1). “Lawrence Wilkerson: Ceasefire Fails, NATO Died & the U.S. Risks Civil War”, Apr 9, 2026, Glenn Diesen interviews Lawrence Wilkerson, Glenn Diesen, duration of video 54:45, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
2). “Today in Politics | Explainer”, Apr 9, 2026, Heather Cox Richardson discusses U.S. Politics, Heather Cox Richardson, duration of video 49:20, at <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n3TVJ66_3D4 >.
3). “Scott Ritter: War Goes Horribly Wrong - U.S. Could Use Nuclear Weapons”, Apr 7, 2026, Glenn Diesen interviews Scott Ritter, Glenn Diesen, duration of video 44:07, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
4). “US MILITARY ‘CRITICALLY LOW’ ON TOMAHAWKS, JASSM'S, INTERCEPTORS IN IRAN WAR | Lt. Col. Daniel Davis”, Apr 9, 2026, Rachel Blevins interviews Lt. Col. Daniel Davis (retired), Rachel Blevins, duration of video 30:01, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
5). “Why has the US had to beg for peace with Iran?”, Apr 10, 2026, Richard J. Murphy discusses U.S. armaments shortages, Richard J. Murphy,duration of video 12:20, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
6). “The New Balance of Power After the Ceasefire: How the United States lost control—and Iran gained it”, Apr 8, 2026, Prof. Robert Pape, The Escalation Trap, at < https://escalationtrap.
7). “US has suffered its worst 'strategic defeat since the Vietnam war' | Profe. Robert Pape”, Apr 8, 2026, Prof. Robert Pape, The Trump Report, duration of video 19:40, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
8). “Iran Mines Strait of Hormuz, Forces Ships Through the 'Tehran Toll Booth' in Its Waters”, Apr 9, 2026, Sal Mercogliano discusses shipping isues with regard to the Strait of Hormuz, Sal Mergoliano What's Going on with Shipping, duration of video 20:08, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
~~ recommended by desmond ~~
Introduction: While the Corporate Controlled Media blathers on about U.S. and Israeli military prowess, the real outcome is certainly at least mixed and probably in Iran's favor. In Item 1)., “Lawrence Wilkerson: Ceasefire Fails, ….”, Wilkerson opines on the generally bleak situation for the U.S. and just how venal its ruling class has become. He notes that the U.S. lost a large number of expensive aircraft and equipment in the recent supposed downed-pilot rescue. He does not know what happened but finds the “official story” implausible. A similar but more hopeful outlook is discussed in Item 2)., “Today in Politics ….”, in which Heather Cox Richardson takes a quite perceptive look at the overall. She is hopeful but acknowledges that the U.S. populace will need to work hard to save our current social order and avoid descent in fascism and authoritarianism. Item 3)., “Scott Ritter: War ….”, also includes an excellent analysis of the recent supposed downed-pilot rescue which he also finds to be implausible.
Item 4)., “US MILITARY ‘CRITICALLY LOW’ ….”; and Item 5)., “Why has the US ….”, both discuss the increasingly critical shortage of munitions for U.S., shortages caused by a combination of Neo-Liberal deindustrialization of the U.S. and the heavy usage in the Ukraine and Israeli wars. In Item 5 Murphy states that the U.S. has had to sue for peace, in these various ceasefires, because munitions were running low; he also wonders aloud if the shoot downs of U.S. military aircraft might be partially a function of shortage of munitions. In Item 6)., “The New Balance ….”; and Item 7)., “US has suffered ….”, Pape discusses the major shifts in World Power that will become more obvious with the passage of time. The Strait of Hormuz is a seminal issue, the Strait is now being controlled by Iran and ships that the Iranians allow to pass through are charged a toll, on a sliding scale poor less developed countries' ships paying less that richer countries, and ships affiliated with the U.S. and/or Israel are prohibited from transiting the Strait. In Item 8)., “Iran Mines Strait of Hormuz, ….”, the host of What's Going on with Shipping discusses what he thinks is the current reality for the ships that want to pass by the Strait.
The U.S. was gradually declining but the whole process has been greatly sped up by the hard-line policies of the Trump Regime. The prospect for continued war is a terrible thing to contemplate but unless Trump, who currently according to Item 4)., has 4 Ultra-Zionists as his closest advisors. Israel-First viewpoints from American Zionists surround Trump.
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1). “Lawrence Wilkerson: Ceasefire Fails, NATO Died & the U.S. Risks Civil War”, Apr 9, 2026, Glenn Diesen interviews Lawrence Wilkerson, Glenn Diesen, duration of video 54:45, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
2). “Today in Politics | Explainer”, Apr 9, 2026, Heather Cox Richardson discusses U.S. Politics, Heather Cox Richardson, duration of video 49:20, at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n3TVJ66_3D4
3). “Scott Ritter: War Goes Horribly Wrong - U.S. Could Use Nuclear Weapons”, Apr 7, 2026, Glenn Diesen interviews Scott Ritter, Glenn Diesen, duration of video 44:07, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
4). “US MILITARY ‘CRITICALLY LOW’ ON TOMAHAWKS, JASSM'S, INTERCEPTORS IN IRAN WAR | Lt. Col. Daniel Davis”, Apr 9, 2026, Rachel Blevins interviews Lt. Col. Daniel Davis (retired), Rachel Blevins, duration of video 30:01, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
5). “Why has the US had to beg for peace with Iran?”, Apr 10, 2026, Richard J. Murphy discusses U.S. armaments shortages, Richard J. Murphy,duration of video 12:20, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
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The New Balance of Power After the Ceasefire
I. A Strategic Outcome, Not a Temporary Pause
The two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran is being described as a pause in hostilities. That description is misleading. What has occurred is not simply a halt in bombing. It is the clearest indication yet of a shift in power.
By the core standard of international politics—who can shape the behavior of others—the outcome is unmistakable. Iran has demonstrated the ability to impose costs on the global system and force adjustment across multiple actors. The United States, despite overwhelming military superiority, has accepted a halt under conditions it cannot fully dictate.
This is not equilibrium.
It is a reversal.
Over the past forty days, Washington escalated step by step—expanding targets, increasing tempo, raising threats. At each stage, the expectation was that additional force would produce compliance. It did not. Instead, each escalation generated counterpressure—on energy markets, on allies, and ultimately on U.S. decision-making itself.
This is the pattern of strategic failure.
Not a single misstep, but a sequence in which more force produces less control.
II. Iran’s Gains: From Disruption to Global Power
Iran’s gains are not measured in battlefield victories. They are measured in the structure of the system it has revealed—and now partially shapes.
First, Iran retains its nuclear infrastructure and its stockpile of enriched uranium. That preserves a compressed timeline to a nuclear capability—measured in months, not years—should it choose to act. Whether or not it crosses that threshold immediately, the existence of that option alters every strategic calculation in the region.
Second, Iran has demonstrated credible capacity to disrupt the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly one-fifth of global oil supply moves. It has not needed to close the strait. It has shown that it can make its operation uncertain—and that uncertainty alone is enough to move markets, alter shipping behavior, and trigger world political response in Iran’s favor for years going forward.
This is the critical shift, with a new geostrategic equation: Control is no longer required. Vulnerability is enough.
In a tightly interconnected global economy, the ability to impose persistent uncertainty becomes a form of power. States do not wait for full disruption. They adapt in advance—hedging risk, adjusting policy, and incorporating the preferences of the actor that can generate that risk.
This is how limited disruption becomes structural influence.
Iran has crossed that threshold.
III. American Losses: The Erosion of System Control
The United States has not lost capability. It has lost control over outcomes that once defined its power.
For decades, a central pillar of American global leadership has been the ability to guarantee the stability of critical economic flows—especially energy. That guarantee underwrote alliances, anchored markets, and reinforced U.S. credibility.
That guarantee is now in question.
Despite sustained air operations and overwhelming force, the United States has not been able to ensure reliable transit through the most important energy chokepoint in the world under conditions of asymmetric threat. The result is not a temporary disruption. It is a loss of confidence in a core function of U.S. power.
Allies respond to outcomes, not assurances.
In Europe, in Asia, and across the Gulf, governments are already adjusting—quietly hedging, diversifying relationships, and reducing reliance on a system that appears less certain than it once did. These are not dramatic shifts. They are incremental.
But incremental adjustments accumulate.
They are the mechanism of relative decline.
At the same time, the rhetoric of escalation has compounded the strategic problem. Threats to destroy critical infrastructure essential to civilian life have raised the perceived risks of U.S. strategy—not just for adversaries, but for partners. That does not enhance leverage. It narrows it.
The result is a paradox: more force, less influence.
IV. Domestic Consequences: The Politics of Strategic Failure
Strategic failure abroad rarely produces immediate collapse at home. It produces erosion.
The ceasefire freezes a conflict that escalated without delivering clear gains. That alone creates a problem. But the deeper issue is what it signals: that the application of force has not achieved its intended political objectives.
This is where foreign policy begins to shape domestic vulnerability.
Political opponents do not need to construct a narrative. The sequence of events provides one. Allies hedge. adversaries endure. objectives remain unmet. Each development reinforces the perception of miscalculation.
That perception does not peak.
It lingers.
For the current administration, the risk is not a single defining break, but a prolonged period of strategic doubt—one that weakens political standing, complicates coalition management, and shapes the environment heading into electoral cycles.
History is clear on this point: when wars fail to produce results, they do not remain foreign policy problems.
They become political ones.
V. The Most Dangerous Phase May Be Ahead
The ceasefire is fragile because the underlying logic of the conflict has not changed.
Capabilities remain intact. Incentives to demonstrate resolve persist. And not all actors are equally bound by the current arrangement. The probability that the ceasefire breaks—whether through deliberate escalation or miscalculation—is significant.
If it does, the next phase will not resemble the last.
It will occur in a system where the key dynamics are now understood: where disruption can generate systemic effects, where escalation produces counterpressure, and where the costs of instability are rapidly transmitted across the global economy.
That knowledge changes behavior.
It raises stakes.
And it makes each subsequent move more dangerous.
This is the final implication of the past forty days.
The ceasefire does not end the war.
It reveals a new structure of power—one in which the United States can no longer assume control, and in which even limited disruption can reshape the behavior of the system.
That is not a temporary condition.
It is the beginning of a different kind of conflict.
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7). “US has suffered its worst 'strategic defeat since the Vietnam war' | Profe. Robert Pape”, Apr 8, 2026, Prof. Robert Pape, The Trump Report, duration of video 19:40, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
8). “Iran Mines Strait of Hormuz, Forces Ships Through the 'Tehran Toll Booth' in Its Waters”, Apr 9, 2026, Sal Mercogliano discusses shipping isues with regard to the Strait of Hormuz, Sal Mergoliano What's Going on with Shipping, duration of video 20:08, at < https://www.youtube.com/watch?
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