracy.
Not only did European nations waste their money and shirk their defence responsibilities, they opened the gates of the West to the third-world. As Trump has warned, nations such as the UK are at risk of becoming Islamic outposts with nuclear weapons.
Trump might be fighting a war (arguably an inevitable one), but the so-called ‘non-interventionalist’ champagne socialists of Europe have been diligently working toward the destruction of the Enlightenment. This has, in turn, put even more pressure on America to hold back China on its own.
Khalid Umar:
The riddle I’ll never be able to solve:
How did the UK, Italy, Spain, France, Germany, Canada and Australia collectively decide that confronting the world’s biggest state sponsor of terrorism, soon-to-be nuclear Ayatollah, sitting astride the global energy chokepoint, is simply “not their war”?
How did the memory, experience, philosophy and logic of a millennium of Western civilisation simply vanish?
Is TDS really that deadly a mental disease?
No it’s not a mental disease, but an economic strategy. Join the globalist team and plunder the West’s treasuries for good jobs and fraudulent funds. Trump threatens the whole big-government-NGO-fraud complex that enriches the TDS team.
Stephen Green at PJ Media:
Shipping and military expert John Konrad spent all day in D.C. on Tuesday talking to his military sources and concluded that “the Navy appears to be in no rush to reopen the strait,” even while Iran dictates whose oil tankers are allowed to pass.
“What is this administration trying to leverage?” Konrad wondered, and that nobody he talked to was willing to discuss the fate of Hormuz “until European politicians and media stop calling Americans war criminals and monsters.”
While Konrad admitted he has “no idea” when Hormuz will reopen, “but if the price is a modicum of cooperation and respect for everything America has done for decades to keep Europe safe, the strait could stay closed for months, or turned into a toll booth for years, because the majority of Americans…. and the vast majority of Trump administration officials I’ve talked with… seem fed up with their arrogance.” …
The harsh truth is that Hormuz is their priority, not ours, and yet they refuse to make any serious contribution to the war effort.
The U.S. is a net exporter of oil and liquified natural gas (LNG), and we buy hardly anything from the Gulf. Closing the Strait of Hormuz is an inconvenience for us (in the price of gas and diesel) and hardly a strategic necessity. In both military and economic terms, Hormuz is way down our target list. Complicating the decision matrix even further, re-opening Hormuz at this stage likely requires ground troops — so it’s simply smarter for us to continue the bombing campaign and see if we can’t wait out an increasingly split and brittle regime that might still collapse under pressure.
Europe, of course, doesn’t see things the way we do. Europe believes that their needs must be our priority, and that, furthermore, we’re required to do their job for them. …
Meanwhile, Europe’s contribution to the actual military effort is barely minuscule, and a handful of nations, including France (duh), Spain (fricken commies), and even Giorgia Meloni’s Italy, have closed their airbases to our military traffic headed to the Gulf. Apparently, “lead, follow, or get out of the way” isn’t a part of Europe’s lexicon.
So Trump’s message to Europe, more implied than explicit for once, is this: If you need the Strait of Hormuz opened, come and open it yourself. … Or at the very least, maybe stop closing your airbases to our military aircraft, you sniveling, presumptuous, Euro-weasels.
American Debunk:
When Trump tells the UK to “go to the Strait and just TAKE IT,” the surface read is that he’s venting at allies who didn’t show up.
But the deeper move is priming the the public (and world) with a new mental frame: the Strait of Hormuz is not Iranian sovereign territory anymore.
It’s available real estate. It’s takeable. Anyone with courage can have it.
That’s a massive Overton Window shift delivered, in a tweet, as an insult to the UK.
A year ago “America controls the Strait of Hormuz” sounded like some twisted fantasy. Today Trump is telling Britain to go grab it themselves like it’s a parking spot.
In a few weeks, Trump has normalized the concept of Western control over the Strait so thoroughly that full US seizure now looks like the modest option compared to what he’s suggesting allies do on their own. This is intentional. …
Whatever the eventual deal includes (US Navy permanent presence, joint patrols, Iranian withdrawal from mining infrastructure) the public will accept it because Trump already told them the Strait is there for the taking. Your subconscious mind has already been primed to accept it. …
Trump isn’t describing reality. He’s installing it.
Lee Smith in Tablet Magazine:
What does Iran have to do with China? Everything.
Tehran runs on Chinese oil money, tech, and cover. This isn’t just a regional clash. It’s part of a broader fight against a China-backed axis. …
Tariffs and other economic measures are simply instruments the White House is deploying in a larger war against the China axis. … Targeting Venezuelan drug cartels, shutting down fentanyl shipments, and supporting allies like Argentina’s President Javier Milei to stand firm against Chinese encroachment into Latin American are as much a part of the campaign as Trump’s China tariffs. Campaigns against China, Russia, Venezuela, Iran and its proxies have dominated the U.S. news cycle the last year because the Trump administration sees the China axis as the most dangerous threat to our national security. It’s all about China.
Zerohedge:
The Trump administration is “methodically building a portfolio of assets” from Venezuela to the Panama Canal to Iran’s oil flows and the Strait of Hormuz, a strategy aimed at reasserting American dominance, securing the empire for years to come, and tightening the screws on Beijing after last year’s rare earths stunt.
“Iran and Kharg Island are next. Iran is a Chinese vassal and so Kharg Island is basically a Chinese asset. Iran and Kharg Island will soon be a U.S. asset. The same with the SoH — it will soon be a U.S. asset,” [Zoltan Pozsar of Ex Uno Plures] noted.
Dr Samuel Furfari on European delusions about fossil fuels:
The crisis in the Strait of Hormuz reveals a truth that many European policymakers have ignored: Humanity remains structurally dependent on oil. This reality, first highlighted during the 1973 oil shortage and reinforced by the 1979 version – triggered by Iran – continues to be neglected, even openly dismissed, by certain political elites. …
As a former official in the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Energy for 36 years, I have witnessed relentless efforts to promote so-called alternatives to hydrocarbons and their disastrous results. Yet, in the face of the current crisis, the EU refuses to recognize its desperate need for fossil fuels.
In May 2023, Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, declared that the fossil-fuel-based growth model is “simply obsolete.” The partial blockade of the Strait of Hormuz starkly exposes the irony of that statement. …
Today, roughly 75% of the primary energy consumed in the European Union comes from fossil fuels, while the global share remains about 87%. It is illusory to believe that “renewable” electricity can meet basic needs.
Bonchie:
People who spent a decade promoting the Iraq War are now certain that a month-old conflict of total military domination has been lost because it’s not over yet.

The lefties have lost it again