Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Team Capitalism, Not Team Elon

By Jonah Goldberg

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

 

I am not a huge fan of Elon Musk as a political activist or commentator. I think he’s made Twitter—sorry, X—worse. His support for the nationalist right in Europe has been ugly. His tenure leading DOGE mostly amounted to a missed opportunity and often descended into little more than performative vandalism. His personal life is not exactly consonant with my preference for bourgeois family values. Though, one can hardly accuse him of being a deadbeat dad.

 

On the other hand, I am a huge fan of his accomplishments in business and engineering. He helped create the foundations of the digital economy with PayPal. At the helm of Tesla, he made the electric car into a viable industry (something climate activists once lionized him for). Starlink, his internet satellite business, has been transformative. And, finally, there’s SpaceX, which went public last week. It’s a testament to human ingenuity, immigrant success, and American greatness on a scale that is hard to describe. 

 

If Musk is successful in his ambitions, he will be more responsible than any other human for making ours an interplanetary species. That would mean that long after nearly every name of every politician and businessman you can think of has been forgotten, people will still remember Elon Musk.

 

But none of that is very relevant to the explosion of outrage over his status as the world’s first trillionaire. I offer my opinions about Musk only because a remarkable number of people think if you defend the morality or legality of him being so rich, you must be on Team Elon. I am not. I am on Team Capitalism.

 

But the confusion hardly ends there. If you followed the reaction on social media to Musk’s shattering of the trillionaire barrier, you’d think that he now has $1 trillion in the bank. Indeed, indignant politicians rushed to propose taxes on Musk’s wealth as if it were a suddenly discovered treasure ship (with laughably questionable math). Many people talked about Musk “hoarding dollars that rightfully belong to the poor, the people, or perhaps Social Security beneficiaries.

 

That $1 trillion doesn’t exist, save as a function of accounting. He owns a large number of shares in SpaceX. Those shares have an estimated book value—for now—of about $1.03 trillion. If the stock price dips in the future,  as I expect it will, he might not be a trillionaire for very long.

 

Let’s say, heaven forbid, that SpaceX has a disaster on the launch pad, loses some major NASA contract, and the stock price tumbles. What happens to those dollars he supposedly hoarded? Do they vanish? No, because they never existed in the first place.

 

A shocking number of people think—or demagogically pretend to—that the economy is a static pie, that all wealth in the economy exists in the form of a finite number of dollars. This zero-sum fallacy is why people think he’s hoarding wealth. He’s not. He’s creating wealth, and I don’t just mean for all of the SpaceX welders and cafeteria staff who now own more than $1 million worth of stock.

 

Increased innovation and productivity grow the pie, which means more pie for more people. That’s what economic growth means. In 1969, the year I was born, the U.S. GDP was about $1 trillion in nominal dollars. (If you adjust for inflation, U.S. GDP was around $1 trillion a century ago.) Does Musk now own all of America’s wealth? Of course not, because the economy has grown massively since then.

 

Other than dislike for Musk, the main driver of all this outrage is our obsession with income inequality. To some, it’s just not right that anyone be so rich when others are so poor—or feel so poor compared to Musk. This is an aesthetic complaint masquerading as a policy position. In objective terms, no one was made poorer by Musk getting richer. Subjectively, however, we’re all poorer in the sense that the richest person in the world became marginally richer.

 

That’s a vibes argument.

 

If your neighbor wins the lottery, you will be poorer in comparison. But your ability to clothe, feed, and house you and your family will not have changed.

 

If I cure cancer tomorrow, I will get very rich. Where’s the injustice? The world gets a cure for cancer, the economy saves countless billions fighting cancer, and I get to buy a bunch of cool stuff. Everyone, except maybe some drug companies and oncologists, comes out a winner.

 

I’ll never cure cancer. But capitalism probably will, eventually. Which is just one of a trillion reasons why I am on Team Capitalism.

Israel’s ‘Internationally Recognized Borders’ Are Holding Up Quite Well, Actually

By Seth Mandel

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

 

The city of Montreal is embroiled in a battle over whether to cut ties with Israel. But the parameters of this fight are quite literally imaginary. And it is a reminder that the more passionately one opposes Israel, the less likely one is to know what one is talking about regarding the details of the conflict.

 

What happened is this: The opposition political party put forth a resolution for the city council to “recognize and denounce the apartheid regime imposed in Palestine and the genocide being perpetrated there, and that it affirm its solidarity with the Palestinian people” by “suspend[ing] without delay its institutional ties with the current Government of Israel, its institutions, and its municipalities, including by ceasing to invite representatives of that state to official events held at Montreal City Hall.”

 

The resolution was supposed to be voted on yesterday, though the mayor, who opposes the one-sided petition, managed to delay it until August. The petition is nothing more than a naked attempt to incite anti-Semitism in a city with a large Jewish population and whose institutions have been the regular targets of violent anti-Semitic attacks.

 

As the Montreal Gazette reports, “The mayor has expressed sympathy for those affected by the conflict, but has maintained she is focused on municipal issues and does not feel Montreal should become involved in international conflicts.” The opposition party wants to stir up trouble by forcing city officials to eschew their actual responsibilities to the people of Montreal.

 

So the bad faith behind this move is transparent. But it also can be seen in the petition itself, which calls for the boycott of the Jewish state “until Israel returns to its internationally recognized borders, ceases its violations of the rights of the Palestinian people, and ends its violations of international law.”

 

Of course, anyone referring to Israel as “the apartheid regime… in Palestine” isn’t concerned with geographic or historical accuracy. But some zombie anti-Zionist talking points need to be eviscerated repeatedly, and this is one of them.

 

The fact is, Israel is abiding by its “internationally recognized borders,” and anyone who says otherwise isn’t engaging in honest debate.

 

The State of Israel as recognized by the UN doesn’t itself have clear borders. This is because the British Mandate powers and the UN proposed a two-state solution that would have had borders. The Palestinian Arab leadership flatly rejected this offer of statehood and joined a half-dozen Arab states in making war on the fledgling State of Israel instead. That war ended with cease-fire lines, not internationally recognized borders.

 

But over time, some Arab antagonists gave up the genocidal war against the Jewish state and signed formal peace agreements with it. Those agreements created actual internationally recognized borders.

 

Egypt, for example, has internationally recognized borders with Israel. These came about through extended negotiations as part of the 1979 Camp David Accords and were implemented over the following few years. Israel packed up its settlements throughout the disputed territory and enabled Egypt to permanently settle the area, outside of a demilitarized buffer zone.

 

Jordan, too, has an internationally recognized border with Israel. How did it get that border? The same way, the only way: It signed a peace agreement with Israel. Jordan even waited until Yasser Arafat and the PLO signed accords with Israel in the 1990s to make its own peace with Israel official. That prevented anyone from being able to claim that the Israel-Jordan agreement cut the Palestinians out of the process.

 

The Palestinians, however, have since declined multiple offers to establish permanent borders with Israel. So there is no state of “Palestine” at this moment, and there is no fully sovereign Palestinian border. When anti-Israel activists say “internationally recognized” they mean “I heard it on the BBC.”

 

What about the other states? There’s Syria and Lebanon, which both refused to engage in full mutual recognition with Israel and strike a peace deal. There are lines in the sand that are generally understood as demarcation lines, but they are not “borders.”

 

However, Lebanon and Syria can have internationally recognized borders with Israel whenever they want. So can the Palestinians. Until then, they’ve got armistice lines and cease-fire lines and a petulant habit of complaining about the things they can fix any time they choose.

The Democrats’ Patriotism Gap

By Rich Lowry

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

 

Democrats take great offense at accusations of being unpatriotic, but the data don’t lie.

 

A new NBC News poll captured the partisan gap over pride in America. Overall, 56 percent of Americans are extremely or very proud of the country, but only 29 percent of Democrats, compared with 90 percent of Republicans.

 

That’s a yawning gap, and about a matter that really shouldn’t be controversial. We aren’t talking about abortion, or Donald Trump’s White House ballroom, but an elemental thing — pride in country — that in most times and places has been taken for granted.

 

Once upon a time, that was the case here. The Gallup poll found in January 2001 that nearly 90 percent of Americans were extremely or very proud of the country.

 

In 2017, according to Gallup, 75 percent of the public said that they were extremely or very proud of America, a low at the time, and it’s been down since. The decline has been driven largely by Democrats.

 

Their disdain for President Trump clearly is responsible for some of the drop, but not all of it. Democrats were less proud of the country than Republicans when Barack Obama and Joe Biden were president.

 

Obviously, pride in country shouldn’t depend on who is president; the country is so much more than its politics. Mark Twain said, aptly, that “the only rational patriotism is loyalty to the nation all the time, loyalty to the government when it deserves it.”

 

Even if you have contempt for the party in power, there’s the country’s Founding, its constitutional system, its stupendous wealth, its great heroes, its victories in two world wars, its natural beauty, and its endlessly interesting, fair-minded, and inventive people to feel proud of.

 

Many Democrats are unmoved by these things or consider them sources of embarrassment. The Founding? Tainted by racism. The constitutional system? An antiquated obstacle to progress. The economy? Rigged by and for billionaires. Our heroes? Feet of clay or worse.

 

A key word here is “systemic,” as in “systemic racism,” which suggests that racism is not a product of historical circumstance but endemic to the American project itself.

 

Why feel pride in a country that is not yet redeemed, indeed may be unredeemable?

 

The left — especially in the academy — has long advanced the view that America’s role in the world is predatory and imperialistic, and over time this radical critique of U.S. foreign policy has gained more traction within the Democratic mainstream.

 

Then there’s the attitude toward small-scale expressions of patriotism — American-flag imagery, lapel pins, fly-overs, Lee Greenwood songs, and the like — that progressives tend to consider crude or jingoistic.

 

The Democratic Senate candidate in Texas, James Talarico, once called the American flag “a complicated symbol.”

 

If the national banner doesn’t elicit an instinctive feeling of devotion, one’s attachment to the country is likely attenuated as well.

 

Many progressives would counter that America is a set of ideals and we should feel fealty to it only to the extent we realize those ideals. But the country and its people are also a concrete reality, and you either like them or not, feel connected to them or not, and — this is close to the crux of the matter — feel grateful for them or not.

 

Nearly everyone who isn’t particularly proud of America is still incredibly indebted to it, benefiting from its liberty and prosperity.

 

It’s a profound act of ingratitude not to return the debt with a sense of reverence and obligation. It’s not enough to say, in effect, you’ll feel proud of the country at some future point when it has met certain social and political benchmarks. “Lord, make me patriotic, but not yet” — this amounts to a version of St. Augustine’s famous prayer.

 

In short, patriotism shouldn’t be a partisan issue but a foundational commitment of both parties and all factions. These days, though, we can’t even agree to feel proud of the nation we share and owe so much.

I Learned It by Watching You

By Noah Rothman

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

 

Alaska’s director of elections, Carol Beecher, was unsparing in a letter explaining her decision to boot Dan Sullivan from the ballot in November. No, not that Dan Sullivan, i.e., Republican U.S. Senator Dan Sullivan, but another candidate who just happened to go by Dan J. Sullivan.

 

Dan J. Sullivan’s U.S. Senate bid, Beecher concluded, was not “an actual good-faith candidacy” for the office he sought. Rather, it was “filed with a purpose to confuse or mislead and thereby compromise the ballot’s fairness or neutrality.”

 

It was a ruse likely designed by the senator’s opponents to trick his voters into thinking they were casting their ballots for the incumbent when they were inadvertently backing a pretender. There was an element of cosmic timing in Beecher’s decision to put this charade to an end when she did. It corresponded with Democratic outrage over Republican efforts to meddle in Democratic primaries so as to “elevate Democratic candidates viewed as more beatable in November,” according to Axios.

 

“Democrats ‘aren’t happy’ that Republicans are ‘trying to help the far left,’ a senior House Democrat told Axios,” the report read. “A trio of obscure super PACs with progressive-sounding names have cropped up in recent months to support more left-leaning or scandal-tarnished candidates in key battleground districts.”

 

Adam Kinzinger, onetime Republican congressman and prolific Trump critic, called the strategy “extremely dangerous.” After all, the risk in boosting candidates unsuited to federal office is that they might actually win, thereby contributing to the growing number of people in power who are, in Kinzinger’s estimation, “the worst.”

 

Well, yes. That is, after all, the right’s long-standing complaint about a tactic that Democrats perfected.

 

Sometimes, the Democrats are right, and the GOP candidates that Democrat-aligned groups back in primaries are beatable. In 2012, Democratic Senator Claire McCaskill bought herself a temporary reprieve by running ads for GOP Senate candidate Todd Akin, which supposedly attacked him for being “too conservative.” Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro owes his office to a campaign that accused him of being too loyal to Donald Trump (“I’m going to have to send him a thank you card,” GOP candidate Doug Mastriano said of the Shapiro camp’s ads). Illinois Governor JB Pritzker dodged a bullet when his allies castigated a weak Republican candidate who “proudly embraces the Trump agenda” while ignoring more formidable GOP hopefuls. Sometimes, this exercise in reverse psychology doesn’t pay off, as Donald Trump’s entire political career attests.

 

But it wasn’t until the GOP got in on the act that this tactic began to raise eyebrows in the legacy press. Until then, it was reported matter-of-factly as a quirky feature of the political scene.

 

“Democrats paying for ads supporting Republican candidates,” NPR marveled. What a country! Sure, “it’s a political gamble,” the outlet conceded, “but it has worked in the past.” Sure, there’s internal debate among Democrats as to whether interfering in GOP politics is prudent, the Washington Post conceded. “But there is little dispute about the effect of altering the Republican primaries in ways that could affect the November matchups,” its dispatch read. And the “strategy seems to have paid off,” an NPR retrospective on the 2022 midterms contended. You can’t argue with success.

 

So, what is the difference between Democratic meddling and the Republican variety? Well, as one former House Democrat argued, “Democrats did their GOP primary meddling more out in the open in those cycles.”

 

As distinctions go, that’s weak sauce. And as Mitt Romney used to say, “What’s sauce for the goose is now sauce for the gander.”

Republican Circus, Republican Monkeys

By Kevin D. Williamson

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

 

The words embroidered on a cushion in my very busy house turn a useful Polish proverb—Nie mój cyrk, nie moje małpy—on its head: “This is my circus. These are my monkeys.”

 

The federal circus, as it turns out, never packs in the tent.

 

A few Republican senators have been making a little noise about the Trump administration’s supposed deal—the agreement to seek an agreement—with Iran. Apparently, there are some in Congress who believe that Congress should have some input here.

 

That’s cute.

 

Trump went to war—illegally—with Iran without so much as a by-your-leave or a desultory nod in Congress’ direction. Congress had no say over how this war started. Congress had no say over how this war was conducted. Congress had no say as to the war’s goals or objectives. And members of Congress—led by such servile specimens as Mike Johnson, the Republican speaker of the House, and John Thune, the Republican majority leader in the Senate—did nothing more than work to maintain a firm grip on their ankles.

 

Radio commentator Mark Levin, speaking on behalf of “we, the people” as is the wont of such broadcasters, demanded:

 

I have asked for days, why can’t we, the people, see the damn MOU?  Not through people briefed by an anonymous person. Honestly, I’ve never seen anything like this. If it is a great outcome for peace, then release it.

 

There is an answer to that question, and it is that Trump does not care what Mark Levin has to say about this or about anything else. I used to have a friendly relationship with Mark Levin, who used to have me on his show from time to time and blurbed one of my books—and one cannot help but admire a man who has made a career in radio with that Gilbert Gottfried-meets-Wallace Shawn voice—but he is, like everybody else in the Fox News orbit, a cheap date where Trump is concerned. He has been, among other disreputable things, a notorious apologist for the attempted coup d’état of 2020-21. Trump knows that Levin et al. will forgive his attempt to illegally hold on to the presidency after having lost an election; by comparison, not being entirely forthcoming about a little bit of text that isn’t going to amount to a picayune pile of pintos is small stuff.

 

Sen. John Thune whimpered that there should be “probably some expectation” that the Senate would get a vote on this. Probably some expectation—forceful stuff, if you happen to be an amoeba. Sen. James Lankford: “We’ve got to have a vote of Congress to be able to solidify [it], long term.” Which is to say, the Republican senator from Oklahoma believes that Congress’ job is simply to “solidify” that which passes out of the executive branch, as if the Senate were a dose of legislative Imodium. Given the conflicting accounts of what is in the deal—Tehran and Washington still do not seem to quite agree about that—Sen. Lindsey Graham, that mighty Hyperion of South Carolina, thundered: “I am somewhat concerned.” 

 

One cannot blame Trump for this. It was not Trump who made Levin, Thune, Johnson, Graham, et al. into such piteous and contemptible figures. They did that to themselves.

 

That is the ironic outcome of setting aside one’s principles—and morality and patriotism—to pursue power vicariously through a corrupt demagogue such as Trump: You lose your reputation but don’t get the power you thought you were going to get—you abandon your honor for nothing, or almost nothing: maybe a little bit of money for the broadcasters and a little more time on the public teat for the time-servers.

 

Proximity to power creates an illusion of sharing in that power, of being part of some great grand thing: I have seen men I thought were serious receive a mere text message from the White House and squeal like a 4-year-old girl who has been presented with a real live unicorn on her birthday. It is unseemly.

 

Upon the triumph of Julius Caesar, Cato the Younger disemboweled himself, preferring to die rather than live a day under a tyrant—and when he regained consciousness and discovered that his friends had saved his life and had him stitched back together, he ripped the sutures out with his bare hands and finished the job. Sen. Graham is “somewhat concerned,” and Mark Levin is out there tweeting on behalf of “we, the people.”

 

The monster always turns on Dr. Frankenstein, and the rabbi always ends up crushed under the weight of the golem. Republicans are pretending to be surprised and put out by all this.

 

Your circus. Your monkey.

The Never-Ending Deal

By Nick Catoggio

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

 

For the second straight day, the biggest news in the world is a peace agreement that no American outside the West Wing has seen. How’s the average joe supposed to tell whether that deal is a good one or a bad one for the United States?

 

Well, let’s consider a few clues.

 

Clue one: The fact that an administration that’s normally terrible at keeping secrets has managed to suppress the text suggests it’s very, very motivated to hide the details. Even John Thune, the Senate majority leader and a member of the president’s party, had yet to be briefed on the deal as of this afternoon.

 

Imagine your child came home from school with their report card, assured you they’d gotten straight A’s, but refused to let you see it. What would you assume? Is that report card a good one or not?

 

Clue two: Leaks are springing about hawkish Cabinet members being skeptical of the terms. Sources told Axios that intelligence officials have evidence that “the way Iranian officials were discussing the deal among themselves was inconsistent with what they were telling the mediators and the U.S.” Because of that, CIA Director John Ratcliffe and Secretary of State Marco Rubio have allegedly made clear during deliberations that they “doubted the Iranians would agree to take the nuclear steps the U.S. was seeking.”

 

When top-level advisers and their allies are working the press to disassociate themselves from a new White House policy on day one, that’s usually a sign that the policy isn’t great.

 

Clue three: The president’s desperation to make and preserve a deal already has him sounding like a mouthpiece for Iran’s regime, as I predicted. “We’re dealing with people that I think are very rational people,” Donald Trump said of the Iranians this morning at the G7 summit in France. “They were nice to deal with. They were strong people, smart people. … They’re not radicalized, and they’re looking to help their country.”

 

When asked about Lebanon, he complained that “Israel has been fighting Hezbollah too long and too many people are being killed. And you don’t have to knock down an apartment house every time you’re looking for somebody. Because there are a lot of people in those apartment houses and they’re not all Hezbollah, that I can tell you.”

 

He even downplayed the urgency of getting Iran to give up its enriched uranium. Does that sound like a man who’s operating from a negotiating position of strength or weakness?

 

Clue four: J.D. Vance was all over cable news yesterday trying to sell the deal to viewers and ended up making three points. First, even basic U.S. security priorities like halting Iran’s enrichment of uranium and allowing snap inspections of its nuclear facilities are still TBD. Second, there is in fact a scenario in which Iran would receive up to $300 billion in reconstruction aid, depending on how it behaves. And third, supposedly senior Iranian leaders have had a belated awakening about building better relations with the United States, which the vice president finds “cool.”

 

You can always tell when the Trump administration believes it’s come out ahead against some adversary because it will exult boorishly in its own dominance afterward. Do any of Vance’s talking points scream “dominance” to you?

 

All of these clues suggest that the negotiations to come won’t end well for the United States, but I think it’s more likely that they won’t end—period.

 

Ratification.

 

James Lankford has always seemed like one of the more sober members of the Senate GOP conference, so I was surprised to see that he said this of the agreement with Iran: “If you want a deal to last, it can’t be an executive agreement. We’ve got to have a vote of Congress to be able to solidify [it] long term.”

 

I can’t make heads or tails of that.

 

For starters, it’s a little late for lawmakers to be getting chesty about their role here. The president went to war illegally, without congressional authorization; he was abetted in that illegality by Republican legislators who opposed Democratic efforts to assert the legislature’s war powers; and he may yet resume the war unilaterally if negotiations with Iran break down.

 

Where does Lankford get off now, insisting that his branch gets a say?

 

I don’t understand, either, why he or other hawks in the Senate would want to “solidify” the deal. If it’s as bad as the circumstantial evidence indicates, Republicans shouldn’t want to solidify it. If they luck out and somehow end up with President Marco Rubio in 2029, they won’t want him bound by an agreement that forces the new administration to maintain a weak posture toward Iran.

 

And if they end up with a Democratic president in 2029, whether the deal has been “solidified” or not won’t matter. Trump’s successor will likely abide by the terms anyway to advance the yearslong left-wing project of detente with the Khomeinists.

 

Still, the strangest part of the quote is Lankford’s apparent desire to vote on the matter. Other lawmakers have also said as much, which I find mystifying. What do Republicans stand to gain by bringing the deal to the Senate floor and going on the record about whether they support it?

 

They can’t win—literally. There’s no universe in which the agreement will receive the two-thirds majority needed for ratification, in which case a Senate defeat can only complicate Trump’s attempt to wind down a war hardly anyone still wants. Would he declare that he’ll continue to abide by the deal despite Congress’ vote of no confidence? Would the Iranians declare that the deal is no longer binding and resolve to close the Strait of Hormuz again?

 

A floor vote would achieve nothing except forcing vulnerable incumbents like Susan Collins into an impossible choice between infuriating Trump and his fans by opposing ratification or embracing a settlement that everyone except MAGA zombies appears destined to dislike. I wonder, in fact, if that’s why Thune hasn’t been briefed on the terms: Maybe his ignorance is less a function of White House secrecy than of Senate Republicans simply not wanting to know what’s in the deal.

 

Think of it as the diplomatic equivalent of an especially obnoxious Trump tweet. Whenever the president barfs up something indefensible, Republican lawmakers cornered by reporters reliably (and unpersuasively) insist that they haven’t seen it. If they haven’t seen it, they can’t fairly be expected to do anything about it, right?

 

Well, the same goes for major diplomatic agreements with longstanding U.S. enemies, perhaps.

 

I have no theory to explain why Lankford and other hawks like Lindsey Graham are claiming to want to vote on the deal apart from atavistic Reaganism. As much as Republican lawmakers have reconciled themselves to Trumpism on domestic policy over the past 10 years, the president’s postliberal infatuations with regimes like Russia and China plainly grate on most of them even now. Their sense of America as a heroic liberating force against totalitarians was etched in their souls by World War II and the Cold War; they’re never going to abandon it entirely to please a dimwitted Caesar who thinks the U.S. could learn a thing or two about governing from Vladimir Putin.

 

Yet the fact remains: Voting on the deal in the Senate will only cause trouble for every Republican involved, from Trump to Collins to everyone in between. Soon enough, the president and his allies in Congress will start looking for excuses to avoid doing so. And they’ll find one.

 

The excuse will be that negotiations are ongoing. And going. And going.

 

Endgame without end.

 

Trump has two goals with respect to the Iran war at this point. Forget denuclearization, ballistic missiles, regime change, and the rest of it. His priority—and this is always his priority, really—is image management.

 

Specifically, he wants to salvage what’s left of his disintegrating image as a president who’s been good for the economy by reopening the Strait of Hormuz and keeping it open. And he wants to protect his lifelong image as a pillar of “strength” and dominance in all things by avoiding a deal that will be savaged as weak by critics across the spectrum.

 

Well, there’s a way to do all of that: Bribe Iran as needed to play nice in the strait and simply extend the 60-day phase of talks on the country’s nuclear program indefinitely. Trump can’t “lose” a negotiation that never actually ends. And Senate Republicans can’t be expected to vote on a deal while negotiations continue.

 

The bribery part has already begun. “The U.S. will allow Iran to immediately begin selling oil and fuel under the deal to end the war, offering Tehran an early financial incentive to wind down the conflict,” the Wall Street Journal reported today. That comes after the United Arab Emirates released $3 billion in frozen funds to the regime with more on the way, according to a Reuters story published this weekend. And if you believe this Israeli outlet, Qatar has been quietly paying Iran billions of dollars with U.S. approval for the better part of a month to allow its tankers safe passage through the strait.

 

Although details remain scant, it’s clear enough from Vance’s public comments and sources who are whispering to the press that the deal is little more than a series of bribes to ensure Iranian cooperation. The regime gets something up front to reopen the strait, then it presumably gets more if the strait stays open, and eventually it’ll receive a $300 billion bonanza (to be funded by who isn’t clear) if it meets all American demands to the White House’s satisfaction. U.S. officials flatly described the arrangement to Axios as “pay for performance,” which sure sounds like diplo-speak for “bribe.”

 

Trump deputies who briefed reporters on the outlines of the deal yesterday were also frank about the incentives, per Politico:

 

“The more that the Iranians are willing to work with us on their nuclear program, on verifying that they’re not building a nuclear weapon, on not funding radicalism and terrorism in the region, the more that they’re going to be welcomed into the world economy through a combination of sanctions relief and other economic measures,” said a second senior U.S. official, who, like others, was granted anonymity to discuss the talks.

 

 

“We are prepared to release frozen funds, and we are prepared to give these sanctions, and we’ll do some small gestures of that in the beginning if they make some small gestures to us that show that they’re willing to meet their commitments,” the first official said.

 

The Iranians are vowing that they’ll eventually begin charging “fees” for transit through the strait, knowing that doing so will humiliate the president by demonstrating America’s powerlessness to stop them. Desperate not to look weak, I assume Trump will solve that problem by offering to release more frozen funds or authorize further sanctions relief if they agree to delay their extortion.

 

In effect, America itself will be paying the “fees” in order to keep the president from looking bad. It’s ironic that a man who spent the first 16 months of his second term running protection rackets domestically will soon find himself victimized by one abroad.

 

That’s how it will go for the rest of the year, I suspect, with the Iranians occasionally gesturing toward doing something that would embarrass Trump and the White House scraping together more cash to purchase their quiescence. The strait will remain open, gas prices will continue to deflate, and the Khomeinist terror regime will refill its coffers with America’s approval.

 

As for the other part of the deal, the 60-day period during which the parties are meant to reach agreement on, er, everything, it’s not a 60-day period in any real sense. According to Iran’s foreign minister, the timetable can be extended “if there is progress,” and whether there’s been progress will doubtless be up to the parties themselves to decide.

 

A White House that won’t release a one-and-a-half-page agreement that ended the war will not feel obliged to share evidence that the two sides are getting closer in negotiations, I’m guessing, which means that the second “60-day” phase of talks will last as long as Donald Trump and Iranian leaders want it to. If the president wants to slow down for political reasons—waiting for Americans to lose interest, sparing Senate Republicans from an awkward pre-midterm vote, denying Democrats an opportunity to accuse him of having surrendered by signing a bad deal—a regime that’s getting occasional bribes for its cooperation will accommodate him.

 

Remember how Trump spent years insisting that he wanted to release his tax returns but couldn’t do so yet because they were still being audited by the IRS? It’ll be like that, except with U.S. national security. He’ll contrive a process excuse to spare himself a public embarrassment indefinitely.

 

Image is everything.

 

I do wonder if it’ll work for him this time, though.

 

The president has been disappointing the rubes who adore him with unkept promises for 15 years. In 2011 he assured them that he’d sent people to Hawaii to find out the truth about Barack Obama’s birth certificate, alleging that his investigators “cannot believe what they’re finding.” They found nothing, of course, presuming they existed at all. In 2024 he told an interviewer that he’d “probably” release Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged client list if reelected, then turned around and fought tooth and nail to get Republican lawmakers to drop the matter before Congress ultimately forced his hand.

 

At some point even the most gullible schmuck wises up to the fact that he’s being conned. If Trump spends the next six months reprising the shtick he perfected during the ceasefire, bombarding Americans with empty promises about an imminent final deal with Iran that never arrives, his image on the right as a pillar of “strength” might finally begin to crack.

 

It’s cracking among Israeli right-wingers, one of the few cohorts outside the United States that admired the president until recently. And those Israelis weren’t already primed by economic grievances to turn against him the way many members of Trump’s white working-class base in the United States are.

 

So much of Trump’s mystique among his fans derives from his unapologetic thirst for dominance and silly reputation as a master negotiator. If the year ends with him stuck in aimless zombie peace talks with Iran, unable to get the regime to make concessions and unwilling to use military force to try to squeeze them into doing so, what’s left of that mystique? What does American politics look like when even many on the right, hawks especially, no longer regard Donald Trump as “strong”?

 

I can only assume that it leads to Republican hawks and doves at each other’s throats in 2028, the former accusing the latter of having sabotaged a winnable war and the latter accusing the former of having started a war that couldn’t be won. But either way, the never-ending Iran deal will end politically with a broad right-wing consensus that the Trump administration failed miserably to achieve its goals. Congratulations to the president on a new chapter in his legacy.

The Iranians Still Aren’t Our Friends

National Review Online

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

 

In early March, the White House put out a document, posted on the websites of U.S. embassies around the world, detailing Iran’s “blood-soaked war on Americans.” It listed dozens of Iranian terrorist attacks on Americans, from taking hostages at the American embassy in 1979; to the Marine barracks bombing in Beirut in 1983; to the wave of airplane hijackings throughout the 1980s; to the relentless attacks on American troops in Iraq. This, the document said, was just a “partial list.”

 

A lot has changed in three months. Now, having signed a memorandum of understanding with the terrorist regime that the White House still refuses to make public, suddenly, the Iranians are being described as if they’re ideal interlocutors.

 

“We’re dealing with people that I think are very rational people,” Trump said on Tuesday at the G7 summit. “They were nice to deal with. They were strong people, smart people.” He added, “They’re not radicalized. They’re looking to help their country.”

 

Vice President JD Vance, meanwhile, told CNBC, “This is a very interesting thing about these negotiations, is you see people, both the hard-liners, but also the more political people, saying our relationship with the United States over the past 47 years has been a mistake. Let’s turn over a new leaf.”

 

This is pure fantasy.

 

By all indications, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is either heavily influential or ultimately making decisions in the currently fractured government of Iran. The IRGC was founded in 1979 with the specific mandate to exist separately from the army as a paramilitary force that would be dedicated to preserving the radical Islamic ideology of the revolution. Nothing in either Iran’s actions or public statements has justified the Pollyannaish talk of Trump and Vance.

 

Just this month, Iran launched missile and drone attacks on Kuwait’s airport, as well as on Bahrain, Jordan, and Israel. The latter strikes, Iran said, were in retaliation against Israel’s strikes on the terrorist group Hezbollah.

 

One Israeli strike, by the way, killed a Hezbollah commander who orchestrated the kidnapping and murder of five Americans. This is not an unusual event: Hezbollah, Iran’s main proxy sponsored and trained by the IRGC, was among the first jihadist militias designated under American law as a foreign terrorist organization, nearly 30 years ago, based on what was then already a sordid history of killing Americans.

 

Also this month, Iran downed a U.S. Army Apache helicopter off the coast of Oman.

 

All of this came during a supposed cease-fire.

 

U.S. administrations and the media have for decades chased after the elusive Iranian “moderates” like researchers hunting for evidence of Bigfoot. During his first inaugural address, in a line largely interpreted as being about Iran, Barack Obama said, “We will extend a hand if you are willing to unclench your fist.” In 2013, he characterized Iran’s then-President Hassan Rouhani as a moderate and then conducted a phone call with Rouhani (heralded as the first direct contact between U.S. and Iranian leaders since the 1979 revolution). Obama boasted that in the call, Rouhani committed that Iran would never develop nuclear weapons.

 

Vance is now saying, “If you go back to the Obama administration, we never had the direct line — really, over the past 47 years — we’ve never had this level of direct connection, where the people at the highest levels of the United States government are talking to the people at the highest levels of the Iranian government.”

 

Meanwhile, Trump is touting as an achievement that Iran is saying that it is not going to develop a nuclear weapon — something that it has claimed for decades while still enriching uranium well beyond any plausible civilian use and manufacturing ballistic missiles that Secretary of State Marco Rubio correctly pointed out were being used as a shield to protect the nuclear program.

 

“For almost 50 years, these wicked extremists have been attacking the United States while chanting the slogan, ‘Death to America,’ or ‘Death to Israel,’ or both,” Trump said at the start of the operation against Iran. “They are the world’s No. 1 state sponsor of terror.”

 

One of the worst aspects of the Obama nuclear deal wasn’t just the agreement itself, but the fact that in desperately pursuing the deal, the administration whitewashed the Iranian regime. Until very recently, Trump was clear-eyed about Iran. He shouldn’t let his desire to extract himself from the military conflict he initiated lead to delusional thinking about the nature of our longtime enemy.