Trump’s “Maximum Pressure” 2.0: Because The First Time Went So Well
If there’s one thing Trump loves more than a signature steak, it’s recycling his greatest hits, and this month, he’s reviving his favorite geopolitical mixtape: Sanction Iran Until Something Breaks.
On February 4, just ahead of a cozy sit-down with Benjamin Netanyahu, Trump announced that his administration was reinstating the full “maximum pressure” campaign on Iran, because nothing says “diplomacy” like economic strangulation with a side of oil price spikes.
The Plan: Squeeze Iran Until They… Do What Exactly?
Trump’s grand strategy (and we use the term loosely) is simple:
✔ Drive Iran’s oil exports down to zero—because if Tehran has no money, it can’t fund its nuclear program, or anything else, really.
✔ Punish any country that buys Iranian oil—because why stop at just sanctioning Iran when you can also alienate its trading partners?
✔ Tell Iran they can “come to the table” for a new deal—but only after kneecapping their economy and hoping they crawl to negotiations.
The problem? We’ve seen this movie before, and it didn’t have a happy ending.
History Lesson: Why This Didn’t Work Last Time
Back in Trump’s first term, he withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal, slapped on these same sanctions, and then…
❌ Iran didn’t back down.
❌ Iran ramped up uranium enrichment.
❌ Iran got closer to a nuclear weapon than ever before.
It turns out, backing a country into a corner doesn’t make them surrender—it makes them double down.
And yet, here we are, hitting replay on a policy that failed to curb Iran’s nuclear ambitions the first time.
Who’s Cheering? Who’s Panicking?
✔ Israel & the Gulf Allies → Netanyahu has been begging the U.S. to play hardball with Iran, and Gulf states are happy to see Iran economically throttled—as long as it doesn’t escalate into war.
✔ Trump’s Base → Nothing fires up the “America First” crowd like crushing a longtime enemy, even if it means oil prices might go up.
❌ Iran & China → China is one of Iran’s biggest oil buyers, and Beijing is unlikely to take these sanctions lying down. Expect some quiet defiance from the world’s second-largest economy, possibly further deepening U.S.-China tensions.
❌ The Global Oil Market → Cutting Iranian supply could drive up energy prices, which means the average American could soon be paying for Trump’s foreign policy at the gas pump.
Trump’s Middle East Play: “Peace” in Ukraine, Fire in Tehran?
The irony of this harder line on Iran is that it’s happening at the same time Trump is playing “peacemaker” in Ukraine.
✔ In Europe, Trump is trying to be the great negotiator.
✔ In the Middle East, he’s throwing gasoline on the fire.
And let’s not forget—Iran isn’t going to sit quietly. They’ve already:
✔ Stepped up uranium enrichment.
✔ Made it clear they’re not backing down.
✔ Threatened to retaliate if their economy is crushed.
So, while Trump is cozying up to Putin and offering Ukraine on a silver platter, he’s simultaneously daring Iran to escalate.
Because, apparently, his foreign policy strategy is “let’s just see what happens.”
The Bottom Line: Maximum Pressure, Minimum Results
This isn’t a bold new strategy—it’s Trump dusting off an old playbook and hoping for a different outcome.
✔ If Iran bends? Trump will claim victory.
✔ If Iran fights back? Trump will use it to justify more military action.
✔ If gas prices skyrocket? Trump will just blame Biden anyway.
And if Iran decides to sprint toward nuclear capability faster than before, well—that’s a future Trump problem.
For now, the Middle East is officially back on high alert. Because when it comes to Trump’s foreign policy, the only guarantee is chaos.