Thursday, June 18, 2026

FP - Argument - An expert’s point of view --. Everyone Lost the War With Iran Months of fighting revealed that multiple countries can impose costs, but none can impose order.

 FP - Argument

An expert’s point of view on a current event.

Everyone Lost the War With Iran

Months of fighting revealed that multiple countries can impose costs, but none can impose order.

By , chief of staff of the Geopolitics and Foreign 
Policy Department and a senior fellow in the Middle East Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Mourners attend the funeral of those killed in the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, in Qom, Iran.
Mourners attend the funeral of those killed in the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, in Qom, Iran.
Mourners attend the funeral of those killed in the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, in Qom, Iran, on March 5. MEHDI ALAVI / ISNA / AFP via Getty Images


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With the announcement of a framework deal to end the war in Iran, the conventional wisdom taking hold is that the United States and Israel lost.

From this perspective, the tactical and operational successes that the U.S. and Israeli militaries achieved masked a deeper strategic defeat, with neither securing the political objectives cited to justify the war in the first place. The Iranian regime survived and emerged more hard-line, and it discovered a new, powerful negotiating chip in closing the Strait of Hormuz. The United States once again became embroiled in a costly Middle East conflict that damaged its credibility with partners, weakened deterrence with adversaries, and reduced readiness in the Indo-Pacific. Meanwhile, Israel’s efforts to advance normalization with Saudi Arabia and other Arab Gulf states appear to have been further set back, and Israel has failed to eliminate the Iranian threat in the postwar regional order.


But focusing on U.S. and Israeli losses misses the fact that almost everyone involved lost. Ultimately, the war has left every major actor further from their preferred strategic end state. The war did not produce a clear victor or a more stable regional order. Instead, it accelerated fragmentation, deepened insecurity, and imposed costs on every key regional and global power involved, including Iran, the Arab Gulf states, Russia, and China. The war demonstrated that no state will be able to navigate the new era of global disorder unscathed.


Iran may have avoided regime collapse, but it did so in a way that narrowed its future options. Survival came at the cost of a weakened standing with allies, a more unstable deterrence environment, economic devastation, and fewer pathways to national recovery. Neither China nor Russia was willing to shield Iran from U.S. and Israeli attacks, demonstrating that these relationships are transactional, not true alliances. After the war, Iran will need to rely more heavily on its partners, but from a position of greater weakness and reduced leverage.


The economic costs for Iran could prove existential. The war accelerated the collapse of the rial, fueled inflation, and damaged key industrial infrastructure, including steel plants, shipyards, and power infrastructure. If current estimates of more than 1 million job losses during the conflict prove accurate, the conflict may become one of the most economically destabilizing episodes in the Islamic Republic’s history. As the Iranian regime emerges from war, it will be forced to choose between prioritizing the rebuilding of its military capabilities and addressing the deep economic crises its people face.

The Iranian regime is not more secure, either. The war appears to have consolidated power among Iran’s military-security elite, strengthening regime control in the short term. But systems dominated by security institutions often become less capable of managing public discontent, economic reform, and political adaptation over time. Thus, Iran may emerge from the war more securitized, but also more fragile.


The war also realized some of Arab Gulf states’ greatest fears. Gulf leaders opposed a major war with Iran precisely because they understood they would be unable to control escalation dynamics while still bearing many of the consequences. Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz revealed geography to be a fundamental vulnerability at the center of Gulf economic models. Gulf states have spent decades attempting to reposition themselves as global hubs for finance, logistics, tourism, and technology—and more recently, as a central node for global AI infrastructure. However, the war shattered their image as an oasis of stability in a troubled region and revealed their continued vulnerability to Iranian attacks. While the war has reinforced the need for these countries to accelerate their diversification away from hydrocarbon revenues, it also challenges their visions for doing so.


What’s more, the conflict has deepened a trust deficit between the Gulf states and the United States. The war reinforced the limits of the U.S. security umbrella and heightened the Gulf’s frustration that Washington did not sufficiently prioritize its security concerns. Arab Gulf states have long understood that the United States can help deter and punish Iran, but the war underscored that Washington cannot shield their economies and infrastructure from the consequences of confrontation with Tehran. Now, they must divert resources away from their economic diversification agendas while also working to invest in their own defensive capabilities.


Russia’s position is more complicated than it initially appeared. Moscow benefited from a short-term boost in oil prices and limited sanctions relief. But the war also accelerated trends that undermine Russian influence in the Middle East. Russian air defenses in Iran proved ineffective in the face of U.S. and Israeli attacks. Meanwhile, Ukraine used the conflict to demonstrate its status at the forefront of modern warfare. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky signed partnerships with key Gulf states and Syria on drone defense, further constraining Russia’s strategic position in the Middle East. The war has also challenged Russia’s ability to balance its ties between Iran and Arab Gulf states. Russia’s support for Iran has infuriated Gulf Arab states, particularly its decision to veto an April 7 U.N. Security Council resolution aiming to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The war also revealed the limits of Russia’s diplomatic leverage, as Moscow failed to play a significant role in shaping the outcome of the conflict. Therefore, Russia’s short-term economic gains mask the progressive shrinking of its strategic positioning in the region.

China’s short-term gains similarly veil longer-term challenges. Beijing has benefited from appearing more stable and restrained than the United States during the conflict. The conflict also undermined U.S. readiness in the Indo-Pacific due to the scale of munitions it has burned through in Iran, bolstering China’s relative position. Yet China suffered important setbacks. The conflict has jeopardized billions of dollars of Chinese investments in Iran as part of its Belt and Road Initiative. It has also strained China’s relationships with Arab Gulf states. Beijing did not convince Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and joined Russia in vetoing the U.N. Security Council resolution on the strait. This exposed the limits of Chinese leverage over Tehran and prompted fury among Arab Gulf leaders, who felt China was unwilling or unable to protect their economic interests, defend its own investments, or act to preserve broader regional economic stability.


More broadly, the war threatens China’s future economic interests. China has been one of the greatest beneficiaries of the relative predictability of the global economic system, even as it has sought to revise parts of that order. The war opened a dangerous Pandora’s box that threatens those interests. The weaponization of strategic choke points, attacks on critical civilian infrastructure, and normalization of economic coercion all create precedents that could ultimately harm China as much as, if not more than, its rivals.


The lesson of the war with Iran is that even the most powerful states are unable to convert military advantage into political control in the emerging geopolitical environment in the Middle East. The Iran war did not reorder the Middle East around a new balance of power. Instead, it exposed a region in which every actor can impose costs, but none can impose order.

This post is part of FP’s ongoing coverage. Read more here.

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Will Todman is chief of staff of the Geopolitics and Foreign Policy Department and a senior fellow in the Middle East Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Cumhuriyet - 17 Haziran 2026 Kulislerde 'yok artık' senaryosu: 'İmamoğlu başbakan olacak ama tek şart...' Seçilmiş İBB Başkanı ve tutuklu cumhurbaşkanı adayı Ekrem İmamoğlu’nun yargılaması sürerken, CHP’ye ‘mutlak butlan’ kararıyla atanan yeni yönetimle beraber yaşanan kriz de devam ediyor. Tüm bunlarla birlikte kulislerde konuşulan ‘yok artık senaryosu’ kaleme alındı. İşte ayrıntılar… 17.06.2026 20:42:00 Güncellenme: 17.06.2026 20:42:36 Haber Merkezi

 Cumhuriyet  - 17 Haziran 2026 

Kulislerde 'yok artık' senaryosu: 'İmamoğlu başbakan olacak ama tek şart...'

17.06.2026 20:42:00
Güncellenme:
Kulislerde 'yok artık' senaryosu: 'İmamoğlu başbakan olacak ama tek şart...'

Gazeteci Nuray Babacan bugünkü yazısında, Ankara kulislerinde konuşulan ‘yok artık senaryosunu’ kaleme aldı. 

Buna göre, ‘yumuşak geçiş’ diye anlatılan ve ‘güçlendirilmiş parlamenter sisteme’ dönüşün yeni versiyonu şu şekilde:

“Öncelikle şunu söylemek gerekir. Ortada dolaşan siyasi senaryoların hepsi, ne yapılırsa yapılsın Özgür Özel ve ekibinin gücünü yok sayamıyor. Bu ekibi daha da zora sokmak için planlar yapılması da bu gücü kabul ettikleri anlamına geliyor.

Bir yanda cumhurbaşkanı danışmanı kendilerine en uygun tarihte erkene alınmış seçim formülü açıklıyor. Kimi AKP’liler, Erdoğan’dan sonrasına hazırlık yapıp, ‘partinin başına aileden kim geçsin’ yarışında. Muhalefet partilerin liderleri, olası bir erken seçim veya Anayasa değişikliği için turlar atıyor.

Bu toz duman arasında, kimine göre uçuk, kimine göre yumuşak geçiş olarak adlandırılan yeni senaryo, bu Meclis’in Anayasa’yı değiştirerek güçlendirilmiş parlamenter sisteme dönülmesi yönünde. Ancak, oldukça farklı şartlarda!

Gelecek Partisi Milletvekili Kani Torun’un meclis kürsüsünden ana hatlarını söylediği önerinin izini sürdük. Öğrendik ki; iktidar partisi dahil dirsek teması yapılmış. Yetkili-yetkisiz siyasilerle analiz edilmiş. Şöyle ki:

Önce tarihi bir uzlaşmayla, bu dönem Anayasa değişikliği yapılarak güçlendirilmiş parlamenter sisteme geçiyor.

Tayyip Erdoğan’ın bir dönem yetkisiz-sembolik cumhurbaşkanı olmasına izin veriliyor. Önemli kısmı bu.

Anayasa değişikliği aşamasında Ekrem İmamoğlu ve ekibi, Selahattin Demirtaş ve diğer siyasi suçluların serbest bırakılması eş zamanlı sağlanıyor.

Seçimde tek başına iktidar olma şansı yüksek ekip olan İmamoğlu-Özel ikilisinin partisi (CHP’de ya da değil) iktidar oluyor.

Bu iddianın sahipleri, bugün tüm operasyonlara rağmen yüzde 30’un altına düşmeyen bu ekibin seçimlerde yüzde 45’i tek başına aşacağını savunuyor.

İmamoğlu, diploma sorunu olmayacağı için başbakan olabiliyor.

Bu zor denkleme ‘yumuşak geçiş’ diyenler, Erdoğan’a onurlu bir veda sağlanacağını iddia ediyor.

Bu durumda Erdoğan, ailesi ve yakın çevresi koruma altına alınıyor.

25 yıl boyunca yapılan yolsuzluklar ve haksızlıkların hesabı Erdoğan ailesi korunarak soruluyor!

Bu senaryoyu savunanlar, devri sabık yaratırken yıkıcı olunmaması gerektiğini iddia ediyor.

Tahmin edersiniz ki; bunun savunan isimler muhafazakar mahalleye daha yakın. Bir nevi muhafazakarları az hasarla kurtarma planı da denebilir!

Bu senaryoda, Erdoğan partisinin başına istediği ismi geçiriyor.

Selahattin Demirtaş DEM’in başına geçiyor ve Türkiye partisine dönüşmesinin altyapısını oluşturuyor.

Senaryo böyle uzayıp gidiyor. Çok bileşenli, imkansız gibi görünen bu planı dillendirenler, Türkiye’de barışın ve demokrasinin yumuşak geçişle yeniden tesis edilmesinin yolu olarak tartışıyorlar.

Hikayenin en eksik ayağı, MHP’nin böyle bir plana ne diyeceği. Çünkü o ekibin tercih etmeyeceği, zaten o ekipten kimseyle de konuşulmadığı anlatılıyor.

Bütün bunları, rakiplerini acımasızca yok etmeye çalışanların sonucu değiştiremediklerini gördüklerine mi yormak gerekir?

Ama siyasette olmaz olmaz! Bilin istedim…”

FP - Analysis -- What We Do and Don’t Know About the U.S.-Iran Peace Deal - Key issues, like Iran’s nuclear program, remain unresolved.- By John Haltiwanger, a staff writer at Foreign Policy.

FP -  Analysis

What We Do and Don’t Know About the U.S.-Iran Peace Deal

Key issues, like Iran’s nuclear program, remain unresolved.

By , a staff writer at Foreign Policy.
U.S. President Donald Trump is seen talking while sitting near a United States flag.
U.S. President Donald Trump is seen talking while sitting near a United States flag.
U.S. President Donald Trump at Hôtel Royal in Évian-les-Bains, France, on June 15. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

The United States and Iran on Sunday announced that they’ve agreed to a preliminary deal to end the monthslong war that has killed thousands and wreaked havoc on the global economy. It marks a positive step forward in a peace process that’s been stalled for weeks, but many details remain unknown, as the text of the agreement has not been released. The two sides are expected to hold a signing ceremony for the deal on Friday.

Here’s more on what we know and don’t know about the interim deal, which has been described by Iran as a memorandum of understanding, and what could happen next.

A path to more talks. The agreement provides a framework for ending the war and is primarily designed to halt military operations, prolong the existing truce, and end the stalemate over the Strait of Hormuz. Reopening the strategic waterway in particular is a key goal for U.S. President Donald Trump, who has faced growing domestic criticism over high gas prices and other economic impacts caused by the war.

The agreement is believed to extend the cease-fire between Washington and Tehran for 60 days, during which nuclear talks are expected to occur. In the meantime, the Strait of Hormuz is supposed to be opened and the U.S. blockade on Iranian ports ended—providing major relief to energy markets and Iran’s economy. Fighting between Hezbollah and Israel in Lebanon is also supposed to end as part of the deal (more on that below).

The deal, which was mostly mediated by Pakistan and Qatar, is set to be formally signed by the United States and Iran in Geneva, Switzerland, on Friday, and the 60-day clock will start ticking at that time. The Trump administration on Monday said that both sides had signed the deal electronically on Sunday, but that an official signing ceremony would still take place on June 19.

“With the agreement now in place, mediators will facilitate a series of meetings this week. These pre-implementation discussions will lay the foundation for the technical talks and the official signing ceremony,” Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Sunday in a post on X.

What the United States has said. In a post on Truth Social, Trump wrote: “The Deal with the Islamic Republic of Iran is now complete. Congratulations to all! I hereby fully authorize the toll free opening of the Strait of Hormuz, and, simultaneously herewith, authorize the immediate removal of the United States Naval blockade. Ships of the World, start your engines. Let the oil flow!”

In a subsequent post, Trump said the strait would not be opened until after the deal is signed, and he indicated that time would be needed for “purposes of mine removal.” But it’s not entirely clear how and when the U.S. blockade will be lifted, despite Trump’s announcement. There are also open questions over Trump’s assertion that the strait will be opened “toll free.” Iranian state media has suggested that Tehran will seek to benefit financially from commercial shipping through the strait after the 60-day negotiation period.

When asked about this on Monday, U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance told CNBC that the administration’s “expectation is that the strait is going to be opened in a toll-free way for the long term. And that’s the sort of thing that we’re going to figure out in these technical negotiations.”

In a separate interview with CBS Mornings, Vance also indicated that Iran could gain access to a $300 billion reconstruction fund, funded by countries in the Gulf, “so long as they [the Iranians] honor their end of the obligation.”

The lack of clarity on such details is indicative of the myriad potential hurdles that the process faces moving forward. Talks on Iran’s nuclear program in particular, which will cover issues such as its stockpile of highly enriched uranium and future enrichment, are poised to be extremely contentious and will likely stand as among the biggest challenges to a broader agreement.

Though Trump has celebrated the interim deal, he also told the New York Times in an interview on Sunday that the United States could resume military attacks on Iran, among other possible steps, if there’s not ultimately a final nuclear agreement.

What Iran has said. Kazem Gharibabadi, Iran’s deputy foreign minister, also confirmed the deal on Sunday and framed it as a victory for Tehran.

Iran’s Supreme National Security Council in a statement said that “final negotiations will be postponed until after the implementation of the other party’s commitments under the memorandum.” But the United States and Iran appear to disagree over the nature of those commitments.

While Iranian officials have suggested that the next stage of negotiations will only begin after the United States releases frozen assets, the Trump administration has maintained it will only take such steps in response to progress on the nuclear front.

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, an Iran hawk who is one of Trump’s top allies in Congress, took to X on Sunday to express concerns about the daylight between Washington and Tehran over aspects of the agreement. “I will be watching closely the ensuing negotiations regarding Iran’s nuclear program and other matters,” Graham said. “I am somewhat concerned that Iran’s view of the agreement seems different than what the American negotiating team is claiming.” Graham also suggested that, under U.S. law, any nuclear deal with Iran will be sent to Congress “for review and a vote.”

The Israel factor. Israel could also throw a wrench in the proceedings. The Israeli government is not a party to the new peace agreement, and top officials have already spoken out against it. “Trump’s agreement does not bind us. Israel is not subject to the United States, and we are an independent and sovereign nation,” Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir said in a statement. “My position is clear: We are not partners to this agreement that does not safeguard our security.”

Israel’s war against Hezbollah, the Iran-backed militant group in Lebanon, appears likely to cause serious problems for negotiators moving forward. The Trump administration has sought to portray that conflict as separate from the war with Iran, but the two are fundamentally linked.

Pakistan and Iran have stated that Lebanon is part of the agreement—and Tehran has continuously insisted that a deal is contingent on a cessation of hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah. But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who faces an uncertain political future with a national election on the horizon, is under domestic pressure to continue taking the fight to Hezbollah.

The Israeli military conducted strikes in Beirut on Sunday that the Trump administration feared could upend peace talks. Trump in a Truth Social post said the Israeli attack “should not have happened, particularly on a special day when we are so close to a Peace Deal with Iran.”

“After the Israelis struck Beirut, we were very worried,” Vance told Fox News on Sunday. “We saw a lot of evidence that the Iranians were going to launch a large number of missiles at the Israelis.” While Iran ultimately held off—reportedly doing so at Trump’s urging—Israel has signaled that it’s not backing down in Lebanon. Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz on Monday said that the Israeli military will remain in southern Lebanon, and he warned that Israel would retaliate to any Iranian attacks.

In a sign of the White House’s rising consternation over Israel’s operations in Lebanon, Trump on Sunday told the Times that Netanyahu is a “difficult guy” who should be “very thankful to us for doing this,” because if Iran had a nuclear weapon, then “Israel wouldn’t be around for two hours.”

This post is part of FP’s ongoing coverage. Read more here.