Sunday, April 5, 2026

EURONEWS - Published on 05/04/2026 - 9:23 GMT+2 - Zelenskyy warns US-Iran war could divert critical aid from Ukraine Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks during an interview with AP in Istanbul, Turkey, Saturday, April 4, 2026.

 EURONEWS

Zelenskyy warns US-Iran war could divert critical aid from Ukraine

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks during an interview with AP in Istanbul, Turkey, Saturday, April 4, 2026.

Copyright Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

By Rory Elliott Armstrong with AP

Published on 05/04/2026 - 9:23 GMT+2



President Zelenskyy has warned that a prolonged US-Israeli war with Iran is threatening the supply of vital Patriot missiles and boosting Russia’s economy through surging oil prices.


President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warned that an extended conflict between the US, Israel, and Iran risks diverting Washington’s attention away from Ukraine, potentially leaving Kyiv with a dangerous shortage of essential Patriot air defence systems.


Ukraine desperately needs more US-made Patriot air defence systems to help it counter Russia’s daily barrages, Zelenskyy said in an interview late on Saturday in Istanbul.


Russia’s relentless pounding of urban areas behind the front line following its full-scale invasion of Ukraine more than four years ago has killed thousands of civilians. It has also targeted Ukraine's energy supply to disrupt industrial production of Ukraine’s newly developed drones and missiles, while also denying civilians heat and running water in winter.


“We have to recognise that we are not the priority for today,” Zelenskyy said. “That’s why I am afraid a long (Iran) war will give us less support.”


A loss of focus on Ukraine

The latest US-brokered talks between envoys from Moscow and Kyiv ended in February with no sign of a breakthrough. Zelenskyy, who has accused Russia of “trying to drag out negotiations” while it presses on with its invasion, said Ukraine remains in contact with US negotiators about a potential deal to end the war and has continued to press for stronger security guarantees.


But, he said, even those discussions reflect a broader loss of focus from Ukraine.


His most immediate concern, Zelenskyy said, are the Patriots — essential for intercepting Russian ballistic missiles — as Ukraine still lacks an effective alternative.


These US systems were never delivered in sufficient quantities to begin with, Zelenskyy said, and if the Iran war doesn't end soon, "the package — which is not very big for us — I think will be smaller and smaller day by day.”


“That’s why, of course, we are afraid," he said.


Interlinked wars

Zelenskyy had been counting on European partners to help make the Patriot purchases despite tight supply and limited US production capacity.


But the Iran war, now in its sixth week, has sent shock waves through the global economy and pulled in much of the wider Middle East region, further straining these already limited resources, diverting stockpiles and leaving Ukrainian cities more exposed to ballistic strikes.


For Kyiv, a key objective is to weaken Moscow’s economy and make the war prohibitively costly. Surging oil prices driven by Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz are undermining that strategy by boosting the Kremlin’s oil revenues and strengthening Moscow’s capacity to sustain its war effort.


In his interview, Zelenskyy said Russia draws economic benefits from the Mideast war, citing the limited easing of American sanctions on Russian oil.


“Russia gets additional money because of this, so yes, they have benefits," he said.


A renewed diplomatic push

To keep Ukraine on the international agenda, Zelenskyy has offered to share Ukraine's hard-earned battlefield expertise with the United States and allies to develop effective countermeasures against Iranian attacks.


Ukraine has met Russia’s evolving use of Iranian-made Shahed drones with growing sophistication, technological ingenuity and low cost.


Moscow significantly modified the original Shahed-136, rebranded as the Geran-2, enhancing its ability to evade air defences and be mass-produced. Ukraine responded with quick innovation of its own, including low-cost interceptor drones designed to track and destroy incoming drones.


Zelenskyy said Ukraine is ready to share with Gulf Arab countries targeted by Iran its experience and technology, including interceptor drones and sea drones, which Ukraine produces — more than are used up — with funding from Americans and its European partners.


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In return, these countries could help Ukraine "with anti-ballistic missiles,” Zelenskyy said.


In late March, as the Iran war escalated, Zelenskyy visited Gulf Arab states to promote Ukraine’s singular experience in countering Iranian-made Shahed drones, leading to new defence cooperation agreements.


Zelenskyy has also positioned Ukraine as a potential partner in safeguarding global trade routes, offering assistance in reopening the Strait of Hormuz by sharing Ukraine’s experiences securing maritime corridors in the Black Sea.


Zelenskyy was in Istanbul for talks with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a day after the Turkish leader spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin.


Zelenskyy said they discussed peace talks and a possible meeting of leaders in Istanbul. He also said there could be new defence deals signed between the two countries soon.


Russia steps up its spring offensive

Each year as the weather improves, Russia moves its grinding war of attrition up a notch. However, it has been unable to capture Ukrainian cities and has made only incremental gains across rural areas. Russia occupies about 20% of Ukraine, including the Crimean Peninsula, which Russia seized in 2014.


On the roughly 1,250-kilometre front line stretching across eastern and southern parts of Ukraine, short-handed Ukrainian defenders are getting ready for a new offensive by Russia’s larger army.


The commander-in-chief of Ukraine’s armed forces, Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi, said Russian troops have in recent days made simultaneous attempts to break through defence lines in several strategic areas.
















Project Syndicate - Will Kharg Island Decide the Future of US Alliances? - Apr 1, 2026 - Carla Norrlöf

 Project Syndicate

Will Kharg Island Decide the Future of US Alliances?

Apr 1, 2026

Carla Norrlöf



As confidence in the United States has eroded, allies have begun to hedge their bets by not automatically aligning themselves with America in the face of new crises. The US-Israeli war on Iran has thrown this dynamic into sharp relief, revealing a fundamental new constraint on American power.


TORONTO – The key question about Iran’s energy-export terminal on Kharg Island is not whether the United States can seize or disable it. Of course it can. The real issue is what happens afterward, when the conditional logic that the US has applied to its alliances begins to shape allied behavior in turn. When allies’ behavior can no longer be assumed, American power becomes more constrained. The key variable is no longer what the US can do, but what costs others will be willing to bear. American primacy rested on a simple bargain—pay more, decide more, and allies follow. That bargain is broken.


-----------------

Trump’s Iran Quagmire Could Sink America

Daron Acemoglu considers what the latest ill-conceived war in the Middle East will mean for US democracy and soft power.

----------------------


Such is the problem now confronting President Donald Trump’s administration. Kharg Island looks like the kind of target the world’s strongest military should be able to turn into leverage with relative ease. But difficult trade-offs would soon follow. Seizing and holding it would impose a sustained burden that allies would be expected to help carry, whereas destroying it would deliver a sharper, escalatory blow whose costs would be immediate, unevenly distributed, and concentrated among the partners most vulnerable to energy shocks. Both options rely on allied participation in different forms, and neither can be taken for granted.


Obviously, any serious disruption would cascade through global energy markets, tightening supply, driving up prices, and increasing shipping and insurance risks. But much of that sensitivity reflects the vulnerability of the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for a significant share of global oil flows, where even limited disruption can affect supply expectations far beyond any single facility.


Kharg Island, by contrast, handles roughly 90% of Iran’s own oil exports (more than one million barrels per day), concentrating a significant share of supply at a single, exposed point. That concentration makes the island immediately visible to markets, which have already responded to the risk of escalation despite the continued flow of exports. War-risk premiums are increasing for tankers moving through the Gulf, raising the cost of transit even without sustained physical damage. Insurers are restricting or withdrawing coverage, and some shipments are being delayed or diverted, tightening effective supply at the margin and adding upward pressure on prices even before any sustained supply loss. 


In the event of a disruption at Kharg Island, these effects would not be confined to Iran. They would be felt acutely in economies that depend on imported energy, most of which are already struggling to manage inflation and weak growth, with limited political room to absorb further shocks. Recent tanker data show how quickly these pressures fragment, with rates splitting sharply across allied routes by early March, revealing a fundamental asymmetry in how the shock is transmitted. For governments in Europe and across Asia, higher energy costs translate directly into domestic pressure, because they affect industrial competitiveness, household budgets, and political stability.


In earlier periods, those costs might have been willingly absorbed within the US alliance network. Though they would not have been evenly distributed, they would have been accepted as part of a shared strategic effort. Not anymore. What has changed is not simply the distribution of costs, but expectations about who will bear them, and uncertainty about whether they will be shared at all.


For years now, the US has treated alliances less as durable commitments than as arrangements to be publicly questioned and renegotiated. There have been repeated disputes over burden sharing within NATO, with US officials openly questioning Article 5 (mutual-defense) commitments and publicly disparaging allied governments. As a result, security guarantees have become contingent commitments.


This change has prompted allies to hedge their bets by not automatically aligning themselves with the US during crises. The cumulative effect has been a shift in how allies think about what they can rely on in crises. Arrangements that were once organized around standing commitments are increasingly taking the form of situational coalitions. While selective autonomy on the part of US allies can work in some cases, if it becomes the default, coordination will splinter, producing uneven responses from one crisis to the next.


That is what we are now seeing. The shift to greater conditionality is shaping how all governments respond to geopolitical developments, with some US allies already limiting their involvement as the risks of escalation grow. In reducing their exposure, they weaken the expectation of coordinated allied action.


By concentrating both the potential benefits and the costs of action, Kharg Island brings this dynamic into sharper focus. Seizing it would increase pressure on Iran, but it would also redistribute strain across the coalition needed to sustain that pressure. The same move that generates leverage introduces risk, and that risk is distributed across the partners expected to bear it.


More broadly, moving from a system of assumed alignment to one that must be negotiated raises the political cost of collective action and weakens its strategic effect. Conditional alliances will not end all cooperation, but they make it more difficult to translate alignment into power on a predictable basis.


That is why Kharg Island—the “forbidden island”—matters. It is important not because it lies beyond American reach, but because it is tempting the US to pursue a course of action with consequences others may not be willing to shoulder. The US military can seize the island, but it cannot compel others to share in whatever outcome follows. The old message was clear: contribute more or the security guarantee weakens. The new one is just as stark: without agreement on the mission, allied support weakens.


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Carla Norrlöf

Carla Norrlöf

Writing for PS since 2020

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Carla Norrlöf is Professor of Political Science at the University of Toronto.




T.C. Dışişleri Bakanlığı : 4 Nisan 2026, 4 Nisan Dünya Mayın Bilinci ve Mayın Faaliyetine Destek Günü Hk.

 T.C. Dışişleri Bakanlığı : 

4 Nisan 2026, 4 Nisan Dünya Mayın Bilinci ve Mayın Faaliyetine Destek Günü Hk.


Birleşmiş Milletler Genel Kurulu tarafından ilan edilen 4 Nisan “Dünya Mayın Bilinci ve Mayın Faaliyetine Destek Günü”, mayın ve patlamamış mühimmatın yol açtığı tehlikelere dikkat çekmektedir.


Mayın ve patlamamış mühimmat, çatışmaların sona ermesinin ardından dahi uzun yıllar boyunca sivillerin hayatını tehdit etmektedir.


Bölgesinde ve dünyada hem kara hem deniz mayınlarıyla mücadele konusunda önemli ve somut katkılar sunan bir ülke olarak Türkiye, tarafı olduğu Anti-Personel Mayınların Kullanımının, Depolanmasının, Üretiminin ve Devredilmesinin Yasaklanması ve Bunların İmhasına İlişkin Ottava Sözleşmesi kapsamındaki uluslararası iş birliği mekanizmalarını Milli Mayın Faaliyet Merkezi aracılığıyla etkin biçimde desteklemeye devam etmektedir.


Ülkemiz, mayın tehdidiyle mücadelede insani değerleri esas alan yaklaşımıyla bölgesel ve küresel düzeyde üstlendiği sorumlulukları kararlılıkla sürdürecektir







DW - 5 Nisan 2026 Zelenskiy'nin İstanbul ziyaretinde barış çağrıları Ukrayna Devlet Başkanı Zelenskiy, İstanbul'da Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan ile görüştü. Ukrayna lideri daha sonra Fener Rum Ortodoks Patrikhanesi'ni de ziyaret etti.

 DW -   5 Nisan 2026 

Zelenskiy'nin İstanbul ziyaretinde barış çağrıları

Ukrayna Devlet Başkanı Zelenskiy, İstanbul'da Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan ile görüştü. Ukrayna lideri daha sonra Fener Rum Ortodoks Patrikhanesi'ni de ziyaret etti.

erdogan-zelenski

Cumhurbaşkanı Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, İstanbul'da Ukrayna Devlet Başkanı Volodimir Zelenskiy ile görüştü.

Cumhurbaşkanlığı İletişim Başkanlığı'ndan yapılan açıklamaya göre, Erdoğan Ukrayna ile Rusya arasındaki müzakerelere Türkiye'nin desteğinin süreceğini, bölgenin daha fazla barış ve istikrara ihtiyaç duyduğunu ifade etti.

Açıklamanın devamında, "Cumhurbaşkanımız, Türkiye olarak Karadeniz'de seyrüsefer emniyetine büyük önem atfettiğimizi ve enerji arz güvenliğinin mühim olduğunu söyledi. Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, Türkiye'nin Ukrayna ile karşılıklı ticaret hacmini artırmakta kararlı olduğunu, bunun için gerekli adımları atmayı sürdüreceğimizi belirtti. Cumhurbaşkanımız görüşmede, Ukrayna'nın Körfez ülkeleri ile ilişkilerini geliştirmesinden duyduğu memnuniyeti de ifade etti" denildi.

Cumartesi günü, yapılan görüşmede, Milli İstihbarat Teşkilatı (MİT) Başkanı İbrahim Kalın, Dışişleri Bakanı Hakan Fidan, İletişim Başkanı Burhanettin Duran, Cumhurbaşkanı Dış Politika ve Güvenlik Başdanışmanı Akif Çağatay Kılıç da yer aldı.

Zelenskiy'den Fener Rum Patrikhanesi'ne ziyaret

Ukrayna Devlet Başkanı Zelenskiy, Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan ile gerçekleştirdiği görüşmenin ardından Fener Rum Ortodoks Patrikhanesi'ni ziyaret etti. Zelenskiy ile Fener Rum Patriği Bartholomeos yaklaşık bir saat süren basına kapalı görüşme sonrasında basın mensuplarına görüntü vererek açıklama yaptı.

Zelenskiy, Bartholomeos ile Ukraynalı çocuklar ve birçok konuda görüştüklerini, bu konudaki destek ve dualar için minnettar olduklarını söyledi. Bartholomeos'a ülkesinde bu kışın zorlu geçtiğinden bahsettiğini aktaran Zelenskiy, enerji desteği sağlayan ülkelere teşekkür etti.

Ukrayna Devlet Başkanı Zelenskiy ve beraberindeki heyet,
Patrik Bartholomeos ve Patrikhane yetkilileri tarafından karşılandı

Zelenskiy: Barış görüşmelerine ihtiyacımız var

Zelenskiy, Patrikhane'de yaptığı açıklamada, "Ukrayna hakkında konuştuk, bu savaşı nasıl durdurabiliriz diye. Ve elbette barış hakkında. Barışa ihtiyacımız var. Müzakerelere ve barış görüşmelerine ihtiyacımız var" dedi.

Basın mensuplarının, "Görüşmeler burada, İstanbul’da yeniden başlayacak mı?" sorusu üzerine Zelenskiy, "Bunun için elimizden geleni yapacağız. Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan ile konuştuk. O da bu tarafta, barış tarafında. Ve elbette bu savaşı durdurmamız gerekiyor. Ve dostlarımızın sahip olduğu tüm değerleri, tüm diplomatik deneyimi kullanmamız gerekiyor. Ayrıca Cumhurbaşkanı Erdoğan, müzakereleri burada İstanbul'da yapmak istiyor. Gelmeye hazırız. Her zaman söyledim, liderler düzeyinde her türlü formatta bir görüşmeye hazırız" ifadelerini kullandı.

Bartholomeos: Barış için dua ediyoruz

Fener Rum Patriği Bartholomeos da "Burada Ekümenik Patrikhane'de, Sayın Cumhurbaşkanı Zelenskiy'i dördüncü kez ağırlamaktan büyük mutluluk duyuyoruz. Kendisiyle bilgi ve görüş alışverişinde bulunduk. Bildiğiniz gibi biz burada patrikhanede her zaman barış için dua ediyoruz. Ve bu amaçla, barışa ve tüm çatışmaların barışçıl çözümüne yönelik müzakereleri destekliyoruz. Ortadoğu'da, Ukrayna'da ve dünyanın her yerinde acı çeken insanlara yakınız" dedi.

Foreign Affairs - The Crumbling Foundations of American Strength Knowledge Is Power—and the United States Is Losing It - Amy Zegart - September/October 2024 - Published on August 20, 2024

 Foreign  Affairs 

The Crumbling Foundations of American Strength

Knowledge Is Power—and the United States Is Losing It

Amy Zegart

September/October 2024

Published on August 20, 2024



When Russia’s invasion of Ukraine appeared imminent in early 2022, U.S. intelligence officials were so confident that Russian tanks would roll quickly to victory that staff evacuated the U.S. embassy in Kyiv. Based on traditional measures of power, the intelligence assessment made sense. In 2021, Russia ranked fifth in the world in defense spending, whereas Ukraine was a distant 36th, behind Thailand and Belgium. Yet more than two years later, Russia and Ukraine are still fighting their brutal war to a standstill.


Ukraine’s resilience is a telling indicator that power is not what it used to be. The country’s surprise showing is in no small part a result of its highly educated population and a technology innovation ecosystem that has produced vast quantities of drones and other homemade weapons on the fly. Ukraine has even managed to wage naval warfare without a navy, using homemade drones and other devices to destroy nearly two dozen Russian ships and deny Russia control of the Black Sea.


For centuries, a nation’s power stemmed from tangible resources that its government could see, measure, and generally control, such as populations that could be conscripted, territory that could be conquered, navies that could be deployed, and goods that could be released or restricted, such as oil. Spain in the sixteenth century had armies, colonies, and precious metals. The United Kingdom in the nineteenth century had the world’s strongest navy and the economic benefits that emerged from the Industrial Revolution. The United States and the Soviet Union in the twentieth century had massive nuclear arsenals.


Today, countries increasingly derive power from intangible resources—the knowledge and technologies such as AI that are super-charging economic growth, scientific discovery, and military potential. These assets are difficult for governments to control once they are “in the wild” because of their intangible nature and the ease with which they spread across sectors and countries. U.S. officials, for example, cannot insist that an adversary return an algorithm to the United States the way the George W. Bush administration demanded the return of a U.S. spy plane that crash-landed on Hainan Island after a Chinese pilot collided with it in 2001. Nor can they ask a Chinese bioengineer to give back the knowledge gained from postdoctoral research in the United States. Knowledge is the ultimate portable weapon.



The fact that these resources typically originate in the private sector and academia makes the job of government even more challenging. Foreign policy has always been a two-level game; U.S. officials have to wrangle both domestic actors and foreign adversaries. But more and more, the decisions of private companies are shaping geopolitical outcomes, and the interests of the U.S. private sector are not always aligned with national objectives. Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, is determining what constitutes truth for the three billion people worldwide that use its platforms. In the past year, American CEOs with vested Chinese business interests have met face-to-face with Chinese leader Xi Jinping about as often as Secretary of State Antony Blinken has. And when war erupted in Ukraine, the tycoon billionaire Elon Musk singlehandedly decided whether, where, and when the Ukrainian military could communicate using the Starlink satellite network he owns.


At the same time, many of the U.S. government’s capabilities are deteriorating. Its traditional foreign policy tools have withered: confirming presidential appointments has become so fraught that at least a quarter of key foreign policy positions sat vacant halfway through the first terms of the last three U.S. presidents. Thanks to spiraling federal debt, this year, for the first time ever, the U.S. will spend more on interest payments than on defense. Because Congress often cannot pass an annual budget, the Pentagon increasingly runs on stopgap budget measures that fund only existing programs, not new ones, preventing new research and development initiatives or weapons programs from getting off the ground. This broken system disproportionately hinders new, small, and innovative companies. As a result, big, expensive weapons systems persist while new, cheap solutions wither on the vine. If China were to design a budget process with the intent to stifle invention, send weapons costs through the roof, and weaken American defense, it would look like this. Meanwhile, and critically, the health of the United States’ K–12 education and research universities—the sources of the country’s long-term innovative potential—are in decline.


In today’s knowledge- and technology-driven world, U.S. policymakers need to think in new ways about what constitutes U.S. power, how to develop it, and how to deploy it. Future prosperity and security will depend less on preventing adversaries from acquiring U.S. technologies and more on strengthening the country’s educational and research capacity and mobilizing emerging technologies to serve the national interest.


INNOVATE  AND  ANTICIPATE

For decades, U.S. policymakers have employed hard- and soft-power tools to influence foreign adversaries and allies. To advance U.S. interests with hard power, they built military might and used it to protect friends and threaten or defeat enemies. With soft power, they shared U.S. values and attracted others to their cause. Both hard and soft power still matter, but because they do not determine a country’s success the way they once did, the United States must work to expand its knowledge power—advancing national interests by boosting the country’s capacity to generate transformational technology.


Knowledge power has two essential elements: the ability to innovate and the ability to anticipate. The first relates to a country’s capacity to produce and harness technological breakthroughs. The second has to do with intelligence. Part of this work fits into the traditional mission of U.S. spy agencies, which are tasked with discovering the intentions and capabilities of foreign adversaries to threaten U.S. interests. As the boundaries between domestic industry and foreign policy blur, however, intelligence agencies also need to help the government understand the implications of technologies developed at home.


Innovation and anticipation are not merely ingredients that strengthen the United States’ military and its powers of attraction. They may do both, but the primary function of knowledge power lies closer to home. Whereas traditional foreign policy tools aim outward—using threats, force, and values to affect the behavior of foreign actors—building and using knowledge power requires Washington to look inward. It involves marshaling ideas, talent, and technology to help the United States and its partners thrive no matter what China or any other adversary does.


Education and innovation are key to the United States’ ability to project power.

The components of knowledge power can be hard to see and quantify. But a good place to start is national educational proficiency levels. Overwhelming evidence shows that a well-educated workforce drives long-term economic growth. In 1960, East Asia nearly tied sub-Saharan Africa for the lowest GDP per capita in the world. Over the next 30 years, however, East Asia vaulted ahead, spurred in large measure by educational improvements.


The geographic concentration of technological talent is another useful indicator of knowledge power, suggesting which countries are poised to leap ahead in critical areas. There is a reason leading scientists and engineers congregate in labs and recruit superstar teams instead of isolating themselves in their offices, designing experiments alone and reading research papers online. Physical proximity matters; the world’s top minds working closely together is a recipe for technological breakthroughs.


Gauging a nation’s long-term power prospects also requires measuring the health of its research universities. Companies play an essential role in technological innovation, but the innovation supply chain really begins earlier, in campus labs and classrooms. Whereas companies must concentrate their resources on developing technologies with near-term commercial prospects, research universities do not face the same financial or temporal demands. Basic research, the lifeblood of universities, examines questions on the frontiers of knowledge that may take generations to answer and may never have any commercial application. But without it, many commercial breakthroughs would not have been possible, including radar, GPS, and the Internet.


More recently, what looked from the outside like the overnight success of mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines was in fact the result of more than 50 years of basic research in universities. Before pharmaceutical companies advanced vaccine development, academic researchers had discovered that mRNA could activate and block protein cells, and they had figured out how to deliver it to human cells to provoke an immune response. Similarly, the cryptographic algorithms protecting data on the Internet today stemmed from decades of academic research in pure math. And many new advances in AI, from ChatGPT to image recognition, build on the pioneering work developed at the University of Toronto, the University of Montreal, Stanford University, and elsewhere.


BRAIN DRAIN

If education and innovation are key to the United States’ ability to project power, then the country’s prospects are on shaky ground. American K–12 education is in crisis. Students today are scoring worse on proficiency tests than they have in decades and falling behind their peers abroad. U.S. universities are struggling, too, as they face greater global competition for talent and chronic federal underinvestment in the basic research that is vital for long-term innovation.


In 2023, math and reading scores among American 13-year-olds were the lowest in decades, according to the National Assessment of Educational Progress. Half of U.S. students could not meet their state’s proficiency requirements. And scores on the ACT, the popular college admissions test, declined for the sixth year in a row, with 70 percent of high school seniors not meeting college readiness benchmarks in math and 43 percent not meeting college readiness benchmarks in anything. Notably, these trends began before the COVID-19 pandemic.


While students in the United States fall behind, students in other countries are surging ahead. According to the Program for International Student Assessment, which tests 15-year-olds worldwide, in 2022 the United States ranked 34th in average math proficiency, behind Slovenia and Vietnam. (Reading and science rankings were higher but barely cracked the top ten and top 20, respectively.) More than a third of U.S. students scored below the baseline math proficiency level, which means they cannot compare distances between two routes or convert prices into a different currency. At the top end, only seven percent of American teens scored at the highest level of math proficiency, compared with 12 percent of test takers in Canada and 23 percent in South Korea. Even pockets of excellence inside the United States don’t fare well internationally. Massachusetts was the top-scoring U.S. state in math in 2022 but would rank just 16th in the world if it were a country. Most U.S. states rank near the global median. And the lowest-scoring state, New Mexico, is on par with Kazakhstan.


Part of this story is the rise of the rest; the global population has become vastly more educated in the past several decades, redrawing the knowledge power map in the process. Since 1950, average years of schooling have risen dramatically and the number of college graduates worldwide has increased 30-fold. As the educational playing field levels, U.S. universities and companies increasingly rely on foreign talent to remain world-class. In 1980, 78 percent of doctorates in computer science and electrical engineering awarded by American universities went to U.S. citizens or permanent residents. In 2022, it was 32 percent. About one million international students now study in the United States each year. The largest share comes from China, at 27 percent.


The United States’ record of attracting talent from around the world is an enormous asset. Nearly 45 percent of all Fortune 500 companies in 2020, including Alphabet, SpaceX, and the chip giant NVIDIA, were founded by first- or second-generation immigrants. About 40 percent of Americans awarded Nobel Prizes in scientific fields since 2000 have been foreign-born. Yet here, too, the country is forfeiting its short-term advantage and creating long-term vulnerabilities. Outdated immigration policies have created a self-sabotaging talent system that educates exceptional foreign students and then requires many of them to leave the United States, taking everything they learned with them.


What’s more, this talent supply chain works only as long as foreign students want to study in the United States and their governments allow it. Foreign universities have improved substantially in recent years, offering more alternatives for the best and brightest. Already, polls show that the share of Chinese students who prefer to study in Asia or Europe instead of the United States is rising. If the Chinese government were ever to restrict the flow of top students to the United States, many university labs and companies would be in serious trouble.


The innovation advantage that U.S. universities have over their foreign counterparts is eroding, too. A decade ago, the United States produced by far the most highly cited scientific papers in the world. Today, China does. In 2022, for the first time, China’s contributions surpassed those of the United States in the closely watched Nature Index, which tracks 82 premier science journals.


The pull of the private sector is draining the sources of future innovation.

Funding trends are also headed in the wrong direction. Only the U.S. government can make the large, long-term, risky investments necessary for the basic research that universities conduct. Yet overall federal research funding as a share of GDP has declined since its peak of 1.9 percent in 1964 to just 0.7 percent in 2020. (By comparison, China spent 1.3 percent of GDP on research in 2017.) The 2022 CHIPS and Science Act was supposed to reverse this downward slide by investing billions of dollars in science and engineering research, but these provisions were later scrapped in budget negotiations.


Basic research has been particularly hard hit. Until 2014, the National Institutes of Health allocated the majority of its budget to basic university research about disease and human health. Now, it spends more on clinical trials and other applied research. The CHIPS and Science Act was supposed to double the budget of the National Science Foundation, the premier government sponsor of basic research in nonmedical science, technology, engineering, and math, this year. Instead, the agency’s budget was cut by eight percent.The NSF awards smaller, shorter grants than it did a decade ago, which forces scientists and engineers to spend more time chasing funds and less time conducting research. “We are fast approaching the point where standard NSF grants aren’t minimally viable,” said one senior administrator at a large research university, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid jeopardizing relations with the NSF. “For some of our faculty, it’s just not worth it for them to apply.” Although the United States still funds more basic research than China does, China’s investment in research rose more than 200 percent between 2012 and 2021, compared with a 35 percent rise in U.S. investment. If current trends continue, China’s basic research spending will overtake U.S. spending within ten years.


The gravitational pull of the private sector is bolstering short-term innovation and economic benefits, but it is also draining the sources of future innovation. In AI, for example, the talent exodus from academia to industry is fueling extraordinary commercial advancements. It is also diverting talent and attention away from basic research on which future innovation depends and depleting the ranks of faculty who teach the next generation. The problem is acute at the very top. In one top-ranked U.S. computer science department, nearly a third of the senior AI faculty a decade ago have left academia. At another top-ranked department, an AI scholar, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, has estimated that half the AI faculty have gone part-time. Doctoral students and faculty at an AI lab at another leading university do not have the ability to discuss their research freely, which is vital for collaboration, because some are working at OpenAI and have signed nondisclosure agreements. Last year, more than 70 percent of newly minted AI Ph.D.’s in the United States went directly to industry, including a disproportionate share of the top students. As a U.S. government commission on AI put it, “Talent follows talent.”


A generation from now, policymakers will lament, “How could we not have seen this talent crisis coming?” But all they need to do is look.


A NEW POWER BASE

U.S. policymakers need a new playbook that will help them assess, enhance, and use the country’s knowledge power. The first step is developing intelligence capabilities to gauge where the United States is ahead in emerging technologies and where it is behind, and to determine which gaps matter and which do not. The Pentagon has legions of analysts comparing U.S. and foreign military capabilities, but no office in the U.S. government does the same for emerging technologies. This needs to change. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence has already begun building stronger relationships with companies and universities to gain insight into U.S. technological developments. These efforts must be institutionalized, with channels to share expertise faster and more frequently. To spur progress, Congress should hold annual technology net assessment hearings with intelligence officials and academic and industry leaders. And universities must step up by sharing the details and implications of their latest lab discoveries. For instance, my institution, Stanford University, launched a new initiative last year called the Stanford Emerging Technology Review to provide more accessible and regular information to policymakers about ten key emerging technologies—including AI, bioengineering, space technologies, materials science, and energy—from leading experts in those fields. It is now essential to broaden and deepen these efforts, building trusted expert networks and increasing information sharing between universities and the U.S. government, state and local officials, and international partners.


Washington also needs to invest in the national infrastructure necessary for technological innovation. In the 1950s, President Dwight Eisenhower developed the Interstate Highway System to bolster U.S. economic growth and to make it easier to evacuate civilians and move troops in the event of a Soviet attack. After the 1973 oil crisis, President Gerald Ford established the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, the largest stockpile of emergency crude oil in the world, so that a foreign oil embargo or other disruption would never again cripple the U.S. economy. The missing national security infrastructure today is computational power. Progress in nearly every field relies on artificial intelligence, which in turn requires advanced computational power to operate. For example, the computational power required to train the ChatGPT-3 AI model is so huge that the task would take 9,000 years on a typical laptop. Today, only large companies such as Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft can afford to buy the massive clusters of advanced chips required for developing frontier AI models. Everyone else struggles to afford the bare minimum. This year, Princeton University announced that it would dip into its endowment to purchase 300 advanced NVIDIA chips to use for research (at a cost of at least $9 million), while Meta announced plans to have 350,000 of the same chips by year’s end, spending an estimated $10 billion.


A national strategic computational reserve would provide free or low-cost advanced computing to researchers through competitive grants that lease time on existing cloud-based services or supercomputing systems at national labs. The reserve could also build and operate smaller-scale computing clusters of its own. This infrastructure would be accessible to researchers outside large tech companies and well-endowed research universities. It would facilitate cutting-edge AI research for public benefit, not just private profit. And it would help stem the flow of top computer scientists from academia to industry by offering them resources to do pioneering work while remaining in their university positions. Improvements are already underway. In January, the National Science Foundation launched a pilot program called the National AI Research Resource, awarding access to computational power, data, and other resources to 35 projects out of more than 150 proposals. A bipartisan group of legislators has introduced a bill to make the NAIRR permanent.



At an elementary school in Artesia, California, January 2024

Mike Blake / Reuters


Enhancing U.S. knowledge power is not just about developing new capabilities. Washington also needs to fix problems in the country’s immigration system and defense budgeting. Congress must pass immigration reforms to allow more of the world’s best and brightest students to stay and work in the United States after they graduate from American universities, provided measures are in place to protect U.S. intellectual property and guard against espionage risks. The secretary of defense should make reform of the Pentagon’s weapons acquisition process a top priority, putting real funding behind long-standing promises to embrace affordability and innovation and making clear to Congress and the American people that budget dysfunction makes the country less safe.


If U.S. research universities are to remain engines of future innovation, the federal government must also reverse years of chronic underinvestment in basic research. Some private-sector leaders are trying to fill gaps through philanthropic programs such as Schmidt Sciences’ AI2050, which is committing $125 million over five years to fund bold academic research in AI. But this is a drop in the bucket. Only the U.S. government—which spends $125 million on a single F-35 fighter jet—can invest on the scale that is necessary. A bipartisan group of lawmakers, led by Senators Martin Heinrich, Mike Rounds, Chuck Schumer, and Todd Young, has renewed calls to fulfill the original promise of the CHIPS and Science Act by ramping up current government funding for nondefense AI research and development tenfold, to $32 billion. Yet the road between this proposal and passing a bill is long; the idea has been floating around Congress since 2021. That’s a lifetime ago in AI development. Given the pace and stakes of technological change, it is not enough for funding to increase. It also needs to be delivered faster.


Finally, the United States needs to fix K–12 education. Warnings that educational decline threatens the country’s future prosperity, security, and global leadership are nothing new, but education reform has not been treated as the urgent national security priority that it is. Today, in most of the country’s 13,500 public school districts, teacher compensation is based on years of experience and graduate education, which means that physics and physical education teachers receive the same pay. So do the best and worst teachers. Some cities are already piloting better approaches. In Dallas, Houston, and Washington, D.C., education officials have been experimenting with incentive funds to evaluate teachers and reward the most effective ones. In some places, districts can receive even more discretionary funding if they deploy the best teachers to the worst schools. These practices are already producing promising results, and they should be studied and scaled.


None of these changes will be easy, but without them, the United States’ knowledge capacity will continue to erode and U.S. power will grow weaker in the years ahead. Washington has been clinging to the idea that restrictions on China’s access to U.S. technology through export controls and outbound investment limits can preserve the country’s technological advantage. But simply thwarting China will do nothing to spur the long-term innovation the United States needs to ensure its future security and prosperity. Now more than ever, Washington must understand that knowledge is power—and that it must be cultivated at home.


AMY ZEGART is the Morris Arnold and Nona Jean Cox Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, a Senior Fellow at Stanford University’s Human-Centered AI Institute, and the author of Spies, Lies, and Algorithms: The History and Future of American Intelligence.


More by Amy Zegart 

Topics & Regions: United States China Economics Politics & Society Education Science & Technology Security Defense & Military Intelligence Strategy & Conflict U.S. Foreign Policy Artificial Intelligence Elon Musk

Yetkin Report - Yazar: Huzur Keskin / 05 Nisan 2026, Pazar - Küresel Enerji Krizinde Türkiye Aktif Oyuncu Olabilir mi?

 

Küresel Enerji Krizinde Türkiye Aktif Oyuncu Olabilir mi?

/ / EkonomiSiyaset

Türkiye son yıllarda enerji altyapısında önemli kapasite artışları

sağladı. Dörtyol, Ali Ağa ve Saros’taki FSRU (yüzer depolama ve

 gazlaştırma ünitesi) gemileriyle günlük gazlaştırma kapasitesi 165

 milyon metreküpe ulaştı. (Foto: Ertuğrul Gazi FRSU Gemisi/ enerji.gov.tr)

Son haftalarda ABD ve İsrail tarafından başlatılan İran Savaşı ve ona bağlı olarak Hürmüz Boğazı sorununa bağlı olarak Asya’da derinleşen enerji krizi, küresel ekonomi için yeni bir kırılmanın işaretlerini veriyor. Filipinler acil durum ilan etti. Çin, petrol ürünleri ihracatını yasakladı. Japonya trafikte tek-çift plaka uygulamasına geçti, bazı sektörlerde üretim kısıtlamasına gitti. Hindistan enerji kullanımında turizm gibi zorunlu olmayan alanlardan hanehalkına öncelik verdi, sanayi üretiminde önlemler aldı. Pakistan’da spot LNG fiyatları yüzde 40’ın üzerinde sıçradı. Tayland ve Vietnam sanayi üretiminde kısıtlamaya gitti. Bu artık bölgesel değil, sistemik bir sorun.

Türkiye gibi enerjide yüzde 70 dışa bağımlı bir ülke için bu tablo, yalnızca dışsal bir risk değil, aynı zamanda stratejik bir test anlamına geliyor. Asıl soru şu: Türkiye bu enerji krizini pasif bir şok olarak mı yaşayacak, yoksa aktif bir konumlanma fırsatına mı dönüştürecek?

Asya’da Kırılma: Sadece Fiyat Değil

Mart 2026 itibarıyla Asya spot LNG fiyatları son bir yılda yüzde 67 arttı. Bölgedeki termik santrallerin kapasite kullanımı ise ortalama yüzde 12 geriledi (IEA). Bu, klasik bir arz-talep dengesizliğinin çok ötesinde. Uluslararası Enerji Ajansı’na göre, enerji fiyatlarındaki bu yükseliş küresel büyümeyi 2026 için 0,4 puan aşağı çekerken, enflasyonu ortalama 0,7 puan yukarı bastırıyor. OECD’nin ara dönem raporu da bu tabloyu teyit ediyor.

Yani yaşanan enerji krizi, yalnızca enerji piyasalarını değil; üretim maliyetlerinden yatırım kararlarına kadar tüm ekonomik dengeleri yeniden şekillendiriyor. Enerji artık bir girdi olmaktan çıkıp doğrudan makroekonomik belirleyici haline geliyor.

Türkiye’nin Kırılganlığı: Çift Yönlü Baskı

Türkiye’nin bu enerji krizine karşı duyarlılığı yapısal. 2025 yılında enerji ithalat faturası GSYH’nin yüzde 5,8’ine ulaşmıştı. 2026’nın ilk çeyreğinde fiyat artışlarının da etkisiyle bu oran yüzde 6,4 seviyesine yükseldi (TCMB). Petrol ve LNG fiyatlarındaki her yüzde 10’luk artışın, cari işlemler dengesinde GSYH’nin yüzde 0,4’ü oranında ek bozulmaya yol açtığı tahmin ediliyor.

Uluslararası kredi derecelendirme kuruluşu S&P Global Ratings, Mart 2026 değerlendirmesinde enerji fiyatlarındaki artışın Türkiye’nin 2026 yılsonu enflasyon görünümünü 5 puan yukarı yönlü revize eden temel faktör olduğunu belirtiyor.

Daha da kritik olan, Türkiye’nin Asya’ya bağımlı ara malı tedarik zinciri. Türkiye’nin Asya ülkelerinden (Çin, Güney Kore, Endonezya, Malezya başta olmak üzere) yaptığı ara malı ithalatı, toplam ara malı ithalatının yüzde 34’ünü oluşturuyor. Bölgedeki üretim kesintileri ve lojistik aksaklıklar, özellikle kimya, otomotiv ve makine imalat sektörlerinde maliyetleri artırarak sanayi üretimini baskılıyor. Nitekim TÜİK verilerine göre, enerji yoğun sektörlerde üretim endeksi 2025’in dördüncü çeyreğinden 2026’nın ilk çeyreğine geçerken yıllık bazda yüzde 2,8 daraldı.

Dolayısıyla Türkiye için enerji krizi hem maliyet hem de üretim baskısına yol açıyor.

Pasifik’ten Dersler: Singapur Boş Durmadı

Asya ülkeleri bu enerji krizine  karşı pasif değil. Japonya ve Güney Kore uzun vadeli LNG kontratlarını artırarak spot piyasa oynaklığından korunmaya çalışıyor. Malezya ve Endonezya ise enerji ihracatçısı konumlarını korumak için yurt içi sanayide enerji tüketimini sınırlandırıcı düzenlemeler getirdi.

Ancak en çarpıcı örnek Singapur. Bu ülke, enerji verimliliği ve yenilenebilir enerji yatırımlarına sağladığı teşvikleri genişleterek sanayide enerji yoğunluğunu düşürmeyi hedefliyor; aldığı kararlardan  Türkiye dersler çıkarabilir:

  • Yeşil Veri Merkezi Yol Haritası kapsamında, yeni veri merkezi yatırımlarında enerji verimliliği standardı PUE 1,3’ün altında olma zorunluluğu getirildi.
  • Enerji Verimliliği Fonu aracılığıyla sanayi tesislerinde enerji yoğunluğunu azaltan projelere yüzde 70’e varan hibeler sağlanıyor. 2025-2026 döneminde bu fondan yararlanan proje sayısı 340’ı aştı.
  • SolarNova Programı kapsamında kamu binalarının çatılarında toplam 350 MW’lık güneş enerjisi kapasitesi devreye alındı. 2030 hedefi 1,5 GW.
  • Karbon fiyatlandırması kapsamında, büyük sanayi tesislerine yönelik karbon vergisi ton başına 25 SGD’den 45 SGD’ye yükseltildi.

Bu yaklaşım, enerji politikasının artık teknoloji politikasıyla iç içe geçtiğini gösteriyor.

Krizi Fırsata Çevirmek Mümkün mü?

Türkiye son yıllarda enerji altyapısında önemli kapasite artışları sağladı.

Dörtyol, Ali Ağa ve Saros’taki FSRU (yüzer depolama ve gazlaştırma ünitesi) gemileriyle günlük gazlaştırma kapasitesi 165 milyon metreküpe ulaştı. Tuz Gölü ve Silivri’deki depolama tesislerinde toplam 6,8 milyar metreküp kapasiteye erişildi. Bu gelişmeler, Türkiye’nin yalnızca bir enerji ithalatçısı değil, aynı zamanda bölgesel bir enerji ticaret ve dağıtım merkezi olma potansiyelini güçlendiriyor.

Nitekim Bulgaristan, Romanya, Macaristan ve Moldova ile imzalanan doğal gaz tedarik ve transit anlaşmaları, bu yönde atılmış somut adımlar olarak öne çıkıyor.

Aynı zamanda küresel yatırım dinamikleri de değişiyor. Preqin’in 2026 verilerine göre, küresel özel sermaye fonlarının enerji ve altyapı yatırımlarına ayırdığı pay son iki yılda yüzde 18’den yüzde 27’ye yükseldi. Yazılım gibi daha kısa vadeli yatırımların payı ise geriliyor. Dünya, enerji, altyapı, veri merkezleri ve savunma sanayii gibi sermaye yoğun, uzun vadeli ve stratejik alanlara yöneliyor. Türkiye, jeostratejik konumu ve sanayi altyapısıyla bu akıştan pay alabilecek bir konumda.

Enerji krizi, doğru politikalarla Türkiye’yi daha kırılgan değil, daha stratejik bir konuma taşıyabilir.

Yeni Politika Çerçevesi: Üç Eksen, Tek Strateji

Bu noktada kritik olan, parçalı değil bütüncül bir yaklaşım. Türkiye’nin enerji krizine karşı vereceği yanıt üç temel eksende şekillenmeli:

  • Birincisi, enerji verimliliği. Uluslararası Enerji Ajansı’nın değerlendirmesine göre, enerji verimliliğinde yıllık yüzde 2’lik bir iyileşme, ithalat faturasında 10 yılda yaklaşık 35 milyar dolar tasarruf sağlayabilecektir. Sanayide enerji yönetim sistemlerinin yaygınlaştırılması ve enerji yoğun sektörlerde dönüşüm projelerine düşük faizli kredi imkânı sunulması gerekiyor.
  • İkincisi, yenilenebilir ve depolama yatırımları. Rüzgâr ve güneş enerjisinde kurulu gücün 2030’a kadar ikiye katlanması, batarya depolama ve hidrojen teknolojilerine yönelik yatırım ortamının iyileştirilmesi şart. Sadece üretim değil, üretimin sürekliliğini sağlayacak altyapı da öncelik olmalı.
  • Üçüncüsü, TL cinsinden enerji ticareti. Enerji ithalatında TL cinsinden uzun vadeli alım anlaşmalarının artırılması, kur riskini azaltacak ve cari açık üzerindeki baskıyı hafifletecektir. Rusya, Azerbaycan ve İran ile mevcut doğal gaz anlaşmalarının TL veya yerel para birimleriyle yeniden yapılandırılması değerlendirilmelidir.

Pasif Kurban mı, Aktif Oyuncu mu?

Asya’daki enerji krizi, Türkiye için kaçınılmaz bir dış şok. Ancak bunun nasıl yaşanacağı bir tercih meselesi.

Pasif bir yaklaşım, bu krizi enflasyon ve cari açık baskısı olarak deneyimlemek anlamına gelir. Aktif bir strateji ise Türkiye’yi enerji, teknoloji ve yatırım ekseninde bölgesel bir merkez haline getirebilir.

Türkiye’nin enerji altyapısında son dönemde kazandığı kapasite artışları, bu dönüşümü pasif bir dış şok olarak deneyimlemek yerine, bölgesel bir enerji ticaret merkezi ve stratejik yatırım destinasyonu haline gelme imkânı sağlıyor. Küresel sermaye akışındaki yön değişikliği de bu fırsatı destekliyor.

Dolayısıyla mesele enerji krizi değil; bu krize verilen stratejik cevaptır. Türkiye’nin önümüzdeki dönemde atacağı adımlar, yalnızca ekonomik performansı değil, küresel sistem içindeki konumunu da belirleyecek.

Drezner's World - The Strategic Defeat of the United States Congratulations, Trump administration, you played yourself -- and America. Daniel W. Drezner Apr 4, 2026

 The Strategic Defeat of the United States

Congratulations, Trump administration, you played yourself -- and America.

Daniel W. Drezner

Apr 4, 2026


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a couple of flags on a pole

Photo by Lee Lawson on Unsplash


To understand the strategic disaster that is unfolding in the Persian Gulf, let’s take a gander at the last two columns of one of the war’s initial optimists: New York Times columnist Bret Stephens.


A few weeks ago Stephens argued that the war was going better than the conventional wisdom suggested. Comparing this war with previous U.S. military interventions abroad, Stephens argued that the initial losses from Operation Epic Fury were rather light:


To hear the critics’ version of events, an unprovoked and unnecessary attack on Iran, launched at Israel’s behest, is already a foreign-policy fiasco that has put the global economy at risk without any clear objective or endgame. As Senator Chris Murphy, a Connecticut Democrat, told NBC’s Kristen Welker over the weekend, “We’ve never seen this level of incompetence in war-making in this country’s history.”


Really? Let’s take a tour of some of the recent history….


[Paragraphs recounting the initial material costs of U.S. interventions in the Middle East, including protecting tankers in the late 1980s and the previous two Gulf wars — all of which were undeniably higher than the current operation.]


If past generations could see how well this war has gone compared with the ones they were compelled to fight at a frightening cost, they would marvel at their posterity’s comparative good fortune. They would marvel, too, at our inability to appreciate the advantages we now possess.


Last week, however, Stephens was sounding a slightly different tune:


Getting some of [the war’s] opponents to see the point may be the intent behind Trump’s reported musing to his aides that he may be willing to end the war without using force to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The president “decided that the U.S. should achieve its main goals of hobbling Iran’s navy and its missile stocks and wind down current hostilities while pressuring Tehran diplomatically to resume the free flow of trade,” The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday. “If that fails, Washington would press allies in Europe and the Gulf to take the lead on reopening the strait.”


Maybe Trump is bluffing, to get more international support to open the strait. Or maybe (more likely) he’s flying by the seat of his pants. Either way, ending the war before retaking the strait would be a mistake for many reasons, even if it allowed the administration to wind down military operations in the next week or two.


Tehran would see it as victory and vindication, emboldening an otherwise fractured regime and making it less, not more, pliable in subsequent negotiations. The Saudis, Emiratis and other Gulf states would feel betrayed by a deal that forced them to bend the diplomatic knee to the Iranians after having been assaulted by them. The Europeans lack the means, the will and the nerve to challenge Iran if diplomacy failed — as it almost surely would. And the United States, despite being a net exporter of energy, would still feel the economic hit in a world in which the price of oil is essentially set globally.


When you’ve lost Bret Stephens….


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Furthermore, Stephens wrote this before Trump’s prime-time, low-energy address to the nation this past Thursday. Contra Stephens’ hopes, Trump reiterated the point that European and Asian allies should take the initiative in re-opening the Strait of Hormuz, using language that sounded awfully rape-y:


We’ve beaten and completely decimated Iran. They are decimated both militarily and economically and in every other way. And the countries of the world that do receive oil through the Hormuz Straight must take care of that passage. They must cherish it. They must grab it and cherish it. They could do it easily. We will be helpful, but they should take the lead in protecting the oil that they so desperately depend on.


So to those countries that can’t get fuel, many of which refuse to get involved in the decapitation of Iran — we had to do it ourselves — I have a suggestion. No. 1, buy oil from the United States of America. We have plenty. We have so much. And No. 2, build up some delayed courage. Should have done it before. Should have done it with us as we asked. Go to the straight and just take it, protect it, use it for yourselves. Iran has been essentially decimated. The hard part is done, so it should be easy.


And in any event, when this conflict is over, the strait will open up naturally. It’ll just open up naturally.


The NYT’s Helene Cooper aptly summarized that speech as, “a rehash of his Truth Social posts over the past month.” The market reaction to it was, how to put it, not good.


The hard-working staff here at Drezner’s World could go on and on and on and on about how ineptly this war was planned and how unpopular it is with the American people and how neither Trump nor his principals comprehend how any of this works.


But what really needs to be stressed at this point — a point that experts have been making since the first weeks of the war — is just how much of a strategic fiasco this has been and will be.


The New York Times’ Edward Wong recently looked at how the United States was doing in achieving Trump’s five articulated goals from February 28th:


Destroy Iran’s missile-industrial complex. “The U.S. and Israeli militaries have destroyed many of Iran’s ballistic missiles and launchers in airstrikes. But a large number are undamaged, and Iran continues to fire missiles in the region.” A follow-on NYT report says that U.S. intelligence has concluded, “Iranian operatives have been digging out underground missile bunkers and silos struck by American and Israeli bombs, returning them to operation hours after an attack.” So clearly, this goal has not been achieved yet.


Destroy Iran’s navy. “The two militaries have destroyed much of Iran’s navy.” Let’s stipulate this one, although it hasn’t stopped Iran from closing the Strait of Hormuz. But this goal, narrowly defined, has been achieved.


Sever Iran from its terror proxies: “Mr. Trump was referring here to militias in the region that receive financial support and other types of backing from Iran. The militias are still active.” Indeed, particularly the Houthis. This goal has not been achieved yet.


Ensure Iran does not obtain a nuclear weapon. “U.S. officials say they think some highly enriched uranium remains in tunnels buried under rubble. Sending ground troops into Iran to seize the material would be risky.” Sure, Trump no longer cares about the uranium, but this counts as a goal that has not been achieved yet.


Create the conditions for regime change. “The newly appointed supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of the deceased cleric, is a hard-liner aligned with a powerful arm of the Iranian military. The current government remains theocratic, authoritarian and anti-American, and continues to wage a war of resistance.” Beyond the fact that the Trump administration doesn’t understand the concept of "regime change,” this goal has not been achieved yet.


Look, call me crazy, but a military campaign against an adversary that has failed to achieve four out of five objectives does not seem like a successful operation.


If anything, however, this understates the depths of Trump’s strategic clusterfuck. Despite a lot of chatter about negotiations possibly taking place, the administration has eliminated any chance at a coercive bargaining strategy working, as the New York Times’ Wong and Julian Barnes reported earlier this week:


Multiple U.S. intelligence agencies have assessed in recent days that the Iranian government is not currently willing to engage in substantial negotiations over ending the U.S.-Israeli war, according to U.S. officials.


The assessments say the Iranian government believes it is in a strong position in the war and does not have to accede to America’s diplomatic demands, the officials said. And while Iran is willing to keep channels open, they said, it does not trust the United States and does not think President Trump is serious about negotiations….


The intelligence assessments, which appear in multiple reports, have been consistent since the beginning of the conflict, one official said.


Senior Iranian officials continue to resist making the kinds of concessions on its nuclear program and ballistic missile production that the Trump administration has demanded….


Iranian officials think they are fighting for the government’s very survival, given the strength of the American and Israeli attack, according to current and former officials. Some Iranian officials are skeptical that any peace deal would be lasting. Their leadership fears Israel could carry out a new attack months later even if Iran were to enter into a deal, U.S. officials said.


So where does this leave the Trump administration? Nowhere good. Trump can try to sell the idea that the current difficulties are just a short-term hitch and a prolonged war is worth fighting, but he’s poorly positioned to sell that narrative. Plus, the longer this fight drags out, the more he alienates NATO allies, including the United Kingdom. And as much as he doesn’t like it, such estrangement carries strategic costs.


Time’s Eric Cortellessa reports that “[Trump] is searching for a way to declare victory, halt the fighting, and hope that economic conditions stabilize before the political damage hardens.” Trump certainly wants to try that gambit — but this strategy isn’t likely to work either. Multiple reports that suggest Iran thinks it is winning the conflict. Even if Trump declares victory, Iran will continue to exert a chokehold over the Strait of Hormuz, pocketing a lot of resources to rebuild itself.


At best, Trump seems to have locked the United States into a regional version of Benjamin Netanyahu’s “mowing the grass” strategy with Hamas: periodically launching attacks whenever the antagonist builds up its capacities. But as the Financial Times’ Neri Zibler reports, this is not working out quite as Netanyahu had hoped:


After Hamas’s October 7 2023 attack, Benjamin Netanyahu vowed “total victory” in the conflict that followed. Yet more than two years later Israel’s enemies — while unquestionably weakened — are still standing.


Hamas and its gunmen still rule over the ruins of half of Gaza. Hizbollah, which Netanyahu said was “crushed” in 2024, fires a steady stream of rockets from Lebanon on northern Israel. And less than a year after he declared a “historic victory” against Iran, Israel and the US are back at war with the Islamic republic.


Rather than promise decisive triumph, the prime minister now speaks of the long arc of history, rising and falling threats, and changing the region’s “balance of power” — all as he prepares Israelis for a future in which dangers are constant and conflict open-ended….


For many Israeli analysts and former officials, Netanyahu’s inability or unwillingness to turn the IDF’s operational achievements into a strategic victory or an enduring diplomatic resolution is his ultimate failure.


“Using the word ‘doctrine’ to describe this is incredibly generous,” said a second former Israeli official. “Wherever there’s a problem he sends the military in, and there’s no doubt that more damage was done to our enemies than us, but that’s not the goal.”


“The view by the region is that while Israel is clearly strong, it can’t be trusted to be a positive and stabilising player . . . none of that diplomatic work is happening,” the former official said.


Why yes, this sounds rather familiar.


The longer this war drags on, the greater the costs for the United States. Absent a full-scale ground invasion, Iran can hold out. But Trump can’t simply declare victory and tap out either. Which means he is stuck trying to sell a strategic defeat as a tactical victory. But inconvenient facts mean that not even Republicans are buying that pitch.


Trump has lost this war. The only question now is how bigly he loses it.

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