Economic Impacts of Iran War
#1251
Gets Weekends Off
Joined: Apr 2011
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right, perception is everything.Politics aside..
Persia’s puppet masters are left relying on sabotage & SM guerrilla streaming. Mockery really. Which is nothing a sustained bombing campaign, blockade and power grid blackouts won’t overcome. Sad as a broken kite but we do still want to win this thing, right?
Persia’s puppet masters are left relying on sabotage & SM guerrilla streaming. Mockery really. Which is nothing a sustained bombing campaign, blockade and power grid blackouts won’t overcome. Sad as a broken kite but we do still want to win this thing, right?
#1252
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Joined: Oct 2023
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Fangs, while I don’t agree with all of your positions, you’re a generally reasonable and intelligent person. Explain this one to me. I understand that China gets far more oil from gulf states than just about anyone else. What I don’t understand is how turning off X amount of global supply hurts them more than us. The fact that it’s a global market has been discussed ad nauseam. Price and supply issues hit us both. Xi has the dictator’s luxury of being able to ignore public opinion (at least for a while), while the American public will very quickly tire of energy shortages, even if there were a strategic benefit to the country. I just don’t see how this play works out in our favor.
#1253
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#1254
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Joined: Sep 2014
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Some great points……. certainly there would be a lot of criticism for Kamalis Harris……but there would not be outright rooting for IR Iran. There would not be vigils for their slain theocratic tyrannical dictator as there actually was in NYC by anti Trump people (presumably liberals)
All this is academic you see. The democrats have since Obama’s nuclear deal aren’t really concerned with the threats extremist Islam poses to not only our country but the region and the globe more broadly. (Maybe they are right) This is what gave Benjamin Netanyahu great concern and his we saw his steadfast opposition to Obamas deal when he gave the speech to congress in 2015………which has just continued to accelerate the eventual 180 degree paradigm shift (which I have noticed my entire lifetime gradually) in US Jewish voting bloc from Liberal progressive to Republican conservative…….
All this is academic you see. The democrats have since Obama’s nuclear deal aren’t really concerned with the threats extremist Islam poses to not only our country but the region and the globe more broadly. (Maybe they are right) This is what gave Benjamin Netanyahu great concern and his we saw his steadfast opposition to Obamas deal when he gave the speech to congress in 2015………which has just continued to accelerate the eventual 180 degree paradigm shift (which I have noticed my entire lifetime gradually) in US Jewish voting bloc from Liberal progressive to Republican conservative…….
My friends are over there. I’m irritated they got yanked from their families and great air line jobs by people who specifically said they wouldn’t do this exact thing, and have clearly failed to articulate how to solve obvious, intractable strategic issues which everyone else clearly saw coming.
#1255
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I think you’d be hard pressed to find anyone “rooting” for Iran on APC. In a 400 million person country with enough cameras you could find a few people protesting against free chocolate ice cream if that’s the narrative you’d like to create.
My friends are over there. I’m irritated they got yanked from their families and great air line jobs by people who specifically said they wouldn’t do this exact thing, and have clearly failed to articulate how to solve obvious, intractable strategic issues which everyone else clearly saw coming.
My friends are over there. I’m irritated they got yanked from their families and great air line jobs by people who specifically said they wouldn’t do this exact thing, and have clearly failed to articulate how to solve obvious, intractable strategic issues which everyone else clearly saw coming.
#1256
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Joined: Mar 2018
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Fangs, while I don’t agree with all of your positions, you’re a generally reasonable and intelligent person. Explain this one to me. I understand that China gets far more oil from gulf states than just about anyone else. What I don’t understand is how turning off X amount of global supply hurts them more than us. The fact that it’s a global market has been discussed ad nauseam. Price and supply issues hit us both. Xi has the dictator’s luxury of being able to ignore public opinion (at least for a while), while the American public will very quickly tire of energy shortages, even if there were a strategic benefit to the country. I just don’t see how this play works out in our favor.
#1257
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Joined: Apr 2011
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My friends are over there. I’m irritated they got yanked from their families and great air line jobs by people who specifically said they wouldn’t do this exact thing, and have clearly failed to articulate how to solve obvious, intractable strategic issues which everyone else clearly saw coming.
#1258
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Ahh, ok, I see what you are saying about that cost in your earlier post. Fair enough.
The flip side of the quoted argument is, however, that if they are crazy enough to do all that, shutdown the Straight with drones and mines, cutting their own throats while losing $450M/day in illicit oil revenue, a crashing Rial/exonomy, and no oil storage remaining, forcing them to shutdown production (a major blow not easy to reverse as I understand), what makes you think they only want a nuke for deterrence?
Can people genuinely say there is not a real risk they will use it? Iran is run by radical ideologues. They aren’t in the same category of other rational actors. And in geopolitical terms, even NK is a rational actor.
Part of this is also about countering China over the medium/long term, as an ancillary benefit if not part of the calculus.
The flip side of the quoted argument is, however, that if they are crazy enough to do all that, shutdown the Straight with drones and mines, cutting their own throats while losing $450M/day in illicit oil revenue, a crashing Rial/exonomy, and no oil storage remaining, forcing them to shutdown production (a major blow not easy to reverse as I understand), what makes you think they only want a nuke for deterrence?
Can people genuinely say there is not a real risk they will use it? Iran is run by radical ideologues. They aren’t in the same category of other rational actors. And in geopolitical terms, even NK is a rational actor.
Part of this is also about countering China over the medium/long term, as an ancillary benefit if not part of the calculus.
1. cost taxpayers billions
2. Not moved the ball one yard on uranium (subjectively one could say it has only increased the drive to obtain a nuclear shield against US aggression)
3. Educated our very real enemy in a strategy of closing the straight with incredibly cheap military hardware
4. angered our allies and the world at large by causing an economic crisis this further eroding soft power
the list continues, so yes, as to your comment. The only real solution was all in or diplomacy. One could state this as objectively true as evidenced by the current stalemate. Dont kid yourselves, we are currently in a stalemate and i dont see a way out of this other than to back down or establish a full on defense in depth of the entire iranian coastline.
for myself i was in the Air Force from 03-14. Ive seen the absolute dumpster fire of combat ops in the middle east. Enough is enough
#1259
Thread Starter
Prime Minister/Moderator

Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 45,098
Likes: 788
From: Engines Turn or People Swim
Fangs, while I don’t agree with all of your positions, you’re a generally reasonable and intelligent person. Explain this one to me. I understand that China gets far more oil from gulf states than just about anyone else. What I don’t understand is how turning off X amount of global supply hurts them more than us. The fact that it’s a global market has been discussed ad nauseam. Price and supply issues hit us both. Xi has the dictator’s luxury of being able to ignore public opinion (at least for a while), while the American public will very quickly tire of energy shortages, even if there were a strategic benefit to the country. I just don’t see how this play works out in our favor.
By purchasing oil directly from IR, presumably in violation of sanctions, they actually have a supply that is somewhat independent from both the global commodity price and also potentially from sanctions that might be levied against PRC in the event that *they* do something crazy.
I've stated ad nauseam that I don't know what the motive(s) were for this war, but there are a few objective fringe benefits, if not outright motives. With regard to PRC...
1. Shows US is willing to engage (at least some of their plans for ROC/SCS likely rely on US inaction).
2. Demonstrates that we can still execute large scale shock-and-awe in the maritime/air domains.
3. Reminds them that we can (and will) interfere with their interests in other parts of the world... they can't rely on a Taiwan situation being confined to the first island chain.
#1260
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Joined: Apr 2018
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With PRC of all nations, it's a little more complicated than just the global commodity price.
By purchasing oil directly from IR, presumably in violation of sanctions, they actually have a supply that is somewhat independent from both the global commodity price and also potentially from sanctions that might be levied against PRC in the event that *they* do something crazy.
I've stated ad nauseam that I don't know what the motive(s) were for this war, but there are a few objective fringe benefits, if not outright motives. With regard to PRC...
1. Shows US is willing to engage (at least some of their plans for ROC/SCS likely rely on US inaction).
2. Demonstrates that we can still execute large scale shock-and-awe in the maritime/air domains.
3. Reminds them that we can (and will) interfere with their interests in other parts of the world... they can't rely on a Taiwan situation being confined to the first island chain.
By purchasing oil directly from IR, presumably in violation of sanctions, they actually have a supply that is somewhat independent from both the global commodity price and also potentially from sanctions that might be levied against PRC in the event that *they* do something crazy.
I've stated ad nauseam that I don't know what the motive(s) were for this war, but there are a few objective fringe benefits, if not outright motives. With regard to PRC...
1. Shows US is willing to engage (at least some of their plans for ROC/SCS likely rely on US inaction).
2. Demonstrates that we can still execute large scale shock-and-awe in the maritime/air domains.
3. Reminds them that we can (and will) interfere with their interests in other parts of the world... they can't rely on a Taiwan situation being confined to the first island chain.
^^^^^^^ Prolly wasting your breath ^^^^^^^

In retrospect 4. Also put NATO on notice
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