Showing posts with label U.S. Foreign Policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U.S. Foreign Policy. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 June 2026

The Decline of American Power in the Gulf: From Beirut to Hormuz

Analysing the Evolving Dynamics of U.S.-Iran Relations and Regional Influence

The intricate dynamics of U.S. involvement in the Gulf region have evolved significantly over the decades, revealing a narrative marked by ambition, challenges, and retreat. The recent collapse of the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the United States and Iran serves as a stark illustration of this decline, echoing pivotal moments such as the tragic withdrawal from Beirut in 1983 and the tumultuous invasion of Iraq in 2003. As geopolitical tensions escalate and regional players recalibrate their alliances, the fragile promises made by American leadership highlight the shifting sands of power in the Gulf, raising critical questions about the U.S.'s future role in this strategically vital area.

US and Iranian officials shaking hands over a signed 2026 US-Iran MoU document, while Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stands apart
A tense diplomatic moment: The US-Iran agreement offers a pathway

You can trace how the collapse of the U.S.–Iran MoU mirrors the long arc of American decline in the Gulf — from Beirut in 1983 to Iraq in 2003, and now Hormuz in 2026:

📜 The MoU’s Fragile Promise

The June 18, 2026, MoU between Washington and Tehran was hailed as a breakthrough — a ceasefire framework, a toll‑free Hormuz passage, and a chance to stabilise the Gulf. Yet within days, Israel’s defiance in Lebanon and America’s contradictions exposed its fragility. Iran, restrained but resolute, now weighs withdrawal. The MoU stands as a paper promise, hollowed by realities on the ground.

⚔️ Beirut, 1983 — The First Fracture

In October 1983, suicide bombers struck U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, killing 241 servicemen. America’s swift withdrawal revealed a truth: the U.S. could not sustain its presence when local hostility outweighed its alliances. That retreat foreshadowed the limits of American power in the Middle East — a precedent now echoed as GCC states refuse to host U.S. logistics in 2026.

The Beirut withdrawal became the first crack in the myth of U.S. invincibility.

🏜️ Iraq, 2003 — The False Dawn

The invasion of Iraq was meant to cement U.S. dominance. Instead, it unleashed chaos, drained resources, and eroded credibility. By dismantling Iraq’s state, Washington created vacuums filled by Iran’s proxies. The war exposed America’s inability to rebuild what it destroyed, a lesson now resurfacing as Iran dictates terms in Hormuz while U.S. warships hesitate to approach.

The Iraq War became the pivot from dominance to decline.


🇮🇱 Israel’s Defiance, 2026

Israel’s strikes in Lebanon, despite MoU clauses, highlight Washington’s impotence. Trump’s public calls for restraint are contradicted by continued weapons shipments. Senators influenced by Israeli lobbying ensure U.S. policy remains captive. Iran retaliates with precision strikes, exposing Israeli defences as porous. Even elite Sayeret Matkal operators fall victim to loitering munitions.
The U.S. cannot restrain its ally, nor protect it — a replay of past failures, now magnified.

🌍 GCC’s Rejection

Saudi Arabia’s refusal to grant Trump airspace access, the UAE’s exit from OPEC, and Trump’s remarks about Mecca alienated the Gulf. Once hosts of U.S. logistics, GCC states now pivot toward Russia and China. The Carter Doctrine’s promise — that America would secure Gulf oil — lies in tatters.

GCC realignment marks the end of U.S. logistical dominance.

⚡ Energy & Military Exhaustion

  • Energy Shock: Iran’s threats to close Hormuz spike oil prices, destabilising global markets.
  • Military Attrition: U.S. and Israeli munitions are depleted, while Iran holds back its full arsenal.
  • Strategic Weakness: Warships avoid close patrols, exposing the gap between rhetoric and reality.

🕊️ Diplomatic Fallout

The Swiss talks, once envisioned as a grand signing, are now downgraded ceremonies overshadowed by threats of withdrawal. Pakistan mediates, but Iran’s leverage grows. Washington’s credibility shrinks. The MoU, like past accords, risks collapse not from external sabotage but from America’s inability to enforce its own terms.

Diplomatic fallout mirrors the unravelling of past U.S. initiatives.

📖 Epilogue: The Long Arc of Decline

From Beirut’s retreat to Iraq’s quagmire, from GCC rejection to Hormuz brinkmanship, the story is consistent: America enters the Gulf with promises of dominance, but exits weakened, exposed, and dependent on allies it cannot control.

The MoU’s collapse is not an isolated failure — it is the latest chapter in a serialised decline. Iran, Russia, and China now shape the Gulf’s future, while the U.S. stands as a distant power, rhetorically assertive but practically sidelined.

Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Unconquerable Iran and America’s Retreat

Unconquerable Iran and America’s Retreat: A War That Redefined Power in the Gulf and Beyond

Read the full essay on Medium

The Iran War was not just a military confrontation—it was a mirror held up to the empire. America, long accustomed to projecting power across oceans, discovered the limits of its reach. Iran, by contrast, reaffirmed its historic identity as unconquerable—a nation whose geography, culture, and resilience have defied every invader from Alexander to modern superpowers.

Iran unconquered
The US could not capture Iran


The essay traces this civilizational continuity: how Iran’s endurance exposed America’s overstretch, how the Gulf’s reconstruction capital now flows eastward to Beijing, and how Washington’s entanglement with Israeli interests turned strategic ambition into self‑inflicted decline.

As the U.S. withdraws from the Persian Gulf and Eurasia, the world witnesses a reversal of centuries—the magnet of wealth and technology shifting eastward, echoing the long arc of history described in China’s Rising Economic Influence.

This is not a story of defeat alone, but of transformation: the end of garrisons and the beginning of diplomacy, the fading of empire and the rise of resilience.

Wednesday, 27 May 2026

The Empire’s Hollow Roar: America’s Defeat in Iran

The Collapse of America's Strategy in Iran: A Humiliating Retreat

May 23 Update: The Adios Paradox

America’s war on Iran has collapsed into humiliation. Once boasting invincibility, Washington now faces shattered defences, retreating fleets, and allies in disarray.

a toppled Statue of Liberty in desert sands
Empire undone: A fallen Statue of Liberty and retreating fleets mark America’s humiliation in Iran — image generated by AI.

In less than forty days, U.S. air and naval power faltered. Over forty aircraft were lost, bases and fleets were struck, and allies distanced themselves. The Pentagon’s refrain — “a ground invasion is risky” — masks the harsher truth: the U.S. cannot beat Iran.

On May 23, 2026, as a peace deal was announced, the U.S. President posted an AI‑generated image of an Iranian warship exploding with the word “Adios” beneath it, followed by a calm message about negotiations. This surreal juxtaposition captured the contradictions of America’s posture — bravado masking exhaustion.

US defeat in Iran. Meanwhile, the U.S. and Gulf missile-defence system has lost 70% of its interceptors in 84 days of conflict, leaving only enough for seven days of combat at current intensity. In Isfahan, 440 kilograms of weapons‑grade uranium remain secured in tunnels, with Iran insisting it stay within the country. The U.S. and Iran describe the same memorandum of understanding, but their versions diverge sharply.

Critics in Washington have condemned the deal, likening it to the Obama‑era accord Trump once derided. Iranian media reports that U.S. negotiators privately assure Tehran that Trump’s public bluster differs from his negotiating stance.

📌 Share & Discover

This Iran War 2026 overview captures the essence of an empire undone. For the full serialised essay with literary pacing and detailed analysis, read the full serialised essay on Medium for deeper analysis.  

📌 America’s war on Iran collapsed into humiliation. From retreating fleets to the surreal “Adios” post, the empire’s roar fades into silence.  

👉 Read the full serialised essay on Medium: https://medium.com/the-geopolitical-economist/the-empires-hollow-roar-america-s-defeat-in-iran-33bdf074d1d9  

👉 Follow serialised updates on Substack: https://naleen.substack.com/  

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