Tuesday, June 23, 2026

MP SPEAKS | Good enough to vote, not govern: Malaysia's 30pct problem










MP SPEAKS | Good enough to vote, not govern: Malaysia's 30pct problem


Syerleena Abdul Rashid
Published: Jun 23, 2026 10:30 AM
Updated: 12:30 PM




MP SPEAKS | I am one of 30. Out of 222. That is how many women sit in the Dewan Rakyat - 13.5 percent of the people's house - in a country where women are more than half the population, outnumber men in our universities, and decide the result of every election with their votes.

Good enough to put us in power. Apparently not good enough to share it.

I write this not as an outsider throwing stones, but as a member of the governing coalition who believes we can do far better - because we have reformed before, and because the alternative is to keep failing in slow motion.

Let me be honest about where we stand. A parliamentary committee spent much of this year studying exactly this question, and its report makes for uncomfortable reading.

In the Global Gender Gap Index, Malaysia ranks 114th out of 146 countries overall. But on political empowerment - who holds decision-making power - we sink to 134th. Near the very bottom of the world.




Look around our own region. According to the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Indonesia has crossed 21 percent women in Parliament. Vietnam has reached 30 percent. Timor-Leste, a nation that only restored its independence in 2002, now seats 35 percent.

The Philippines and Thailand are both ahead of us too. They began far behind Malaysia. Today, they are in front. 71 countries have already legislated candidate quotas. We are still debating whether to begin.

And at the current pace? The report warns it will take 135 years to close our political gender gap. Not 135 days. Not one electoral cycle. A century and a half. The granddaughters of today's schoolgirls will be old women before this country delivers the fairness it keeps promising.


Structural barriers

Why are we so far behind? Because for 30 years - across governments of every stripe, not the failing of any single party - we leaned on the voluntary goodwill of political parties. Three decades of good intentions.

The result: the number of women candidates rose from eight in 1982 to 127 in 2022, yet the share who won crept from five percent to barely 14.

The barriers are structural, not accidental. Party rooms dominated by men. The stale assumption that a woman belongs in the "kitchen" of a campaign - making the calls, never making the decisions.

The unpaid weight of family care. The punishing cost of contesting. A first-past-the-post system that quietly shields sitting incumbents, who are overwhelmingly male.




And then there is the part I know first-hand. Women who step into Malaysian politics are met with a flood of abuse - about our faces, our families, our faith - engineered to make the price of public life unbearable. I have lived it. I am still standing.

But how many capable women take one look at that gauntlet and quietly decide it is not worth it? That, too, is a barrier - and we almost never name it.

Let me be equally honest about the cure. A quota is not a magic wand. If we chase nomination numbers alone, parties will game them - fielding women to lose, not to win.

Any law we pass must reward victories, not just candidacies; strategic seats, not sacrificial ones; and it must be audited so the incentives cannot be abused. Justice done halfway is not justice.


Finish what we started

So what now? I am proud that this came from us. That a unity government Parliament commissioned this report and looked honestly into the mirror is itself progress. But a report that gathers dust changes nothing. Let us finish what we started.

Pass a Gender Parity in Political Representation Act, phased in by the next general election. And while legislation runs its course, let us act on what the government already controls - today, without waiting for voters: a firm 30 percent of women in the cabinet, the Senate, the boards of our GLCs, and local councils.

Then build the scaffolding that makes it real - childcare, flexible work, fair campaign financing - so that a talented woman never has to choose between her family and her country.

Thirty percent is not a ceiling. It is the floor of a serious democracy - and we are still crawling beneath it.




Malaysian women are not asking for sympathy, and they are certainly not asking for a favour. They are demanding a seat at the table where their own lives are decided.

A nation that locks half its people out of power is not guarding tradition. It is squandering its talent and gambling with its future.

We began this journey. Let us finish it - not in 135 years, but in our generation.



SYERLEENA ABDUL RASHID is Bukit Bendera MP.


Rival parties cannot use same coalition logo in same seat, says EC





Rival parties cannot use same coalition logo in same seat, says EC



Election Commission deputy chairman Azmi Sharom reportedly said rival candidates contesting in the same constituency cannot use the same party or coalition logo. — Picture by Hari Anggara

Tuesday, 23 Jun 2026 1:54 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, June 23 — The Election Commission has reportedly said election candidates from rival parties cannot use the same party or coalition logo when standing in the same constituency.

Berita Harian reported that EC deputy chairman Azmi Sharom said the use of a logo is limited to candidates who have been authorised by the party or coalition concerned via a formal letter.

“Only one authorisation is valid. We can determine who has the authority to issue the letter,” he was quoted as saying.

The issue concerns a dispute between PAS and Bersatu, who are likely each other in the same seats while both remain part of Perikatan Nasional.

According to the report, Former EC deputy chairman Datuk Seri Wan Ahmad Wan Omar said Regulation 11(2)(d) of the Election (Conduct of Elections) Regulations bars candidates from different parties from using the same logo.

He said candidates without valid approval to use a party or coalition logo could have their nomination papers rejected, but may still stand as Independents using symbols assigned by the returning officer.

Loke: Malaysia must modernise ports, secure shipping routes amid global uncertainty





Loke: Malaysia must modernise ports, secure shipping routes amid global uncertainty



Transport Minister Anthony Loke Siew Fook said Malaysia must strengthen its ports, energy systems, digital infrastructure, shipping security and regional cooperation to build a future-ready maritime economy. — Bernama pic

Tuesday, 23 Jun 2026 12:13 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, June 23 — Malaysia must build a future-ready maritime economy, anchored by resilient ports, a diversified energy architecture, innovative digital infrastructure, secure shipping corridors, and robust regional cooperation.

Transport Minister Anthony Loke Siew Fook said this is important given the growing strategic significance of the Strait of Malacca amid evolving global development.

“With approximately one-quarter of globally traded goods and a massive share of Asia’s energy imports transiting through this corridor annually, Malaysia is strategically positioned in the centre of gravity.

“As global shipping routes recalibrate around geopolitical uncertainties, we have a significant opportunity to reinforce our standing as a premier maritime, logistics, and transhipment hub,” he said in his keynote address at the Global Maritime Economics Conference 2026, organised by the Maritime Institute of Malaysia here today.

The conference, themed ‘Advancing Resilience and Accelerating Sustainable Maritime Growth’, explores the trends influencing global maritime economic growth amid ongoing geopolitical uncertainty.

In his speech, Loke emphasised that by accelerating port modernisation, deploying advanced automation, expanding multimodal logistics networks, and elevating maritime security, Malaysia can capture new trade opportunities while actively stabilising regional supply chains.

“This is particularly as Malaysia’s major ports already handle hundreds of millions of tonnes of cargoes annually, serving as critical links connecting Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and Africa,” he added.

Loke also cautioned that modern economies are highly dependent on uninterrupted maritime freedoms.

“Historical milestones have shown that when maritime chokepoints are threatened, far-reaching economic shocks would follow. Shipping rates surged, insurance premiums spiked, supply chains fractured and energy markets spiralled into volatility,” he said.

Citing reports from the World Bank and the United Nations Trade and Development, Loke said that due to recent disruptions in the Red Sea and the Strait of Hormuz, the average maritime shipping routes have increased to 5,200 miles today from approximately 4,800 miles in 2018.

“When more than 80 per cent of global commerce relies on maritime transport, safeguarding freedom of commerce is not just an idealised goal but an absolute economic imperative,” he said.

As such, Loke emphasised that investment in maritime cybersecurity, digital transformation, sustainable infrastructure, and regional cooperation would ensure that international trade continues to function as a powerful engine for growth and prosperity. — Bernama

Malaysian Bar ‘not optimistic’ over plan to separate AG, public prosecutor roles





Malaysian Bar ‘not optimistic’ over plan to separate AG, public prosecutor roles



Malaysian Bar president Anand Raj has reportedly raised concerns over how the government plans to implement the proposed separation of the roles of Attorney General and public prosecutor. — Picture by Ahmad Zamzahuri

Tuesday, 23 Jun 2026 9:52 AM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, June 23 — The Malaysian Bar has reportedly expressed concern over the government’s proposed implementation of the separation of the roles of the Attorney-General and public prosecutor.

According to the New Straits Times, Malaysian Bar president Anand Raj said the Bar was “not optimistic” that the final outcome would reflect what it had hoped for.

“All we need to say is, the separation of Attorney-General and public prosecutor in theory and in concept is good.

“However, the way in which it is proposed to be executed, from what is available in the public domain, is far from ideal.

“We are not satisfied that enough has been done to execute the separation in the best interest of the country,” he was quoted as saying.

Anand said the Bar had been consulted before the proposal was prepared, but not all its views and suggestions to the parliamentary special select committee were adopted by the government.

He said that in some instances, none of the Bar’s proposals were adopted, while also reiterating that the separation should be carried out as soon as possible and in the best possible manner.

Singapore sentences Indian passenger to jail for molesting and cornering SIA flight attendant






Singapore sentences Indian passenger to jail for molesting and cornering SIA flight attendant



Singapore Airlines stewardesses walk through Changi Airport in Singapore on October 24, 2020. — TODAY pic

Tuesday, 23 Jun 2026 9:42 AM MYT


SINGAPORE, June 23 — A man has been sentenced to six months in jail after molesting a Singapore Airlines flight attendant and later harassing her by cornering her in the aircraft's galley.

Akash Tiwari, 35, was also ordered on June 22 to pay S$1,270.95 (RM4,000) in compensation. The Indian national, who pleaded guilty to one count each of molestation and harassment, faces an additional five days behind bars should he fail to make the payment, The Straits Times reported.

The incident occurred on February 9 during a Singapore-bound flight from Thailand. Court documents reveal that Tiwari was travelling with four friends who became rowdy during the journey, waving frantically and laughing whenever a female crew member passed by.

The harassment began before takeoff in Bangkok. While the victim was confirming meal orders, Tiwari stretched out his arm to brush against her left upper thigh and laughed, while his friends joined in.

The victim immediately reported the incident to the chief stewardess and was moved to a different aisle to avoid the offender. Despite this, Tiwari struck again, using his left elbow to nudge the victim's buttock as she collected meal trays.

“She was very upset and told the accused not to touch her. Instead of apologising, he smirked,” Deputy Public Prosecutor Lynda Lee told the court. The victim, increasingly distressed, repeated her demand for him to stay away.

When the victim and the chief stewardess confronted Tiwari, he remained unapologetic and insisted he had done nothing wrong.

As the captain announced the plane's descent, the victim retreated to the galley. Tiwari followed her, standing extremely close and ignoring her pleas for him to stay away.

“Instead of moving away, the accused persisted with the same threatening behaviour by coming even closer and cornered the victim in the galley,” the DPP said.

The victim shouted for him to stop following her and attempted to leave the galley, but Tiwari continued to pursue her. Passengers in the aisle witnessed the encounter. Tiwari only ceased his harassment when the victim sought help from the chief stewardess. By then, the victim was in tears, visibly frightened, and shaking.

Tiwari was arrested immediately after the plane landed in Singapore.


Tourism minister: Rain Rave Water Festival generated RM320m in tourism revenue, drew half a million people




Tourism minister: Rain Rave Water Festival generated RM320m in tourism revenue, drew half a million people



Tourism Minister Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing told Parliament this morning that the controversial Rain Rave event contributed nearly RM400 million to the economy. — Photo by Hari Anggara

Tuesday, 23 Jun 2026 12:17 PM MYT


KUALA LUMPUR, June 23 — The Rain Rave Water Festival held on the Labour Day holiday generated an estimated RM320.4 million in overall tourism revenue, Tourism Minister Datuk Seri Tiong King Sing told Parliament this morning.

The event, which received backlash primarily from more conservative politicians, drew close to half a million visitors across all seven states it was held in. The event was held concurrently in Negeri Sembilan, Terengganu, Johor, Melaka, Kedah, Pahang and Labuan. The revenue from the six states was some RM71 million.

“So estimates indicate it contributed a total of RM370 million to the economy,” Tiong said during Minister’s Question Time.

MORE TO COME


***


Penang should have one every six months - it's not only good for tourism and our economy but also as a relief for our sweltering environment.👍😂😁



Govt must maintain good relations with Malay rulers, says Anwar





Govt must maintain good relations with Malay rulers, says Anwar


Yesterday
Elill Easwaran


The prime minister says cordial ties made it easier for both sides to clear the air on issues affecting the states


Anwar Ibrahim said he had also given his views to the other sultans on separate issues and would heed their advice. (Bernama pic)


PETALING JAYA: Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said tonight the federal government must maintain a good relationship with the Malay rulers, citing his audience today with the Johor regent.

Anwar said cordial ties made it easier for both sides to clear the air on issues affecting the state.

“The Johor regent said he considered me a friend, which is why I was able to seek an audience with him when he was in Kuala Lumpur,” he said, referring to Tunku Ismail Sultan Ibrahim.


Anwar, who is the Pakatan Harapan chairman, said this before unveiling the coalition’s candidates for the Johor state election.

He also said he had given his views to the other sultans on separate issues and would heed their advice.


Anwar said he and Tunku Ismail agreed to preserve their good relations while reinforcing cooperation between the federal and state governments.

He said their discussions revolved around the welfare of Johoreans and the state’s development.


PH names ex-education minister Maszlee, Batu Pahat MP for Johor polls





PH names ex-education minister Maszlee, Batu Pahat MP for Johor polls


Yesterday
Elill Easwaran


Maszlee Malik will contest the Puteri Wangsa seat, while Onn Abu Bakar will vie for Senggarang


Pakatan Harapan chairman Anwar Ibrahim announced the coalition’s 56 candidates for the Johor polls. (Facebook pic)


PETALING JAYA: Pakatan Harapan tonight unveiled its candidates for next month’s Johor election, with a lineup that includes former education minister Maszlee Malik, Batu Pahat MP Onn Abu Bakar and Johor PKR Youth chief Faezuddin Puad.

Maszlee will contest the Puteri Wangsa seat, while Onn has been named the coalition’s candidate for Senggarang. Faezuddin will stand in Kempas.

Pulai MP Suhaizan Kaiat of Amanah, meanwhile, will stand in Larkin.

PH’s candidates were announced by chairman Anwar Ibrahim.

Also present were Amanah president Mohamad Sabu and DAP secretary-general Loke Siew Fook.

In his speech, Loke said victory in Johor was crucial for the federal government’s stability.

“If we want Anwar to continue as prime minister, we need PH to win in Johor,” he said, adding that the state’s economy grew partly due to the federal government.

It was previously reported that PKR would field candidates in 20 seats, DAP 17 and Amanah 19.

In May, PH said it would contest all 56 seats in the state election, in response to Barisan Nasional’s decision to field candidates in every constituency.


The Johor election is set for July 11, with nominations on June 27 and early voting on July 7.

Here is the full list of PH candidates for the Johor state election:

  1. Buloh Kasap – Rozy Razit
  2. Jementah – Ng Kor Sim
  3. Pemanis – Lee En Xiang
  4. Kemelah – Afif Abdul Hamid
  5. Tenang – Elia Nadira Sabudin
  6. Bekok – Tay Yok Jiuen
  7. Bukit Kepong – Subramani Chami
  8. Bukit Pasir – Najib Lep
  9. Gambir – Mohd Nor Mohd Yusof
  10. Tangkak – Ei Chin Li
  11. Serom – Ahmad Nazari Abdul Hamid
  12. Bentayan – Ng Yak Howe
  13. Simpang Jeram – Nazri Abdul Rahman
  14. Bukit Naning – Ysauhrudin Kusni
  15. Maharani – Taqiuddin Cheman
  16. Sungai Balang – Soraya Badaruddin
  17. Semerah – Khuzzan Abu Bakar
  18. Sri Medan – Hishamuddin Misrin
  19. Yong Peng – Yong Hui Yi
  20. Semarang – Ramli Hamid
  21. Parit Yaani – Ezam Taslim
  22. Parit Raja – Shazwan Dainal
  23. Penggaram – Poh Rui Ling
  24. Senggarang – Onn Abu Bakar
  25. Rengit – Yazid Bakri
  26. Machap – Hafiz Roslan
  27. Layang-Layang – Guna Balakrishanan
  28. Mengkibol – Chu Poh Yee
  29. Mahkota – Ahmad Zuhan Mohd Zain
  30. Paloh – Ruben Arumungum
  31. Kahang – Sabri Kadir
  32. Endau – Saiful Nizam Samat
  33. Tenggaroh – Yusof Dawam
  34. Panti – Daniel Sharudin
  35. Pasir Raja – Fakharuddin Moslim
  36. Sedili – Amirul Husni Onn
  37. Johor Lama – Danish Rahman
  38. Penawar – Sawaludin Salleh
  39. Tanjung Surat – Faizul Abdul Ghani
  40. Tiram – Nor Zulaila Abdul Ghani
  41. Puteri Wangsa – Maszlee Malik
  42. Johor Jaya – Lee Wern Yiing
  43. Permas – Teo Siew Hui
  44. Larkin – Suhaizan Kaiat
  45. Stulang – Chen Kah Eng
  46. Perling – Tee Boon Tsong
  47. Kempas – Faezuddin Puad
  48. Skudai – Kartiyaini Jeyapalan
  49. Kota Iskandar – Dzulkefly Ahmad
  50. Bukit Permai – Shafwan Ani
  51. Bukit Batu – Chiong Sen Sern
  52. Senai – Wong Bor Yang
  53. Benut – Abdul Razak Ismail
  54. Pulai Sebatang – Haniff Hosman
  55. Pekan Nanas – Yeo Tun Siong
  56. Kukup- Cheah Chee Hong


RM2.10 diesel from July 1: Who qualifies, how it works and how much fuel you can buy





RM2.10 diesel from July 1: Who qualifies, how it works and how much fuel you can buy



The diesel subsidy works exactly as the Budi95 programme. — Picture by Sayuti Zainudin

Monday, 22 Jun 2026 8:15 PM MYT


PUTRAJAYA, June 22 — The government will roll out a new MyKad-based diesel subsidy system from July 1, allowing eligible Malaysians to buy diesel at RM2.10 per litre while moving all diesel prices to market rates nationwide.

The move marks the biggest change to the Budi Diesel programme since targeted diesel subsidies were introduced in June 2024, replacing monthly cash assistance for individual recipients with direct fuel subsidies at the pump.

Here’s what motorists need to know.


What is changing?

Beginning July 1, diesel will be sold at unsubsidised prices nationwide.

However, eligible Malaysians who own diesel vehicles will be able to purchase subsidised diesel at RM2.10 per litre by verifying their identity using their MyKad at petrol stations.

The mechanism mirrors the existing Budi95 system for RON95 petrol, which Finance Minister II Datuk Seri Amir Hamzah said when presenting the targeted diesel subsidy reform at the Ministry of Finance building here, has helped reduce subsidy leakages while ensuring assistance reaches intended recipients.


Who qualifies?


The scheme is open to Malaysian citizens who:

  • Hold a valid driving licence;
  • Own a diesel-powered vehicle registered with the Road Transport Department (JPJ); and
  • Have a valid road tax.

The government estimates around 700,000 private diesel vehicle owners will qualify.

River boat operators and owners of generators in remote areas will also be included under separate arrangements.


How does the subsidy work?

The diesel subsidy works exactly as the Budi95 programme.

Eligible recipients will use their MyKad at petrol stations to verify their entitlement before purchasing fuel.

Payment can still be made using cash, debit cards, credit cards or selected e-wallets.

The subsidy is tied to a monthly fuel quota rather than cash payments.

For existing Budi Diesel Individual recipients, the current RM400 monthly cash assistance will be discontinued and replaced automatically with the new subsidy mechanism.

No fresh application is required for current recipients.


How much subsidised fuel can I buy?

Each eligible individual will receive a basic allocation of 200 litres a month.

Unlike previous schemes, the quota can be shared between diesel and subsidised RON95 purchases.

For example, a motorist could use part of the allocation for diesel and the remainder for Ron95, with both counted against the same monthly quota.

The government says nearly 90 per cent of motorists use less than 200 litres of fuel a month, making the allocation sufficient for most recipients.


Why are pickup truck and SUV owners getting 100 litres more?

Owners of eligible diesel-powered pickup trucks and sport utility vehicles (SUVs) may apply for an additional 100 litres monthly.

This would raise their total entitlement to 300 litres a month.

The government said many pickup trucks are used by small traders and rural residents who travel longer distances, particularly in interior areas.

Officials estimate that 95 per cent of diesel users consume less than 300 litres monthly.

To put that into perspective, Amir Hamzah said the government had analysed fuel consumption patterns and found that a 300-litre monthly allocation would be sufficient for someone travelling daily between Marudi and Miri in Sarawak — a round trip of about 172km a day.

Amir Hamzah said owners of diesel-powered pickup trucks and SUVs who require the additional allocation must apply through the Budi Madani portal (www.budimadani.gov.my), with the extra 100 litres granted only upon approval.

Applications may also be made in person at LHDN offices, including at UTCs.


What about Sabah and Sarawak?

The system will be implemented in the same way across Peninsular Malaysia, Sabah and Sarawak.

At the same time, the Subsidised Diesel Control System (SKDS) will be expanded to East Malaysia, allowing around 70,000 eligible commercial vehicles to buy diesel at RM2.15 per litre using fleet cards.

The federal government is also working with the Sabah and Sarawak governments to ensure remote communities continue to have access to subsidised diesel.


What happens to other diesel subsidy programmes?


Several existing schemes will remain unchanged.

These include:

  • Diesel at RM1.65 per litre for fishermen;
  • Budi Agri-Komoditi assistance for farmers and smallholders; and
  • SKDS 1.0 diesel at RM1.88 per litre for public transport operators, including school and express buses.

When can people start checking eligibility?

Motorists can check their eligibility and monthly quota through the official Budi Madani portal from today.

Ahead of the full rollout, early access to the new Budi Diesel system will be available from June 27 for eligible private diesel vehicle owners in Peninsular Malaysia.


Monday, June 22, 2026

What The Hawks Miss About The Iran Talks





What The Hawks Miss About The Iran Talks



by Portfolio Armor
Monday, Jun 22, 2026 - 19:37



What The Hawks Miss About The Iran Talks


A lot of Trump’s critics are treating the Switzerland talks as a humiliation, a sellout, or a failure waiting to happen.

That misses the point.

The war came first because, in a real sense, it had to come first. For Americans old enough to remember 1979—and Donald Trump is certainly one of them—the seizure of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran was never just a diplomatic incident. It was an act of war, covered at the time by the regime’s fig leaf that “students” had done it rather than the regime itself.

The United States never imposed a price commensurate with that act. Jimmy Carter’s response lodged in the American memory as weakness. For a country that still thinks in terms of honor, deterrence, and humiliation, that mattered.

Now Iran has paid a price.

American and Israeli strikes killed Ali Khamenei, Ali Larijani, Ali Shamkhani, Mohammad Pakpour, Aziz Nasirzadeh, Abdolrahim Mousavi, Esmail Khatib, Gholamreza Soleimani, Behnam Rezaei, Alireza Tangsiri, Majid Khademi, and other senior regime, military, intelligence, and IRGC figures. They destroyed Khamenei’s compound. They hit Iranian air defenses, command nodes, missile infrastructure, naval assets, and military facilities repeatedly. The regime survived, but America and Israel punished it.

That matters on the American side of the ledger.

It matters on the Iranian side too.


Why Iran Had To Fight Before It Could Deal

Iran couldn’t realistically go from decades of “Death to America” to normalized relations by press release.

Part of the reason is institutional. The previous clerical leadership was unlikely to accept a genuine normalization with Washington, and many of the men most invested in the old posture are now dead. But the deeper reason is cultural and political. A regime that built much of its legitimacy around resistance to America needed to be seen resisting America before it could negotiate with America.

Iran did resist.

It got hit much harder than it hit back, but it didn’t fold. It survived weeks of American and Israeli bombing. It kept launching missiles and drones. It struck American military bases in the Gulf. And, reportedly, it even managed to hit Camp Buehring in Kuwait with an old F-5 fighter jet—a bizarre Top Gun: Maverick inversion in which Iran, not the hero, flies the obsolete aircraft.

That episode, if the reporting is accurate, matters less militarily than symbolically. Iran didn’t just lob missiles from a distance. It sent pilots in museum-piece airframes into harm’s way and scored at least one hit.

The regime can now tell its own hawks: we fought America and Israel, we survived, and we hit back.

That may be the condition that makes diplomacy possible.


Sunday’s Theater

A lot of people jumped on Sunday’s intemperate statements from both sides as proof that the talks had failed.



Trump threatened Iran again. Iran’s negotiators talked tough. Iranian media floated walkout stories. American critics pounced. The usual people declared the whole thing a debacle before the first round had even finished.

That reading is too literal.

Both sides were signaling to their own hawks. Trump had to remind the Republican right, Israel, the Gulf states, and Tehran that America’s military options remained on the table. Iran’s negotiators had to remind their own hardliners that they weren’t crawling to Switzerland to accept dictated terms.

Both sides almost certainly understood what the other was doing.

That’s why the talks kept going through mediators even after the public fireworks. That’s why the technical talks are continuing. That’s why the first round produced a 60-day roadmap, a Lebanon mechanism, a communications line for the Strait of Hormuz, and movement on sanctions waivers, oil exports, frozen assets, and reconstruction.

The rhetoric was ugly. The diplomacy continued.

That’s what hard diplomacy often looks like after a war.


The Attack On Vance

Much of the Republican-side commentary about Switzerland is less about Iran than about 2028.

A faction of the Republican foreign-policy world still hopes Marco Rubio, not JD Vance, becomes Trump’s successor and restores a more conventional neoconservative foreign policy. That faction can’t attack Trump directly, because Trump remains too popular with Republican voters. So it attacks Vance.

The argument wears the costume of concern about American humiliation, but the political target is obvious. Vance is being framed as the weak link, the naive negotiator, the man getting played by Tehran. By extension, the attack also targets Trump’s policy, because Vance isn’t freelancing in Switzerland. He’s carrying out the president’s strategy.

Some of the attacks aren’t subtle.


We see the coordinated op and it's not going to work.
Chandler Langevin
@ChandlerForPB
Daily reminder that attacking the Vice President is an attack on the President. If you pretend you’re a Trump/MAGA loyalist for access you don’t get to say “I only attacked JD”.
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Commentators who were conventional liberals five minutes ago are now lecturing the MAGA base on Reaganite strength. Senator Bill Cassidy said Reagan would be “rolling over in his grave” over Trump’s Iran deal.

That comparison doesn’t survive contact with history.

Ronald Reagan hit Iran in Operation Praying Mantis in 1988, and that was a serious naval action. But Trump hit Iran far harder with Operation Epic Fury. Reagan also sold weapons to Iran as part of Iran-Contra. And when 241 American servicemen were killed in the Beirut Marine barracks bombing in 1983, Reagan didn’t double down on the Lebanon peacekeeping mission. He pulled the Marines out.



That doesn’t make Reagan a coward. It makes him a president who understood limits.

Trump understands limits too.


Prudence After Force

The hawks calling for regime change, invasion, or a return to full-scale war are being imprudent.

Trump has cared about nuclear proliferation for at least forty years. He knows Iran can’t be allowed to become a nuclear weapons state. But he also knows military force can only achieve so much at an acceptable cost.

America can bomb Iran. America can kill senior Iranian leaders. America can destroy military targets. America can blockade Iranian ports. America can rescue downed pilots from Iranian territory and demonstrate that it won’t leave Americans behind.

America can’t occupy Iran cheaply. It can’t turn a proud, ancient, mountainous country of more than 90 million people into a stable client state by invasion. It can’t keep the Strait of Hormuz throttled indefinitely without imposing serious costs on the global economy. It can’t ask voters who elected Trump to avoid stupid wars to support an open-ended occupation of Persia.

Trump seemed to acknowledge that reality in France when he talked about the economic catastrophe that could follow if the war and the Hormuz crisis continued. Energy workarounds and strategic stockpiles can’t permanently substitute for normal shipping through one of the world’s most important chokepoints.

The choice was between converting battlefield gains into a durable settlement and letting maximalists push America into a war whose political support would evaporate the moment body bags started coming home in large numbers.

Trump chose to bank the gains.

That’s prudence after force.


The Dollar Angle

One underappreciated aspect of the sanctions debate is what sanctions relief would actually do to Iran.

Critics describe the mooted $300 billion reconstruction and development plan as though the United States would simply write Tehran a check. That’s almost certainly not how it would work. The more likely structure would involve some mixture of private-sector financing, regional government loans, strategic investments, joint ventures, oil revenue normalization, and access to previously frozen assets.

To get that, Iran would have to come back through the dollar system.

That’s not a small thing.

For years, the BRICS fantasy has held that Russia, China, Iran, and the rest of the “Global South” would build a parallel financial order outside American reach. The fantasy was always overstated. The yuan can’t replace the dollar so long as Beijing reserves the right to devalue it whenever necessary to maintain its trade surplus and domestic employment model. A currency controlled that way can support bilateral trade and political signaling, but it can’t function as a true global reserve substitute.

If Iran gets pulled back into dollar-denominated trade, dollar-cleared investment, Western-linked financing, and U.S.-licensed reconstruction, the BRICS alternative becomes even less plausible.

The same goes for the International North-South Transport Corridor, the Russia-Iran-India route designed in part to move trade outside the reach of U.S. sanctions and naval pressure. If Washington reestablishes diplomatic and economic relations with Tehran, it gains leverage over that corridor instead of watching Iran function as the sanctioned hinge between Moscow and New Delhi.

That’s a strategic gain, not a giveaway.


The Russia Spillover


There’s also a Russia angle here.

If Washington normalizes relations with Iran, lifts sanctions, permits reconstruction financing, and pulls Tehran back into the dollar system, it’ll become harder to explain why sanction-free relations with Iran are possible but sanction-free relations with Russia aren’t.

The two cases aren’t identical. Russia is fighting a major land war in Europe. Iran’s war was shorter, more contained, and more directly tied to nuclear and regional-security arrangements. But the diplomatic contrast will still be obvious. If a postwar Iran can come back into the American-led economic order, then Washington can’t simply treat a postwar Russia as permanently untouchable without making sanctions look less like a tool of policy and more like a theological category.

That may be one of the larger consequences of an Iran settlement.

The earlier Russia track was real enough to alarm the Ukraine-war establishment. Axios reported last year that the Trump administration had been quietly working with Russia on a Ukraine peace plan, and Reuters reported that the proposal grew out of discreet discussions involving Steve Witkoff and Kirill Dmitriev. Park MacDougald put the internal fight more sharply on X: “Rubio burned a lot of political capital to strangle the Witkoff-Dmitriev plan.”


Rubio burned a lot of political capital to strangle the Witkoff-Dmitriev plan. The flip side of that is that he’s going to have to say things like this in public.
Department of State
@StateDept
SECRETARY RUBIO: The U.S. is constantly asked to help in wars and we have. But when we had a need, it didn’t get positive responses from NATO. A couple leaders said that Iran was not Europe’s war. Well, Ukraine isn’t our war, yet we’ve contributed more to that fight than anyone.
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That line captures the larger tension inside Trump’s foreign policy.

On one side is the Trump-Witkoff-Vance instinct: use American leverage to get settlements. On the other side is the old Republican foreign-policy apparatus, which is more comfortable treating Ukraine as an open-ended proxy war and Russia as a permanently sanctioned enemy. Rubio has often sounded closer to the latter camp, which is why his role in both the Russia and Iran tracks matters.

A successful Iran deal would strengthen the case for reviving the Russia track.

It would show that Trump’s method is force followed by bargaining. Hit hard where necessary. Establish the limits of what force can achieve. Then convert leverage into a settlement before the war party moves the goalposts from victory to maximalism.

There’s a warning here too.

If Russia concludes that Iran got Washington to the table by surviving punishment, imposing costs, threatening energy flows, and proving that escalation could damage the global economy, Moscow may draw its own conclusions. Great powers notice what gets results. If diplomacy with Russia remains blocked while diplomacy with Iran succeeds, the lesson Moscow takes may not be the one Washington wants it to take.

That’s another reason to treat an Iran settlement as part of a larger strategic reset, not as a one-off exception.

A president who can make peace with Tehran after war should be able to make peace with Moscow after Ukraine. The alternative is a foreign policy in which America reconciles with the former “Death to America” regime while continuing an open-ended proxy war against the world’s largest nuclear power.

That would be a strange definition of realism.


Israel And Iran

The Israel-Iran side of the conflict will be harder to settle.

There’s no near-term path to normal Israeli-Iranian relations. Too much blood has been spilled. Too many constituencies on both sides define themselves against the other. Israel needed to learn the limits of what it could accomplish by airpower alone. Iran needed to learn the price of continuing to arm and encourage proxies at Israel’s borders.

That learning process was brutal, but it was probably necessary too.

The realistic near-term objective isn’t Israeli-Iranian normalization. It’s Lebanon. If Trump can get Iran to rein in Hezbollah, and if Washington can get Israel to withdraw, then the most dangerous live fuse in the postwar settlement can be dampened.

That won’t end the ideological hostility between Israel and Iran. It may not even end covert conflict between them. But it could move the region away from open war and toward a colder, more manageable rivalry.

That’s how a lot of wars end. Not with hugs. Not with trust. With limits.


The Possible Shape Of Peace

The Switzerland talks should be judged against the reality of what came before them.

America and Israel demonstrated they could decapitate much of Iran’s leadership and batter its military infrastructure. Iran demonstrated it could survive, impose costs, disrupt global energy flows, and keep fighting. The United States demonstrated it was willing to use overwhelming force, but not willing to invade and occupy Iran. Iran demonstrated it could still retaliate, but not defeat America or Israel conventionally.

Those are the facts the diplomats are now negotiating over.

The hawks wanted the war to end with regime change. The third-worldists wanted it to end with America humiliated. Neither got what they wanted.

What may be emerging instead is more realistic: no Iranian nuclear weapon, sanctions relief conditioned on compliance, Iran pulled back into the dollar system, Hormuz reopened, Hezbollah restrained, Israel out of Lebanon, and the United States positioned as the indispensable power in the settlement rather than the exhausted occupier of another Middle Eastern country.

Iran may cheat. Israel may keep striking Lebanon. Republican hawks may try to sabotage the deal from Washington. Iranian hardliners may try to sabotage it from Tehran. The 60-day deadline is ambitious, and the old JCPOA took far longer than that.

But the fact that the talks are happening at this level, after this war, is historic.

The war clarified what force could do. Switzerland may clarify what diplomacy can do after force has done its work.

That’s the opportunity Trump and Vance are trying to seize.