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Tuesday, June 16, 2026

HOW TRUMP'S DEFEAT UNDERMINES THE ZIONIST STATE


In the grand theatre of Middle Eastern power politics, few spectacles have been as revealing as Donald Trump's botched adventure against Iran. What was sold as a decisive strike to "finish the job" and neuter the Islamic Republic has instead emerged as a masterclass in how resilient actors exploit the hubris of declining empires. 

Iran didn't just survive the assault—it emerged stronger, its axis of resistance emboldened, and its leverage over Israel amplified to levels that could force real concessions on the Palestinian question—an existential issue for Israel.

Trump, the Neocons, and their increasingly hollow MAGA cheerleaders are pathetically attempting to spin this as a "win," but the facts on the ground tell a different story: a humiliated America, a bloodied but unbowed Tehran, and a path to Iranian regional hegemony that looks increasingly unstoppable.

Trump's campaign—launched with Israeli backing—aimed to decapitate Iran's leadership, smash its nuclear sites, and eben pull off real regime change. Yet Iran absorbed the blows. Its decentralized command structure, hardened by decades of sanctions and proxy warfare, proved far more robust than the fragile house of cards Washington and Tel Aviv imagined.

Proxy forces in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and Lebanon tied down Israeli and American assets, while Iran's own retaliatory barrages—carefully calibrated to avoid total escalation—demonstrated its reach and the fragility of the Neo-Gulf Economy. The blockade of Hormuz, even if partial and temporary, sent oil prices skyrocketing and exposed the fragility of global energy flows. Trump, ever "the dealmaker," blinked first, settling for a ceasefire brokered by Pakistan and others that left Iran's core capabilities intact.

This victory for Iran, however, isn't mere survivalism. It's a force multiplier for Tehran. Iran's economy, battered but not broken, now benefits from a narrative of "divine resilience." Domestically, the regime has rallied its population around the flag, quelling internal dissent more effectively than any reformist could. Militarily, the conflict validated its asymmetric doctrine: cheap drones and missiles versus expensive Western air defences.

Hezbollah, the Houthis, and Iraqi militias, while suffering some military degradation, have emerged with deeper morale from the fray. Russia and China, meanwhile see a reliable partner in Iran that successfully defied everything that America could throw at it. In the wake of this, expect deeper tech transfers, from hypersonics to air defences, to who knows what to flow Tehran's way.

The real prize, however, lies in the broader Middle East and to changing attitudes in Europe.

With America exposed as a paper tiger—willing to bomb but not commit to occupation—Iran's influence in Baghdad, Damascus, and Beirut has surged. Gulf states, from Riyadh to Abu Dhabi, are hedging their bets. They watched Trump fold and now court Tehran to secure their own energy exports and avoid becoming collateral in the next round.

Even Turkey, that opportunistic player, finds common cause in checking Israeli overreach. Iranian-backed forces now control key chokepoints and can dial up or down pressure on shipping and energy infrastructure at will.

This enhanced clout is extremely dangerous to Israel which, in recent years, has gone far beyond the moral parameters usually granted to it by once sympathetic Western nations.

For years, the Jewish state has relied on fragmentation—Hamas versus Fatah, endless "peace processes" that go nowhere—to maintain the status quo of occupation and settlement expansion.

Post-Trump fiasco, Iran can now shift the calculus. In addition to its economic threats and undiminished hard power assets, Tehran can now take the moral high ground and drill into Israel's growing soft power weakness. Europe, ever eager for cheap oil and genuinely disgusted by what Israel has been doing in Gaza, the West Bank, and Lebanon will tilt towards what is effectively a pro-Iranian agenda, although no one will call it that. They don't need to when there are words like "human rights" and "democracy" to use instead.

Israel's options have greatly narrowed. Full-scale war risks regional conflagration that it can't sustain alone. Technological edges—iron domes and AI targeting—have their limitations (and high costs), especially against what appear as "reasonable demands" backed by the rest of the Middle East and Europe, while America is forced to take a back seat.

Expect to hear more about easing the Gaza blockade, freezing and reversing settlements, and even a Palestinian statelet, especially from European capitals.

The mullahs understand this dynamic perfectly. Victory for them isn't apocalyptic Armageddon but steady erosion—bleeding Israel demographically, economically, and morally until it yields ground. They also know how weak and fragile Netanyahu's coalitions have been and how they can fracture and throw up new, more flexible leaders.

Of course, none of this guarantees utopia for the Palestinians or stability for the region. Iranian power brings its own contradictions: sectarian tensions, economic mismanagement, and the risk of overreach. But in the cold logic of geopolitics, Tehran's post-conflict ascent reshapes the board, a board that now sits squarely on the back of a defeated Donald Trump and his cynical Zionist backers who found the world cannot be so easily manipulated by pulling a few greased strings in Washington. 
 

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