Who's Holding the Cards? George Friedman on the Iran War Stalemate
A week after Donald Trump warned that «a whole civilization will die tonight», a tenuous ceasefire has been declared and negotiations have begun in Pakistan. But with Iran refusing to surrender its enriched uranium, the Strait of Hormuz still effectively closed, and a U.S. blockade now choking Iranian ports, how much closer are we to a real resolution? Can either side actually win this standoff militarily, or are we witnessing the opening moves of a protracted negotiation neither party wants to admit they need? And with China now joining the talks, European allies refusing to help, and Trump no longer facing reelection, who truly holds leverage in a conflict where oil prices and nuclear ambitions collide?
Kernaussagen
The U.S.-Iran conflict cannot end in military victory for either side; the U.S. lacks the will for a massive ground invasion, and Iran cannot defeat American forces, making negotiation the only viable outcome.
Trump's closure of Iranian ports in response to Iran's Strait of Hormuz blockade is a strategic bet that China — desperate for oil and U.S. market access — will pressure Iran to settle rather than America.
Iran's refusal to surrender enriched uranium despite war signals that nuclear capability is central to its regional ambitions, validating U.S. concerns and making denuclearization the non-negotiable core of any deal.
NATO's refusal to support the U.S. in this conflict exposes the alliance as obsolete; its original purpose — deterring Russia — has dissolved, and European members have no interest in American strategic priorities outside Europe.
Trump's immunity to political consequences — unable to run for reelection and indifferent to midterm losses — gives him unusual staying power in a prolonged negotiation, mirroring Nixon's ability to end Vietnam where Johnson could not.
Kurzgesagt
Neither the United States nor Iran can win this war militarily, which means it will end through negotiation — but those negotiations will be long, messy, and shaped more by who can withstand economic pain and who can pressure China than by battlefield victories.
Wars End Two Ways — And This One Can't End in Victory
Neither the U.S. nor Iran can achieve military victory.
All wars end in one of two ways: decisive military victory or negotiation. The Vietnam War ended through talks in Paris; World War II ended with the destruction of Japan and Germany. George Friedman argues that the U.S.-Iran conflict falls squarely into the first category. The United States could theoretically deploy nuclear weapons or mount a massive ground invasion, but Trump explicitly campaigned against long conventional wars, and recent history in Iraq and Afghanistan demonstrates the futility of occupying hostile territory. Iran, meanwhile, is a country two and a half times the size of Texas, with a resilient population and irregular forces that have historically resisted foreign occupation.
Iran cannot defeat the United States militarily, but it doesn't need to. Its strategy is to withstand economic pain and military strikes long enough to exhaust American political will. The Republican Guard has proven capable of brutally suppressing domestic dissent, and the regime shows no sign of internal collapse. Because neither side can impose a decisive outcome on the battlefield, the war's endpoint is already determined: it will be settled through negotiation. The only question is how long each side can sustain the pretense that it doesn't need a deal.
The Negotiating Table Is a Poker Game
Breakdowns, bluffs, and brinkmanship are standard in high-stakes negotiations.
“When you look at any business deal being done, buying a house or ending a war, the same process in place and from the outside it looks like this will never work that it does.”
The Strait of Hormuz Gambit
What Each Side Actually Wants
Nuclear capability for Iran; denuclearization and regional stability for the U.S.
Trump's Negotiating Advantage
No reelection means no political cost for prolonged conflict.
Trump's Negotiating Advantage
Trump cannot run for reelection, which paradoxically strengthens his negotiating position. Unlike Lyndon Johnson, whose political future was destroyed by Vietnam, Trump has no electoral incentive to capitulate. He can sustain unpopular oil prices and midterm losses without facing personal political consequences. Friedman compares him to Nixon, who was able to negotiate an end to Vietnam precisely because he wasn't invested in the war's initiation.
NATO's Irrelevance Exposed
European refusal to join the conflict reveals the alliance is obsolete.
NATO's foundational principle is that an attack on one member is an attack on all. European allies argue that the U.S. chose this war and therefore cannot invoke Article 5. The United States counters that preventing an Iranian nuclear weapon was a defensive act — preempting an existential threat before it materialized. But this legalistic debate obscures a deeper truth: Europe simply does not want to spend money, lives, or political capital on American strategic priorities outside the European theater.
Friedman argues that NATO has been functionally obsolete since Russia's inability to conquer Ukraine over four years demonstrated that Moscow poses no credible threat to Western Europe. Poland alone is now a formidable military power. The alliance's original purpose — deterring Soviet invasion — has dissolved, and European members have no interest in pivoting to Asia, the Middle East, or other regions where U.S. interests now lie. Trump's frustration with NATO is not a personality quirk; it reflects a structural misalignment of national interests. The alliance is dying not because of bad diplomacy, but because its reason for existence has expired.
Key Numbers from the Conflict
Oil prices, territorial scale, and historical timelines shape the stalemate.
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Glossar
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