one person's opinion...good take on Europe's behavior so far.
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/gordon-sondland-stay-course-iran-president-trump-breaking-horseGetting Iran to capitulate is like breaking a wild horse. Anyone who's done it or even watched it done knows how this goes. Calm one minute, violent the next. You get a step forward, then you lose half of it back. The horse is testing you your patience, your resolve, your willingness to stay in the saddle when it tries to throw you.
That's Iran.
And here's the part the foreign policy commentariat still doesn't get:
Donald Trump actually understands this dynamic.
Not from theory. From instinct.
Iran is not a normal negotiating partner. It's not even a unified one. Power is fragmented across clerics, politicians, intelligence services and, most importantly,
the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps a state within a state that answers to ideology, money and survival.
And inside that system are hard-liners who don't want a deal period. These are people who would rather burn down the house than give up their
nuclear potential, their offshore wealth and their grip on power. For them, compromise isn't a concession. It's extinction.
So when I hear the usual noise why the mixed signals, why the tough talk one day and restraint the next I have to laugh. That critique assumes we're dealing with rational, Western-style negotiators who respond to consistency and good-faith process.
We're not.
We're dealing with a regime that has spent 45 years perfecting delay, deception and division. Show them a straight line and they'll run circles around it. Telegraph your endgame and they'll stall you to death.
What Trump is doing whether people like his style or not is exactly what this situation demands: pressure, pause, pressure again. Open a door, then make it very clear what happens if they try to game it. Keep them off balance. Keep them guessing.
That's not chaos. That's leverage.
And here's where the leverage really comes from and it's something most analysts either miss or are too uncomfortable to say out loud.
The leverage is the
overwhelming military capability that's been assembled and the very clear willingness to use it if the horse needs a severe correction.
Not as bluster. Not as background noise. As a credible, ever-present option.
Tehran understands that when push comes to shove, this isn't an academic exercise. The same apparatus that can impose sanctions can also impose consequences rapidly and decisively against leadership targets, command structures and critical infrastructure if the regime crosses the line or continues to play rope-a-dope.
That reality changes behavior.
It forces calculations inside a regime that has historically believed it could outlast, outmaneuver or simply exhaust Western resolve. It introduces doubt where there used to be confidence. It sharpens the internal debate between those who want to test limits and those who understand the cost of getting it wrong.
This is, at its core, a
test of wills and power, carried out to its logical conclusion.
Most leaders don't understand that. They look for an off-ramp too early. They prioritize optics over outcomes. They confuse activity with achievement.
Trump doesn't.
He understands that if you ease off before the dynamic shifts, you don't get a better deal you get played. He understands that credibility isn't built on statements; it's built on a demonstrated willingness to act. And he understands that regimes like Iran only recalibrate when the alternative becomes unacceptable.
That's what's happening now.
And yes, it makes people uneasy.
Turn on the TV and it's a minute-by-minute panic cycle. Gas prices tick up breaking news. Some leak hits the wires six hours of speculation. Who said what at 9 a.m. versus 3 p.m. treated like it's dispositive.
It's noise.
This is not a daily trading strategy. This is a generational geopolitical play.
The upside, if we get this right, is enormous. A truly non-nuclear Iran changes the entire equation in the
Middle East. It removes the single biggest destabilizing force in the region.
Imagine a world where Iran is not shooting at Israel, not funding proxy militias across multiple theaters and not sitting on the threshold of a nuclear weapon. Even if the regime remains clerical, its ability to wreak havoc is dramatically reduced.
That opens the door to something real
trade, investment, normalization. Stronger economic ties between Israel, the Gulf states, the United States and beyond. Capital flows instead of capital flight. Stability instead of constant brinkmanship.
That's what's on the table.
Now look at Europe.
The Europeans, predictably, want to make the campaign contribution after the candidate has already won the election. They'll criticize the tone, question the tactics and keep one foot in and one foot out until the outcome is clear.
Then they'll show up and declare themselves indispensable.
We've seen this movie before.
The reality is that without
sustained American pressure economic and military there is no deal worth having. None. Iran has no incentive to move unless it believes the alternative is materially worse.
That's what
Trump has restored: credibility.
And credibility is everything in this kind of negotiation.
What's required now is discipline. Not second-guessing every tactical move. Not flinching every time there's volatility. Certainly not pulling back just because the process looks messy.
Of course it's messy. It's supposed to be.
Breaking a horse is messy. Push too hard and you get thrown. Ease off too soon and you lose control. The key is staying on long enough for the dynamic to change.
That's what's happening here.
The pressure is real. Iran's economy is under strain. Its currency has taken repeated hits. Public dissatisfaction is not theoretical it's visible. And
inside the regime, the debate over how far they can push and how much they can take is intensifying.
That's progress.
Not a signing ceremony. Not a neat press release. Pressure.
So let's take a breath.
Stop obsessing over hourly gas prices. Stop parsing every headline like it's the final chapter. This is a long game, and it's being played at a level that requires patience and nerve.
The stakes are enormous. A neutered, non-nuclear Iran removes the last major obstacle to a more stable, more prosperous Middle East one where trade, not terror, defines its relationships.
You don't get there with process. You get there with pressure.
And for all the noise, that's exactly what Trump is delivering.
He's staying in the saddle.
And that's how you break the horse.