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Weekly Column

The War In the Middle East Re-Starts, After “NACHO” Trump Has Strengthened the Iranian Regime

The Strait of Hormuz, on this fourth day of May, has become the geopolitical equivalent of a pressure cooker without a release valve. Iran today launched what the United Arab Emirates’ Ministry of Defence describes as a coordinated wave — twelve ballistic missiles, three cruise missiles, four drones — at Emirati territory, sparking a fire at the Fujairah oil zone and injuring three; simultaneously, Iranian forces fired cruise missiles at vessels transiting the strait, while a South Korean cargo ship sustained the day’s only confirmed maritime damage. The retaliation followed the recent Emirati decision to leave OPEC and align more with Israel and US positions, and Donald Trump’s launch of “Project Freedom,” an operation deploying guided-missile destroyers, more than one hundred aircraft, and 15,000 service members to forcibly extract the hundreds of vessels stranded in the Persian Gulf since open hostilities erupted on 28 February. Tehran’s calculus is transparent: any unilateral Western reopening of the strait is, by Iranian definition, a violation of the fragile 8 April ceasefire — and therefore a casus belli sufficient to justify reactivating the kinetic theatre.

Against this backdrop, Tehran has tabled a fourteen-point peace plan via Pakistani mediators, structured around a thirty-day window to convert the truce into a comprehensive settlement. The terms are maximalist: lifting of all sanctions; withdrawal of US forces from Iran’s periphery; release of frozen assets; reparations for war damage; cessation of hostilities including in Lebanon; and, most provocatively, retention of an indigenous uranium enrichment capacity, with existing stockpiles to be transferred abroad and diluted to civilian-grade levels. Trump rejected the proposal within twelve hours of receipt, declaring that Tehran “has not yet paid a big enough price”; he subsequently asserted that Iran possesses “no navy, no air force, no anti-aircraft equipment, no radar.” Yet the empirical evidence of today’s strikes belies the rhetoric. The Islamic Republic retains sufficient capacity to threaten allied infrastructure, contest a critical chokepoint, and impose tangible costs on global energy markets — Brent crude has now crossed $110, and the US national average gasoline price has reached $4.46.

It is here that the strategic paradox identified by Danny Citrinowicz in his recent Foreign Affairs essay becomes analytically indispensable. The original Israeli premise sold to Trump in early February — that decapitation strikes would catalyse an internal rebellion against the clerical regime — has produced the inverse outcome. The killing of Ayatollah Khamenei and senior leadership figures, far from precipitating collapse, has consolidated the Islamic Republic around its hardline factions; external aggression has reactivated the patriotic reflex that had, until February, been steadily eroding the regime’s legitimacy. Thus, the war that was meant to end the Islamic Republic has, in fact, refurbished its domestic mandate — a historical pattern visible since Iraq’s 1980 invasion.

Markets have begun to price this lock-in with characteristic dark humour. Traders have abandoned last year’s TACO acronym — “Trump Always Chickens Out,” coined to describe the predictable retreat from tariff threats — in favour of NACHO, “Not A Chance Hormuz Opens,” reportedly first surfaced by Bloomberg’s Javier Blas. The semantic shift matters: TACO described oscillation; NACHO describes structural deadlock. Wall Street has correctly identified that the Hormuz file is no longer subject to the President’s familiar rhythm of escalation and climbdown.

The implications are threefold. First, energy markets must adjust to a sustained risk premium rather than transient spikes. Second, Gulf allies — already absorbing direct retaliation — face the compound burden of escalating exposure alongside compulsory alignment with Washington. Third, and most strategically, the Iranian regime now possesses precisely what it lacked in early 2026: a unifying external enemy, a defensible negotiating posture, and the demonstrated capacity to make the region pay for any unilateral American assertiveness. In failing to deliver collapse, the war has delivered consolidation. The standoff, therefore, will not break — it will deepen.

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