It would be a mistake to assume the war is over simply because the heaviest bombing may be subsiding. The Gulf is unlikely to return to normal. What may be coming is neither stable peace nor uninterrupted war, but something in between: a prolonged condition of managed instability in which escalation remains latent, coercion remains available and access to a vital waterway becomes something negotiated rather than assumed. The ceasefire does not yet establish a durable political end-state.
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A Trump state is not a regime at ease. It is a regime in survival mode: narrower in legitimacy, harsher in instinct and more dependent on coercion than political confidence. Such a regime does not need to win decisively to remain dangerous. It needs only to deny normality.

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