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🎭 After Being Deceived Twice, Iran Learned Its Lesson—But Trump Is Still Sending Invitations
There's an unspoken rule in diplomatic history:
The first time you're deceived, it's called trust. The second time you're deceived, it's called a lesson. The third time you're deceived... that's your own problem.
Iranian officials have been blunt about it—
"We don't want to be fooled again."
Translated into diplomatic language, this means: one thing at the negotiating table, another thing when approving missile strikes—we're not having these meetings anymore.
Let's rewind the previous two rounds of operations: While Trump publicly claimed to be "seeking a peace agreement," he simultaneously approved deadly strikes on Iran—talking negotiations while never stopping military action.
Now the script is repeating—
U.S. aircraft carriers and bombers are massively reinforcing the Middle East, while the White House is pushing Iran to the negotiating table.
This combination of moves... feels awfully familiar~
Iran's dilemma: not negotiating means sustained pressure; negotiating, history tells them the outcome.
And the market's dilemma: every time the Middle East situation mentions "negotiations," oil prices briefly dip; every time negotiations collapse, oil prices double payback.
The Strait of Hormuz is still blocked, troop reinforcements are ongoing, and negotiations haven't even started—
Peace is the most expensive commodity, and right now no one can afford it~
The geopolitical chess game will ultimately be written into oil prices, and then written into your bills~