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adrian_b 23 hours ago [-]
USA has a weird concept about the future as it were something already known, so they may declare now what will happen, even if the actual future depends on other agents.
From TFA:
> U.S. officials have said Iran agreed to reopen the Strait of Hormuz permanently without tolls, while Tehran said the agreement is to allow free passage for the next 60 days during another period of negotiations led by Vance.
> When asked about the confusion during a Monday appearance on CNBC, Vance said “Well, our expectation is that the strait is gonna be opened in a toll-free way for the long term, and that’s the sort of thing that we’re gonna figure out in these technical negotiations.”
adjejmxbdjdn 2 hours ago [-]
These are semantic games.
Iran has said the Strait will be open without tolls as well.
But they’ve said they will charge fees for “services they provide”, where the possible service they will provide is not shooting down any ship that pays them the “fee”.
mdp2021 1 days ago [-]
I would campaign that the deal be fulfilled with private money instead of public funds.
(Or, act to show - roots and consequences - that this should be the proper procedure.)
vintermann 1 days ago [-]
Don't worry, nothing this administration says to Iran means anything.
ciconia 1 days ago [-]
I got news for you: that private money - a big chunk of it comes from public funds.
mdp2021 1 days ago [-]
[flagged]
red-iron-pine 19 hours ago [-]
this is bait
mdp2021 1 hours ago [-]
As in? Check again
I have been complaining against this bad "culture" since the start.
fifilura 1 days ago [-]
> Can anybody for f.ing f. f. do something against the snipers who annoy and add nothing to the discussion?
I don't care about your comment but I downvoted you for the rude language.
mdp2021 1 hours ago [-]
And I don't care about the occasional "overwhelmed by the form" left tail of the curve,
but I do totally care about having here an environment that is _substantially_ civilized.
That implies that the discussion must be carried out with respect and effort - actual, factual respect. In that context, shallow dismissals include "hit and run" (downvote and do not substantiate unless perfectly evident), "sneer" (the same) etc.
--
Oh, incidentally:
> We are at staggeringly low levels of general civilization and ### even push it
there is a downfall of civilization in the "western" world at least, and you are focusing at the cursing. Look at it: it makes no sense. It is not even part of the accused phenomenon - whereas the shallowness of the relations is (downfall of the societal exchange).
erentz 1 days ago [-]
This would be an incredible $1,800 from each taxpayer sent overseas to the Iranian regime. On top of what’s already been spent and the inflation caused. In any other time in history just this alone (ignoring all the other scandals) would lead to something like a landslide 100 seat swing in the house. The fact polls show we’ll be lucky to see 10 seats switch shows how incredibly broken our information environment has become.
t0lo 1 days ago [-]
Sustained flooding the zone and abject denial over multiple years really is an unmatched cognitive warfare strategy isn't it. It's incredible how so many of us are tricked by something so primitive.
red-iron-pine 19 hours ago [-]
rubes gonna rube
jiwidi 1 days ago [-]
what, so you go and bomb them then now u pay them hahaha
mdp2021 43 minutes ago [-]
If you like those kind of "jokes", also note that
-- it does not seem that those who had to bear the collateral damages of the whole action (e.g. economic loss, diplomatic loss) will be paid;
-- there have been hints that some not involved in the action (hit by the retaliation) also paid (to appease the retaliator).
LtWorf 20 hours ago [-]
Loser has to pay reparations.
cosmicgadget 11 hours ago [-]
> “Well, our expectation is that the strait is gonna be opened in a toll-free way for the long term, and that’s the sort of thing that we’re gonna figure out in these technical negotiations... You know that there are a lot of very important details to figure out, that we’re actually gonna sit at the table and discuss together and figure out a path forward on these details.”
This is the kind of thing you say when the deal is ready to be signed Friday.
3eb7988a1663 1 days ago [-]
Surely such a deal would have to be approved by Congress, right? Would they really have the votes?
WarOnPrivacy 1 days ago [-]
> Surely such a deal would have to be approved by Congress, right?
That's the law. But Congress is abdicating much of it's power. The SCotUS defers to the WhiteHouse (ex:sides with the admin 90% of the time). The mechanisms that foster ethics in the 3 branches are being intentionally sabotaged by the majority in power.
joxdosba 1 days ago [-]
What is congress going to do? Say “never negotiate with the US”?
It’s not like congress can very feasibly reject this deal in the end, Iran would just extort the gulf countries and it’d be even harder to sell an intervention.
3eb7988a1663 1 days ago [-]
Iran has been bombed at least twice during negotiations. Surely there is some skepticism that the US will not keep the deal.
There is no winning move -which is why this never should have been started. Congress absolutely can and should reject the deal. I thought we were worried about the deficit? Or is that just when the next guy is in charge?
joxdosba 1 days ago [-]
If the congress rejects this deal, it cripples the US ability to negotiate in the future and essentially just forces an unconditional US surrender as nobody has appetite for a ground invasion of Iran.
Congress can only sabotage deals like this at an immense cost to the US’s future ability to negotiate anything with anyone, and it certainly can’t sabotage it’s way into a more favourable deal.
jusssi 1 days ago [-]
I think you're underestimating both the amount of damage Trump has already done for the future ability to negotiate, and the desire of everyone else to be not bombed by the US.
Everyone already knows, any deal with the US does not bind the US, only the other party. But it still might be preferrable to the alternative of no deal at all.
brewdad 1 days ago [-]
Congress will find a way to make sure this money is paid out in 2029. Then they will blame Democrats for the hole in the budget and our stupid electorate will believe them.
It’s been this way for almost my entire life and I’ll be collecting SS soon.
JumpCrisscross 23 hours ago [-]
> Say “never negotiate with the US”?
The way Tom Cotton did to Iran over Obama? And then Trump did when he tore up the JCPOA?
America has straight up broken treaties before. Most countries have. You negotiate with who you have at the table in geopolitics. Diplomats who refuse to negotiate with someone have short, useless careers.
nixon_why69 1 days ago [-]
The article says "funded by the gulf coast coalition" so it doesn't sound like they're planning on asking Congress.
No way congress passes that appropriation. They wouldn't pass the first JCPOA which is why Trump could shred it so easily.
joxdosba 1 days ago [-]
>No way congress passes that appropriation
No way congress passes an appropriation you just invented, which even the most optimistic Iranian propagandists are not claiming to be happening?
I mean yeah. Most random things you can come up with are likely to be things that congress will never pass.
nixon_why69 1 days ago [-]
Who invented? It's the headline of the article, attributed to Vance. Yes, there's been a lot of conflicting messaging about it.
joxdosba 1 days ago [-]
It’s the Trump admin signature big number that goes on all documents, not a reference to real money that exists or is genuinely expected to exist.
cosmicgadget 11 hours ago [-]
You're saying once the deal is signed the president will say "lol Iran, the gulf coalition doesn't exist, you get nothing"?
nixon_why69 1 days ago [-]
Sure, I'm just saying congress wouldn't fund that if asked.
joxdosba 1 days ago [-]
Of course they wouldn’t, the admin is claiming the seemingly non-existent ”gulf coast coalition” will fund it.
1 days ago [-]
bediger4000 1 days ago [-]
Why was it bad for Obama to release much less than this to assure the earlier joint agreement? We heard a lot about how bad that was. Pallets of cash they said, real bad.
newtonianrules 1 days ago [-]
Because Democrats are held to different standards. I mean just look at the last year.
marysol5 1 days ago [-]
And they also have no teeth, even now. They still play this "we must reach across the aisle" stuff.
And the worlds shortest memories. They literally re-hashed a conspiracy from 2008 at the fight....
Democrats can't even remember a Republican scandal from 2 weeks ago
enaaem 23 hours ago [-]
If they have to attack Obama by rehashing "Michelle is a man", then Obama must be an angel.
chadgpt3 22 hours ago [-]
But it works.
srean 1 days ago [-]
And when they come in power it's not that they will hold any one accountable -- looking at Obama's administration.
seanmcdirmid 1 days ago [-]
Trump has never felt any shame for hypocrisy. Or any shame at all actually.
pjc50 1 days ago [-]
Because that was done by Obama.
red-iron-pine 19 hours ago [-]
because Israel, the Saudis, and a few US billionaires didn't like it.
and now they do
lobito25 23 hours ago [-]
Destroy and rebuild, that's the whole point of war.
trolleski 22 hours ago [-]
For the 3567th time, I'll believe it when I see the fuel prices drop. Anything else is just the Yellow Dog and Jeffrey Dahmer Vance market manipulation talks.
> War reparations are compensation payments made after a war by one side to the other. They are intended to cover damage or injury inflicted during a war.
Another war lost by the USA, despite its infinite military supremacy. Weird.
One observation that comes to mind is that a lot of people in the world realize that the interests of the US and of Israel are not aligned, but American policy makers keep pretending they're one and the same. This was completely self-inflicted and it's not the first time. (The Iraq war cost what, trillions?) It's quite incredible.
jimmydoe 22 hours ago [-]
Please appreciate the peace and say thanks.
ekjhgkejhgk 18 hours ago [-]
I think nobody here can agree what part of that offended you.
thisislife2 22 hours ago [-]
There is no "$300 billion fund" or "peace treaty" - these are all "carrots" being dangled to entice Iran. What we know for sure:
1. An MoU has been signed by both sides extending the ceasefire for another 60 days.
2. US Naval blockade will be lifted. The US expects the Strait to be toll-free, while Iranians claim it will not charge anything only during the 60 days ceasefire period. Iran claims it does plan to introduce some "maritime service fees", along with Oman, for the usage of the Strait, in the future.
3. Trump claims Iran will have no weapon grade nuclear material and will hand over all its enriched nuclear material. Iran claims it has only agreed to dilute the existing stockpile of 60% enriched uranium to "civilian grade" levels. It will not hand it over to anyone. And while it will also retain its existing enrichment facilities there will no "0% enrichment" policy as the US administration demands. Iran however will restrict itself from enriching uranium for military use as per the NPT.
4. The agreement also demands that Israel will have to end all military operations in Lebanon too, and withdraw from all the Lebanese territories occupied by it so far. Israel has however said it will not withdraw from the territories it has captured. Iran says it is up to Trump and the US to bring Israel to heel and enforce the agreement.
5. "Denuclearisation" and complete cessation of hostilities in Lebanon is supposed to be further negotiated within this 60 days period. During this process, US has offered to lift some sanctions if progress is made on the nuclear "deal".
Personally, I wouldn't hold my breath for this ceasefire to last beyond 60 days. Netanyahu needs some war, some where to continue till elections in Israel are over. Peace in the Lebanon front upsets that. The US has made clear it wants the enriched nuclear pile removed. So Iran will have to deliberate on how much of all this nuclear negotiations can be trusted to not be an "intelligence gathering" exercise (to figure out where the stockpile is currently - dilution of the enriched pile will need on the ground inspection).
N_Lens 1 days ago [-]
It's surprising how this administration consistently keeps rolling 1s on a D20.
red-iron-pine 19 hours ago [-]
what's surprising is that people think 1) they give a shit, and 2) that they're not 100% manipulated by foreign influence.
Israel and Russia completely own MAGA. Every decision they make re: foreign policy looks like it is straight out of Foundations of Geopolitics or Netanyahu's fever dreams.
mdp2021 35 minutes ago [-]
The point may be beyond the surprise and towards actions towards accountability.
Edit: and more than that, towards the defense of alternative political and geopolitical models. (Actual examples redacted to keep a calmer water surface.) (Already 'alternative' seems so preposterous a term for the context - as if "rape" vs "invite to dinner" could be covered by the term.)
oliwarner 23 hours ago [-]
The lack of consequence and massive personal gains suggest the White House are hitting nat 20s.
The taxpayer and future generations are footing the bill. Trump and friends are rich forever.
tenuousemphasis 1 days ago [-]
Do they? Then where are the consequences?
krapp 23 hours ago [-]
We pay the consequences. I don't know why we decided the DM gets to play their chaotic stupid goblin rogue and wreck the entire campaign, but we did.
chadgpt3 22 hours ago [-]
It was because of racism.
tyleo 21 hours ago [-]
Comments like this are unhelpful for finding the truth. The world would be nice if things aligned on a clear good vs evil axis, “the other side is just evil of course!” but they don’t.
I know people on both sides of the political spectrum and there’s pain and confusion across society. Perhaps one side has more power in this moment and more harmful impact but making sweeping claims, "it’s all racism" is what makes a group feel unheard and angry.
tacomonstrous 18 hours ago [-]
This kind of comment might have been borderline reasonable before 2025 (though I would have found it laughable even then), but the evidence of the last 18 months shows that one side is in fact evil, corrupt and venal in entirely unprecedented ways.
chadgpt3 21 hours ago [-]
Stating the truth is unhelpful for finding it?
It is because of racism. People were told about the invasion coming over the border, and that Trump would stop it, and they voted for Trump.
AnimalMuppet 18 hours ago [-]
You can believe that the amount of immigration coming over the border (and contrary to the law) is causing harm and needs to be stopped, without that concern being based on the race of the people who are coming.
mindslight 16 hours ago [-]
Sure, you can. In the abstract, this is a perfectly reasonable position to hold. But if you're actually coming from a place of wanting rational policy responses, then you would have gotten off the Grump train years ago. Or at the very least (if immigration is really the one single issue you're concerned about), then as it became apparent that even the immigration narrative is performative kayfabe as well (many of the despotic "executive orders" are failing in court since there hasn't been legislative action on immigration. the straightforward conclusion is that the ultimate goal is for them to end up failing).
Having been skeptical of the racism explanation for quite some time, I've come around to it. Of course racism isn't the only thing that remains (there is also religious fundamentalism, spite, grift, etc), but it is a large chunk of what remains. I find the analogy of how communities destroyed their own public swimming pools as a response to desegregation an apt comparison.
From TFA:
> U.S. officials have said Iran agreed to reopen the Strait of Hormuz permanently without tolls, while Tehran said the agreement is to allow free passage for the next 60 days during another period of negotiations led by Vance.
> When asked about the confusion during a Monday appearance on CNBC, Vance said “Well, our expectation is that the strait is gonna be opened in a toll-free way for the long term, and that’s the sort of thing that we’re gonna figure out in these technical negotiations.”
Iran has said the Strait will be open without tolls as well.
But they’ve said they will charge fees for “services they provide”, where the possible service they will provide is not shooting down any ship that pays them the “fee”.
(Or, act to show - roots and consequences - that this should be the proper procedure.)
I have been complaining against this bad "culture" since the start.
I don't care about your comment but I downvoted you for the rude language.
but I do totally care about having here an environment that is _substantially_ civilized.
That implies that the discussion must be carried out with respect and effort - actual, factual respect. In that context, shallow dismissals include "hit and run" (downvote and do not substantiate unless perfectly evident), "sneer" (the same) etc.
--
Oh, incidentally:
> We are at staggeringly low levels of general civilization and ### even push it
there is a downfall of civilization in the "western" world at least, and you are focusing at the cursing. Look at it: it makes no sense. It is not even part of the accused phenomenon - whereas the shallowness of the relations is (downfall of the societal exchange).
-- it does not seem that those who had to bear the collateral damages of the whole action (e.g. economic loss, diplomatic loss) will be paid;
-- there have been hints that some not involved in the action (hit by the retaliation) also paid (to appease the retaliator).
This is the kind of thing you say when the deal is ready to be signed Friday.
That's the law. But Congress is abdicating much of it's power. The SCotUS defers to the WhiteHouse (ex:sides with the admin 90% of the time). The mechanisms that foster ethics in the 3 branches are being intentionally sabotaged by the majority in power.
It’s not like congress can very feasibly reject this deal in the end, Iran would just extort the gulf countries and it’d be even harder to sell an intervention.
There is no winning move -which is why this never should have been started. Congress absolutely can and should reject the deal. I thought we were worried about the deficit? Or is that just when the next guy is in charge?
Congress can only sabotage deals like this at an immense cost to the US’s future ability to negotiate anything with anyone, and it certainly can’t sabotage it’s way into a more favourable deal.
Everyone already knows, any deal with the US does not bind the US, only the other party. But it still might be preferrable to the alternative of no deal at all.
It’s been this way for almost my entire life and I’ll be collecting SS soon.
The way Tom Cotton did to Iran over Obama? And then Trump did when he tore up the JCPOA?
America has straight up broken treaties before. Most countries have. You negotiate with who you have at the table in geopolitics. Diplomats who refuse to negotiate with someone have short, useless careers.
No way congress passes that appropriation. They wouldn't pass the first JCPOA which is why Trump could shred it so easily.
No way congress passes an appropriation you just invented, which even the most optimistic Iranian propagandists are not claiming to be happening?
I mean yeah. Most random things you can come up with are likely to be things that congress will never pass.
And the worlds shortest memories. They literally re-hashed a conspiracy from 2008 at the fight....
Democrats can't even remember a Republican scandal from 2 weeks ago
and now they do
Literal reparations:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_reparations
> War reparations are compensation payments made after a war by one side to the other. They are intended to cover damage or injury inflicted during a war.
Another war lost by the USA, despite its infinite military supremacy. Weird.
One observation that comes to mind is that a lot of people in the world realize that the interests of the US and of Israel are not aligned, but American policy makers keep pretending they're one and the same. This was completely self-inflicted and it's not the first time. (The Iraq war cost what, trillions?) It's quite incredible.
1. An MoU has been signed by both sides extending the ceasefire for another 60 days.
2. US Naval blockade will be lifted. The US expects the Strait to be toll-free, while Iranians claim it will not charge anything only during the 60 days ceasefire period. Iran claims it does plan to introduce some "maritime service fees", along with Oman, for the usage of the Strait, in the future.
3. Trump claims Iran will have no weapon grade nuclear material and will hand over all its enriched nuclear material. Iran claims it has only agreed to dilute the existing stockpile of 60% enriched uranium to "civilian grade" levels. It will not hand it over to anyone. And while it will also retain its existing enrichment facilities there will no "0% enrichment" policy as the US administration demands. Iran however will restrict itself from enriching uranium for military use as per the NPT.
4. The agreement also demands that Israel will have to end all military operations in Lebanon too, and withdraw from all the Lebanese territories occupied by it so far. Israel has however said it will not withdraw from the territories it has captured. Iran says it is up to Trump and the US to bring Israel to heel and enforce the agreement.
5. "Denuclearisation" and complete cessation of hostilities in Lebanon is supposed to be further negotiated within this 60 days period. During this process, US has offered to lift some sanctions if progress is made on the nuclear "deal".
- MoU reached. Peace? Not sure. - https://www.tehrantimes.com/news/527364/MoU-reached-Peace-No...
- Iran and US agree peace deal roadmap: What is and isn’t known - https://www.rt.com/news/641641-iran-us-peace-deal/
- Scoop: CIA director doubts Iran's intentions on deal, sources say - https://www.axios.com/2026/06/15/us-iran-deal-cia-director-r...
Personally, I wouldn't hold my breath for this ceasefire to last beyond 60 days. Netanyahu needs some war, some where to continue till elections in Israel are over. Peace in the Lebanon front upsets that. The US has made clear it wants the enriched nuclear pile removed. So Iran will have to deliberate on how much of all this nuclear negotiations can be trusted to not be an "intelligence gathering" exercise (to figure out where the stockpile is currently - dilution of the enriched pile will need on the ground inspection).
Israel and Russia completely own MAGA. Every decision they make re: foreign policy looks like it is straight out of Foundations of Geopolitics or Netanyahu's fever dreams.
Edit: and more than that, towards the defense of alternative political and geopolitical models. (Actual examples redacted to keep a calmer water surface.) (Already 'alternative' seems so preposterous a term for the context - as if "rape" vs "invite to dinner" could be covered by the term.)
The taxpayer and future generations are footing the bill. Trump and friends are rich forever.
I know people on both sides of the political spectrum and there’s pain and confusion across society. Perhaps one side has more power in this moment and more harmful impact but making sweeping claims, "it’s all racism" is what makes a group feel unheard and angry.
It is because of racism. People were told about the invasion coming over the border, and that Trump would stop it, and they voted for Trump.
Having been skeptical of the racism explanation for quite some time, I've come around to it. Of course racism isn't the only thing that remains (there is also religious fundamentalism, spite, grift, etc), but it is a large chunk of what remains. I find the analogy of how communities destroyed their own public swimming pools as a response to desegregation an apt comparison.