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Iran's precision strikes fracture US security guarantee to Middle East

Wednesday, May 6, 2026 · from 5 podcasts, 8 episodes
  • Iran's ability to strike US bases with precision has forced the US Navy to withdraw from the Strait of Hormuz.
  • China's defiance of US sanctions and the UAE's OPEC exit signal a lasting realignment in the global oil order.
  • The energy crisis is crushing vulnerable industries like aviation, with Spirit Airlines bankrupt and European margins eroding.

The U.S. security guarantee in the Middle East is eroding in real time. On Breaking Points, Trita Parsi noted that after Iran used Chinese satellite imagery to land precision strikes on the Al-Udeid air base, the U.S. Navy had to stay 3,000 kilometers offshore to avoid losing a major warship. This technical parity has effectively ceded control of the coast.

The military reality has created an impossible choice for American allies. Iran’s subsequent strike on the UAE's Fujairah oil terminal - a facility designed to bypass the Strait of Hormuz - proved there is no safe haven. The show’s hosts argued that the lack of consequences for Israel's strategy in Gaza gave a green light for similar tactics in Lebanon, where civilian infrastructure is being demolished to create buffer zones.

"The security umbrella that Gulf states relied on for decades is now viewed as unreliable and ineffective."

- Trita Parsi, Breaking Points

Simultaneously, the economic architecture underpinning U.S. power is being challenged. Breaking Points highlighted that China invoked its 2021 ‘blocking statute’ for the first time, ordering its firms to ignore U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil. Economist Richard Wolff, on the same show, argued this creates a legal trap for multinationals and directly challenges dollar hegemony as U.S. national debt exceeds GDP.

The energy shock is immediate and structural. The Intelligence reported the Strait's closure has removed 13 million barrels per day - four times the deficit after Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Yet markets are underpricing the crisis, relying on draining strategic reserves and shadow tanker fleets. Macro Voices guest Daniel Lacalle warned Europe is the weak link, with jet fuel costs five times normal and corporate margins set to be obliterated.

"Even if the Strait reopens today, it would take four months for production to resume, ships to re-route, and fuel to hit refineries."

- Matthieu Favas, The Intelligence

Domestically, the cost is shifting from geopolitics to household economics. Breaking Points reported gas prices hitting $4.50 a gallon, with Trump voters in a New York Times focus group describing the situation as “betrayed.” The war bankrupted Spirit Airlines after jet fuel costs doubled; filling a Boeing 777 now costs $200,000. Secretary Pete Hegseth, in a contentious Senate hearing covered by The Daily, dismissed cost concerns as defeatism while advancing a novel legal theory to bypass the 60-day War Powers Act deadline.

The consensus across shows is that the crisis is accelerating a multipolar realignment. The UAE's departure from OPEC, noted on Macro Voices and The Intelligence, signals a future without spare capacity. As alliances fracture, the U.S. finds its military primacy questioned and its economic coercion met with defiance, leaving global stability hanging on a three-month energy lag the market hasn't priced.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

5/5/26: Iran Hits Critical UAE Facility, Prof Pape On Iran Escalation, Trump Courts Fetterman, Voting Rights Act DebateMay 5

  • Iran attacked the UAE's Fujaira oil terminal with twelve ballistic missiles, three cruise missiles, and four drones, hitting a facility that bypasses the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Robert Pape says the U.S. strategy of Project Freedom is a high-risk gambit to break Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz by daring Iran not to shoot back. He argues hitting one U.S. vessel would trigger a major escalation.
  • The Trump administration is downplaying the UAE attack, with General Kane stating Iran's nine attacks on commercial vessels and more than ten on U.S. forces are below the threshold for restarting major combat operations.
  • A trapped Indian ship captain stated his company prohibits transiting the Strait of Hormuz until officially declared safe, illustrating civilian reluctance to join Trump's military project.
  • Sagaar argues Iran views the UAE as an extension of Israel, citing Israeli-provided Iron Dome defenses and IDF soldiers stationed there, making it a closer, weaker target.
  • Lindsey Graham advocated for a 'Second Amendment solution' in Iran, suggesting flooding the country with guns to enable an uprising, a model used in Libya and Syria.
  • Project Freedom aims to guide trapped vessels. General Kane stated 1,550 commercial vessels with 22,500 mariners are currently trapped in the Arabian Gulf.
Also from this episode: (6)

Politics (6)

  • Robert Pape says pressures driving Trump include global disrespect from Iran and Germany, NATO's disintegration, and the humiliation of a pending meeting with President Xi, pushing him towards risky action.
  • Republicans are actively courting John Fetterman to switch parties, complicating Democratic Senate math. Fetterman reportedly spends time in the Republican cloakroom, not with Democrats.
  • Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro allegedly pushed a firefighters union to endorse Republican Stacy Garrity for state treasurer after the Democratic candidate criticized him.
  • A Supreme Court decision curtails the Voting Rights Act provision protecting majority-minority districts. Analysts estimate this could shift roughly seven House seats to the GOP.
  • Krystal argues the decision is a setback for black representation in the South, rooted in ongoing racial discrimination. Sagaar counters that the 'dilution' principle violates equal protection and is a relic, citing recent Democratic gerrymandering in Virginia.
  • Barney Frank, in a CNN interview, argued progressives should prioritize more accepted issues over controversial ones like transgender athletes in women's sports, drawing criticism for his role in crafting Dodd-Frank and subsequent bank lobbying.

5/4/26: Israel Uses Gaza Strategy In Lebanon, Epstein Suicide Note, China Screw You To US SanctionsMay 4

  • Israel's National Security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir celebrated his 50th birthday with a cake featuring a gallows as a nod to his push for death sentences for Palestinians, which hosts view as part of a genocidal ideology.
  • Israel is applying its Gaza military model to southern Lebanon, ordering everyone south of the Litani River to leave indefinitely and demolishing villages with tacit US support, affecting up to a million people.
  • Hosts say Israeli forces have disproportionately devastated Shia Muslim villages in Lebanon compared to Christian ones, and they cite the destruction of solar panels as evidence claims of targeting Hezbollah infrastructure are false.
  • Saagar says new unpublished Israeli maps reveal Israel now controls nearly two-thirds of the Gaza Strip, creating a restricted zone where aid groups are scared to operate and at least three Palestinian aid workers have been killed.
  • Hosts argue unsubstantiated atrocity claims - like beheaded babies and systematic rape by Hamas - were pushed post-October 7th by outlets like the New York Times to justify Israel's genocidal campaign in Gaza, citing Adam Johnson's book 'How to Sell a Genocide'.
  • Richard Wolff says China's first use of its 2021 blocking statute, ordering firms to ignore US sanctions on Chinese oil refineries, marks a major escalation by directly challenging US dollar hegemony and extra-territorial law.
  • Wolff says the UAE's withdrawal from OPEC could lead to a global oil glut and price collapse, bankrupting US fracking operations and their lenders, demonstrating the instability of Trump's fossil-fuel-centric energy policy.
Also from this episode: (6)

Media (1)

  • Krystal notes the Daily Wire faced significant layoffs and a viewership drop, which she attributes to its lockstep pro-Israel stance alienating a shifting conservative base and its failed business expansion into children's content and movies.

Politics (1)

  • Hosts argue cultural war issues like CRT or transgender debates are a political luxury when voters face a dire affordability crisis, with gas prices over $4.50 a gallon, and that this shift is hurting media outlets focused on those topics.

Corruption (3)

  • A purported suicide note from Jeffrey Epstein reading 'time to say goodbye' has been hidden from public view, sealed in a New York courthouse as part of a cellmate's case, and was not included in millions of DOJ-released Epstein documents.
  • Bard College president Leon Botstein is retiring after an independent review of his friendly relationship with Epstein, who visited by helicopter and steered $150,000 to him in 2016.
  • Pablo Torre's reporting revealed Harvard's 2020 Epstein self-investigation omitted the 'Jeffrey E. Epstein Fund for Women’s Athletics' and former president Larry Summers' close ties, including a honeymoon on Epstein’s island.

Macro (1)

  • Wolff argues the US dollar's dominance is declining, with its share of global central bank reserves falling from 80% to just over 50%, while the US national debt now exceeds GDP - warning signs for lenders.

5/4/26: Oil Spikes Amid Hormuz Chaos, US Bases Damaged By Iran, Spirit Airlines Goes BankruptMay 4

  • Iranian state media claims it struck a US warship near Jask Island, but US officials deny any Navy ship has been hit.
  • The US changed its rules of engagement to authorize strikes on immediate threats like IRGC fast boats or missile positions in the Strait of Hormuz.
  • An Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) tanker was reportedly struck while transiting the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Trita Parsi notes Iran's economy did not collapse as predicted by the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, revealing the blockade's failure.
  • Parsi argues the US Navy kept 3,000 km from Iranian shores to avoid missile strikes, a distance Trump's 'Project Freedom' rhetoric ignores.
  • China declared it will no longer comply with US sanctions on Iranian oil, signaling a direct geopolitical challenge.
  • Kuwait has not exported a single barrel of oil for 30 days, a situation unseen in 30 years.
  • CNN reports Iran's acquisition of a Chinese satellite gave them high-resolution imagery, enabling strikes on US bases like Huttar's Ledded Air Base.
  • Trita Parsi predicts Gulf states will diversify security, reduce US bases, and force the US to pay for rebuilding damaged infrastructure.
  • Jet fuel price doubling killed Spirit Airlines, with a Boeing 777 fill costing up to $225,000 in Seattle as of May 2.
Also from this episode: (5)

Iran (3)

  • Iranian proposals for ending the conflict demand US withdrawal from the region, lifted sanctions, asset release, reparations, and a full ceasefire.
  • Parsi says Iran's potential offer of a nuclear fuel 'needs basis' could mean zero enrichment for 5-7 years, aligning with a Trump term.
  • Trita Parsi argues the Iran conflict represents a US strategic defeat worse than Iraq, undermining global military primacy and accelerating multipolarity.

Markets (2)

  • Sagaar notes major airlines targeted Spirit by discounting 20 seats on competing routes weeks before flights, pushing Spirit's profitable routes into the red.
  • Spirit's shutdown leaves 809,000 seats unfilled across 4,119 domestic flights in the first two weeks of May.

4/30/26: Trump Orders Indefinite Blockade, US Tries To Collapse Iran Economy, Trump Delusional Oil BetApr 30

  • Saagar argues the US faces three dire options in Iran: withdrawing and accepting a historic strategic defeat, continuing the indefinite blockade, or resuming limited strikes which would restart hot war and destroy Gulf oil assets.
  • Krystal cites Iranian claims that 52 ships breached the US blockade, highlighting its porous nature. She notes Iran can also move goods over land and has secured new deals with Pakistan.
  • Saagar claims the US lost 50% of its interceptor capacity in the 38-day war. Krystal says the world now sees a breakdown of the US global empire.
  • Krystal cites Treasury interventions to suppress oil prices but says they have a limited shelf life. She references Ryan reporting next week on the direct market manipulation.
  • Saagar says Japanese Airlines now charges a $350 surcharge per ticket for North America/Europe flights, more than double the pre-war rate, with South Korean airlines following suit.
  • Krystal and Saagar criticize Pete Hegseth for refusing to acknowledge war costs. Ro Khanna stated the blockade will cost the average household $5,000 extra for gas and food this year.
  • Guest Rory Johnson says the Strait of Hormuz closure has already caused a 600 million barrel supply hit, guaranteeing at least a 1 billion barrel shortfall for the year.
  • Rory Johnson notes US commercial petroleum inventories fell by a headline 17 million barrels plus a 7.1 million barrel SPR draw, a massive 24 million total draw versus a normal ±5 million range.
  • Rory Johnson argues Iran has 10-30 days of onshore and floating tanker storage before having to shut in wells, a timeline mismatched with the Gulf's two-month production shutdown.
  • Rory Johnson's fair value models show oil could reach $180-$200 per barrel by end of June if Hormuz remains closed, absent major policy actions like SPR releases.
Also from this episode: (5)

Politics (2)

  • Krystal points out Pete Hegseth's contradictory testimony: he justified the war to stop an imminent nuclear threat, then claimed Iran's nuclear facilities were already 'obliterated'.
  • Saagar says Iran offered a five-year enrichment moratorium with IAEA inspections and downblending uranium to Russia, but the US rejected it because it resembled the JCPOA.

Inflation (1)

  • Saagar cites a University of Michigan survey showing consumer sentiment at 49.8, the lowest in over 50 years, lower than when gas was $5/gallon under Biden.

Markets (2)

  • Saagar explains the S&P 500 is up because Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft are spending $1.3 trillion on AI over two years - more than the Manhattan Project each month.
  • Krystal says the bond market is collapsing with the 10-year yield back above 4.4% and the 30-year at 5%, a level Trump has intervened at before, signaling rising US debt financing costs.

673. What Is Money?May 1

Also from this episode: (9)

Culture (7)

  • David Lang composed a new oratorio titled 'the wealth of nations' for the New York Philharmonic, using text from Adam Smith's 1776 book and other American historical sources.
  • Lang won the Pulitzer Prize in 2008 for 'the little match girl passion', a choral piece that replaces the story of Jesus with Hans Christian Andersen's tale to explore the redemptive observation of suffering.
  • He co-founded the Bang on a Can Music Festival and collective in the late 1980s to expand the audience for experimental music and foster a more generous, collaborative community among composers.
  • Lang's piece 'crowd out' was inspired by the communal singing at an Arsenal football match, using internet search autocompletions of 'when i am in a crowd' as lyrics for 1,000 community performers.
  • He titles all his compositions in lowercase as a deliberate affectation to relieve the pressure of writing within the classical music tradition.
  • The 'wealth of nations' oratorio includes texts from Ralph Waldo Emerson, Frederick Douglass, Edith Wharton, and a courtroom speech by socialist presidential candidate Eugene V. Debs.
  • Lang believes music's primary role is to make people 'see things more clearly,' advocating for a clearer view of economic connections and moral justice rather than prescribing political change.

AI & Tech (1)

  • He writes music using a software program called Encore, which he refuses to upgrade because its lack of autocorrect allows him to embrace mistakes he considers creatively valuable.

Society (1)

  • Lang grew up in a family without money, studied chemistry at Stanford intending to be a doctor like his father, and later earned a doctorate at Yale, where he now teaches composition.

Hegseth in the Hot SeatMay 1

  • Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee for the first time in a year, facing questions over the stalled Iran war and his controversial management of the Pentagon.
  • The hearing was to review a historic $1.5 trillion Pentagon budget request for FY27, which is about $500 billion more than the current year's budget. The funds are intended to replenish munitions, rebuild the Navy, and construct a new anti-missile system called Golden Dome.
  • Hegseth framed congressional Democrats and critical Republicans as the primary adversary, calling them 'reckless naysayers and defeatists' for questioning the Iran war and claiming they pose a greater threat than Iran itself.
  • Committee Republicans offered no criticism of Hegseth or the Iran war, instead praising his leadership, the operation to seize Venezuela's President Maduro, and the military's readiness.
  • Senate Democrats criticized the Iran war as a costly stalemate, citing estimates of over $25 billion spent already. They argued it has failed to remove Iran's regime, halt uranium enrichment, or reopen the Strait of Hormuz, while driving up fuel and grocery costs.
  • Hegseth defended the war by arguing there is no price too high to prevent a nuclear-armed Iran, framing short-term economic pain as a necessary cost for long-term security.
  • Hegseth presented a novel legal interpretation to avoid the War Powers Act, claiming the 60-day clock for congressional authorization is paused because the U.S. is currently in a ceasefire with Iran. Legal scholars disputed this claim.
  • Senator Elizabeth Warren questioned whether Pentagon insiders were profiting from the war using non-public information, citing a case where a Special Forces soldier allegedly made $400,000 trading on knowledge of the Venezuela operation.
  • Hegseth vehemently denied a Financial Times report that his broker attempted to buy shares in a defense-focused BlackRock fund just before the Iran war began, calling the story 'made up out of whole cloth.'
Also from this episode: (3)

Elections (1)

  • Senator Elissa Slotkin pressed Hegseth on whether he would follow a hypothetical presidential order to deploy troops to seize ballots or voting machines in the 2026 election. Hegseth dismissed it as a 'gotcha hypothetical' and only stated he has never been ordered to do anything illegal.

Politics (2)

  • Senator Jacky Rosen challenged Hegseth's repeated use of the term 'Pharisees' to describe critics, calling it a historically weaponized anti-Semitic slur. Hegseth stood by the term as accurate for those who focus on operational flaws over historic success.
  • Eric Schmitt observed that Hegseth's combative style marks a departure from past defense secretaries, showing little deference to Congress and framing dissent as akin to being an enemy, despite having built his career on criticizing his predecessors.

MacroVoices #530 Daniel Lacalle: China and The Us Will Decide The Outcome of The Iran WarApr 30

  • Europe faces severe energy security risks from the Strait of Hormuz closure, with only weeks of jet fuel left and potential for prices to quintuple. Consumer sentiment there is at its lowest since the pandemic.
  • Lacalle argues the US and China have superior staying power in the conflict. The US is a net exporter of 2.8 million barrels of oil per day, and China has massive commodity stockpiles plus a strategic supply agreement with Russia.
  • Iran’s economy was already in crisis before the war, with 60% inflation and protests in 2025. Lacalle notes 25% of its GDP and 60% of government revenue flow through the Strait of Hormuz.
  • European political sentiment is polarized regarding the conflict. A majority view holds it is a US-Israel issue, with support limited to logistical or diplomatic efforts, not active military participation.
  • Lacalle sees a consensus against price controls in Europe, but a greater risk of populist-driven windfall profit taxes on energy companies that could deter investment in supply security.
  • He believes oil prices have likely peaked but the geopolitical risk premium will keep a floor under them. The forward curve discounts oil prices remaining $15 above January levels by year-end.
  • Lacalle cites the US shift from largest oil importer to largest producer as turning it from a shock amplifier to a shock absorber in energy crises, a key structural change from 1973 and 2008.
  • Erik Townsend argues the market is in denial about the inevitable global energy crunch, drawing a parallel to the early COVID pandemic where economic reality took weeks to be priced in.
  • Townsend interprets the UAE’s exit from OPEC as a signal that spare capacity will be eliminated post-crisis, making markets more vulnerable to future price spikes despite a near-term production surge.
Also from this episode: (5)

Macro (1)

  • Daniel Lacalle attributes the stock market rally amid the Iran crisis to soaring global money supply growth, which inflates asset prices even as money velocity declines.

Inflation (1)

  • Lacalle argues for a regime of persistent inflation, driven by high government spending, soaring money supply, and policies aimed at sustaining aggregate demand. He notes food and shelter costs in the EU and UK have risen twice as much as official CPI over seven years.

Markets (1)

  • He explains gold’s recent inverse relationship to oil and geopolitics was driven by unwinding of leveraged long-gold/short-dollar trades and central bank selling to support local currencies.

Business (2)

  • Lacalle identifies fertilizer availability and price as a critical inflation vector, a bigger problem for Europe due to eroded farm margins, while the US faces only a price issue.
  • He warns of lagged economic damage in Europe, particularly margin erosion and credit deterioration in financials, aviation, automotive, and tourism, which equity markets have yet to price.

Drill pickle: oil prices still misjudge shockApr 30

  • The current oil supply shock is the largest in history, with a 13 million barrel per day deficit from the Strait of Hormuz closure, far exceeding the 3 million barrel per day disruption feared from the Russia-Ukraine war.
  • Oil prices around $125 per barrel are misleadingly low because buffers absorbed the initial shock. These included a pre-war market surplus, increased Gulf exports before conflict, and the release of rich countries' strategic petroleum reserves.
  • Hidden demand destruction in developing nations is masking the true deficit. Cooking oil and petrochemical feedstock shortages in Asia and Africa have already rationed consumption outside major tracked markets.
  • Mathieu Favas argues oil prices must rise further to ration consumption in rich countries as buffers deplete, forcing a contraction in demand for gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel.
  • Reopening the Strait of Hormuz would not provide immediate relief. Restarting production, repositioning tankers, and refining crude would take three to four months before markets normalize.
  • The UAE's departure from OPEC matters for the future. It could export more post-crisis and may encourage other members to leave, potentially leaving Saudi Arabia alone to manage production cuts.
Also from this episode: (8)

Markets (1)

  • Financial markets react asymmetrically to oil news. Prices fell $10 on a false reopening announcement but rose only $5 when it was retracted, partly due to algorithmic traders reacting to headlines over fundamentals.

Politics (3)

  • Polls indicate the French populist right, the National Rally, is the only certainty for the 2027 presidential runoff, with Marine Le Pen or Jordan Bardella as its candidate.
  • Sophie Pedder says the French centre and left are fragmented with no clear frontrunner to oppose the National Rally, risking a final choice between political extremes.
  • Succession for Macron's centre hinges on a rivalry between former prime ministers Édouard Philippe, currently leading in polls, and Gabriel Attal, who leads Macron's Renaissance party.

Elections (2)

  • A July 7th court appeal ruling will determine if Marine Le Pen can run for president; if banned, Jordan Bardella will lead the National Rally ticket.
  • Sophie Pedder notes French presidential polls 12 months out are historically unreliable, with half of the last six elections failing to predict the final runoff candidates.

Sports (2)

  • Brazil's football team qualified fifth in South America for the expanded 48-team World Cup, winning only eight of its 18 qualification matches.
  • Brazil holds the best men's World Cup record with 76 victories in 114 matches and is the only country to have played in all 22 tournaments.