documentaires

 Trump et Netanyahou se rencontrent à nouveau

 Trump et Netanyahou affichent un front uni face à l'Iran et au Hamas

 Iran : le président Massoud Pezeshkian dénonce une « guerre totale » menée par l'Occident contre son pays

 L'Iran sur le pied de guerre : Trump menace d'intervenir pour «soutenir les émeutiers». Téhéran menace les intérêts américains et célèbre le «Conquérant de Khaybar»

 Une nouvelle guerre américano-israélienne contre l'Iran embrasera toute la région (secrétaire général du Hezbollah)

 Au bord de l'embrasement, le Moyen-Orient s'active pour freiner le face-à-face Washington-Téhéran

 Les pourparlers irano-américains à Oman portent exclusivement sur la question nucléaire

 Les États-Unis imposent de nouvelles sanctions contre l'Iran immédiatement après les négociations à Oman

 L'Iran privilégie la diplomatie tout en se tenant prêt à toute agression (ministre des A.e.)

 Une solution mutuellement avantageuse au dossier nucléaire iranien reste possible (Araghchi)

 Israël et les États-Unis lancent des frappes contre l'Iran

 Les forces armées iraniennes lancent une vaste riposte contre Israël et des bases américaines au Moyen-Orient

 La défense aérienne américano-israélienne en échec

 Pourquoi l'Iran a déjà gagné la guerre ?

 Iran: Larijani rejette les menaces de Trump concernant le détroit d'Hormuz

 Tensions au détroit d'Ormuz : Washington presse ses alliés de déployer des navires de guerre

 L'Otan a commis une « erreur stupide » en ne soutenant pas le Pentagone : Trump

 Douglas Macgregor : la guerre contre l'Iran a ruiné l'Otan, le Golfe, Israël et l'empire américain

 Trente-deux jours qui ont déplacé le centre du monde

 L'Iran fait ses propositions pour mettre fin à la guerre

 L'Iran proclame une « victoire historique » sur les Usa; l'ennemi contraint d'accepter sa proposition

 Israël accélère ses massacres au Liban et à Gaza

 Les bombardements massifs d'Israël au Liban font des centaines de morts et blessés rien qu'à Beyrouth

 Furieux de la violation du cessez-le-feu par Israël, l'Iran a de nouveau fermé Ormuz

 Le Liban fait partie de l'accord de trêve irano-américain, affirme l'ambassadeur du Pakistan à Washington

 Refus frontal du Hezbollah : Naïm Qassem rejette les négociations avec Israël

 Un cessez le feu au Liban : à l'israélienne ?

 Liban : la résistance est à nouveau pleinement opérationnelle (vidéos)

 Semaine sanglante au Liban : Israël bombarde tout le Sud

 « Nous allons intensifier les coups » : Israël annonce une escalade face au Hezbollah

 L'Iran répond aux attaques israéliennes sur le Liban

 Enième escalade en Iran : Washington prétend riposter

 Iran-États-Unis : un « texte final » d'accord de paix trouvé, selon le Premier ministre pakistanais

 Liban : la nouvelle attaque meurtrière d'Israël contre Beyrouth sape le dialogue irano-américain

 Le vice-ministre iranien des Affaires étrangères annonce la finalisation du mémorandum d'entente avec les États-Unis, qui sera signé à Genève vendredi.

16/06/2026 lewrockwell.com  5min 🇬🇧 #317212

 Le vice-ministre iranien des Affaires étrangères annonce la finalisation du mémorandum d'entente avec les États-Unis, qui sera signé à Genève vendredi.

Who Won the Third Gulf War ?

By Andrew Korybko
 Andrew Korybko's Newsletter  

June 16, 2026

Iran is poised to gradually return to the US-led Western order within certain limits exactly as Iran's moderate faction has long wanted, its hardline faction has successfully preserved the armed forces and their missile stockpile, while Israel achieved none of its goals in its most epic defeat ever.

Iran and the US plan to sign a  Zarif-inspired memorandum of understanding (MoU) on ending the Third Gulf War this Friday in Switzerland. The exact details aren't yet known, and  Fortune reported that there were at least three competing texts, but all of them "include similar elements around reopening the vital Strait of Hormuz waterway, giving Iran sanctions relief and opening the door to longer-term negotiations around its nuclear program." That's already enough to arrive at several very important conclusions.

For starters, reopening the strait without Iran's wartime  petroyuan toll booth in place would represent a significant concession by the Islamic Republic, whose media surrogates  celebrated this model as an historic multipolar milestone. The same goes for resuming negotiations on its politically sensitive nuclear program. The sanctions relief in exchange might arguably be worth it, however, judging by this estimate  here of the profound economic-financial damage caused by the US' (imperfect) blockade.

On that topic, it was explained  here in late March that "The US will have lost the Third Gulf War if China can still rely on Iran as a reliable low-cost energy supplier while turning the yuan into a global reserve currency that challenges the petrodollar", so preventing both is imperative from the US' perspective. With the petroyuan reportedly out of the picture, that leaves Iran's oil export dependence on China, but sanctions relief could help gradually redirect its sales ( such as to India) without disrupting the market.

Likewise, if  reports about a $300 billion reconstruction fund for Iran are true (even if the final sum is much lower but still tens of billions of dollars), then US and Gulf investments in Iran's energy industry could lead to them controlling its exports. It was assessed in January that " The US Wants To Replicate The Venezuelan Model In Iran", which would be on the path to implementation in that scenario. The resultant interdependence could  advance collective security and  facilitate the US' regional withdrawal.

Iran's moderate ("reformist") and hardline ("principalist") factions would therefore achieve some of their goals, the first with respect to sanctions relief and the second with regards to preserving the country's (arguably battered) armed forces as well as their missile stockpile, not to mention their political system. Nevertheless, the factional balance would have shifted in the moderate's favor since the US wouldn't sign a MoU if the moderates couldn't control "rogue" hardliners, who could potentially rekindle the war.

It can therefore be concluded that the moderates beat the hardliners in Iran's deep state power struggle, but this was due to the US and Israel killing dozens of top hardline figures, after which their respective institutions (especially the IRGC) were weakened and ultimately tamed by the moderates. To be sure, "rogue" hardliners - regardless of their relationship to the IRGC - could still sabotage the MoU, but Trump 2.0 feels comfortable enough that they won't otherwise it wouldn't go through with the signing.

A new regional era is emerging whereby the Third Gulf War might very well lead to Iran's gradual reincorporation into the US-led Western order, albeit within limits, which lays the groundwork for better ties with its Gulf neighbors. In that scenario, Israel would stand to lose since it could no longer divide-and-rule Iran and the Gulf,  nor would the US have its back if Israel resumes hostilities with Iran due to the recent revival of the  possibly irreconcilable Trump-Bibi rift. Israel is therefore the war's  biggest  loser.

This article was originally published on  Andrew Korybko's Newsletter.

 lewrockwell.com