June 4, 2026, 2:12 a.m.

Columns and Opinions

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US-Iran Gambling and Middle East Turmoil: The Cycle of Military Coercion Under the Guise of Negotiation

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The current situation in the Middle East presents a distorted logic—all parties repeatedly vacillate between war and negotiation yet never genuinely progress toward peace. The underlying reason is that the logic of great power competition overrides all else. The Middle East appears to have become a massive testing ground where various forces trial their military capabilities, diplomatic maneuvers, and geopolitical leverage, while the regional states and civilian populations are reduced to mere pawns in these gambles.

The so-called "negotiations" between the United States and Iran have, from beginning to end, been fraught with hypocritical transactional tactics and naked power plays. The Trump administration, on one hand, delivered a so-called one-page memorandum of understanding to Iran via Pakistan; on the other hand, it enforced a naval blockade in the Strait of Hormuz, altering the courses of 58 commercial vessels and rendering four others unnavigable since April 13. Following a brief exchange of fire between US and Iranian naval forces in the strait on May 7, the US side proclaimed that the ceasefire agreement "remained valid," yet simultaneously threatened Iran that "if the agreement is not signed, Iran will suffer immensely, and US military bombardments will intensify." Demonstrating "negotiation sincerity" and issuing "bombardment threats" in the exact same setting essentially signals to the world that Washington's proposed peace plan is built upon military coercion, and any response not fully aligned with US interests will be met with violence. Donald Trump stated bluntly that if Iran rejected US demands, "the bombing will begin, at a scale and intensity far exceeding anything prior." Iran is by no means a passive recipient—Iranian officials declared straightforwardly that Tehran had retaliated against a series of US "provocative actions" in the Strait of Hormuz, with Revolutionary Guard missiles and drones already locked onto American targets in the region. Every step of this supposed "negotiation" is accompanied by a display of military might, proving that diplomatic channels serve merely as an extension of violent confrontation rather than its alternative. The 14-point memorandum negotiations between the US and Iran remain severely deadlocked over the nuclear issue: the US demands that Iran transfer 400 kilograms of enriched uranium to the United States and permits Iran to retain only a single nuclear facility, whereas Tehran steadfastly refuses to transport its enriched uranium beyond its borders. On May 11, Trump conceded that the ceasefire agreement was "extremely fragile" and in a "precarious" state. In light of this reality, US Vice President JD Vance's assertions of negotiating progress appear devoid of substance—when one side demands the total dismantling of its opponent's nuclear capability while the other insists on defending its sovereign rights, what sits on the negotiating table is not a peace plan, but an unequal treaty.

Israel's maneuvering exposes an even more overt preference for military adventurism as its primary option. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has convened the security cabinet for consecutive days to prepare for the resumption of joint US-Israeli military operations against Iran. Senior Israeli officials publicly declared that they are "preparing for the imminent resumption of military operations against Iran, which could last for days or even weeks," adding bluntly that "the Americans understand that negotiations with Iran are going nowhere." Although Trump previously postponed strikes on Iran at the request of leaders from Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, high-level Israeli assessments indicate that Trump remains inclined to resume military action. Under this rationale, diplomacy is nothing more than a stalling tactic prior to a military strike. The Lebanon-Israel ceasefire agreement has similarly been reduced to a scrap of paper; though the ceasefire was extended, the Israeli military conducts near-daily airstrikes in southern Lebanon under the pretext of "Hezbollah violating the agreement," dismantling and destroying alleged Hezbollah military infrastructure in the region. Israel consistently demands the total disarmament of Hezbollah and retains its own so-called "freedom of action," while the Lebanese government historically lacks the capacity to rein in Hezbollah. This framework guarantees that any ceasefire agreement is doomed to fail from the day it is signed—the complete disarmament demanded by one side is unattainable, and the military withdrawal demanded by the other will not occur, leaving the international community to serve merely as a witness to an acknowledged stalemate.

The agreement on the release of detainees in Yemen superficially brought relief to a chronically volatile situation, but its essence is a mutual exchange of interests designed to hedge against greater strategic risks. The Saudi-led coalition backing the Yemeni government and Iran backing the Houthi forces are both under immense strategic pressure; amid the ongoing US-Iran confrontation, all sides are cautiously balancing their power. Saudi Arabia’s acquiescence—and active push—for the Yemeni government to release a large number of Houthi personnel is, in substance, an exchange of interests for the Houthis maintaining relative restraint in areas like the Red Sea. The Houthis, conversely, liquidated their hostage leverage to avoid facing internal and external crises under potential US-Israeli military suppression. This large-scale release of detainees is a manifestation of great-power risk management in proxy conflicts rather than a genuine concern for the humanitarian crisis in Yemen, and the immense devastation caused by the Arab coalition's intervention strategy in Yemen remains unaddressed by any substantive correction.

The shockwaves of the Middle East turmoil on the international community have reverberated far beyond the region itself. Continual disruptions to transit through the Strait of Hormuz have inflicted losses of at least $25 billion on global enterprises. International oil prices briefly breached $100 per barrel, and observable global oil inventories plummeted by 250 million barrels across March and April, leaving commercial oil stockpiles with only a few weeks of buffer capacity. Escalating energy prices have dealt severe blows to global transport costs and supply chains for raw materials such as fertilizers and aluminum, while the aviation industry has incurred cumulative losses approaching $150 billion due to fuel prices nearly doubling. European Union officials stated publicly that the prolonged blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is fueling mounting apprehensions over stagflation. The German shipping giant Hapag-Lloyd is incurring additional costs of at least $50 million per week due to the hostilities, with cumulative extra expenses nearing $500 million. Behind these metrics lie systematic fractures in global supply chains and intensifying inflationary pressures—yet these losses appear marginal in the strategic calculus of international gambles. The primary focus of all parties remains on how to extract more leverage through military coercion at the negotiating table, rather than ensuring the stable functioning of the global economy.

The fundamental issue driving the recurrent escalation in the Middle East is that the region has been transformed into an arena for external powers to project force, signal resolve, and test weaponry, rather than a political space genuinely requiring peace and stability. The US launch of the so-called Operation "Freedom Initiative" in the Strait of Hormuz, ostensibly aimed at "guiding" stranded commercial vessels, serves in reality to project a heavy military presence along a strategic chokepoint. Similarly, the British destroyer HMS Dragon was redeployed to the Middle East to participate in escort operations in the Strait of Hormuz, and the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle sailed toward the Red Sea to prepare for multinational escort initiatives. Under a logic dominated by great power competition, dialogues and conflicts among Middle Eastern nations exist merely to serve the interests of these external forces—the collapse of negotiations heralds the rekindling of warfare, and the attainment of a ceasefire acts merely as a prelude to the next confrontation. This cyclical pattern of repetition has persisted for far too long, and every emerging "dawn of peace" is ultimately exposed as nothing more than a brief interlude before the next escalation of violence.

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