From The Perspective Of The Buffered Identity, There’s Nothing Funny About A Gay Ayatollah

Charles Taylor’s concept of the buffered self describes the modern individual as someone who experiences a strong boundary between inner life and the external world. The self is autonomous and insulated. Meanings come from inside rather than from outside forces or public spectacle. Taylor contrasts this with the older “porous” self, which had no such firm boundary and remained open to external moral forces, social drama, and cosmic meaning pressing in from outside.
That shift in how the self is structured produces several habits of mind that shape what strikes modern people as funny and what strikes them as cruel.
In the buffered framework, sexual orientation belongs to the domain of private psychology. It is part of a person’s inner identity and sits behind the boundary between inner life and public life. Mocking it feels like a violation of that boundary, an intrusion into territory that is not anyone else’s business. The instinct is not amusement but discomfort.
Humor built on moral contradiction also loses its structure in a buffered world. In older or more porous moral frameworks, hypocrisy about sexuality carries cosmic weight. A religious authority who secretly violates the sacred law he publicly enforces represents a dramatic inversion of the moral order. That kind of contradiction invites satire because it carries genuine metaphysical stakes. The gap between the public role and the private life feels like a tear in the fabric of things.
But in a buffered world, sexuality is not a cosmic category. It is a personal trait. The leader’s religious role and his private orientation get sorted into separate domains, and without that metaphysical tension the joke has no internal structure. There is nothing to collapse. Modern liberal cultures also treat sexuality as a protected aspect of personhood, so laughing at someone for being gay reads as mocking a minority identity rather than exposing a fraud. The buffered self prefers psychological explanations over symbolic drama. If someone is gay, that is simply a fact about them, not a sign or a moral irony in the larger social order.
A gay ayatollah, then, produces very different reactions depending on which framework the observer carries. The buffered modern observer hears it and processes it as a private matter that should not be weaponized. The reaction is neutrality or mild discomfort at the cruelty of using the information at all.
Trump’s laughter operates on a different logic entirely. He hears the rumor through an older political framework where hypocrisy inside a strict moral regime is inherently comic and humiliating. The ayatollah enforces a severe public code of sexual morality. If he privately violates that code, the gap is enormous and the irony writes itself. In that older logic, the joke does not require any elaborate setup. The contradiction is the joke.
What makes this worth examining is that neither reaction is simply right or wrong. The buffered observer is applying a genuine moral intuition about dignity and privacy. Trump is applying a genuine satirical intuition about hypocrisy and power. The two intuitions come from different worlds, and they do not translate cleanly into each other. Taylor’s framework helps explain why people in the same room can hear the same joke and have completely opposite reactions, not because one side has better values, but because they are operating with fundamentally different structures of selfhood and different assumptions about what sexuality means in public life.
The deeper irony is that the ayatollah’s own regime operates entirely within the porous framework. It treats sexuality as a cosmic moral category, polices it publicly, and imposes severe consequences for violations. In that sense, Trump’s instinct to find the contradiction funny is more structurally aligned with the ayatollah’s own moral world than the buffered liberal reaction is. The buffered liberal says sexuality is private and should not be mocked. The ayatollah says sexuality is public and must be controlled. Trump says the gap between the two positions is hilarious. He is not wrong about the gap.
The buffered self finds humor in things that do not require a porous, metaphysically charged world to land. Several categories work well.
Irony about systems and institutions rather than persons. The buffered self enjoys pointing out the gap between what an institution claims to be and what it actually does, but the humor stays analytical rather than carnivalesque. It is the comedy of bureaucratic absurdity, corporate doublespeak, and political spin. The Daily Show operated almost entirely in this register. The joke is about the structure, not the soul.
Self-referential and meta humor. Because the buffered self is aware of itself as a constructed observer, it finds humor in the mechanics of perception and representation. Jokes about jokes, comedy that breaks the fourth wall, humor that draws attention to its own artificiality. This is why absurdism resonates so strongly with modern educated audiences. Monty Python, Seinfeld, and later Adult Swim all work this way. The comedy does not depend on any external moral order. It generates meaning entirely from within its own internal logic.
Incongruity without victims. The buffered self laughs readily at pure incongruity, situations where categories collide in unexpected ways, as long as no protected identity is the target. A cat sitting in a bowl. A very formal letter about something trivial. A politician using the wrong word at the wrong moment. These work because they require no metaphysical scaffolding and harm no one’s inner dignity.
Observational humor about shared psychological experience. This is the dominant mode of stand-up comedy since Seinfeld redefined the form. What is the deal with this feeling we all recognize? The humor comes from the recognition of inner states, anxieties, and social awkwardness. It is humor that confirms the buffered self’s sense that inner life is the real territory worth exploring.
What the buffered self finds much harder to laugh at is anything that treats a person’s identity as the punchline, humor that depends on cosmic or religious transgression, and jokes that require you to believe that some violations carry metaphysical rather than merely psychological weight. Crude ethnic humor, blasphemy comedy, and sexual humiliation all tend to misfire because they presuppose a porous world where those categories carry dramatic moral charge.
The comedian who best understood this transition was probably Steve Martin in his early work. His act was almost entirely about the absurdity of performance itself. He was not telling you that something in the world was wrong or contradictory. He was performing the pure machinery of comedy stripped of content. That is about as buffered as humor gets.
Here are some that land cleanly in the buffered register.
“I have a lot of growing up to do. I realized that the other day inside my fort.”
That is Mitch Hedberg adjacent in spirit. It works because it is pure incongruity between self-awareness and behavior, no victims, no cosmic stakes.
Steven Wright: “I have a map of the United States that is actual size. I spent last summer folding it.” The humor is entirely internal to its own logic. It just follows a premise to an absurd conclusion and stops there.
Seinfeld: “What is the deal with lampshades? You buy a lamp. It comes with a shade. The shade’s job is to block the light. Why do you want the light blocked? You bought a lamp.” It goes nowhere and means nothing and that is precisely the point. The buffered self finds the texture of ordinary experience endlessly worth examining.
The entire premise of The Office works this way. The comedy comes from institutional absurdity and the gap between how people present themselves professionally and what they actually are psychologically. No metaphysics required. Just the mild horror of bureaucratic life observed very closely.
A classic New Yorker cartoon: a dog sits at a computer. The caption reads “On the internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.” That joke is almost a diagram of buffered self-consciousness. Identity is private, presentation is constructed, and the gap between the two is funny rather than shameful.
One more. A man goes to the doctor. The doctor says you need to stop masturbating. The man asks why. The doctor says because I am trying to examine you. That joke works in the buffered register because the humor comes entirely from the collision of institutional context and private behavior, with the punchline restoring the boundary the patient violated. It is a joke about categories, not a moral judgment.
What all of these share is that the comedy generates itself from internal incongruity, systems behaving oddly, or the gap between self-presentation and reality. None of them require you to believe that God is watching or that someone’s soul is implicated.

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Decoding The Israel Democracy Institute

The Israel Democracy Institute presents itself as a research organization dedicated to strengthening Israeli democracy. Through the lens of Alliance Theory, developed by David Pinsof, it is better understood as a coordination hub for a specific elite coalition inside Israel and among Israel’s Western partners. Alliance Theory starts with a simple premise: public arguments are tools for recruiting allies and weakening rival coalitions. Think tanks exist to produce arguments that help their coalition coordinate, signal loyalty, and maintain allies at home and abroad.
The IDI coalition is not hard to map. It includes Supreme Court-oriented jurists, constitutional scholars, and former civil servants. It includes center and center-left political actors who emphasize liberal democratic norms, Western diplomatic and academic networks, and Israeli economic elites tied to global markets, particularly the tech sector and export-oriented firms. This coalition benefits from Israel being perceived internationally as a liberal democratic state governed by strong institutions. That perception is not incidental to the IDI’s work. It is the work.
The institute solves a specific collective action problem. For a coalition of legal, economic, and globalist elites, the challenge is maintaining a unified front against populist or nationalist rivals who hold more raw electoral power. The IDI provides the intellectual grammar that allows these disparate groups to recognize one another and act in concert. It tells Israeli elites where the respectable center sits. It signals to bureaucrats, journalists, academics, and moderate politicians which positions to hold and which battles to fight.
The institute also functions as a gatekeeper for what counts as reasonable discourse within the international community. By defining specific legal standards as the benchmark for democracy, it creates a high cost for Israeli politicians who deviate from those norms. When the IDI labels a policy as democratic erosion, it sends a signal to international credit rating agencies, foreign investors, and diplomatic bodies. Domestic political decisions carry immediate external economic and reputational consequences. This feedback loop is not accidental. It is the mechanism.
Professional socialization deepens this effect. The IDI serves as a finishing school for parts of the Israeli civil service, hosting seminars and publishing materials that standardize how military officers, government lawyers, and junior diplomats think about the rule of law. This ensures that even when political leadership changes, the underlying bureaucratic layer stays anchored to the coalition’s preferred institutional logic. It creates a stability that frustrates populist attempts to bypass traditional power centers. The IDI does not just train bureaucrats. It trains the people who train bureaucrats, shaping law school curricula, military legal officer education, and the internal culture of the Attorney General’s office. Its influence operates with a generational lag.
The coalition also needs material resources to survive, and the IDI facilitates their flow. It connects Israeli academics and jurists to prestigious Western institutions, providing a safety net for elite coalition members. If someone is marginalized domestically, their standing within the IDI-linked international network gives them continued relevance, funding, and a platform. Members of this coalition have exit options. An Israeli jurist sidelined under a hostile government can take a fellowship at Yale, publish in European law journals, or join an international arbitration panel. That asymmetry matters enormously for how each side plays its hand.
The institute also produces the annual Israeli Democracy Index, which gives the coalition a shared map of the political battlefield. These numbers are not neutral observations. They are benchmarks that tell coalition members which legislative fights to prioritize and which rhetorical themes to press in the media. By highlighting declining trust in specific institutions or rising concern among certain demographics, the IDI helps the alliance coordinate in real time.
The rival coalition uses the Kohelet Policy Forum as its primary intellectual hub. Where the IDI focuses on liberal institutionalism to maintain ties with Western partners, Kohelet uses Alliance Theory logic to mobilize a coalition built around national sovereignty, religious identity, and free-market deregulation. Its network includes Religious Zionist and Haredi political factions, the settler movement and West Bank administrative bodies, conservative libertarian economists, and segments of the American right along with right-wing philanthropists. This coalition seeks to dismantle the legal and bureaucratic structures that IDI-aligned elites use to maintain power. From their perspective, the Supreme Court is a tool of an old governing class that prevents the majority from exercising its democratic will.
Just as the IDI uses universalist democratic language, Kohelet uses sovereignty as its primary moral frame. This recruits allies who feel marginalized by the legal establishment, signals that true democracy flows from the ballot box rather than court rulings, and legitimizes territorial policy as a matter of national rights. Kohelet also connects the Israeli right to European and American conservative networks by framing Israel as a frontline defender of Western civilization against a radical left-Islamist alliance. This provides the nationalist coalition with a counter-narrative to the liberal democratic club the IDI promotes.
Kohelet’s policy papers on judicial reform and economic deregulation are not merely research documents. They are blueprints for power. They give the coalition the technical language needed to draft laws that shift authority from unelected jurists to elected officials. This professionalization of right-wing policy allows the coalition to govern effectively once it wins elections rather than relying on a civil service that may be loyal to its rivals.
The absence of a formal Israeli constitution sharpens all of this. In most liberal democracies, the constitution serves as a shared text that both coalitions must at least pretend to honor. Israel has Basic Laws instead, and their status is contested. The IDI treats them as functionally constitutional. Kohelet argues they are ordinary legislation the Knesset can revise or override. This is not merely a legal dispute. It is a fight over which coalition gets to define the rules of the game, and whoever controls that definition controls what counts as legitimate governance.
The IDI and Kohelet also represent something larger than an Israeli internal dispute. They are local franchises of a global argument playing out simultaneously in Hungary, Poland, the United States, France, and Brazil. On one side sit institutions that derive authority from credentialed expertise, international norms, and supranational bodies. On the other sit movements that derive authority from electoral majorities, national sovereignty, and religious identity. Israel runs this argument at higher temperature because the stakes include physical security, occupied territory, and a legal system with no written constitution to anchor the debate.
One tension the Alliance Theory framework illuminates but does not fully resolve is the Gaza problem. The IDI’s entire value to its transnational coalition rests on Israel’s legibility as a liberal democracy. That legibility has taken serious damage since October 2023, and not primarily because of judicial reform. The conduct of the war, the humanitarian situation in Gaza, and the behavior of settler militias in the West Bank have strained the IDI coalition’s ability to perform its core translation function for Western audiences. Some of those audiences are no longer listening. This puts the IDI in a structurally difficult position: it exists to keep Israel inside the liberal democratic club, but the conditions for club membership are being renegotiated in real time by forces neither the IDI nor Kohelet controls.

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Iran Is A Tougher Enemy Than Iraq

There was a saying in the Bush administration prior to the 2003 Iraq invasion: Everyone wants to take Baghdad but only real men want to take Tehran.
Baghdad was always the easier target. Iran is a different problem entirely.
Iraq in 2003 had a broken military, a population traumatized by sanctions and internal repression, and no serious geography to defend. The country sits on a flat alluvial plain. You could drive from Kuwait to Baghdad in days, and the Americans did. The air defenses were obsolete, the command structure was hollowed out, and large parts of the army simply walked away.
Iran is none of those things. It has three times the population, roughly the geographic size of Western Europe, serious mountain ranges along its western and northern borders, and a government that has spent forty years preparing for exactly this scenario. The Revolutionary Guards exist partly as a conventional fighting force and partly as an ideological army designed to keep fighting even if the regular military collapses. The doctrine is explicitly built around the idea that Iran cannot match American airpower, so it will make the cost of occupation or regime change unbearable through asymmetric pressure, proxy networks, and yes, Hormuz.
The saying also reflects something the Bush administration understood intellectually but chose to ignore in practice. Taking Baghdad was the easy part. Governing it was the catastrophe. Tehran would not even get to the governance phase before the problems started. Any serious ground campaign against Iran would face supply lines that stretch through some of the most difficult terrain in the Middle East, an enemy with genuine popular nationalism behind it, and a strategic depth that Iraq simply never had.
No serious military planner wanted to take Tehran. The line was less a boast than a warning dressed up as bravado.

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Video: Why the US Navy “Already Won” Before Iran Knew It Started

Gemini: The analysis in the video is highly credible regarding the technical sequence and military principles of Operation Epic Fury, as current battlefield data from March 2026 confirms several of the core claims. While the channel “Navy Decoded” often uses a dramatic narrative style, its breakdown of the systematic dismantling of the Iranian air defense “wall” aligns with reports from the U.S. Department of War and independent monitors like NetBlocks.

1. Digital Infrastructure Collapse (Phase Zero)
The claim that Iran’s connectivity dropped to 4% is verified. Following the initial strikes on February 28, 2026, NetBlocks and Cloudflare reported that Iranian internet traffic flatlined to between 1% and 4% of normal levels. This near-total blackout was a mix of U.S. cyber operations and the Iranian regime’s own “kill switch” intended to prevent internal coordination of protests and secure leadership communications.

2. Combat Use of LUCAS Drones (Phase One)
The video correctly identifies the use of the Low-cost Unmanned Combat Attack System (LUCAS). On February 28, 2026, U.S. Central Command confirmed the first combat deployment of these $35,000 drones, built by Arizona-based SpektreWorks. These drones were indeed reverse-engineered from Iranian Shahed-136 designs to serve as affordable, high-volume decoys and strike platforms, forcing Iranian batteries to expend multi-million dollar interceptors on cheap targets.

3. Suppression of the Bavar 373 (Phase Two)
The technical dilemma presented for the Bavar 373 radar operators is consistent with current military doctrine. The AGM-88G ARGM-ER has been the primary tool used by Carrier Strike Group 3 to suppress Iranian air defenses. Recent satellite imagery confirms that many coastal radar sites are inactive or destroyed, validating the video’s claim that the “kill chain” now runs backward: U.S. stealth assets detect and geolocate the hunter before the hunter can lock onto them.

4. The 40-Minute Window (Phase Three)
The timing of the Tomahawk strikes is a known tactical reality. The USS Spruance and other Arleigh Burke-class destroyers launched Block 5 Tomahawks early in the opening hours of Operation Epic Fury. Because these missiles are subsonic, the electronic warfare and drone suppression phases had to occur while the missiles were in flight to ensure they reached their targets—such as IRGC naval bases and missile production sites—unopposed.

As of March 16, 2026, the “wall” has indeed been dismantled, but Iran continues to launch sporadic, uncoordinated ballistic missile strikes. The war is ongoing, even if the primary air defense network has been suppressed.

Gemini: The credibility of this video is high concerning its application of military industrial doctrine, though it must be viewed as a strategic analysis of the ongoing conflict rather than an objective news report. The video utilizes the “Navy Decoded” signature style: framing modern warfare as an engineering problem—specifically one of consumption vs. production.

1. Industrial Warfare Logic (Credible)
The central thesis—that the side unable to replenish its stockpiles will eventually lose—is a foundational principle of attrition warfare. The video correctly shifts the “scoreboard” from tactical ship-to-ship skirmishes to industrial output. By targeting the “source” (factories) rather than the “symptoms” (fast boats), the U.S. Navy is employing a strategy that historically favors the industrial power.

2. Target Verification (Highly Credible)
The video identifies specific complexes that are indeed the backbone of Iran’s military-industrial complex:

Shahroud & Parchin: These are well-documented sites for solid-fuel rocket motor production. Satellite imagery from early March 2026 has corroborated the video’s claims of “extensive destruction” at these sites, specifically targeting the assembly lines that are the hardest to replace.

Isfahan & HESA: These are the primary hubs for the Shahed drone series. The reported 90% reduction in drone and missile volume (from 700+ on Day 1 to ~60 on Day 10) matches intelligence briefings regarding the “extinction curve” of Iranian munitions.

3. The “Trade-Off” Strategy (Credible Doctrine)
The video provides a rare, cold assessment of why the U.S. Navy “lets ships burn.” This aligns with the “Force Protection” priority in U.S. naval doctrine. Risking a $2 billion Arleigh Burke-class destroyer to protect a commercial tanker that ignored warnings is a poor “industrial calculus.” The video correctly cites the 1988 USS Samuel B. Roberts incident as a historical precedent for the disproportionate damage a single cheap mine can do to a sophisticated warship.

4. Technical Specifications (Accurate)
The hardware details—such as the NASR-1 anti-ship missile on fast boats and the Ghadir-class midget submarines—are accurately described. The video’s point that a “fast boat without its missile is a fishing vessel with a machine gun” is a technically sound assessment of the IRGC’s reduced lethality.

Strategic Time Stamps and Analysis
[02:43] Consumption vs. Production: This is the most critical analytical point. The war is defined as a “cold industrial ledger.” Even if Iran “wins” a tactical engagement by hitting a tanker, they “lose” the war because they cannot replace the missile used in the strike.

[05:10] The Convergent System: The analysis breaks a missile down into four components (fuel, casing, guidance, TEL). It correctly notes that you only need to destroy the “hardest one to replace” (solid fuel production) to render the entire program obsolete.

[07:02] Supply Chain Blockade: The video links the current industrial strikes to the “Three Carrier Siege” (covered in previous reports). By cutting off imports of GPS modules and engines, the U.S. ensures that even if a factory is rebuilt, it has no components to assemble.

[11:20] Commercial Recklessness: The video places the blame for current shipping losses on the shipping companies’ “war risk premium” gambles rather than naval failure. This is a credible interpretation of why certain vessels are still being struck despite U.S. dominance.

[14:04] The Cost Symmetry: A key engineering insight. While Iran uses cheap weapons against expensive ships, the U.S. is using cheap JDAM kits ($25,000) to destroy the multi-billion dollar factories that build those weapons. This flips the “asymmetric” advantage back to the U.S.

The video is a credible breakdown of industrial calculus. It argues that Iran is “running out of things to shoot,” not because they lack courage, but because the infrastructure required to sustain a 21st-century war has been methodically erased. While the rhetoric from Tehran remains high, the 90% drop in fire volume suggests the “equation” described in the video is currently the most accurate way to measure the war’s trajectory.

Gemini: The credibility of this video is high, as it accurately reflects the tactical and strategic shift that occurred in the second week of Operation Epic Fury (March 2026). The analysis correctly identifies that the U.S. Navy’s refusal to escort tankers is not a sign of weakness, but a calculated mathematical and geometric strategy.

1. The “10% Problem” (Highly Credible)
The video’s most compelling point is that in a 6-nautical-mile wide shipping lane, 90% destruction of enemy assets is a failure. Current battle reports from March 12-15, 2026, confirm that while the Iranian “wall” has been shattered, the IRGC still operates mobile Transporter Erector Launchers (TELs) hidden in the Zagros Mountains. The video correctly states that an escort requires 100% certainty; a single surviving missile hitting a supertanker would create an environmental and economic catastrophe that would “erase all victories before it.”

2. Mine Warfare Reality (Accurate)
The technical assessment of the mine threat is verified. Iran began seeding the strait with bottom-influence and contact mines on February 28, 2026. The video correctly identifies a critical U.S. vulnerability: the decommissioning of most Avenger-class mine countermeasures (MCM) ships. With only four ships forward-deployed in Japan, the U.S. lacks the immediate “on-site” hardware to sweep 360 square nautical miles of seabed, making a months-long clearing process a realistic estimate.

3. The Geometric Siege (Strategic Reality)
The video accurately describes the positioning of Carrier Strike Group 3 (USS Abraham Lincoln) in the Gulf of Oman. By sitting outside the strait, the Navy has flipped the geometry of the conflict. This reflects the actual state of the war as of mid-March 2026:

The “Double Lock”: Iran’s mines keep the U.S. out, but U.S. air supremacy keeps Iranian oil exports in.

Economic Suffocation: Iran is currently unable to export its 1.4 million barrels per day, leading to the collapse of its internal revenue while the U.S. maintains global logistics chains.

4. Historical Precedent (Correct)
The reference to the USS Samuel B. Roberts (1988) is a staple of Naval War College doctrine. It serves as a credible warning that a $1,500 mine can effectively “mission-kill” a multi-billion dollar Aegis destroyer. This historical grounding adds significant weight to the video’s explanation of current Navy caution.

Key Time Stamps and Analysis
[01:42] The Hallway Geometry: Explains why “21 miles” is a myth. The traffic separation scheme narrows the usable space to 6 miles. This is a critical engineering fact that explains why maneuvering a 1,100-foot tanker under fire is impossible.

[04:33] Why 90% is Not Enough: A brutal look at the math of escort. It highlights that the 10% of Iranian forces that survived (fast boats and hidden mountain launchers) are enough to maintain the blockade.

[07:32] The Ceiling Threat: Describes the survivability of Noor and Khalij Fars missiles. The video correctly notes that these can be launched and strike a tanker in seconds, leaving no time for a “reactive” defense without an Aegis shield directly alongside every vessel.

[11:23] The Geometry Flip: The pivot of the video. It argues that the Navy has turned Iran’s “fortress” into a “prison.” This is the most accurate description of the current U.S. strategic posture in Operation Epic Fury.

This video is a credible, engineering-focused breakdown of the Siege of Hormuz. It rejects the “pundit” view that the Navy is failing and instead provides a logical explanation for why the U.S. is choosing patience over firepower. By locking the “front door” from the outside, the U.S. is allowing the Iranian economy to collapse under the weight of its own defensive measures—a strategy the video aptly calls “industrial calculus.”

The Strait of Hormuz is Iran’s real strategic weapon. It gives Tehran leverage over the global economy even when it cannot win a straight conventional fight.
About 20 million barrels per day of crude oil and petroleum products moved through Hormuz in 2025, roughly 25 percent of the world’s seaborne oil trade. The strait also carried about one fifth of global oil and petroleum product consumption in 2024 and roughly one fifth of global LNG trade, mostly from Qatar. Bypass options are limited, which means disruption there carries outsized global consequences.
That matters more than Iran’s air defenses for a simple reason. Air defenses are mostly defensive. They can slow strikes, impose costs, and force attackers to be careful. Hormuz is coercive. It lets Iran threaten everyone at once: Gulf monarchies, Europe, India, China, Japan, Korea, and global shipping insurers. Even a partial disruption can spike prices, freeze tanker traffic, and create instant political pain far beyond the battlefield. The IEA describes Hormuz as one of the world’s most critical oil transit chokepoints and warns that limited alternatives mean any disruption would have enormous consequences for world oil markets.
Iran does not need to close the strait completely to gain leverage. It just needs to make passage look unsafe. Mines, anti-ship missiles, drones, fast boats, submarine threats, harassment, and insurance panic can all reduce traffic without a formal blockade. Markets price risk, not just reality. Once tanker owners and insurers think the route is dangerous, flows can fall before any legal closure exists. Recent IEA and EIA reporting already describes near halts and sharp disruptions in tanker movements through Hormuz during regional war scares, with crude prices jumping in response.
This is the deeper strategic asymmetry. The United States and Israel can probably degrade Iranian radars, missile batteries, and command nodes. But Iran can still threaten the shipping corridor beside its coastline. Tehran’s deterrent is not “we can stop your air force.” It is “we can make victory economically painful for the whole world.”
It also changes the politics of a war. If Iran’s air defenses collapse, that is mostly a military story. If Hormuz is disrupted, it becomes an economic and diplomatic crisis. Gulf states panic, Asian importers lean on Washington, Europe worries about inflation, and oil producers scramble to reroute or release reserves. The war stops being about Iran and becomes about global energy stability. The EIA notes that options to bypass Hormuz are limited, which is precisely why the chokepoint carries so much leverage.
So the blunt version is this: Iran’s air defense can make an attack harder. Hormuz can make an attack politically unaffordable.
That is why so much commentary about winning the air war misses the real issue. The more important question is not whether Iran can keep its skies closed. It is whether Iran can keep the Gulf nervous enough that the economic costs of war start fracturing the coalition against it. That is where Tehran’s real bargaining power sits.
The catch for Iran is that Hormuz is a mutual hostage. Iran also depends on Gulf shipping and knows that a major, sustained disruption might trigger overwhelming retaliation and alienate buyers like China. So Hormuz is most useful as a threat, a pressure valve, and a source of controlled chaos, not as a permanently sealed gate.
Through an Alliance Theory lens, Hormuz is Iran’s best coalition weapon. It does not have to beat the U.S. Navy head on. It just has to raise costs enough to split America’s coalition from energy markets, Gulf partners, and oil-importing states. That is a far more realistic path to leverage than trying to win an air defense duel.

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Trump reacted with hilarity to the news that the Ayatollah might be gay. How might previous American presidents reacted?

Each president would have filtered the intelligence through his own coalition logic, personal temperament, and the specific political moment he occupied.
Franklin Roosevelt would probably have found it useful and filed it away without laughing. He was a ruthless collector of personal information about rivals and allies alike. J. Edgar Hoover kept files on everyone partly because Roosevelt created a culture where personal vulnerability was understood as a political resource. FDR would have seen the intelligence as potential leverage and said nothing publicly, possibly nothing privately either, because discretion about that kind of information was how you kept it useful.
Eisenhower would have been uncomfortable. He came from a military culture with its own complicated and largely suppressed relationship with homosexuality, and he would have understood immediately that the information was both a potential weapon and a liability if mishandled. He would have passed it to the CIA and told them to determine its operational value. His reaction in the room would have been a flat midwestern silence followed by a question about verification.
Kennedy would have smiled. He had enough of his own private life to protect that he would have appreciated the irony without moralizing about it. He also had a sophisticated enough sense of how information moved through political systems to understand its propaganda potential. He would have asked McGeorge Bundy what they could do with it and whether it could be used to split the Iranian leadership internally.
Johnson would have been loud about it in private and disciplined in public. He was famous for crude humor and for using personal information about rivals mercilessly in backroom settings. He would have made jokes that cannot be repeated here and then asked his national security team how to weaponize it without fingerprints.
Nixon would have been the most strategically serious about it and also the most personally conflicted. He was deeply uncomfortable with homosexuality, made that plain on the White House tapes, and would have reacted with genuine disgust before his strategic brain engaged. Then he would have thought carefully about whether it could be used as part of a broader destabilization effort. Nixon understood psychological warfare better than almost any postwar president. He would have wanted to use it but worried about the blowback if the operation were traced back to the White House.
Carter would have been visibly uncomfortable for entirely different reasons. His Baptist faith made him genuinely conflicted about homosexuality throughout his life, though he consistently moved toward greater acceptance over the decades. In the late 1970s context he would have worried about the ethics of using a man’s private life as a weapon, asked whether it was consistent with American values, and probably frustrated his national security team by insisting on thinking it through morally before acting on it strategically.
Reagan would have deflected with a joke that was gentler than Johnson’s but served the same function of not engaging seriously. His public persona required optimism and a certain avoidance of anything squalid. In private his reaction would have depended heavily on who was in the room. With Bill Casey at the CIA the conversation would have turned operational quickly. With Nancy present he probably would have moved on fast.
George H.W. Bush would have been the most classically WASP about it, meaning a brief acknowledgment, no visible reaction, and an immediate pivot to what the intelligence community recommended doing with the information. He was a former CIA director. He understood that personal information about foreign leaders was a tool, not a subject for personal reaction. His affect in that briefing room would have been almost unreadable.
Clinton would have reacted with genuine intellectual curiosity and probably spent twenty minutes asking about the sourcing, the cultural context, and the theological implications before anyone could steer him back to the policy question. He also would have been acutely aware, sitting in that room, of the particular irony of a leader being politically vulnerable because of private sexual behavior. Whether that awareness would have made him more or less inclined to use the information is an interesting question.
George W. Bush would have been uncomfortable in a specifically evangelical way. By his second term he had anchored much of his political coalition to social conservatism, and homosexuality as a topic carried enormous political charge in that context. He would not have laughed. He would have looked to Cheney, who would have shown no reaction whatsoever, and to Condoleezza Rice, who would have immediately reframed it as a question of regional stability. Bush would have followed her lead.
Obama would have had the most complex reaction in the room and shown the least of it. He was personally comfortable with gay people and had evolved publicly on marriage equality by his second term. He also had a lawyer’s instinct for not reacting to raw intelligence before it was verified. His visible response would have been thoughtful and measured. Privately he would have been alert to both the propaganda potential and the risk that using it would undermine the kind of multilateral legitimacy he spent his presidency trying to build. He would have asked whether American fingerprints on the story would damage relationships with Muslim-majority allies.
Trump laughed, which is in some ways the most honest reaction in the room. He was not performing strategic calculation or moral deliberation. He found it funny and said so. That transparency is consistent with everything else about how he processes information. The laugh also signals something Alliance Theory predicts, that he immediately understood it as a status weapon rather than as a piece of intelligence requiring careful handling. The humor was recognition. He knew exactly what it was for.

Posted in America, Homosexuality | Comments Off on Trump reacted with hilarity to the news that the Ayatollah might be gay. How might previous American presidents reacted?

If the ayatollah did a news conference where he came out as a proud gay-iranian, how might it be covered by the news media?

The coverage would fracture almost immediately along the coalition lines we have been mapping, and each ecosystem would find a way to make the same event confirm what it already believed.
The Atlanticist establishment press, the Financial Times, the Washington Post, the Economist, would treat it first as a breaking news crisis and then quickly as a legitimacy story. The framing would center on instability and succession. Is this a sign of regime collapse? What does the clerical establishment do now? They would quote Thomas Wright or someone from Brookings within hours, arguing that this represents a historic fracturing of the Islamic Republic’s ideological foundations. The tone would be grave and analytical. The human element, a man publicly acknowledging something that his own system would execute him for, would get a paragraph or two before the piece pivoted back to geopolitical implications and alliance credibility.
CNN would do a split screen. One side would have a national security analyst explaining the theological implications of Velayat-e Faqih. The other side would have an Iranian dissident in London describing what this means for LGBTQ Iranians who have been executed under the system he now leads. The chyron would say something like IRAN SUPREME LEADER STUNS WORLD and the panel would talk over each other for four hours.
Fox News would not know where to put it. The story breaks two of their standard narratives simultaneously. They have spent years using Iran’s treatment of gay people as evidence of Islamic barbarism and as a justification for military action. Now the Supreme Leader is gay and saying so proudly. The hawk wing would try to argue it is a propaganda stunt or a sign of weakness. Tucker Carlson’s corner of the media ecosystem would probably suggest it was a CIA operation or a globalist plot. Someone would say it within the hour.
The interventionist hawk ecosystem, the Wall Street Journal editorial page, Commentary Magazine, the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, would pivot fast. Their coverage would argue that this proves the regime is in terminal collapse and that the United States must press its military advantage before the power vacuum fills with something worse. The personal revelation would be almost beside the point. It becomes evidence for the conclusion they already hold.
The nationalist realist camp around Elbridge Colby would use it differently. Their coverage and commentary would argue that a regime this internally chaotic and destabilized no longer requires massive American military investment to finish. Get out, declare victory, redirect resources to the Pacific. The Supreme Leader coming out as gay becomes, in their framing, proof that the war has already broken the regime’s coherence.
Social media would do what it always does, which is move faster than any of those institutions and in every direction at once. Within an hour there would be genuine expressions of solidarity from LGBTQ activists worldwide, memes, conspiracy theories, Iranian diaspora accounts processing something almost too large to process, and hardline regime supporters calling it an American deepfake. The deepfake narrative would have millions of impressions before any fact-checking organization published anything.
The humanitarian and diplomatic coalition, Crisis Group, Carnegie, the UN adjacents, would publish something within twenty-four hours arguing that this moment represents a narrow and fleeting opening for a negotiated ceasefire and that the international community must resist the temptation to exploit the chaos militarily. They would be largely ignored by everyone with actual power.
The energy market analysts would note the price of oil, assess whether the news changes the probability of Hormuz remaining closed, and move on. Helima Croft would appear on Bloomberg and give a careful assessment of whether a leadership crisis changes the supply picture. She would be the most useful person on television that day.
The Israeli press would be in genuine turmoil, caught between the instinct to cover a potential enemy’s humiliation and the discomfort of a story that cuts too close to their own internal religious politics. The Haredi press would probably not cover it at all, or cover it only as evidence of moral degeneracy and Western corruption spreading even to Israel’s enemies.
The Iranian state press would not cover it. Or it would call it a fabrication. Or it would say the Supreme Leader was coerced. All three simultaneously, in different outlets, with no coordination, because the regime’s information apparatus would itself be in crisis.
And somewhere in all of that noise, the actual human story would mostly get lost. A man raised inside one of the most repressive systems on earth, shaped by a father who apparently saw his nature as a disqualification, standing in front of cameras and saying something true about himself at the precise moment it could cost him everything. That story would trend for six hours and then get buried under the geopolitical analysis.
That is probably the most accurate thing you can say about how the modern media ecosystem handles anything genuinely human. It processes the feeling for a moment and then returns immediately to the coalition logic underneath.
I wonder if a gay ayatollah might lead a gentrification movement in the middle east?
The image is irresistible. A Supreme Leader who decides that Tehran’s answer to the war damage is reclaimed wood, artisanal saffron lattes, and a redesigned Revolutionary Guard uniform with better tailoring.
But set the joke aside for a moment because there is actually something analytically interesting underneath it.
Gentrification as a social process requires a specific set of conditions. You need a creative class with disposable income and aesthetic preferences. You need property markets flexible enough to allow displacement. You need a state that tolerates, and eventually co-opts, subcultural spaces. And you need enough political stability that people believe investing in a neighborhood has a future. The Middle East has versions of all of these in specific places. Dubai is essentially gentrification as state policy, a ruling coalition that decided aesthetic modernization and global capital attraction were more useful than religious conservatism as legitimating tools. Abu Dhabi is doing the same thing more slowly with museums and Formula One. Even Riyadh under Mohammed bin Salman has been running a controlled aesthetic liberalization, concerts, cinemas, mixed public spaces, as a way of building a new coalition among younger Saudis without surrendering political control.
What those examples share is that the liberalization is top-down, tightly managed, and explicitly disconnected from any challenge to the ruling coalition’s core power. MBS can allow women to drive and open a nightclub in Riyadh precisely because those changes do not threaten his grip on the security services or the oil revenues. They expand his coalition without redistributing power.
A gay ayatollah attempting something similar in Iran faces a categorically different structural problem. The Islamic Republic’s legitimating ideology is not separable from its moral code the way Gulf monarchies manage to separate modernization from political control. Khomeinism is the source code of the system, not a feature that can be updated while the operating system runs normally. Any aesthetic or cultural liberalization Mojtaba attempted would be read immediately as theological deviation by the clerical establishment and the IRGC, both of which have independent institutional power and their own survival interests.
The genuinely interesting historical question your image raises is whether there is a version of Islamic modernism that could do what the Renaissance did for Christian Europe, produce a flowering of art, architecture, urban culture, and intellectual life that coexists with religious identity rather than replacing it. The Ottoman Empire at its height was actually closer to that than either the Islamic Republic or the Gulf monarchies. Istanbul in the sixteenth century was one of the most cosmopolitan cities on earth. Persian culture before the revolution produced serious literature, film, and architecture that engaged the world without abandoning its identity.
The revolution destroyed that tradition deliberately. It was not an accident or a side effect. The suppression of Iranian cosmopolitan culture was a coalition strategy, a way of eliminating the educated urban middle class as a rival power center.
So a gay ayatollah leading a gentrification movement is funny. But the serious version of the question is whether the destruction of that tradition is permanent or whether the conditions for its revival exist somewhere underneath the current regime. Given that Iran has one of the most educated and culturally sophisticated populations in the Middle East, the answer is probably that the tradition is suppressed rather than dead.
What it would take to revive it is not an ayatollah with good taste. It is a collapse of the coalition that made suppression its survival strategy. That may actually be closer than it was a year ago. Whether what comes after is a renaissance or a failed state is the question nobody in Washington’s competing coalitions has a convincing answer to.
Energy markets would react instantly because oil traders care about political stability in major producing regions, not the personal life of a leader. The question markets would ask is simple.

Does this increase or decrease the chance of disruption to oil supply?

Iran sits near the center of one of the most important energy corridors in the world. The country exports oil and sits beside the shipping route through the Strait of Hormuz, the passage through which roughly a fifth of global oil supply moves.

So the market reaction would depend on how the announcement affects regime stability and regional tensions.

Immediate reaction

The first market move would likely be volatility.

Oil traders hate uncertainty. A shocking announcement from the head of a theocratic state would create uncertainty about internal politics in Tehran. The immediate response in futures markets would probably be a short spike in oil prices as traders price in the risk of instability.

Energy markets move fast because large hedge funds, banks, and commodity traders automatically respond to geopolitical shocks. Even rumors can move prices if they suggest potential supply disruption.

Scenario one: regime instability

If the declaration triggered a major political crisis inside Iran, markets could react strongly.

Possible triggers include

• clerical backlash
• protests or elite power struggles
• instability inside the Revolutionary Guard

If investors believed Iran might enter a period of internal turmoil, oil prices could jump because instability could threaten exports from major terminals like Kharg Island, Iran’s main oil loading hub.

Markets would also worry about tanker traffic in the Strait of Hormuz. Even a small risk of disruption there can add several dollars to the price of a barrel of oil.

Scenario two: reform signals

There is another possible interpretation.

If the announcement were perceived as part of a broader social or political liberalization, markets might react positively after the initial shock.

Energy investors often interpret political liberalization as a sign that a country may

• reopen to foreign investment
• increase oil exports
• reduce confrontation with the West

In that scenario oil prices might actually fall because traders would anticipate more Iranian supply entering global markets.

Scenario three: propaganda or short-lived controversy

Markets are also pragmatic.

If traders concluded that the announcement was mostly symbolic and did not affect real power inside Iran, the price impact would fade quickly.

Oil markets ultimately respond to physical supply.

If Iranian oil keeps flowing, tankers keep sailing, and the government remains in control, the price shock would disappear within days.

What energy analysts would watch

Energy strategists would immediately look at a few indicators.

Statements from the Revolutionary Guard.
Reactions from senior clerics.
Signs of protests or elite divisions.
Any military activity near the Strait of Hormuz.

If those indicators remained calm, markets would settle.

Why oil markets are so sensitive to Iran

Iran is not the largest oil producer, but its location gives it enormous strategic leverage. Any instability there raises questions about Gulf shipping lanes, which affect exports from Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, and the UAE.

That is why political shocks in Tehran often ripple through energy markets far beyond Iran’s own production.

The announcement itself would not move oil prices for long. But if it created even a small risk of political instability in Iran or shipping disruption in the Gulf, energy markets would react quickly with higher volatility and potentially higher prices.

Posted in Homosexuality, Iran | Comments Off on If the ayatollah did a news conference where he came out as a proud gay-iranian, how might it be covered by the news media?

Is Iran’s New Supreme Leader – Mojtaba Khamenei – Gay?

Trump is telling people that he’s gay.
Honestly, Mojtaba pings my gaydar.
The New York Post reports:

Two of the sources said the intelligence indicated that Mojtaba, who earned the nickname “the power behind the robes” while serving as his aging dad’s gatekeeper, has had a long-term sexual relationship with his childhood tutor.
The third source said the intelligence indicated the affair was with a person who formerly worked for the Khamenei family.
Mojtaba, who is believed to have been wounded in the same Feb. 28 airstrike that killed his father and other members of his family, has made “aggressive” sexual overtures to men caring for him, possibly while under the influence of heavy medication, one of The Post’s sources said.
Some elements of Mojtaba Khamenei’s sex life have been reported before and may lend credence to the allegation.
A classified US diplomatic cable from 2008, published by WikiLeaks, described Mojtaba being treated in the UK for impotence, though that report did not identify what may have caused the condition.
The State Department file says Mojtaba married “relatively late in life” — around age 30 — “reportedly due to an impotency problem treated and eventually resolved during three extended visits to the UK, at Wellington and Cromwell Hospitals, London.”
“Mojtaba was expected by his family to produce children quickly, but needed a fourth visit to the UK for medical treatment; after a stay of two months, his wife became pregnant,” the leaked file said…
The allegation of homosexuality was alluded to in a CBS News report on Sunday that said the elder Khamanei, who had ruled Iran since 1989, preferred a different successor in part because of unspecified “issues” in Mojtaba’s “personal life.”
“His father and others suspected he was gay and that was something that people were spreading to try to stop his ascension,” one of The Post’s sources explained.
Homosexual conduct is illegal in Iran, though the government does allow surgical sex change operations, which some gay men reportedly are pressured into undergoing to avoid criminal penalties.
Sodomy is a capital offense in the nation of 93 million people, with some gay Iranians infamously hanged from construction cranes as a warning to others.
“In Iran, we don’t have homosexuals,” former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who is believed to be an ally of the younger Khamenei, claimed in 2007.

Brokeback Damavand Mountain! Iran’s tallest mountain looms over Tehran. What if the mountain became a gay symbol? Perhaps gays the world over would fly to Tehran to climb it?
If Trump is circulating the claim that Mojtaba Khamenei is gay, the first question Alliance Theory asks is what coalition function that claim serves. It is not primarily an intelligence disclosure. It is a weapon designed to operate inside the Islamic Republic’s own internal coalition logic.
The Islamic Republic’s legitimacy rests on a specific architecture of moral authority. The Supreme Leader is not just a political figure. He is the Vali-e Faqih, the guardian jurist, the man whose authority derives from his embodiment of Islamic law and virtue. That is not a ceremonial claim. It is the load-bearing wall of the entire system. A charge of homosexuality, which the Islamic Republic treats as a capital offense, does not merely embarrass the leader personally. It attacks the theological foundation of his right to rule. It tells the Iranian clergy, the Revolutionary Guard, and the population that the man claiming divine-adjacent authority is, by the system’s own moral code, deserving of execution.
This is a form of what might be called legitimacy deconstruction. It is more destabilizing than calling him corrupt or incompetent, because corruption and incompetence are manageable charges inside any political system. But a charge that strikes at the core of the system’s own self-justifying mythology is categorically different. It forces the regime to respond, and every possible response is costly. Denial draws attention to the charge. Silence looks like confirmation to some audiences. Rage looks defensive.
From a niche construction standpoint, the claim also works to reshape the information environment inside Iran itself. The Islamic Republic has spent decades constructing an epistemic landscape in which the Supreme Leader’s moral authority is simply assumed. A charge like this, amplified through social media that the regime cannot fully suppress, introduces a crack in that constructed environment. It does not need to be believed by a majority to do damage. It needs only to be whispered, repeated, and joked about in private to erode the aura of untouchability that the office depends on.
There is a historical precedent worth noting. Psychological operations targeting leadership legitimacy have a long history in American strategy, and sexual allegations have been used before to destabilize figures whose authority rests on moral claims. Whether the charge is true is almost secondary to whether it circulates and what it forces the target to do.
The risk calculus cuts both ways. Inside Iran, the charge might backfire by generating nationalist sympathy for a leader seen as the target of American cultural aggression. The Islamic Republic has long framed homosexuality as a Western imposition, a form of cultural imperialism. Trump’s claim might inadvertently allow the regime to cast Mojtaba Khamenei as a victim of exactly that framing, rallying conservative religious sentiment around him rather than undermining it.
What it signals about Trump’s own strategic approach is also worth noting. The Art of the Deal framework we discussed applies here directly. Trump treats reputational damage as a legitimate negotiating instrument. He used it against domestic rivals for years before applying it to foreign policy. The willingness to make a charge like this publicly, regardless of its verifiability, reflects a negotiating philosophy in which psychological pressure and unpredictability are tools, and in which the norms that constrain establishment foreign policy analysts like Wright are not guardrails but handicaps.
Whether it works depends entirely on the internal coalition logic of the Islamic Republic, which remains difficult to read from outside.
The reported intelligence, still unverified and without photographic evidence, is worth analyzing on two levels: what it might mean if true, and what it means that it exists at all as a circulating story.
Start with the factual situation. Reports claim U.S. intelligence briefed Trump that Mojtaba Khamenei is gay and that his father knew and considered it a liability to succession. Trump apparently reacted with surprise and laughter. He has not publicly confirmed or shared the claim himself, at least as of March 16, 2026. The sourcing relies on unnamed officials. Treat it as unverified intelligence, possible disinformation, or a deliberate leak, not established fact.
If it is true, the implications flow directly from the structure of the system Mojtaba now leads. The Islamic Republic’s legitimacy rests on the doctrine of Velayat-e Faqih, the guardianship of the jurist, which holds that the Supreme Leader derives authority from his embodiment of Islamic law and moral rectitude. That is not window dressing. It is the load-bearing premise of the entire system. Homosexuality under that system is not merely a sin. It is a capital offense. A Supreme Leader who secretly violates the moral code he enforces on others does not just face personal embarrassment. He faces a legitimacy crisis at the theological root of his authority.
The most immediate practical consequence would be vulnerability to blackmail. Whoever holds credible knowledge of the secret, whether the IRGC, rival clerics, foreign intelligence services, or some combination, gains leverage over the leader. In authoritarian systems, kompromat of this kind tends to make leaders more dependent on the structures protecting them rather than more independent. Mojtaba, already described by Trump as a lightweight and lacking his father’s institutional stature, would be weaker still if key power brokers knew he could be destroyed by disclosure.
The second consequence Pinsof’s framework predicts is overcompensation. Leaders who fear exposure for violating their coalition’s moral code tend to perform that code more aggressively than anyone else. History produces many examples of closeted figures who became the most zealous enforcers of the norms they privately broke. For Mojtaba, that might mean stricter moral policing, harsher public rhetoric, and a performative brutality designed to signal orthodox loyalty. That makes the regime more repressive, not less, and more erratic.
The third consequence concerns internal coalition panic. Alliance Theory holds that coalitions depend on signals of shared values. If senior IRGC commanders, clerical rivals, or members of the Assembly of Experts believe their leader secretly violates the code they enforce at gunpoint, the internal solidarity of the regime erodes. It does not require public exposure. Rumor alone, circulating among elites who already have factional grievances, can accelerate the fragmentation analysts like Wright have warned about.
Now consider the story’s existence independent of its truth. The claim is almost perfectly engineered as a psychological warfare instrument. It attacks the one dimension of the Supreme Leader’s authority that cannot be defended on military or economic grounds. You can argue about missile inventories and oil revenues. You cannot easily argue your way out of a credible sexual allegation inside a system that executes people for the same behavior. The accusation forces the regime into a dilemma with no clean exit. Silence lets the rumor spread. Denial amplifies it. Rage looks defensive and draws more attention.
Notice the symmetry the document you shared identifies correctly. Mojtaba has not appeared on camera since his father’s assassination. That absence creates an information vacuum. In Alliance Theory, whoever fills that vacuum with the more useful narrative wins the coordination battle. The U.S. side is filling it with personal scandal and incapacity. The Iranian side is trying to fill it with the image of a shadow leader directing resistance from a position of safety. The rumor directly undermines that image by suggesting the man directing the resistance is compromised at his core.
Trump’s use of this material also fits the Art of the Deal framework we discussed earlier. He treats reputational damage as a legitimate negotiating instrument. The goal is not evidentiary. It is to lower the perceived status of the opponent, make him an object of ridicule or suspicion, and signal contempt to both domestic supporters and Iranian audiences. Calling Mojtaba a lightweight and then allowing intelligence about his sexuality to circulate follows the same logic as the nicknames and personal insults Trump has used against domestic rivals. The objective is status destruction, not argument.
The tactic has a long history for a reason. It works, at least partially, under specific conditions. It works best when the target’s authority rests on moral claims rather than purely military or economic power. It works when the accusation maps directly onto the target coalition’s own taboos rather than external ones. And it works when the target cannot easily produce contrary evidence. All three conditions apply here. The risk, as the document notes, is that it backfires by allowing the regime to frame the claim as American cultural aggression, rallying nationalist and religious sentiment around a leader cast as the victim of Western degeneracy propaganda. Iran has long used that framing effectively.
The most honest summary is this. If true, the intelligence describes a vulnerability that could accelerate internal fracturing in a regime already weakened by war, assassination, and economic pressure. If false or planted, it still functions as a weapon by forcing the regime to manage a narrative it cannot cleanly refute. Either way, its appearance in circulation on March 16, 2026 is itself a strategic event, regardless of what Mojtaba Khamenei does or does not do in private.
I wonder if he will become a gay icon and usher in a new gay-friendly Islam? That is a genuinely entertaining thought, but the structural barriers make it nearly impossible in any near-term scenario.
The Islamic Republic is not a system where a leader’s private behavior reshapes official ideology. It runs the other way. The system shapes, constrains, and if necessary destroys the individual. Mojtaba did not inherit a personal kingdom he can redecorate. He inherited a coalition of clerics, IRGC commanders, intelligence services, and ideological enforcers who have their own institutional interests in maintaining the existing moral code. That coalition would remove him before it would follow him into a theological reinterpretation of homosexuality.
There is also no reform tradition within Khomeinism that could absorb such a shift. The system was built explicitly to prevent exactly this kind of ideological drift. The Assembly of Experts exists partly to remove a Supreme Leader deemed unfit, and unfitness in their framework includes moral deviation. If Mojtaba attempted anything resembling liberalization on sexual morality, he would more likely face removal or worse than lead a revolution in Islamic thought.
The deeper irony the document you shared touches on is worth noting. Iran already has a strange and specific relationship with gender and sexuality through its state-sanctioned gender reassignment surgery policy, which Ayatollah Khomeini endorsed as a way of resolving homosexuality by reclassifying it as a gender problem. That policy is not compassion. It is the system trying to make reality fit the ideology rather than adjusting the ideology to fit reality. It tells you something important about how the Islamic Republic handles the tension. It does not liberalize. It reclassifies and redirects.
The gay icon scenario would require Mojtaba to have both the personal courage and the institutional power to spend his political capital on the most explosive possible reform in the middle of a war his country is losing. Neither condition appears remotely close to true.
The more likely trajectory, if the intelligence is accurate and circulates further, is the opposite of liberation. He becomes more repressive, more performatively orthodox, and more dependent on the enforcers around him. The secret, if real, is a cage, not a key.
Imagine if one of Israel’s chief rabbis came out as gay too in a gesture of sympathy? It could lead to reconciliation between Israel and Iran.
It is a beautiful thought as a piece of political fiction, and there is something genuinely moving about the symmetry of it. But the structural barriers are just as formidable on the Israeli side, and the leap from personal revelation to geopolitical reconciliation skips about forty layers of reality.
Start with the Israeli religious establishment. The chief rabbinate in Israel is not a liberal institution. It is dominated by Haredi and national religious figures whose position on homosexuality is essentially identical in its condemnation to the Islamic Republic’s, differing mainly in the punishment. A chief rabbi coming out would produce immediate calls for his removal, a crisis inside the rabbinical establishment, and a political earthquake in the coalition politics of the Israeli government, which depends heavily on Haredi parties. It would be consumed entirely by that internal crisis before it could function as any kind of diplomatic gesture.
Then there is the question of whether personal gestures by religious figures translate into state behavior. They almost never do. States respond to power, interests, and coalition pressures. The Iranian regime’s hostility to Israel is not fundamentally about homosexuality or sexual morality. It is about the Palestinian cause as a legitimating narrative for the Islamic Republic’s regional ambitions, about Hezbollah and the axis of resistance as strategic assets, and about the existential threat each side believes the other poses. Two religious figures sharing a personal characteristic does not touch any of those drivers.
Alliance Theory is blunt about this. Reconciliation between coalitions happens when the cost of continued conflict exceeds the benefit, when a new common enemy reorders priorities, or when internal coalition pressures force a renegotiation. It does not happen because of symbolic gestures from figures outside the core power structure, however poignant those gestures might be.
The scenario also assumes that visibility and sympathy flow naturally between religious traditions sharing a similar internal contradiction. But the Islamic Republic has spent decades constructing an ideological framework in which Israel is not a neighbor with shared human struggles but an illegitimate colonial entity. That construction is too politically load-bearing to be dissolved by a moment of cross-religious solidarity, however humanly resonant.
What the thought experiment does illuminate is something real. Both systems, Khomeinist theocracy and Israeli religious nationalism, enforce moral codes that create private suffering among their own members. The people crushed by those codes in Tehran and the people crushed by similar codes in Jerusalem have more in common with each other than either government would ever acknowledge. That is a genuine and melancholy truth.
But the distance between that truth and any political reconciliation is vast. States are not therapy groups. Shared vulnerability does not produce shared interests, at least not at the speed politics requires.
It would make a extraordinary novel though.

The rumor spread across the Middle East like desert wind.

First it appeared in whispers on encrypted channels. Then on satellite television. Then everywhere.

The new Iranian Supreme Leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, had something in common with men he had spent his life condemning.

No one knew if it was true. But the rumor refused to die.

Iran’s clerical establishment was already shaken. Mojtaba had only recently been elevated by the Assembly of Experts after the assassination of his father during the war with Israel and the United States.

Now the rumor was everywhere.

In Tehran, senior clerics argued in private rooms behind thick curtains.

Some demanded repression. Silence the rumor. Arrest anyone spreading it.

Others feared the opposite.

“If we crush this story,” one ayatollah said quietly, “people will believe it even more.”

Meanwhile in Jerusalem, an unexpected voice spoke.

The chief rabbi of Israel stood before a packed hall.

No one expected what came next.

He cleared his throat.

“For many years,” he said slowly, “I have lived with a truth that I could not say publicly.”

The room froze.

“I am a gay man.”

Gasps rippled through the crowd.

Television stations cut to emergency broadcasts. Social media erupted. Within minutes the speech was translated into Persian, Arabic, English.

But the rabbi was not finished.

“For centuries,” he continued, “religious leaders have hidden truths about themselves. We feared that honesty would destroy faith. But perhaps honesty can save it.”

He paused.

“I do not know the private life of Iran’s leader. But I know this. Human beings are more complicated than our slogans.”

He looked directly into the cameras.

“If two religious leaders on opposite sides of a terrible war share the same hidden burden, perhaps God is telling us something.”

In Tehran the speech played on silent televisions inside government offices.

No one spoke.

Inside the headquarters of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, a colonel watched the broadcast three times.

He turned to a colleague.

“This rabbi just did something very dangerous,” he said.

“Dangerous how?”

“He removed the weapon.”

Across Iran young people began sharing clips of the speech.

Memes appeared. Jokes. Debates.

But something else appeared too.

Curiosity.

For decades the Israeli–Iranian conflict had been framed as a cosmic struggle between two irreconcilable systems.

Now the narrative had cracked.

If two powerful religious leaders could share a secret that their own societies condemned, then perhaps the boundaries between enemy and ally were not as absolute as they seemed.

Weeks later, an unexpected message arrived in Jerusalem through Swiss diplomats.

It was brief.

“Private meeting requested.”

The rabbi read the note twice.

The signature was simple.

M.K.

He smiled.

History sometimes turns not on armies or missiles but on small acts of honesty.

And sometimes peace begins with a confession.

The Peace Conference of the Impossible

No one remembers exactly how the invitation was written.

Some say it came by diplomatic pouch. Others claim it appeared mysteriously in the inboxes of several exhausted diplomats at three in the morning.

The subject line read:

“Emergency Interfaith Dialogue.”

The location was neutral ground. A hotel in Geneva with carpets so thick that revolutions could occur without anyone hearing footsteps.

Two men arrived from opposite sides of the world.

The first was Rabbi Eliyahu Ben-Ari, a fictional chief rabbi of Israel whose beard had become an institution unto itself. Journalists often said the beard was older than half the state.

The second was Ayatollah Hossein Rahmani, a fictional Iranian cleric whose turban seemed to hover above his head like a small theological planet.

Both men had been sent by governments that were not entirely sure why they were going.

The diplomats hoped for a miracle.

Instead they got a conversation.

They were seated at opposite ends of a polished table. Between them stood a tray of untouched tea.

The translator cleared his throat.

The rabbi spoke first.

“I must confess something.”

The translator hesitated, sensing danger. Diplomats in the back of the room began quietly preparing statements of denial in case something went wrong.

“For forty years,” the rabbi said, “I have carried an identity my society does not easily accept.”

The ayatollah blinked.

The translator blinked.

The diplomats stopped typing.

The rabbi continued calmly.

“I spent decades preaching certainty. But certainty is a heavy robe. Sometimes a man wears it to hide the parts of himself that don’t fit the pattern.”

The ayatollah stared at the table.

Then he sighed.

“My friend,” he said softly, “you believe you are alone?”

The translators froze again.

“Do you know how many sermons I have given about purity?” the ayatollah said. “Thousands. Enough sermons to fill ten mosques.”

He leaned forward.

“Every sermon was also a hiding place.”

The diplomats began sweating.

One of them whispered to another.

“Is this… normal diplomacy?”

“No.”

Across the table the rabbi began to laugh.

A deep, exhausted laugh that echoed across the hall.

“For seventy years,” he said, “our nations have described each other as monsters.”

The ayatollah nodded.

“Yes. Monsters are easier than people.”

They sat quietly for a moment.

Then the ayatollah reached across the table and took a biscuit from the tray.

“Do you know what the real absurdity is?” he asked.

“What?”

“That two old men with secrets are somehow responsible for explaining God to millions of people.”

The rabbi considered this.

“Yes,” he said. “God must find it very amusing.”

Outside the conference room journalists waited for news of breakthroughs or disasters.

After several hours the doors opened.

The diplomats emerged looking confused.

“What happened?” reporters shouted.

The lead negotiator paused.

He searched for the right phrase.

“We may have accidentally discovered interfaith diplomacy.”

“Did they sign an agreement?”

“No.”

“What did they do?”

The negotiator rubbed his forehead.

“They talked.”

“About what?”

He hesitated.

“About how ridiculous it is that entire nations hate each other because of identities nobody understands.”

The reporters stared.

“And what happens now?” one asked.

The negotiator shrugged.

“I suspect the theologians will argue for twenty years.”

“And the war?”

He glanced back at the closed doors.

“Hard to say.”

Then he added quietly.

“But it’s difficult to maintain a holy war once the holy men start laughing.”

The Peace Conference of the Impossible
Part II

The problem with miracles is that governments don’t know what to do with them.

Within twenty-four hours of the Geneva meeting, intelligence agencies on both sides began issuing urgent memoranda.

In Jerusalem, a Mossad analyst wrote a report titled:

“Unexpected Diplomatic Risk.”

In Tehran, an IRGC colonel wrote one called:

“Possible Theological Containment Problem.”

Both reports described the same phenomenon.

The two religious leaders would not stop talking to each other.

At first the conversations were private. A quiet phone call. A shared joke about the difficulties of explaining ancient scriptures to modern television audiences.

Then something strange happened.

Students discovered the recordings.

Not the secret parts. Just the harmless parts. The laughter. The discussions about prophets, philosophy, and why theologians are always arguing about footnotes.

Within days the clips spread across the internet.

Young Israelis and Iranians began sharing them.

“Wait,” someone wrote online. “Why do these guys sound like old friends?”

This was not the intended narrative.

Emergency meetings began.

In Jerusalem, a cabinet minister slammed his fist on the table.

“Why is our chief rabbi discussing metaphysics with an ayatollah during a war?”

Across the region, the same question echoed in different languages.

The intelligence services attempted to solve the problem the way intelligence services always do.

They tried to control the story.

The Mossad issued a quiet directive to discourage further recordings.

The IRGC issued a louder directive threatening prison for anyone spreading unauthorized theological content.

Neither approach worked.

The students kept watching.

They found the conversations fascinating.

For seventy years their governments had told them that the other side was incomprehensible. A civilization so alien that dialogue was pointless.

Yet the two clerics seemed to understand each other perfectly.

Soon university debate clubs began reenacting the conversations.

A philosophy department in Haifa hosted a symposium titled:

“Can Religious Leaders Accidentally Create Peace?”

A theology seminar in Tehran hosted another titled:

“Are Rabbis Secretly Reasonable?”

Both events were heavily attended.

Meanwhile the two clerics continued meeting.

Sometimes in Geneva. Sometimes through encrypted video calls.

Their discussions wandered everywhere.

Ancient legal arguments. Mysticism. The absurdity of bureaucrats attempting to regulate divine mysteries.

One evening the rabbi asked a question.

“Do you think the politicians understand what we’re doing?”

The ayatollah smiled.

“No.”

“Should we explain?”

“Absolutely not.”

Outside the quiet world of theology, diplomats began noticing a peculiar change.

Public anger between the two societies had not vanished. But it had softened.

People still argued.

They just sounded less certain.

One day a journalist asked the rabbi whether the conversations with the Iranian cleric were undermining Israel’s war effort.

The rabbi adjusted his glasses.

“My dear friend,” he said, “if two old scholars discussing philosophy can destroy a war, then the war was not very strong to begin with.”

In Tehran, the ayatollah was asked a similar question by a suspicious reporter.

“Are you negotiating with the enemy?”

He considered the question.

“No.”

“What are you doing?”

“I am arguing with him about medieval legal theory.”

“And this helps Iran how?”

The ayatollah shrugged.

“It keeps him busy.”

The reporter looked confused.

Across the region, something subtle was happening.

Hatred had always depended on certainty.

Certainty that the enemy was unknowable.

Certainty that dialogue was pointless.

Certainty that the other side was morally incomprehensible.

But two elderly clerics laughing about theology had quietly introduced doubt.

And doubt, it turned out, was extremely dangerous.

Especially to wars.

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Decoding Thomas Wright

Thomas Wright is currently analyzing the Iran war as a conflict of competing endgames between Washington, Jerusalem, and Tehran. In a recent discussion with Ian Bremmer on March 14, 2026, he argued that the war has evolved from a simple military strike into a complex struggle where the primary actors are pursuing fundamentally different goals.
Wright identifies a major strategic rift between the United States and Israel. He notes that while Israel is pushing for full regime change, the Trump administration appears more transactional. Wright stated that Trump might not care who runs Iran as long as they are a pragmatic partner, whereas the Israelis are committed to a total overhaul of the Iranian state. This difference in objectives creates an unpredictable environment where military successes do not necessarily translate into a stable political outcome.
Wright warns that the current path could lead to the fragmentation of Iran. He describes this as a potential Syria civil war on steroids. In his view, efforts to break the Iranian state without a clear plan for what follows risk creating a much larger regional problem that would be far more difficult to manage than the current regime. Europe stays largely accommodating to Washington despite private concerns, while China and Russia pursue balanced economic interests without direct confrontation. He notes emerging technological elements, like AI and frontier tech integration in Pentagon operations, marking a first in high-intensity regional warfare.
Meanwhile, China and Russia are balancing their economic interests without directly confronting the United States.Technological Intersection: He points to an evolving relationship between the Pentagon and Silicon Valley, specifically how AI and frontier technologies are being used for the first time in a high-intensity regional war.
Wright concludes that there is no clear exit strategy. The best case involves the emergence of a more legitimate Iranian leadership, while the worst case is a prolonged era of regional instability and state collapse. Wright’s current rhetoric performs two main tasks for his coalition:
Warning against unilateralism: By highlighting the “Syria on steroids” scenario, he is signaling to the Trump administration that bypassing the traditional policy bureaucracy and allied consensus leads to unmanageable chaos.
He positions Brookings and the national security establishment as the necessary “pragmatic” middle ground between what he frames as Israeli overreach (regime change) and potential American impulsiveness.
Thomas Wright sits at the intersection of three elite alliances: the Washington national security bureaucracy, the transatlantic alliance network, and the think-tank and academic policy ecosystem. He is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and previously served as Senior Director for Strategic Planning at the U.S. National Security Council. His work focuses on U.S. grand strategy, alliances, NATO, China competition, and the future of international order. That biography already signals something important in Alliance Theory terms. His role is not primarily prediction. It is coalition maintenance.
The coalition he represents is what critics sometimes call the foreign policy establishment or the Blob. Its core includes the U.S. national security bureaucracy, NATO governments and European elites, Washington think tanks, transatlantic policy networks, and large foundations and policy journals. The belief system binding this coalition is the liberal international order, and its key claims follow a predictable structure: U.S. alliances are the foundation of global stability, NATO and Asian alliances must be preserved, authoritarian powers form a strategic bloc, and American leadership must coordinate democracies. Wright studies and promotes exactly this framework. In Alliance Theory terms, he is a theorist of coalition architecture.
Every coalition needs intellectuals who explain why the alliance exists. Wright’s narrative role is to argue that American alliances are the central pillar of global order and that abandoning them would produce chaos. That story does three political tasks simultaneously. It keeps European allies aligned with Washington. It justifies U.S. forward engagement abroad. And it frames rival powers as coordinated threats. If China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea are portrayed as forming an axis, the U.S. coalition must hold together to counter them. That is coalition signaling, not neutral analysis.
Pinsof’s insight is that people adopt beliefs that serve their coalition. Brookings is a prestige institution embedded in the U.S. policy elite, and its incentives include influence inside government, credibility with foreign governments, access to policymakers, and status within Washington. Producing analysts like Wright serves those incentives well. They are intellectually respectable, institutionally embedded, acceptable across Democratic administrations, and compatible with allied governments. That makes them ideal translators between academia and power.
Alliance Theory always asks who the rival coalition is. For Wright’s ecosystem, the rivals are America-First foreign policy advocates, isolationists, national populists, and realists skeptical of alliances. These groups argue that NATO freeloading is real, that alliances entangle the U.S. in unnecessary wars, and that global leadership costs too much. Wright’s work responds directly to these claims. His analysis is not neutral. It is intra-elite coalition conflict.
From Wright’s coalition perspective, Trump’s worldview threatens the institutional infrastructure of the alliance system. Trump questions NATO burden sharing, long-standing alliances, and multilateral institutions. For someone whose coalition depends on those institutions, that is existential. The incentives push analysts like Wright to argue that alliances are essential, that retrenchment is dangerous, and that American leadership must continue. That is alliance defense behavior.
His professional path makes this plain. Brookings, the Chicago Council, NSC strategic planning, commentary in the Atlantic and Foreign Affairs: those institutions are alliance-maintenance machines. Wright’s job inside that ecosystem is to produce narratives that justify U.S. leadership, keep allied elites coordinated, and frame geopolitical competition in coalition terms.
The deeper Pinsof insight is subtle. Wright genuinely believes his arguments. But the selection effect matters more than conscious loyalty. The people who rise inside these institutions are those whose beliefs align with the coalition’s incentives. It is not that Wright defends alliances because Brookings wants him to. It is that people who believe strongly in alliances are the ones who thrive inside Brookings-type ecosystems. Beliefs and incentives align, and the alignment looks like conviction because, for the people inside it, it is.
Wright is not just analyzing alliances. He is part of one.
“Expertise” functions as a credential that limits the coalition to those who share specific baseline assumptions. By framing the liberal international order as a complex, fragile machine that only seasoned practitioners understand, Wright helps maintain a high barrier to entry. This excludes populist or realist rivals not just on the merits of their arguments, but by framing them as intellectually unserious or unqualified. His role is to define the Overton Window of foreign policy so that only those who support the alliance architecture are seen as credible stakeholders.
Strategic alarmism as a cohesion tool. Pinsof argues that coalitions grow most cohesive when they face a common threat. Wright’s focus on the axis of authoritarians, meaning China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea, serves a vital internal function. If these powers are portrayed as a monolithic, coordinated threat, any internal dissent within the U.S. alliance system looks like a betrayal of global security. By heightening the perception of an external enemy, Wright raises the switching costs for any ally, such as France or Germany, that might consider a more independent or transactional path.
The buffered identity of the globalist elite. Wright’s narratives supply a moral vocabulary for the transatlantic elite coalition, a group that sees itself not as a narrow interest group but as the defender of universal values. Pinsof would note that this moralizing is a classic alliance tactic. It allows the coalition to claim that its specific strategic interests, such as NATO expansion, are the interests of humanity or democracy itself. That framing makes the coalition’s opponents appear not just strategically different but morally deficient.
The revolving door as selection pressure. The movement between Brookings, the NSC, and prestigious editorial boards creates a fitness landscape where the most successful ideas are those that are interoperable. An idea fits if a speechwriter at the State Department, a researcher at a foundation, and a columnist at The Atlantic can all use it simultaneously. Wright excels at producing this kind of interoperable prose. His arguments are built to be used by other members of the alliance to justify their own positions, creating a self-reinforcing loop of prestige and influence.
Now consider how these coalitions behave in the context of the current Iran war. In a hot war scenario, they do not just report information. They compete to define the emergency in ways that maximize their sub-alliance’s influence over the response.
On selective vulnerability, Helima Croft and other energy analysts are reporting that oil has breached the $100 per barrel mark due to the functional closure of the Strait of Hormuz. In Alliance Theory terms, this group performs a reality-check signaling function. While the interventionist hawk coalition argues that Iran’s missile capacity is functionally defeated, the energy coalition signals a different reality: Iran needs only asymmetric nuisance capabilities, drones and small boats, to maintain an economic blockade. Their incentive is to prevent the security hawk coalition from over-promising a short, decisive war that would produce a catastrophic global supply shock.
On threat realignment and coalition poaching, the America-First coalition, represented by figures like Elbridge Colby, uses the Iran war to argue for strategic triage. Pinsof’s framework suggests that coalitions compete for limited resources, and Colby’s sub-alliance signals that every Tomahawk missile fired at Tehran is a missile that cannot be used in a future conflict with China. Their narrative function is coalition poaching. They try to pull defense strategists away from the Atlanticist camp by arguing that the Atlanticists are prioritizing a secondary theater at the expense of the primary one.
On the humanitarian coalition’s purification ritual, with the death of Ali Khamenei and the accession of Mojtaba Khamenei, institutions like Crisis Group and Carnegie signal the risk of regime entrenchment. In Alliance Theory, this group serves as the moral auditor. They frame the war not as a military victory but as a humanitarian problem without resolution. By focusing on the battered remnant of the Islamic Republic, they argue that a military success without a diplomatic off-ramp is a long-term failure. This keeps their coalition, NGOs, the UN, European diplomats, relevant even when they hold no military power.
On the operational proof-of-work, institutions like the Institute for the Study of War provide what Pinsof might call credentialed loyalty. Their daily updates tracking strikes on internal security infrastructure and LEC sites supply the raw data that the security hawk coalition uses to justify continued operations. Their incentive is to remain indispensable to the Pentagon. By providing high-resolution tactical data, they reinforce the military bureaucracy’s belief that the strategy is working, even as political and economic costs mount.
What this means, taken together, is that the truth of the Iran war is being negotiated through competing signals. The Atlanticist coalition argues that alliances are the only path to stability and works to keep European allies from drifting toward accommodation with China or Russia. The nationalist coalition argues that the Middle East is a distraction and pushes to reprioritize resources toward the Indo-Pacific. The hawk coalition argues that one more push might break the regime and works to sustain military spending and political resolve. The energy coalition argues that the math does not support the optimism and works to protect global capital flows from ideological overreach. Each group bets that its narrative will be the one the Trump administration adopts as its definition of victory.
Niche construction is a concept from evolutionary biology, developed most fully by biologists like Kevin Laland, that describes how organisms do not simply adapt to their environment but actively reshape it to suit their own survival. The classic example is the beaver. It does not adapt to rivers. It builds dams and creates the pond it needs. The environment then becomes something the beaver’s offspring inherit, not just genetically but ecologically.
Applied to the think-tank and foreign policy ecosystem, niche construction adds a dimension that Alliance Theory alone does not fully capture. Alliance Theory explains why Wright and analysts like him hold the beliefs they do and which coalitions those beliefs serve. Niche construction explains how those analysts build and maintain the environment that makes their beliefs the default.
Wright and his peers do not just operate inside institutions like Brookings or the Atlantic Council. They help construct the epistemic landscape those institutions occupy. They write the syllabi that train the next generation of foreign policy professionals. They sit on the editorial boards that decide which arguments get published in Foreign Affairs or Survival. They participate in the hiring committees that select which junior fellows get a foothold in the ecosystem. They testify before committees and brief staffers, shaping which questions Congress thinks to ask. Over time, this activity does not just reflect the liberal international order as a worldview. It builds the institutional pond in which that worldview swims naturally and rivals struggle to breathe.
This matters because it explains the self-reinforcing quality of the establishment consensus without requiring any conspiracy. No one needs to instruct Wright to exclude realist or nationalist challengers. The niche itself does the filtering. Graduate students learn early which assumptions are load-bearing in the ecosystem. Junior analysts understand which framings get them published and which get them ignored. The revolving door between think tanks, the NSC, and prestigious journals is not a corruption of the system. It is the system reproducing itself, exactly as niche construction predicts.
There is another layer worth considering. Niche construction theory distinguishes between the niche an organism inherits and the niche it actively modifies. Wright’s generation inherited a post-Cold War ecosystem already built around NATO expansion, democracy promotion, and U.S. primacy. But analysts like him also modified that niche in response to new pressures, particularly the rise of China and the disruption of the Trump years. The framework of great-power competition, which now dominates Washington, represents a constructed adaptation. It preserved the core alliance architecture while updating the threat narrative to meet new challenges and new rival coalitions.
What niche construction adds to Alliance Theory, then, is a temporal and environmental dimension. Pinsof’s framework explains the logic of coalition behavior at a given moment. Niche construction explains how coalitions build the terrain across time so that their logic feels like common sense rather than advocacy. The most powerful thing a coalition can do is not win an argument. It is to construct the environment in which its assumptions never have to be argued for at all.
Most people treat The Art of the Deal as a business book or a piece of celebrity self-promotion, and it is both. But read against the framework we have been building, it describes a negotiating philosophy that sits in direct structural conflict with the alliance maintenance model that Wright and his peers represent.

The core of Trump’s framework is that every relationship is a transaction and every transaction has leverage. You never pay list price. You never accept the first offer. You never let the other side know how much you want the deal. And critically, you never treat a long-standing relationship as a reason to stop demanding better terms. Loyalty in Trump’s framework is not a value. It is a negotiating variable.

This is not just stylistically different from the Atlanticist worldview. It is categorically incompatible with it. The liberal international order that Wright defends rests on the idea that alliance commitments must be credible precisely because they are unconditional. NATO’s Article 5 works as a deterrent only if adversaries believe that the United States will honor it regardless of burden sharing percentages or bilateral trade balances. The moment alliance commitments become contingent on transactional performance, the deterrent logic collapses. Trump’s entire negotiating philosophy treats that unconditional commitment as a sucker’s position.

From a niche construction standpoint, Trump represents something more disruptive than a rival coalition. He is an environmental threat to the pond itself. The Atlanticist ecosystem took decades to build, its journals, its fellowship pipelines, its shared assumptions about what counts as serious analysis. Trump’s transactional worldview does not compete inside that ecosystem. It delegitimizes the ecosystem’s foundational premise, which is that alliance relationships have a value independent of their immediate material returns.

Alliance Theory adds another layer here. The Art of the Deal is also a coalition document, though not the kind Wright would recognize. Trump’s coalition is not built around shared institutional assumptions. It is built around a shared suspicion of institutional assumptions. His base views the foreign policy establishment not as the defender of global order but as a self-dealing guild that has extracted resources from ordinary Americans to maintain a system that benefits allied governments, defense contractors, international institutions, and the professionals who staff them. The Art of the Deal gives that suspicion a philosophical vocabulary. Every NATO ally that spends below two percent of GDP on defense is, in Trump’s framework, a bad-faith negotiating partner taking advantage of American generosity.

What the book adds to our analysis is a window into why the conflict between Trump and the Wright ecosystem is so difficult to resolve through normal argument. Wright can produce sophisticated evidence that alliances generate returns that outweigh their costs. Trump’s framework does not dispute the evidence. It disputes the accounting. In The Art of the Deal, the question is never whether a relationship has produced some value. The question is whether you could have gotten more by negotiating harder. That is an unfalsifiable position in foreign policy terms, which makes it politically durable.

Niche construction helps explain why the Blob finds Trump so disorienting. They built an environment in which the value of alliances is a premise, not a conclusion. Trump treats it as an opening bid.

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Moral Universalism v Alliance Theory

Enke, Rodríguez-Padilla, and Zimmermann argue that moral universalism, the degree to which a person extends the same altruism and trust to strangers as to in-group members, predicts an entire vector of policy views across five Western democracies with remarkable consistency. People who score high on universalism want to spend on foreign aid, welfare, environmental protection, and affirmative action. People who score low want to spend on border control, military, and police. Universalism outperforms income, wealth, education, and even beliefs about government efficiency as a predictor. That is a strong claim. The authors do not say universalism is a surface attitude layered on top of alliances. They treat it as a measurable psychological trait with real behavioral correlates, validated against actual donation decisions.
Pinsof, Sears, and Haselton argue from the opposite direction with their Alliance Theory. They hold that the apparent moral coherence of a political belief system is an illusion produced by alliance structure. Partisans do not hold conservative or liberal values as such. They hold allegiances to specific groups, and then generate post-hoc moral justifications for whatever those groups need at a given moment. The moral principles are the propaganda, not the cause. The strangest bedfellows in American politics, libertarians allied with evangelicals, labor unions allied with Hollywood, make no sense as a principled moral cluster but make perfect sense as historical accidents of coalition-building.
So does universalism punch holes in Alliance Theory? Partially, but not fatally, and Alliance Theory might punch back just as hard.
The universalism paper creates a genuine problem for any pure alliance account. If political beliefs were simply ad hoc rationalizations for whoever your allies happen to be, you might expect the correlation structure of policy views to vary considerably across countries, since alliance structures differ. But Enke et al. find the structure is nearly identical across Australia, France, Germany, Sweden, and the United States, countries with very different party systems and ethnic compositions. That cross-national stability is hard to explain if ideology is just a local accident of coalition history. It suggests something deeper is organizing the clusters.
The universalism finding is also hard to dismiss as circular. The authors measure universalism through incentivized allocation tasks, not through political questions. You split hypothetical money between a cousin and a stranger, between a compatriot and a global random person. That measurement is behaviorally grounded. When it predicts whether you want to fund foreign aid or border patrol, that is not obviously alliance logic at work.
But here is where Alliance Theory gets its footing back. Pinsof and colleagues would likely say that universalism as a psychological trait might explain something, but it cannot explain the specific contents of belief systems. Why do American liberals support police unions differently than they support other unions? Why did conservatives trust the FBI until it investigated Trump, then stop? These are the cases where universalism as a general trait runs out of explanatory rope. The alliances are doing specific work that a broad moral orientation cannot track.
There is also a deeper objection Alliance Theory might raise. The universalism paper holds the cross-national alliance structures relatively constant, comparing countries that are all wealthy, Western, and liberal-democratic. Pinsof et al. predict that in non-Western political contexts, where alliance structures differ substantially, universalism would predict policy views poorly or in opposite directions. The universalism paper actually confirms this: in Brazil and South Korea, the correlations weaken or reverse. Alliance Theory might read that finding as supporting its own claim rather than undermining it.
Where the papers might actually converge is on a layered model neither quite spells out. Universalism might set a disposition, a prior about how much you extend trust and care to strangers, that makes certain alliance structures more or less attractive to you in the first place. A highly communitarian person finds the ethno-nationalist coalition more appealing; a highly universalist person gravitates toward cosmopolitan alliances. Alliance Theory then explains the specific and often absurd contents of what you end up believing once you have joined your team. The universalism paper explains the structure. Alliance Theory explains the noise.
Neither paper fully defeats the other. The universalism research shows that the structure of ideology is not entirely arbitrary or culturally contingent. Alliance Theory shows that the specific contents of belief systems are far too inconsistent and historically contingent to derive from any deep value. Both are right about what they actually measure.
the universalism paper creates a real problem for Alliance Theory, but not a fatal one. The trouble is that both frameworks make claims that could absorb or reframe the other’s evidence, which means the tension between them is genuine but unresolved rather than conclusive.
The strongest challenge Enke et al. pose to Pinsof is the cross-national stability finding. If political belief systems were primarily the product of historically contingent alliances, you might expect the internal structure of ideology to look different in Germany than in Australia, since the specific alliances that formed in each country have different origins. But the universalism paper finds the structure is nearly identical across five countries with quite different party systems, ethnic compositions, and electoral histories. That is hard to explain through pure coalition accident. It suggests something more durable is organizing the clusters.
The demand-side manipulation experiments add pressure to this point. When Enke et al. reframe redistribution as local rather than national, left-right differences collapse. Right-wingers become as supportive of local redistribution as left-wingers. That is not what you would predict if ideology were mainly learned from elite party cues. It suggests that people are responding to the universalist or communitarian character of the policy itself, not just following their team’s signal.
Pinsof’s strongest counterargument is the specific, absurd inconsistencies that universalism as a trait cannot touch. Why did Republican support for the FBI collapse the moment the FBI began investigating Trump? Why do liberals who oppose group stereotyping apply them freely to southerners or evangelical Christians? A stable psychological orientation toward social distance does not generate those shifts. Only alliance loyalty can explain them, because they track specific group memberships rather than abstract moral orientations.
There is also a deeper problem the documents gesture toward but do not quite name. The universalism paper measures a trait through incentivized allocation tasks and validates it against donation behavior. That is methodologically careful. But Pinsof could still argue that universalism as measured reflects which coalition a person has already joined, not a prior psychological cause. Someone embedded in cosmopolitan, educated networks may have been trained over years to express equal concern for distant strangers because that is the moral vocabulary of their coalition. The direction of causation matters enormously here, and the universalism paper cannot fully rule out that alliance membership shapes the expressed trait rather than the other way around.
The layered synthesis where universalism sets a psychological disposition that makes certain alliances feel more comfortable, while alliances then produce the specific propagandistic content, is probably the most defensible position. Neither paper actually measures the causal chain between moral orientation and coalition membership, so neither can claim priority. What is clear is that they are not actually explaining the same thing. Enke et al. explain why the structure of ideology looks similar across Western democracies. Pinsof et al. explain why the contents of any given belief system are so often incoherent and opportunistic. A full account of political psychology probably needs both.

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NYT: Entering War’s Third Week, Trump Faces Stark Choices

The NYT piece frames the Iran war as a strategic puzzle with two bad options: fight on toward goals that keep receding, or declare victory and leave with the job half done. That framing is accurate as far as it goes. But Alliance Theory adds a layer the piece largely ignores.
Every decision Trump faces has two audiences. One is the tactical audience, meaning Iran, the Strait of Hormuz, the nuclear stockpile, and the regional balance of power. The other is the coalition audience, meaning the domestic alliances that keep him in power and the rival alliances that want to displace him. Most of the NYT analysis stays in the tactical lane. Alliance Theory asks what the coalition logic looks like beneath the tactical surface.
Start with the most revealing detail in the piece: Trump rejected British aircraft carriers with the line “we don’t need people that join Wars after we’ve already won,” and then days later publicly begged five nations to send ships to secure the Strait of Hormuz. That contradiction looks like incoherence if you read it tactically. Read it through Alliance Theory and it looks like two separate signals aimed at two separate audiences. The rejection of Britain was a dominance display for the populist coalition, reinforcing the message that America fights alone and wins alone. The plea for naval help was a concession to reality that he buried in a social media post rather than a formal diplomatic channel, minimizing its visibility to the base. He needs the ships. He also needs his supporters not to notice that he needs the ships.
The Netanyahu relationship follows a similar logic. Trump publicly built the war around the premise that killing Khamenei would trigger popular revolt. When that failed to materialize, he quietly acknowledged in a radio interview that the Basij would simply shoot protesters in the street. He did not frame this as a planning failure. He framed it as a tough reality. That framing protects his coalition standing by converting a broken prediction into a display of cold-eyed realism. The base hears a hard man acknowledging hard facts rather than a leader whose central premise collapsed in two weeks.
The nuclear fuel problem is where the coalition logic gets most dangerous. Rubio’s line that “people are going to have to go and get it” signals a possible ground operation into the heart of Iran. Tactically, that operation would be extraordinarily risky. But the coalition logic pushes toward it anyway, because the base was sold a war with a clean endpoint, and “near-bomb-grade uranium still sitting in tunnels in Isfahan” is not a clean endpoint. If Trump leaves that fuel in place, he hands his critics a permanent argument that the war accomplished nothing permanent. The pressure to attempt the raid may come less from strategic calculation than from the need to deliver a trophy the coalition can point to.
The Saudi crown prince’s advice to “cut off the head of the snake” is worth noting here too. Mohammed bin Salman belongs to a regional alliance that wants Iranian power broken permanently. His advice serves his alliance’s interests, not necessarily America’s. Trump receives that advice in a context where his own coalition rewards toughness and punishes restraint, which means the advice lands on fertile ground regardless of whether it reflects sound strategy.
Republicans worry the base could fracture if casualties mount and the commitment grows. That fracture risk is real, and Alliance Theory explains why. Trump’s populist coalition is not pro-war in any traditional sense. It is pro-dominance. A short, crushing display of American power fits the coalition’s appetite perfectly. A grinding, expensive, inconclusive conflict that looks like Iraq does not. The longer the war runs, the more the coalition logic and the tactical logic pull in opposite directions. His base wants him to have already won. The battlefield has not cooperated.
What the NYT treats as a presidential dilemma between two bad tactical options is also a coalition management problem with no clean solution. Fight on and the base grows anxious about another foreign entanglement. Declare victory and leave while Iranian uranium sits in underground tunnels, and critics from both parties spend the next decade arguing the war was a wasted exercise in destruction. Either way, some part of his coalition pays a price. The question is which defection he can better afford.
Both elite coalitions, the cultural one at the LA Times and the technocratic one at the NYT, have planted their interpretive flags before the war ends. That is not accidental. They are trying to control the definition of success before Trump can define it himself. The race to anchor the ending is its own form of coalition warfare, and it explains why both pieces feel slightly prosecutorial rather than analytical.
The National Security Insider narrative is the least visible. That narrative actually has the most evidentiary support. Iran’s conventional forces are degraded. Iran’s asymmetric capacity remains intact. Both things are true simultaneously. But because that narrative resists clean political use, neither major coalition has much incentive to amplify it. The populist coalition cannot use “mixed results” as a rallying cry. The elite coalition cannot use “Iran’s navy is gone” without undermining its trap narrative. So the most accurate interpretation gets the least airtime, which itself illustrates information distortion. Coalitions do not suppress accurate information deliberately. They simply have no coordination incentive to spread it.
The populist frame wants crushing the Iranian military and crushing elite credibility to feel like the same act. The institutional frame wants the oil shock and impulsive leadership to feel like the same story. Each narrative succeeds politically to the degree it makes those two things feel inseparable. Trump’s rhetorical problem, three weeks in, is that the battlefield symmetry is starting to break down. He destroyed the Iranian navy and the Strait is still closed. That gap between conventional success and strategic disruption is hard to paper over with dominance language, and it hands the institutional narrative exactly the friction it needs.
When Trump asks why the Strait cannot simply be reopened, he may be performing ignorance rather than displaying it. The question signals to his base that he will not accept expert definitions of what is feasible. That is a coordination function. Whether he privately understands the answer is almost beside the point. The public performance of challenging expert authority is the signal, not the question itself.
What about the time pressure each coalition faces? The elite coalition needs the trap narrative to solidify before Trump can exit the war on his own terms and claim victory. Trump needs the dominance narrative to hold long enough for some visible endpoint, whether Kharg Island, the nuclear fuel, or a ceasefire he can call a win, to arrive before base anxiety about costs crosses a threshold. Both sides are racing against the same clock, just toward opposite finishing lines. That temporal competition may end up being more decisive than the battlefield itself.
Iran does not need to win conventionally to win strategically. It needs only to keep the Strait expensive enough, long enough, that the gap between Trump’s declared victory and the visible economic reality becomes too wide for even his coalition’s narrative discipline to bridge. The 1980s precedent suggests that gap can persist for years.
China buys roughly 1.4 million barrels per day of Iranian oil. The war puts Beijing in a position where the U.S. indirectly controls a significant share of Chinese energy imports, which gives Trump real leverage at the upcoming summit. But it also gives China an incentive to help Iran survive in some functional form, which works against Trump’s coalition narrative of total Iranian defeat. That tension, between Trump’s trade leverage over China and China’s interest in Iranian survival, runs beneath the surface of the NYT piece without ever getting named directly.
The 21-mile width of the Strait of Hormuz is a concrete detail that explains why Iran’s asymmetric capacity survives conventional military destruction. The comparison to the Tanker War of the 1980s is genuinely apt. The U.S. intervened then, escalated costs, and still could not fully secure transit. That precedent suggests the current escort operation being discussed is not a clean solution but a commitment that tends to grow. The detail about insurance premiums and rerouting adding ten to fifteen days to Asia-bound shipments matters because it shows the economic damage does not require Iran to sink ships. The mere threat, sustained over weeks, reshapes commercial behavior. That is exactly the kind of asymmetric leverage the populist dominance narrative cannot absorb without cracking.

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