President Trump Signals End of “Waste of Time” Ceasefire With Iran

jdrucker.com

There is a moment in every failed negotiation when one side finally says out loud what everyone else has been thinking. That moment arrived Wednesday in Ankara, when President Donald Trump, seated beside NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte at the alliance’s annual summit, was asked about the status of America’s tentative ceasefire with Iran. His answer required no translation from diplomatic language because he refused to use any.

“For me, I think it’s over,” Trump said. “As far as I’m concerned it’s just a waste of time.”

The president’s verdict came only hours after American forces struck more than 80 Iranian targets, including air defense systems, radar installations, and Revolutionary Guard vessels used to menace commercial shipping. Washington also revoked the waiver that had allowed Tehran to sell its oil on the world market, cutting off a revenue stream the regime had extracted at the negotiating table.

Both moves were retaliation for Iranian attacks on at least three commercial vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz on Monday and Tuesday, the narrow waterway through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s traded oil must pass.

A Regime That Cannot Tell the Truth

Trump’s frustration was not with the terms of the deal but with the character of the men across the table. He accused Iranian negotiators of agreeing to terms in private and then denying them in public, a pattern anyone who has followed four decades of Islamic Republic diplomacy will recognize instantly.

“They’re liars. We make a deal. … They go outside, talk to the press. They say, ‘We never even talked about it.’ … As far as I’m concerned, it’s over.”

He left the door open for his negotiators to keep meeting with their Iranian counterparts, then promptly explained why it would accomplish nothing. “They can talk, but I think they’re wasting their time. They’re liars, they’re cheats. They’re sick people.”

The interim agreement, a memorandum of understanding signed June 17 that renewed a truce first reached in April, was supposed to calm the region and reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial traffic. Iran answered that arrangement by firing on the very ships the agreement existed to protect.

Restraint Repaid With Rockets

The detail that should end any lingering debate about who broke faith is the timing. Trump had held American fire to allow the regime to conduct funeral ceremonies for Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader killed in a joint American-Israeli strike on the war’s first day in February. That mourning period, still underway this week, featured regime-organized crowds throwing pebbles at Trump’s image in a symbolic stoning ritual while circulating lists of American officials marked for vengeance.

The president extended a courtesy no one would have faulted him for withholding, and Tehran used the window to resume attacks on civilian shipping. When the United States responded, the Revolutionary Guard launched missiles and drones at American installations in Bahrain and Kuwait, dragging two Gulf states into a fight they wanted no part of.

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Kuwait publicly objected to the attacks on its soil. Oil prices jumped more than five percent, with Brent crude climbing above $78 a barrel, as markets priced in what the regime’s apologists still will not admit.

The Mirage of a Deal

The substance of the impasse explains why every apparent breakthrough dissolves. Washington wants Iran to abandon its nuclear ambitions and surrender its enriched uranium. Tehran has reportedly demanded joint control of the Strait of Hormuz and the release of billions in frozen assets. One side seeks an end to the threat. The other seeks payment for pausing it. Those are not positions that converge; they are worldviews that collide.

New supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei, who inherited his father’s office in March, has not been seen in public since taking power. He rules from hiding while his parliament speaker declares that Iran does not fold. A regime confident in its cause does not conceal its leader and lie about its agreements. It does both because deception is not a tactic of the Islamic Republic. It is the operating system.

The psalmist knew this species of adversary well, the kind that treats an outstretched hand as an opening for the knife.

My soul hath long dwelt with him that hateth peace. I am for peace: but when I speak, they are for war. (Psalm 120:6-7)

Trump’s declaration that the ceasefire is over is not a failure of diplomacy. It is the overdue acknowledgment that diplomacy was never actually happening, because it takes two honest parties to negotiate and only one showed up.

The mullahs were given a fantastic deal, a funeral truce, and the benefit of the doubt. They spent all three on missiles. Whatever comes next, at least it will come without illusions.

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