94 pointsby decimalenough4 hours ago16 comments
  • Toluhis4 hours ago
    So there are tolls after all and they’re going to make Iran money.
    • JumpCrisscross4 hours ago
      We paid to get out of kerfuffle in hopes voters forget by the midterms.
      • fny3 hours ago
        I'd bet Iran will find a way remind voters in October.
        • bigmattystyles3 hours ago
          Are you kidding, Iran is loving the current US leadership.
          • paulryanrogers3 hours ago
            Are they? They may come out stronger than before in the long term. Yet in the short term they've lost iconic and experienced leaders, their navy, and plenty of other military assets.

            I suppose they may be grateful to have an enemy uniting their people. Though it's not like they lost control of the opposition, even if they've had to kill a few thousand at a time.

            • Haven880an hour ago
              That old guy already on deathbed from cancer. He basically given death bonus to the country, immortalized like George Washington of Iran. Thank you. Trump! Greatest American and Iranian and world president!
            • colechristensen3 hours ago
              Their stranglehold on power is in no small way influenced by having an enemy.

              America bringing destruction and failing to bring freedom from their current tyranny has doubtfully bought us many more friends in Iran.

              • Danox9 minutes ago
                Doubtful, wishful thinking, America should’ve left well enough alone in 1953. We got rid of a president who was elected, who wanted to nationalize the oil industry within Iran, and when the puppet was installed the Shah he kept it nationalized anyway and for America, the Middle East became a quagmire and still is billions wasted.

                Too bad the Pan America highway or a Pan-American Railway is but a dream the Chinese probably will get that high speed rail all the way to Europe once Russia and the Ukraine stop fighting, I might add if it wasn’t for the war. There’s a good possibility. It would already be done by now.

            • cmrdporcupine3 hours ago
              Oil prices are up, they're getting transiting fees now, as well, and other gulf states were weakened by the conflict.

              Assume the leadership of both Iran and the US are kleptocrats who both have motivations to have oil prices high and people dependent on them and it all makes a lot more sense.

              The Iranian people, that's a different story.

        • Andrex3 hours ago
          Nothing surprising ever happens in October. You're talking crazy here.
          • wang_li2 hours ago
            We’re going to see graham planter’s dick in October and it’s going to turn out he sent the picture to a minor and then he’ll be arrested by the FBI and half the country will scream political persecution instead of admitting the dude is a nazi pedo trust fund nepo baby.
            • solid_fuel20 minutes ago
              > the dude is a nazi pedo trust fund nepo baby

              You do realize republicans consider that prime credentials for president, right?

            • amanaplanacanalan hour ago
              Like trump? Say it ain't so!
      • fhub3 hours ago
        Paid starting it. Paid during it. Paid to end it.

        Political capital + diplomatic reputation + military reputation + strategic reputation.. and cash.

      • ramijames3 hours ago
        I'm torn between "this was so bad, there's no way that they can forget" and "god, there's just enough time for just enough people to forget". I hate this.
    • credit_guy2 hours ago
      There might be. But, from the US point of view, the tolls are not a strategic problem. A conspiracy theorist might even argue that tolls in the Strait of Hormuz make the US oil exports more competitive, and therefore more profitable. The strategic problem for the US (and the rest of the world, Israel obviously included) is for Iran to acquire nuclear weapons. One might say that the Memorandum of Understanding is quite vague about that. But the natural conclusion from last Summer and from the last few months is that the US will not hesitate to bomb Iran if it tries to resume its pursuit of the bomb. This does not need to be codified in any agreement, the threat is there implicitly. The MoU is more focused on the carrots than the stick, but the stick is there, in the background, and Iran knows it.
      • amanaplanacanalan hour ago
        I think the president wants this all to go away. None of this is making him look good, and he hates it. If the bombing starts again, the straight will be closed again. He's gonna leave the whole problem for the next president.
  • walrus014 hours ago
    Are we all tired of so much winning yet?
  • comrade12343 hours ago
    Something that I found interesting was how far away the USA had to keep its navy. What's the pint of having 11 aircraft carrier groups when you can barely even use them?
    • godwinson__4-83 hours ago
      They were still used heavily... you think aircraft carriers are only useful if you can get right next to your target? A huge part of American doctrine is to kill the enemy before you are ever in their view. This is also just basically intuitive. I'm not sure what is confusing you. Its like asking why isn't a bomber parked next to its target before taking off and deploying its munitions.
      • symian3 hours ago
        I think the essence of the question you responded to is: The U.S. has a gigantic navy and couldn’t force safe passage through Hormuz. Why is this the case? Is the U.S. wasting its money given this?
        • walrus012 hours ago
          If we say that you can fit a small unit of guys equipped with Shahed-136 and launcher, or small missile launcher into just about any civilian garage or small industrial/warehouse-sized structure within a 300 km radius of the strait of hormuz, it would be quite impossible to air strike every possible hiding site without causing absolutely abhorrent and unacceptable civilian casualties.

          The capability of the IRGC and Iranian regime to hide small to medium sized drone and missile launch equipment within civilian infrastructure (nevermind caves, bunkers, etc) within range of the strait exceeds the capability of the US forces to destroy or remove it.

          As long as major shipping companies believe that the Iranians retain enough drone and missile capacity to hold the straight under threat, they're not going to sail through it.

          The only possible way would be an extremely bloody and manpower intensive ground operation to hunt it down at the boots on the ground level.

          • godwinson__4-82 hours ago
            Which will also not work.

            America knew how to do this once. Berlin is still in a sense occupied by American troops in that we still have bases there, and through NATO subsidize their defense and way of life.

            You simply can't kill your way out of political conflicts into perpetuity, unless you truly plan on annihilating everyone. That is part of what makes the alcoholic running the DoD so galling. His thesis on places like Fallujah is essentially there wasn't enough bloodshed. Americans would be vacationing in Baghdad if only there had been more violence.

            • walrus012 hours ago
              > That is part of what makes the alcoholic running the DoD so galling

              Pretty much what I said in Jan/Feb of this year when the major, bloody nationwide protests of Iranians (est. 15,000 to 40,000 death toll killed by their own "government") kicked off domestically in Iran. Specifically, that the worst possible people were running the executive branch and DoD at this moment in history and that they would rush headlong into something foolish.

              • godwinson__4-82 hours ago
                Of course they didn't even prevent those massacres. They watched it happen. As I recall the administration seemed unconvinced of this as a pretext for war, and by the time the decapitation started the regime already had regained total control of the streets. And now a negotiation to give the same regime an economic lifeline just so the administration doesn't have to explain to someone in Iowa why the price of gas is going up.

                I recall Reza Pahlavi on Fox News engaging in the delusion that the current administration cared about the Iranian people. Where is he now?

        • comicjk2 hours ago
          Historically, this is the norm. The British Navy in WWI was a behemoth, but still couldn't force safe passage through the mines and cannons of the Dardanelles Strait against what was considered a third-rate power. "A ship's a fool to fight a fort."
        • s1artibartfast2 hours ago
          I think it was a much more specific question. Both are valid.

          Iran is a big country ~100 million people. Aircraft carriers can launch planes to disable specific targets. They cant take out an entire country. They could have been more useful if the US was waging total war against Iran, but it isn't/wasnt.

        • AtlasBarfed2 hours ago
          The answer is yes.

          The world is deglobalizing, and while drones may not exert Blue water power projection, they now dominate littoral power projection.

          Marine invasions may be impossible in drone combat without drone superiority, and right now, Joan superiority is not a thing that I think exists between two fully drone enabled armies

          And note the US army is not a fully drone enabled army.

    • jmyeet2 hours ago
      It's a good question and there are three aspects to this:

      1. The US Navy is designed for the Cold WAr. It's often called a "deep blue" Navy because it's designed to operate in the open ocean in deep water. Also, it's designed to operate in colder climates like the North Atlantic and the North Sea. The Persian Gulf is none of those things. It's shallow, warm and narrow. The warm part also matters. It increases wear on ships, it's harder to keep them habitable, you get faster biofouling and so on;

      2. Geography just isn't a friend here. The navigable part of the Strait of Hormuz at its narrowest is about 6 miles wide. You'll hear claims about it being 2 miles wide. That's incorrect. There are 2 mile wide navigation channels, one in each direction, and they're separated by a ~2 mile wide buffer; and

      3. Another clue here was the continued use of so-called "stand off" weapons [1]. Rather than using gravity bombs, missiles continued to be fired from ships and planes. That's inefficient because you lose weight for the munition part to fuel. So you only ever do this if you can't safely use gravity bombs. Therefore, one can conclude that the military could protect air or water assets. Water assets can't be protected mainly from drones. There was a lot of talk about mines and that is a threat but the same drones that essentially destroyed Gulf military bases could overwhelm the defenses of an aircraft carrier battle group too. Plus there's drone boats. But the way aircraft were used also demonstrated a lack of air supremacy.

      [1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48380176

    • dv35z3 hours ago
      Is there a map that shows generally where they are?
    • s1artibartfast2 hours ago
      Why do you think they were barely used? I dont know, but assume they were being used nearly non stop to support bombing runs. They dont go on land and they dont have cawasn't.

      I'm no expert, but the attack range of the carrier flight wing is 4-500 miles

  • ggm4 hours ago
    The low bar path out for Iran is not to charge US ships insurance. The people most likely to complain would not complain if America has an exception.
    • JumpCrisscross4 hours ago
      Does anything America imports through the Strait travel on U.S.-flagged vessels?
      • s1artibartfast3 hours ago
        The US import very little from Hormuz on any ship. Most buy ers are in asia or europe.
    • Zigurd4 hours ago
      If the only recourse is to spend tens of billions on another bombing campaign, or even more on a land war, why would Iran be looking for a path out of anything?
      • knollimar4 hours ago
        Americans are fueled by spite, though.
        • RobRivera4 hours ago
          I see
        • SpicyLemonZest3 hours ago
          Spite against whom? Like most Americans, I have a number of grave concerns about the Iranian regime and the terrible things they've done. But on a personal level, Donald Trump has done a lot more to make me feel spiteful than either Masoud Pezeshkian or Mojtaba Khamenei have. I think everyone involved is well aware of this fact and it's going to continue to severely constrain Trump's options.
          • bijowo16763 hours ago
            Americans have zero concerns about Iran, they care more about inflation and gas prices, it is evident in all surveys.

            the only people who have grave concerns over Iran are the ones who have monetary incentive to do so, or ethnical tribalism reason

            • SpicyLemonZest3 hours ago
              It sounds like you agree with me that Americans do not feel that fighting theocracy in Iran is a particularly high priority, and that people who care about it care more about domestic issues. So I'm not sure why you've chosen to express that in such a confrontational tone. Perhaps I've misunderstood something.
              • bijowo16762 hours ago
                >>Like most Americans, I have a number of grave concerns about the Iranian regime

                I didn't agree with "most Americans" part. This kind of rhetoric is false and is used to whitewash and launder war crimes and escape responsibility, for example for murdering 160 Iranian school girls in in Minab.

                • SpicyLemonZest2 hours ago
                  You don't think most Americans would say, if you asked them about the issue, that the Iranian regime is bad and oppressive? I don't think this has anything to do with whitewashing or escaping responsibility for war crimes; obviously we're getting beyond the level of detail most Americans would know, but I personally find it quite easy to believe that both Ahmad Vahidi and Pete Hegseth should be arrested and sent to the Hague.
                  • bijowo16762 hours ago
                    do Americans care enough about Iran, to murder 160 innocent girls ??

                    there are many ways to phrase a question and make it seem like very low stakes, while it causes actual human lives on the other end of the globe

                    • SpicyLemonZestan hour ago
                      No, they don't. Perhaps that's where the confusion lies? Americans mostly did not want to bomb Iran in the first place, which is why their representatives in Congress didn't agree to; the regime in the White House just issued illegal orders to start bombing without Congressional authorization. Even had Hegseth not murdered those schoolgirls, the war would still have been illegal, and I would still be calling (perhaps a bit less vehemently) for him to go to prison over it.
                      • bijowo167644 minutes ago
                        This is empty rhetoric, WW2 was the last war where Congress officially declared war. Vietbam, Iraq, GWOT wars had some form of congress authorization, but the rest of the wars never had any authorization

                        America been droning and murdering people around the globe with impunity, for example Cambodia bombing which literally put Pol Pot and Khmer Rouge in power and led to genocide. The list of US war crimes is simply too big and I have zero tolerance for whitewashing or excusing this behavior

                        • SpicyLemonZest28 minutes ago
                          Your "zero tolerance" attitude is preventing you from understanding that I agree with you. I'm not going to talk to you any further, but I would encourage you to reflect on whether your reflexive hostility here has been an enjoyable or productive use of your time.
    • yousif_1231233 hours ago
      It affects global prices and sets a precedent against rules on international waters and freedom of navigation.
    • decimalenough3 hours ago
      There is zero commercial shipping through the Strait with US flags, everybody uses flags of convenience.
      • stubish2 hours ago
        The US could also get into this racket then by offering US ship registrations at a very reasonable price...
    • unmole3 hours ago
      > US ships

      What US ships?

    • epistasis3 hours ago
      [dead]
  • Zigurd4 hours ago
    To the victor belong the insurance policy commissions
  • BashiBazouk3 hours ago
    Why would they not just build a pipeline from Kuwait to Oman or even UAE to the other side of Oman? If the Keystone pipeline is profitable, so would this I would think. Seems like a temporary problem or a fine line for Iran to charge fees low enough the effort would not be worth it...
    • walrus012 hours ago
      1. They already did, Fujairah is a major oil port.

      2. Fujairah is within drone and missile range of a lot of remaining Iranian strike capability.

      3. Fujairah is not really equipped with a large amount of high precision, reliable, expensive, slow to procure and replace air defense systems.

      4. Fujairah has already been struck repeatedly since this conflict kicked off.

      5. The oil pipeline capacity from the 'west' side of the UAE to Fujairah is nowhere near enough to meet demand, even if the port and oil terminal were considered totally safe by ship owners and cargo owners, which it isn't.

    • decimalenough3 hours ago
      They already did:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habshan%E2%80%93Fujairah_oil_p...

      But it obviously wasn't designed to carry all the oil going through the Strait.

      • godwinson__4-83 hours ago
        It should be pointed out that facilities connected to this pipeline were targeted during the conflict.
    • godwinson__4-83 hours ago
      Imagine thinking this was a good idea when you cut your ribbon after all that money and effort and then a ~$500 drone flies over and with one explosion has it leaking.

      Do you think people are dumb? Obviously beneficial and easy actions that no one has taken rarely exist in the real world. You're basically suggesting the people actually there who have a better view than you are profoundly stupid.

      • 3 hours ago
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      • colechristensen3 hours ago
        Oil pipelines are underground. The small proportions of above-ground sections were indeed targeted in this recent conflict but in war-prone areas so is the rest of your oil infrastructure including ships at sea and the ground based facilities can be fortified and defended.
        • godwinson__4-83 hours ago
          Is it vulnerable to the same sort of asymmetric attack, yes or no?

          Can the system run if those above ground areas are destroyed? Of course hypothetically they can be defended. Just like hypothetically a few drones should not be able to shut the world's most powerful navy out of the strait.

          In reality we know the real answer lies in an admission of your answer. The best defense is electing governments which will not wantonly engage in armed conflicts.

  • jmyeet3 hours ago
    If this was obvious to some random guy like me at least two months ago [1][2] without access to intelligence community information and military assessments then this should surprise absolutely no one in the administration. I said then and have been vindicated (IMHO): this will go down as the largest strategic blunder in US history. It's also going to reshape the region away from US influence because of the hollowness of US security guarantees. The GCC are going to have to deal with Iran as a fellow oil-producing nation. A big loser here is the UAE and I'm not sure that Dubai ever recovers.

    Before all of this, Iran closing the Strait of Hormuz was a theory that was never tested. Traffic passed freely. But a war was forced upon them by the US and Israel so if any of these countries (or anyone else for that matter) is unhappy at the outcome, you know where to point the finger.

    One irony in all this is that the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea would guarantee free transit passage through territorial waters like the Strait of Hormuz. Iran isn't a signatory. The ironic part is that the United States isn't either.

    [1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47944212

    [2]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47937691

    • symian33 minutes ago
      People used to jokingly say that the way to prosperity is for the U.S. to defeat you in a war. Soon people will jokingly say the way to prosperity is for you to defeat the U.S. in a war. The sequel to The Mouse that Roared is The Lion that Squeaked.
    • ChoGGian hour ago
      > you know where to point the finger.

      Greenland, Cuba, or Canada?

  • lokar3 hours ago
    Look at the doc (from Iran), the things covered by the “insurance” have only ever happened (in the straight) due to Iran.
    • ajross3 hours ago
      Well, gosh! You're right, that's just not fair! We should make sure the relevant authority figures pass judgement or something to make them stop.

      Folks, this is what happens when you lose a war. You have to pay the bad guys to win the war in a more comfortable way for you.

      Iran knows this is a protection racket. They don't care. What're we gonna do about it? Bomb them again?

      • lokar3 hours ago
        lol. I’m not pro-Iran or pro-maga. I was going to make a mafia reference but wanted to stay neutral
  • bjourne2 hours ago
    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47200879

    I wonder what happened to the Iranian buddies? So many HN accounts whose Iranian friends were all supposedly celebrating the US-Israeli bombings of their country of origin. Are they still cheering?

  • fuzzfactor4 hours ago
    Al Capone couldn't have come up with a more "attractive" insurance plan himself.
  • zaptheimpaler3 hours ago
    LMAO they're learning how to do legally defensible racketeering the way US insurance companies do, very smart.
  • freitasm2 hours ago
    So much winning.
  • gafferongames3 hours ago
    ART OF THE DEAL
    • walrus012 hours ago
      Some real 5 dimensional chess being played here
  • jimbob453 hours ago
    Were straits not doing insurance at all before? Would have thought that all straits were charging for it after the Ever Given disaster. The strategy can’t permanently be “wait for the EU or US to fix it in a week as worldwide markets crash”.
    • gtirloni3 hours ago
      The Ever Given was stuck in the Suez Canal.

      Narrowest width:

      - Strait of Hormuz (33 km)

      - Bab-el-Mandeb (26 km)

      - Strait of Gibraltar (13 km)

      - Strait of Malacca (2.8 km)

      - Bosphorus (700 m)

      - Suez Canal (205 m) <- Ever Given

      - Panama Canal (55 m)

  • ameon4 hours ago
    [dead]
  • 2OEH8eoCRo04 hours ago
    Incredible that Iran is victorious (so far).

    War is one way of forcing political will on another. The US military executed nearly flawlessly yet US leadership doesn't want to pay the cost of defeating Iran by force.

    Why even have this military if anything that affects the market makes the US cower in fear?

    • gpm3 hours ago
      > The US military executed nearly flawlessly

      Did they? They

      - Started the war off by (to all appearances accidentally) bombing a girls elementary school

      - Had an aircraft carrier spontaneously catch fire via laundry - forcing it to go for repairs mid war

      - Lost a bunch of very expensive aircraft, and some (though not very many per airframe) soldiers with them

      - Proved that the F-35s stealth capabilities aren't quite what they were hyped up to be by having one hit by a guided missile

      And on the strategic objectives front (where, to be fair, they were given impossible tasks)

      - Killed the person they were hoping to install as the new head of state

      - Didn't manage to destroy Iran's missile launch capability

      - Didn't manage to secure the straight of hormuz

      - Didn't manage to defend their own bases against missile attacks, instead fleeing to hotels

      • Natfan2 hours ago
        on that last one: don't americans talk a lot of shit about hamas using residential areas as cover? what, pray tell, is cohousing your military with civilian in hotels?
      • everyone3 hours ago
        Also..

        * USA (or Israel really) started this war on their own terms at a time of their choosing. But they werent prepared at all.

        * Incredibly valuable things like THAAD radars (like $1B per unit) were taken out by $1000 drones.. We've all seen the war in Ukraine, we all know Iran makes Shahed drones. US seemed to be completely unprepared for this.

        * US was using $1M pac 3 patriot missiles to shoot down $1000 drones, utterly failing the shot exchange problem. Also US has run down its stockpiles of many missiles to 50% or less. It will take 3 or 4 years to return many items to acceptable levels, and wont be able sell any either, leaving customers seeking alternatives.

        * Clear miscoordination and lack of clarity between US and allies. Like no-one really knew what was happening or why, leading to stuff like the ghost of Kuwait.

        Classic trump regieme action. No-one competent in the room. Just impulsively doing random shit each day with no strategy or understanding.

        • paulryanrogers3 hours ago
          > Classic trump regieme action. No-one competent in the room. Just impulsively doing random shit each day with no strategy or understanding.

          It has echoes of LBJ and later Nixon trying to control a massive conflict from thousands of miles a way, based mostly on vibes.

          • antodan hour ago
            Vibes? There's a fallacy named after McNamara trying to break it down to numerical metrics. Vibes probably would've served them better.

            I think they had much more intelligence and competence back then, even if they were wrong. Now it's stupidity and incompetence on top of being wrong.

    • jcranmer3 hours ago
      > The US military executed nearly flawlessly

      The US military exhibited numerous flaws. To cover numerous flaws not yet covered by other replies:

      * Required the deployment of assets beyond their useful operational capability (which caused the aircraft carrier to catch fire).

      * Demonstrated that their targeting list is not only based on outdated information, but failed to update that information when informed it was outdated (which led to the bombing of the elementary school).

      * Failed to anticipate literally the one military contingency everyone expected Iran to do--close the strait. Hell, even after it was clear that was happened and everyone was screaming "what are you going to do about it?" the answer was, shockingly "absolutely nothing."

      * Failed to adequately secure supply lines to ensure that military units in the area have sufficient food. This is literally logistics 101 stuff.

      * Defined operational success criteria not based on results achieved but on effort spent--in other words, how many bombs you launched rather than whether or not the targets you wanted destroyed were destroyed.

      * Definitely several C2 issues we're not entirely privy to, given the midair collision that cost a tanker, and the loss of an AWACS unit.

      The strategic issues are even more myriad, but since strategy is supposed to be largely a civilian, not military, decision, it's not really the military's fault. Except I will note that a lot of civilians in this field do come from ex-military background, and there does seem to be a major recurring problem that CENTCOM is producing a lot of people with really bad strategic judgement that is partially responsible for this debacle in the first place. Really to the point that we should consider blackballing everyone from CENTCOM from ever having a military or civilian defense job of importance ever again.

    • nemomarx4 hours ago
      The cost of defeating Iran military (in enough detail to stop them from firing rockets at ships or doing insurgency harassment etc) would probably take years, so honestly the whole operation was unrealistic from the outset without trying to install a favored successor.
      • ceejayoz4 hours ago
        It doesn't help that they nearly blew up the favored successor.

        https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/19/us/politics/iran-israel-u...

        > Mr. Ahmadinejad was injured on the war’s first day by an Israeli strike at his home in Tehran that had been designed to free him from house arrest, the American officials and an associate of Mr. Ahmadinejad said. He survived the strike, they said, but after the near miss he became disillusioned with the regime change plan.

    • wolvoleo4 hours ago
      Is this really just about the market? I imagine it's also about a ton of body bags coming back just around the midterms. Because that will happen in a ground war.
      • walrus014 hours ago
        There was never a buildup of even 1/50th of the ground forces that would have been required to occupy the major military sites, industrial sites and large cities (nevermind attempt to control the countryside). The buildup to the 2003 Iraq War started 12+ months in advance with thousands of vehicles, cargo containers, equipment and 150,000+ guys collecting in bases in Kuwait.
        • Terr_3 hours ago
          Also worth noting that Iran is generally a bigger and richer country than Iraq, whichever timeframe you look at.

          To summarize in rough numbers:

          * 2x the population (today)

          * 3x the land area (today, but also probably back then)

          * 7x the relative wealth (compared to Iraq-2002, using US GDP across time as a shared baseline)

          I'm sure the US military has a much better statistical analysis... and I'm also sure it was ignored by the commander-in-chief.

          • walrus012 hours ago
            Iran is also considerably more mountainous than Iraq, if one looks at a topo map of Iraq and examines all the generally 'flat, somewhere generally near the Euphrates' area vs a population density map in people per square km. Yeah there's more complicated terrain in the northern part of the country, but nowhere on the size/scale of what exists in Iran.
    • JumpCrisscross4 hours ago
      > War is one way of forcing political will on another

      War is politics by other means (Clausewitz).

    • cjbgkagh3 hours ago
      > pay the cost of defeating Iran by force.

      And how much do you think that cost would be? What are we at now? $139B to $1T in long term costs baked in so far.

    • JumpinJack_Cash3 hours ago
      > > Why even have this military if anything that affects the market makes the US cower in fear?

      First of all the chain of those cowering in fear begins with the the actors around ship transit , meaning the owners but also the seamen , they don't want to cross if there is a > 5% chance of being hit . And the seamen are actually being forced to accept such risk, they signed up for something else entirely, their risk preference would be around 0.0% because these days nobody dies at sea anymore.

      Without Hormuz the world runs out of oil and that is a much bigger problem than just stock market going down

      With the mines and drones and asymmetric warfare you'd need to conquer the entirety of Iran alley by alley and mountain by mountain to secure the strait for a risk tolerance in line with the aforementioned 5%

      This war was lost when the U.S. wasn't ready to intervene during the week of popular uprise against the regime, had the intervention happened back then , maybe it could have been possible to overthrow the Ayatollah system and reinstall the Shah (who btw was no Saint either)

      John Mearsheimer has called this right from the first day, he said that Iran 'holds all the cards' and he's been right on everything down to a T (no pun intended) [0]

      It has been an acrobatic adventure in the Middle East with lots of expenses and very little human losses to follow the 'Greater Israel' ambition of Israel and Bibi. But we must not forget that we killed their Supreme Leader and Religious Leader all wrapped in one , they will not let this slide and with the asymmetric war and warfare this Administration has exposed itself to potentially another 9/11 that would at that point force a ground war with lots of victims.

      [0]http://youtube.com/watch?v=DBOVT0UdHXg

      • attentive2 hours ago
        Iran calls notwithstanding, Mearsheimer is a complete clown with regard to Ukraine calls

        2014 - Claimed Putin had no interest in annexing large parts of Ukraine, conquering it, or pursuing regime change

        Feb 2022 - Putin had “no intention of invading Ukraine” in the sense of large-scale conquest (days before the invasion)

        June 2022 - “There is no evidence in the public record that Putin was contemplating, much less intending to put an end to Ukraine as an independent state… Putin was not interested in making Ukraine a part of Russia… the Russians pursued a limited aims strategy”

        Repeated claim (2014–2022): Putin is a rational actor who understands the costs and would not pursue maximalist territorial or imperial goals in Ukraine

    • 4 hours ago
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