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Concealed Republican > Blog > Politics > After A Little Weekend Warrior Work, Iran Is Back In the M.O.U. Box
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After A Little Weekend Warrior Work, Iran Is Back In the M.O.U. Box

Jim Taft
Last updated: June 29, 2026 12:10 pm
By Jim Taft 27 Min Read
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After A Little Weekend Warrior Work, Iran Is Back In the M.O.U. Box
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It’s a lot more fun and less dangerous to spend weekends re-enacting famous battles in history. No one ever truly gets hurt, and it’s a good way to get you mind off the rut of the work week and outside for a bit. But in most cases, once you’ve finished dying, or killing others in some gloriously overacted fashion, you still show up to work on Monday and nothing really has changed. That’s pretty much what occurred in the Persian Gulf this past weekend after a brief return to kinetic activity between the remnants of the Iranian regime and the United States. Except the difference here is that we return to work on Monday with a lot more advantages over the Iranians than before we headed into the weekend. 

A week ago, Brent crude opened at $80 dollars a barrel, and WTI was at $76. It was poised to open up this morning at $71 and $69, respectively. All of the big three market indexes were expected to hit the ground running due to renewed optimism that last weekend’s tit-for-tat-for-tit-for-tat is over, and the resumption of talks on a final Iran-U.S. peace deal will soon take place in Doha. 

So what happened? You wouldn’t know anything about it by watching legacy news outlets, because they had breaking Reflecting Pool coverage to bring you and Sophie Cunningham pointing at everyone memes online. 

Momentous things did take place, however, and they signal an unstable Iranian regime that is acting very differently than their blustery rhetoric about getting the best of the Americans in the Memorandum Of Understanding. Let’s walk through them. 

The M/S Ever Lovely, a Singapore-flagged cargo ship fleeing the Strait of Hormuz along with over a hundred other vessels last week, was hit by one of four one-way Iranian drones, damaging the ship’s bridge but not inflicting casualties or stopping it from continuing its journey. The other three inbound drones were taken out by the U.S. Navy. 

In response, Friday evening Middle East time, at least three separate sets of explosions in and around Sirik, Iran were reported. Sirik has long been a suspected drone and fast-boat port on Iran’s southern coast about halfway down the right leg of the Hormuz horseshoe. CentCom soon confirmed the rumors. 





STATEMENT:

“U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) forces conducted strikes against Iran, June 26, as a powerful response to yesterday’s attack on a commercial ship that was transiting the Strait of Hormuz.

U.S. aircraft struck Iranian missile and drone storage locations and coastal… https://t.co/aRuJkzKeMV pic.twitter.com/ecaXWEsmAG

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 26, 2026

Vice-President J.D. Vance quickly added that while his hope was that the M.O.U. would remain in force, and that the Iranians would do well to return to the terms of it while further negotiations continued, violence would be met with violence. 

U.S. Vice President JD Vance:

“Iran signed a ceasefire agreement. We have honored it. If they have disagreements about how the MOU is being applied, they can pick up the phone.

But violence will be met with violence.” pic.twitter.com/VgswaPH68q

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 26, 2026

And for a few hours, it seemed like that indeed would be that. Until the Iranians took to social media. 

Iranian lawmaker Mahmoud Nabavian said US strikes on targets in southern Iran on Friday violated the US-Iran memorandum of understanding and called for a firm response from Iran’s negotiators.

“We are waiting for the conditions to be fulfilled and for a clear, regret-inducing…

— Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 27, 2026

They shot at a Singapore freighter, and yet to them, our response is the violation of the M.O.U. 

Iran’s hardline newspaper, Kayhan, called for negotiations to be suspended and a resumption of war. 

Iran’s hardline Kayhan newspaper on Saturday called on Tehran to suspend the US-Iran memorandum of understanding and close the Strait of Hormuz, arguing Washington had repeatedly violated the agreement with its latest strikes on Iranian military sites.

In an editorial, Kayhan… pic.twitter.com/ausfCJNcdb

— Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 27, 2026

It continued to spiral into Saturday. 

Ali Khamenei’s representative to the Revolutionary Guards said on Saturday that the force would never reconcile with the United States and remained committed to Israel’s destruction.

Abdollah Haji-Sadeghi said any negotiations with Washington would not aim at peace or…

— Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 27, 2026

And then this banger popped up. 

IRGC Navy:

America’s indiscriminate strikes on Sirik do not solve the mystery of our dominance over the Strait.

But our strikes against violators serve as a clear reminder to the remaining vessels of the safe route for passage.

As for the American bases in the region, that is…

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

They had me at “Iranian Navy.” Bolivia’s got a more robust navy, and they’re landlocked. But the bluster led to some Iranian to order up strikes in Bahrain and Kuwait in an attempt to strike U.S. assets. 

Iran Fires Missiles at U.S. Bases in the Gulf

All the info: https://t.co/8w8lSw0RoW

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

All inbound weapons, drones, and missiles- a dozen into Bahrain and a half-dozen into Kuwait- were all knocked down. Hell, despite what Iran promised would be delivered, did not materialize. Where Hell did arrive, however, was in the form of ten more strikes along the Sirik coastline and more of Qeshm Island. 





“United States aircraft just struck Iranian missile and drone storage locations, and coastal radar sites, for violating the Cease Fire Agreement, AGAIN! It is very possible that they will never learn!” – President Donald J. Trump 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/btHdMaR8Hd

— The White House (@WhiteHouse) June 27, 2026

U.N. Ambassador Michael Waltz delivered the diplomatic find out to Iran’s weekend F’ing around. 

MIKE WALTZ: “If the Iranian regime thinks for a second that President Trump is going to sit by, stand by, while Iran continues to attack international shipping without a response… they’re sadly mistaken, and they saw that loud and clear over the last few nights.” pic.twitter.com/QixgGJfAeG

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

So why? Why did the Iranian regime begin this nonsense again when they’re allegedly about to be awash in cash and sanctions relief? Why put that at risk so soon? Several reasons. 

Despite what CNN and the other Alphabet media outlets tell you about how Donald Trump got taken to the cleaners by the Iranians, facts are stubborn things. And the facts are that for Americans, we’re already at oil price levels before the war went kinetic in late February. The trickling down of lower fuel costs through the supply chain to retail goods and services will still take time, but the President has all but restored 100% of the cost of America keeping the war going. Economic equilibrium here is headed back to where it was. And actually, the United States will be better off, because we’re now the largest net exporter of energy in the world, where we were not before the war. How’s Iran doing after signing the M.O.U? They’re on track to get back about 20% of what they lost due to the war, according to Israel’s Finance Minister.  

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich:

Trump removed 100% of the economic pressure on Americans, while only about 20% of the economic pressure on Iran was eased.

Today, we are only a decision by the political leadership away. Within three or four hours, the Israeli Air…

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

Inside Iran, you’d think ships full of Iranian oil finally leaving the Strait would be a boost to their economy. 

In Die Hard 2, a military warlord opened the plane door on the runway of Dulles Airport in a blizzard, looked to the heavens, and decried, “Freedom!” Bruce Willis, reprising his role as Officer John McClane, punched him in the mouth and said, “Not yet.” Iran still has a world of hurt going on internally. They’re not out of the woods yet. 

Iran’s point-to-point inflation rate climbed to nearly 89% through the Iranian month of Khordad (May 22-June 21), with rural inflation exceeding 108%, according to the Statistical Center of Iran. The agency also reported annual inflation of 62% and food price inflation of nearly… pic.twitter.com/RVeCD0SeFw

— Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 27, 2026

And to compound the issue, I don’t think we can rule out that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has ceased messing with them every time they pull a stunt like this last weekend. Coinciding with Iran’s attacks and Trump’s response, Iran’s banking system was doing the Tehran two-step all weekend. 





Iranian daily Shargh says Iran’s banking system is trapped in a familiar cycle: cyberattack, service collapse, public confusion, brief official statements and a gradual return to normal without any clear report on what failed or who was responsible.https://t.co/yXsbMGPniw pic.twitter.com/IrouPa9pZQ

— Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 27, 2026

To be fair, the Israelis could very much be involved here, but Secretary Bessent has shown time and time again that he’s a stone-cold economic assassin. I wouldn’t put this past him to keep turning off the banking system breakers in Iran when they quit playing nice with others. 

In short, Iran isn’t seeing the instant relief they believe they bargained for in the M.O.U., and they’re having buyer’s remorse. 

Iran has delivered sharp messages to the U.S. through intermediaries over the past two days, an Iranian source told Al-Arabi Al-Jadid.

Both the effort to establish an alternative shipping route bypassing the Strait of Hormuz and recent American strikes are seen by Tehran as a…

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

They’re angry that most of the traffic through the Strait is hugging the Oman coastline and avoiding the Iranian side where they have deluded themselves into believing the tollbooth fleecing operation will become a reality. 

Iranian Army spokesperson:

We have serious plans in two areas: domestic production and the procurement of advanced equipment from friendly countries.

We will certainly be equipped with more advanced systems in the coming days pic.twitter.com/9bV33Nf8to

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

Their defense industrial base is literally half of what it was four months ago, and they do not have the cash to rebuild it. They certainly don’t have the money to go onto the international market and buy it. Regardless, the last stuff they bought was Russian and Chinese, and it failed miserably. For crying out loud, this army spokesman hasn’t been paid, either. 

Iran says ships must use the northern route along its coastline and coordinate with Tehran. The U.S. and Oman back a separate corridor along Oman’s coast, which now handles both inbound and outbound traffic.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned Sunday that any… pic.twitter.com/IGjAtXep34

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

Araghchi was Zoltan all weekend long. He was spitting out predictions about what will be and what won’t be on a whole host of topics.

Araqchi: Responsibility for bringing Strait of Hormuz maritime traffic back to pre-war levels lies solely with Tehran.

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi:

According to Article One of the memorandum of understanding, the war must come to an end on all fronts, including in Lebanon. We regret that the Israeli regime continues its attacks.

It is the responsibility of the United States, in…

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

The bottom line is it’s the Iranians who are complaining about the M.O.U. far more than Iran hawks here in the United States or in Israel. But this is only part of the reason Iran acted out this weekend. If they think they fleeced Donald Trump, they’ve got a funny way of showing it.

The Israel-Lebanon peace deal announced Thursday is an absolute killer for Iran, and they know it. I’m not saying there won’t be a trouble in the days, months, and years ahead between the two countries, but a tide definitely turned, and it’s one that cuts off Iran from it’s most potent terror proxy, Hezbollah – something which actually was one of the stated goals Donald Trump and the administration consistently made for going to war with Iran in the first place. What does the deal do? First and foremost, it establishes for the first time ever that Lebanon recognizes Israel’s right to exist as a nation-state. 





Lebanon has recognized Israel as a sovereign state and agreed to end the state of war.

That would have been unthinkable without U.S. and Israeli successes against the Islamic Republic in Iran and Hezbollah—and @SecRubio’s diplomacy.

Many obstacles remain, but this is a hopeful…

— Mark Dubowitz (@mdubowitz) June 28, 2026

This is, quite simply, an enormous admission by Lebanon and a severe blow to Iran. As part of the deal, Lebanon also begins to sit on its hands at the United Nations instead of doggedly pursuing and prosecuting them. 

A clause in the Israel-Lebanon framework agreement has sparked controversy in Lebanon. The provision commits Beirut to refrain from pursuing international legal action against Israel, including at The Hague – while Lebanese PM Nawaf Salam previously served as president of the…

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

Third, as part of the ceasefire, Israel gets to maintain their positions inside Southern Lebanon for as long as necessary to root out Hezbollah. Once the Lebanese Army shows it can take over Lebanese territory and hold it from the terrorists, only then will Israel recede back below the Litani River. 

Israeli Defense Minister, Israel Katz:

“The agreement with Lebanon constitutes a strategic blow to Iran. I have issued, along with the Prime Minister, directives to the army to prepare for a long stay in the security zone”.

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

Defense Minister Israel Katz says the IDF will maintain its security zone in Lebanon, including the Beaufort Castle ridge, and will not withdraw as long as Hezbollah has not been disarmed throughout the country.

Katz hailed yesterday’s Israel-Lebanon deal as “historic” and a…

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 27, 2026

And there was a huge underground tunnel network a few clicks north of Israel’s border in Southern Lebanon. I say there was, because after a carefully executed strike by the IDF, it’s no more. 

Holy f*cking sh*t.

Earlier today the IDF sent out a notification to residents to Northern Israel.

One they had never received before.

It informed them that there would be the sound of an enormous explosion this evening and may even be so powerful it could trigger earthquake…

— Kosher (@koshercockney) June 28, 2026

Hezbollah was not amused. 

Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem on Saturday rejected the Israel-Lebanon framework agreement signed in Washington, calling it “null,” a “humiliation” and a surrender of Lebanese sovereignty.

In a statement, Qassem said the agreement should be replaced by the Iran-US memorandum and…

— Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 27, 2026

Protests began immediately in Lebanon, with supporters of Hezbollah setting fire to everything they could get their hands on and rioting. It looked like a Darializa Chevalier C.U.A.D. encampment at Columbia.

And as upset as Hezbollah was about having everyone around turn on them with no Iranian funding and support on the horizon, Iran did not like its knees being cut off by Marco Rubio, either. 

Hezbollah must continue fighting Israel in Lebanon to prevent the conflict from reaching Iran, Alireza Salimi, a member of the Iranian parliament’s presiding board, said on Saturday.

“Iran has not been alone in this war, and Lebanon is part of the war. Lebanon is our strategic… pic.twitter.com/Its7BHkazI

— Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 27, 2026





I don’t know who gets to be the lucky person to tell him, but Israel has been operating inside of Iran with relative impunity on an intelligence basis for years, and militarily for most of 2026. They’ll be able to strike Iran at will for the foreseeable future. Hezbollah wasn’t really much of a buffer protecting Iran from Israel before now, and they’re going to be less so going forward. 

Iran does not recognize the Israel-Lebanon framework agreement and wants to force a full Israeli withdrawal, per diplomatic sources to Lebanon’s Al Jadid.

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

Ali Khamenei’s representative to the Revolutionary Guards said on Saturday that the force would never reconcile with the United States and remained committed to Israel’s destruction.

Abdollah Haji-Sadeghi said any negotiations with Washington would not aim at peace or…

— Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 27, 2026

Going into Sunday, it began to look like the Iranians were of the opinion that this deal was getting worse all the time. 

Sixty-two Iranian lawmakers canceled a planned protest gathering outside parliament after the legislature announced it would hold a formal session instead, according to Fars News, an outlet affiliated with the Revolutionary Guards.

The protest gathering had been scheduled for…

— Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 27, 2026

It wasn’t the weather that drove them back indoors. I think they did a head count, multiplied it by 72 virgins, and figured several of them were going to get short-changed, and meeting outdoors right after provoking the Americans again was not a terrific idea. 

A rare public dispute has erupted inside Iran’s Assembly of Experts after a majority of its members issued a statement on the US-Iran memorandum of understanding, prompting an extraordinary public rebuke from the body’s own leadership within hours.https://t.co/S96eDhNQz9 pic.twitter.com/z7CuhRubMi

— Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 29, 2026

The Trump administration has been calm, rational, and methodical applying both carrots and sticks where appropriate this past week. The Iranian regime, by comparison, has been flailing. 

Fars News: “the Islamic Republic has no choice but to obtain the atomic bomb to remove the military option from the table.”

Big statement

— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) June 28, 2026

And while they allegedly have no choice but to obtain the bomb and use it, and apparently strike their Arab neighbors with anything left in their arsenal that can fly, their plan now is to scrap talks with the Americans and enter into negotiations with the same people they’ve been attacking to develop a regional governance plan that excludes the Americans, but enables them to collect tolls on ships originating from, *checks notes*, the same Arab countries they’re attacking randomly. 

Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araghchi says Tehran is ready to work with its Arab neighbours on a new regional security framework that excludes outside military powers.

He told Iraqi National Security Adviser Qasim al-Aboudi any arrangement should include economic cooperation.

— Iran International English (@IranIntl_En) June 28, 2026





Just when you thought you were convinced the Iranians were going to dig in, and Donald Trump was going to have to finish the job (something I dearly wish he would have done already), Iran caved Sunday afternoon. 

(Reuters) – Iran and the United States agreed to halt recent hostilities in the Gulf and renew talks regarding their dispute over the Strait of Hormuz, a U.S. official said on Sunday, raising hopes of saving an interim peace deal that was under pressure from days of tit-for-tat…

— Phil Stewart (@phildstewart) June 29, 2026

Back to talks, everything’s good, all boats are safe going through the Strait again…for now. The three indexes in pre-market trading all weekend were in the red. Once this news broke, fortunes on Wall and Broad reversed, and oil continued its drive to a pre-war equilibrium price. So why did Iran cave? 

Quite simply, Trump still holds all the cards and the money. The more time passes, and we learn what and how the particulars of the M.O.U. are implemented, Iran is still in a box from which their only escape is performing exactly as we demand. If there are sanctions lifted and money does come to them, it’s nowhere near enough to rebuild what they think they want to quickly. And if they do use the money inappropriately, their economy won’t hold together for much longer without large infusions of cash. 

IRGC hardliners might believe they’re about to send help to the proxies once more, but my guess is both Secretary Bessent and the Israelis will be watching and have something to say about disintermediating them from that money if they attempt to use it the wrong way. The squeeze remains very much in place, and this weekend alone, you can tell its effects by how the regime has squirmed around. 

Sure, there were fireworks and grandstanding all around, but a week later, the markets are coming to Trump, and the available options for the Iranians continue to run out. Will they make this whole process as painful for the President and his foreign policy team as possible? Of course. I would expect nothing less from this regime. But you have to give credit where credit is due. 

Iran flexed their muscles this weekend very much in the same way it flexed them a couple of months ago. Then, it froze traffic in the Strait to a standstill for way too long and spooked the markets. This time, when Iran flexed, they got clotheslined by Secretary of State Rubio with the deal between Israel and Lebanon, lost more offensive capabilities in the Strait, and got forced in short order right back into the box they found themselves 96 hours ago. 

Haters will still hate, but any way you look at this past week, Trump came out on top. 







Read the full article here

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