Barbara Boyd argues the Iran war is being compressed toward a defined endpoint determined by President Trump and key Arab allies in the Abraham Accords, who want Iran no longer to pose a military threat after attacks on Gulf civilian infrastructure. She says expectations of U.S. ground troops are misguided and that a ceasefire is more likely, citing a Pakistan-China backchannel effort tied to reopening the Strait of Hormuz, Iran’s stated willingness to end the conflict under conditions, and Trump’s public consideration of a ceasefire. Boyd frames the conflict as an economic operation with military enforcement aimed at breaking a transatlantic energy-control system: maximum-pressure financial measures weakened Iran before fighting began, while U.S. agencies expanded domestic energy output and Treasury managed oil-supply measures to prevent market collapse. She contrasts Europe and U.S. “green mandate” states facing high fuel costs with “drill” states she says are buffered.00:00 The Midweek Update – IT’S ENDING: Trump’s Iran Strategy Revealed — And Britain’s Energy Empire Goes With It – April 1, 202601:25 The War Ends When Trump and His Allies Say It Ends05:00 This War Was Planned — and So Was the Energy Outcome08:27 Drill, Baby, Drill — or Pay the Price
The Midweek Update – IT’S ENDING: Trump’s Iran Strategy Revealed And Britain’s Energy Empire Goes With It – April 1, 2026
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