Sunday, June 7, 2026

Iranian Endgames?

Iranian Endgames?

Iranian Endgames?
AP Photo/Vahid Salemi

The Trump administration has bent over backward to negotiate an end to Iran's grand plans to develop nuclear weapons – before the June 2025 bombing, afterward, and again during the follow-up diplomacy of spring 2026.

Yet Iran is unlikely ever to abandon its pursuit of the bomb voluntarily. With nuclear weapons, Tehran hopes to become the de facto hegemon of the Middle East. Only then could it effectively coerce or deter both Israel and the wealthy Arab Gulf states.

And that is the charitable view, one that excludes the possibility of a messianic Shiite theocracy believing that eliminating the "one-bomb" state of Israel would forever ensure the Shiite minority permanent preeminence in the pantheon of Islamic jihadists.

After three months of intermittent war, we are now better acquainted with Iran's intentions and the realities of the conflict.

The Iranian regime has never viewed "negotiations" as a path leading to an ultimate "deal." At best, the regime's supposedly "elected" government plays good cop, while the bad cop theocratic henchmen periodically violate whatever understandings have been reached.

Accordingly, talks remain perpetually fluid, punctuated by delays, pauses, and renewed demands. The regime's art of "dealing" is not aimed at resolution but at gaining strategic advantage by postponing any military effort that leads to their demise. The regime's mere survival is broadcast as victory, whatever the damage to the country.

As a result, Iran does not necessarily regard overwhelming military defeat on the battlefield as a strategic loss. The regime believes its own advantage lies in the long term and beyond the battlefield itself. For nearly half a century, this wicked regime has survived through propaganda, bloodcurdling threats, slaughtering civilians at home and abroad, terrorist proxies and clients, and mastery of both global politics and the internal politics of its adversaries, especially in the U.S. and Europe.

Its strategy is also to feign detachment from reality and appear capable of doing anything to anyone anywhere at any time. Iran's leaders are like the crazy assailant on the subway who feels he can do anything he wishes, since most people either fear his antics or don't wish to stoop to his level to stop him.

All threats, ultimatums, and vows are also not credible. They are designed to bluff or mislead opponents into miscalculations. The more left-leaning American presidents, whether Clinton, Obama, or Biden, reached out to dialogue and normalize with Iran, the more the Iranians loathed these presidents for being weak.

They view Europe and the U.S. not as nations, but as various successive governments and administrations that, to various degrees, can be manipulated. And they have utter contempt for perceived Western appeasement. Magnanimity they interpret as weakness to be exploited, never as kindness to be reciprocated.

This Iran war is unlike our past conflicts in the Middle East. So far, there is no American use of ground troops. The bombing (and thus the war itself) has been historically short, lasting only around 38 days – unlike the two Iraq wars, Afghanistan, Libya, and Serbia.

In terms of size, population, resources, wealth, and military strength, Iran has been the most formidable adversary the United States has faced in the Middle East. Yet our losses in this war so far have been historically low, while the damage to the Iranian industrial, nuclear, and military infrastructure has been immense and unprecedented.

Unlike past conflicts, where combatants often struggled to distinguish friend from foe in places such as the streets of Fallujah, the villages of Helmand Province, or the rice paddies of South Vietnam, this war has been uniquely suited to overwhelming American airpower. The U.S. has clearly won the shooting war, though it has yet to secure the peace.

One problem is the scarcity of accurate information. We have only rumors and spotty regime-fed reports of what is actually going on inside Iran, given there are neither American ground troops nor embedded Western reporters there.

What comes out of Iran is the chronic form of lying associated with "Baghdad Bob" during the Second Gulf War. No one yet knows the full extent of the damage to the regime or the viability of the Iranian resistance. The result is that Iran is likely to be in far worse shape than it lets on.

Even so, a militarily weakened Iran seems to hope that escalating tensions in the Strait of Hormuz will raise gas prices, at home and worldwide, and cost Trump the midterms, before American sanctions, blockades, and freezing assets will bankrupt the country.

The U.S. is now weighing two choices. One is to end the war and get some sort of deal, assured that it has already done close to a decade's worth of damage to Iran, and perhaps more if sanctions persist.

The U.S. would seek to negotiate an exit that lowers oil prices and staves off political catastrophe in the November midterms. America's anxious Gulf allies might support – or even now insist upon – such a negotiated settlement, assuming that Iran has been sufficiently defanged in the short term, that their vulnerable oil infrastructure remains secure for the time being, that anti-Iran sentiment in the Arab world remains strong, and that the Iranian people will grow increasingly restive if the regime continues to ignore their poverty and instead chooses to rebuild its shattered arsenals and revive its bankrupt Arab terrorist proxies abroad.

Yet the long-term limitations of such a limited and transitory victory are twofold. First, Iran's regime would likely consolidate its hold on power, claiming that its reputation abroad has grown and that its mere survival should be seen as an incredible victory.

Secondly, Iran would likely rebuild and wait to go nuclear until the arrival of a president akin to Obama or Biden, convinced then that there would be no danger of another American intervention and that the new American Left sympathizes with Iran's anti-Israel agenda and therefore its nuclear aspirations. The regime has good reason, given the current new Socialist-Islamist Democrat Party, that a future Democrat president would revive Obama's bankrupt visions of empowering a Shiite crescent from Tehran to Yemen to "balance" Israel and the Gulf monarchies.

An alternative course is a riskier one that could involve greater casualties and Iranian missile and drone strikes against Israel and the Gulf states. It would begin with issuing a final one-week deadline for Iran to concede to U.S. demands to denuclearize, hand over all its enriched uranium, dismantle its remaining missile forces, cease subsidizing Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis, and stop interfering with international traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.

Otherwise, for a week or so, the U.S. would strike the remaining regime grandees who believe they are still in charge of the government, along with dual-use bridges, subterranean nuclear depots, power plants, island ports and docks, weapons arsenals and factories, and the remnants of the Iranian mosquito navy. It would then open the Strait of Hormuz, leave a guardian force to keep it navigable, declare victory, go home, and pivot to the economy.

The point would be to inflict enough damage on the Iranian theocracy and its appendages to end the current off-and-on war. Either such Iranian concessions or such destruction would humiliate the regime, neuter its military, and halt its nuclear aspirations for decades, leaving it ripe for internal uprising – and reminding the world there is a limit to unpredictable U.S. patience and placidity.

https://townhall.com/columnists/victordavishanson/2026/06/04/iranian-endgames-n2677253?utm_source=thdailyvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-r8uKfaTtVa&utm_term=&_nlid=r8uKfaTtVa&_nhids=ncXyxhWBcGgols

Trump Just Confirmed What We Already Knew About J6

Trump Just Confirmed What We Already Knew About J6

Trump Just Confirmed What We Already Knew About J6
AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

President Donald Trump confirmed what many already believed about the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol Building. 

During a Wednesday interview with the New York Post’s Miranda Devine, Trump affirmed that federal informants infiltrated the crowd that showed up to hear him speak and helped to incite violence at the Capitol building. “Just so you understand, these are people that have been decimated,” he said, referring to those who were railroaded over Jan. 6. “These are people that lost their lives over nonsense, where the FBI said, ‘go in, go in, police, go in, go into the van.’”

He continued, noting that many of the defendants “were supposed to serve five years, 10 years in jail” and that “people committed suicide.”

“These were many great people,” Trump said. “And I gave them pardons. I’m very proud to have given them pardons. And I think they should be reimbursed for a crooked government.”

After the riot occurred, it was later revealed that about 26 confidential human sources with the FBI were among the protesters who showed up to demonstrate against the outcome of the 2020 presidential election. The informants were ostensibly there to provide the FBI  with information about possible crimes. 

A Justice Department review showed that three of the informants had been asked by the FBI to go to D.C. and spy on  certain groups that could cause problems. The others were there to gather information or for personal reasons.

However, many claimed that at least some of these informants acted as agitators, pushing the crowd to storm the Capitol building and fight with police. Video footage allegedly shows informants goading people into pushing into the building. The DOJ’s Inspector General said the informants did not encourage illegal acts. However, four of them entered the building without approval.

Still, suspicions have remained. Given the FBI’s history, it’s no surprise folks might be skeptical. It conducted similar operations against various civil rights groups in the 1960s. It was instrumental in the supposed plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. The Bureau also used informants for this purpose against Black Lives Matter groups in Colorado during the George Floyd protests.

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/jeff-charles/2026/06/03/trump-just-confirmed-what-we-already-knew-about-j6-n2677173?utm_source=thdailypmvip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl&utm_content=ncl-uq966XC6tQ&utm_term=&_nlid=uq966XC6tQ&_nhids=ncomnHr6tEXmls

Saturday, June 6, 2026

From Delaney Hall to ‘Freedom 250,’ lefty violence is what real insurrection looks like

From Delaney Hall to ‘Freedom 250,’ lefty violence is what real insurrection looks like

Threats made to the safety of performers booked for a national celebration of America’s 250th birthday.

We could be in for another long, hot summer of leftist violence.

Last week rocker Bret Michaels pulled out of the planned Freedom 250 State Fair in Washington, DC, citing “concerns” regarding “the safety of my fans, band, crew, family and myself, including threats that are completely unfounded and unforgivable.”

An earlier Freedom 250 event was marred by vandalism, NBC News reported Tuesday, when saboteurs cut fuel lines and contaminated the National Mall.

As one social-media wag responded, “The fact that we are having a hard time throwing America a 250th birthday party because leftists are threatening to kill everyone involved is the most zeitgeist s–t I’ve ever seen in my life.”  

Ever since President Donald Trump’s initial inauguration in 2017, leftist groups ranging from Antifa to Black Lives Matter to the Democratic Socialists of America to the ever-present ANSWER have been staging protests that very frequently turn violent. 

Under federal law, codified at 18 USC 2331(5), such events could be deemed domestic terrorism.

That’s because they involve criminal acts “dangerous to human life” that “appear to be intended . . . to intimidate or coerce a civilian population,” to “influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion,” or to “affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction.”

Things like the Delaney Hall riots outside a New Jersey ICE facility, featuring not only violence but death threats against ICE agents, would seem to fit the bill.

So would threats against prospective performers at a national event. 

“It is impossible to understand the politics of the left without grasping that it is all about deniable intimidation,” as writer Richard Fernandez put it decades ago.

But today they’re not even bothering to deny it — and leading figures of the Democratic Party are complicit in these efforts. 

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, of course, famously threatened conservative members of the Supreme Court shortly before a crazed leftist tried to murder Justice Brett Kavanaugh.  

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries called for “maximum warfare” against Republicans and Trump — and did so right after another assassination attempt at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in April. 

Numerous Democrats have compared Trump to Hitler, condemned him as a threat to democracy, and suggested that his supporters should be sent to re-education camps and worse.

With that sort of rhetoric, Democrats might be accused of what they themselves have called “stochastic terrorism” — the use of inflammatory language to lure their more unbalanced supporters into acts of violence that can’t be directly connected to the speaker. 

And much of the violence we’re seeing isn’t spontaneous at all.

Riots like those at Delaney Hall are not just sudden effusions of public anger. 

They’re organized events, funded and supported with training and supplies courtesy of a whole web of leftist organizations, themselves funded by left-wing billionaires who launder their money through tax-exempt NGOs. 

Piles of supplies — bottled water, gas masks, face shields, snacks, medical equipment and more — seem to just appear wherever the agitators descend. 

They’re not the product of spontaneous generation. 

This support may not be terrorism per se, though under federal law it may qualify as “material support” for terrorism.

We heard a lot from the Democrats, and the traditional media (but I repeat myself), about the Jan. 6 “insurrection.” 

But no such infrastructure — much less truckloads of supplies — accompanied the Jan. 6 rioters’ confrontations with police at the US Capitol.

“Insurrection,” unlike terrorism, carries no specific statutory definition in US law.

In general parlance, it’s understood to mean a violent, organized uprising or resistance against government authority or its laws.

Federal law uses the term in criminal and emergency-powers statutes, but leaves its meaning to judicial interpretation based on context, history and common understanding.  

That would certainly seem to apply to a series of organized riots against the execution of federal statutes. 

 A duly elected president — one who won a majority of both the electoral vote and the popular vote, as well as carrying every swing state — is trying to enforce valid federal laws widely supported by the public. 

His political opponents are trying to use violence to stop it.

The federal government has vast resources at its disposal to fight an insurrection. 

Some of those were deployed at the drop of a hat in 2021.  

Where are they now?

Glenn Harlan Reynolds is a professor of law at the University of Tennessee and founder of the InstaPundit.com blog.

https://nypost.com/2026/06/03/opinion/from-delaney-hall-to-freedom-250-lefty-violence-is-what-insurrection-looks-like/

Scott Pelley Is Out. So What?

Scott Pelley Is Out. So What?

The demise of the news anchor as someone who matters.

Scott Pelley thinks he’s important. He’s going to learn quickly that he is not.

Years ago a friend of mine in DC commented that he knew a lot of people who thought they were big shots, because while they were in important government jobs people treated them like big shots. It was nice to be so liked and admired.

Then when they left the important jobs, they didn’t feel nearly so liked and admired anymore. Turned out that what people liked and admired about them wasn’t their personal qualities, but the big shot jobs — or, more specifically, what they hoped the holder of those big shot jobs could do for them. No job, no big shot treatment.

He commented that it was hilarious how often people felt this way, especially since most of them had been dealing with other people in and out of big shot jobs for most of their careers.

Well, that’s Scott Pelley’s situation, but I don’t think he knows it yet.

What’s a news anchor’s skillset? You have to be able to look at the camera and read off a teleprompter while sounding natural — not as easy as it looks, if you’ve never done it before, but my daughter mastered it in an afternoon at a local TV station when she was in 8th grade. You have to look good on camera — maybe not movie-star good, but you have to have a pleasant, trustworthy face. And that’s mostly it.

Those skills serve you well as long as you’re occupying your network perch, but there aren’t many such perches, and once you’re off of them they don’t carry you very far.

That’s especially true since in the last couple of decades TV news has been less important, and people care about it less. Who actually misses David Muir or Jeff Glor? More people miss Alex Trebek, the departed host of Jeopardy. Brian Williams at least inspired some amusing liar memes, but nobody actually misses him.

The original idea of the anchorman sort of made sense: Nobody could trust the faceless crews that produce TV news. But everyone knew the anchorman (or, later, -woman). The thinking was that if viewers felt they could trust the anchorman not to present news that was false or misleading, they’d trust the program. If you thought Ron Burgundy would quit rather than present false news, you’d trust him and by extension the news he was presenting in a voice like velvet.

The problem was, you couldn’t trust the anchors because in fact they lacked the integrity. They were, at bottom a mixture of corporate drones and ideological warriors. (There wasn’t much conflict between these roles because the corporate operation itself was also made up of ideological warriors. Political diversity in newsrooms disappeared in the last century, and it was never great. Leslie Stahl couldn’t name any conservative journalists at her network back in 2003. It hasn’t gotten better.) Even such highly trusted a figure as Walter Cronkite was basically a fraud offering — knowingly — liberalism in the guise of objectivity.

People caught on. Of course, TV news is obsolete anyway, with more people getting their news from X — the single biggest news media source on the planet — and from various other news media sources. But one reason that people turned to those alternatives was a loss of trust in, and affection for, the old media.

At any rate, Scott Pelley was a big shot in the media world when he sat atop a big CBS operation. But even then he mattered a lot less in the real world than he thought. He will no longer be such a big shot anywhere after he’s gone. Just ask Keith Olbermann.

If you can find him.

https://instapundit.substack.com/p/scott-pelley-is-out-so-what?r=9bg2k&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&triedRedirect=true