Trump Losing Grip on Iran and It’s No Surprise Why

Trump’s military strategy is a fat guy on a couch eating potato chips, watching TV, telling everyone he’d destroy any professional fighter in the ring. He’s never trained. He refuses to train. He fired his trainers. But he’s the loudest mouth in the room, so he must be the toughest. Right?

Iran just rang the bell.

The Chips

Four years. That’s how long Ukraine has been running the most intensive drone warfare laboratory in human history. Outgunned and outmanned since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Kyiv built a domestic drone industry from garage startups and kitchen tables. They figured out that a $500 first-person-view quadcopter could kill a million-dollar tank. They developed cheap “Sting” interceptors to shoot down Iranian-made Shahed drones at a 90% kill rate. They iterated, tested, failed, adapted, and iterated again with constraints under live fire, every single day, against the exact same weapons Iran is now using against American bases.

That was the gym. That was the weight room. Under Biden, the United States was at least in the same vicinity by sending weapons, funding production, and getting some knowledge transfer from the most intensive drone conflict in modern history. The smart play was to scale that investment: embed more liaisons, surge production lines for both Ukrainian and American needs, and build the institutional muscle for whatever came next.

MAGA arrogance killed it. Republican obstruction held Ukraine aid hostage for months in Congress while Trump promised he’d stop all wars immediately. The very preparation window that could have built surge capacity, tested counter-drone systems, and scaled cheap interceptor production was strangled by the same political movement that then rushed headlong into a Gulf war without any of it. They blocked the training, then stepped into the ring.

When Trump finally took office in January 2025, he didn’t just stop what was left, he actively reversed course and said no more working out. He cut Ukraine off to “negotiate,” handed Russia leverage, and let the knowledge pipeline go cold. Defense budget attention went to culture war purges instead of procurement reform. Institutional energy went to loyalty tests instead of doctrine adaptation. Pete Hegseth got the Pentagon as a man whose qualification for overseeing the world’s most complex military was … losing his grip.

The Announcement

Sun Tzu’s most basic lesson is to know yourself and know your enemy. Trump’s contribution to military strategy was to announce, publicly, that he would do neither.

Renaming Defense back to War. Stripping Geneva Convention protections. Promising unconstrained force. This wasn’t strategy. It was a press release telling every adversary on earth exactly how America planned to fight: escalation dominance through brute expenditure. Maximum force, zero adaptation.

Every asymmetric fighter in history just smiled. That’s the guy you want to face in the ring. He’s the one who talks a lot, only knows how to throw haymakers, and thinks training and cardio is for losers.

The entire history of post-WWII conflict confirms the pattern. Vietnam. Ethiopia. Angola. Afghanistan. Iraq. Somalia. Overwhelming force without strategic intelligence, legal legitimacy, and allied support produces tactical wins and strategic defeat. Every time. Without exception. Trump walked into 2026 asymmetric battle with 1968 logic applied to a 2022 technology domain, having shriveled the one muscle that could have kept him current.

The Ring

NPR reported this week that U.S. officials are already worried about running out of interceptor missiles after just weeks of fighting Iran. Weeks. Against one mid-tier power. Patriot interceptors cost millions per shot. THAAD interceptors cost millions per shot. They’re firing them at Shaheds that cost Tehran somewhere between $20,000 and $50,000 each. Iran doesn’t need to win in the air. It just needs to keep the drones coming until the American magazines are empty.

This is the professional fighter dancing around the fat guy, waiting for him to gas out. Every wild swing costs energy. Every missed punch brings the end closer. Iran planned for exactly this. They scaled Shahed production for years, sold the design to Russia, watched Ukraine develop countermeasures, and calculated that the American system was optimized for expensive kills against cheap threats. The math was never a secret. Anyone paying attention knew the equation was unsustainable.

Six American servicemembers were killed from a Shahed hit on an undefended operations center in Kuwait. The U.S. embassy in Riyadh took two drone strikes. The embassy in Baghdad got hit. UAE air defenses have engaged over 1,600 drones. And the stockpiles are draining.

The Refused Cornerman

Here’s where it becomes unforgivable. Ukraine, as the country that solved this exact problem, offered to help. Kyiv offered its Sting interceptors, cheap drone-on-drone systems that cost a fraction of a Patriot missile and actually work against Shaheds at scale. Ukraine offered the knowledge that comes from four years of continuous high-intensity adaptation against these weapons.

Trump went on Fox News and said:

We don’t need their help in drone defense. We know more about drones than anybody. We have the best drones in the world, actually.

That’s the couch potato turning down a personal training session because he already knows everything about fitness. While actively losing the fight.

The rejection wasn’t just arrogant. It was operationally suicidal. A leader secure enough to accept help would actually be strong. The one insisting he’s already the best while hemorrhaging interceptors and personnel is telling every adversary exactly where to hit him.

The Cardio Problem

Stockpiles can be rebuilt, in theory. But theory requires an industrial base and fiscal capacity that actually function. Raytheon’s Patriot production line was already backlogged. These are complex systems with multi-year lead times, specialized workforces, and deep supplier networks, which are exactly the kind of infrastructure that tariff chaos disrupts. You can’t surge-produce precision munitions when you’re simultaneously waging trade wars against the countries that supply rare earth materials and electronic components.

Then there’s the oil dimension sitting right in the middle of this conflict. Petroleum facilities hit in the UAE. The Strait of Hormuz under threat. If energy prices spike hard enough, the cascade hits everything — consumer spending, federal revenue, borrowing costs. You’re trying to fund a war and restock munitions during an economic crisis your own trade policy accelerated. The couch potato doesn’t just lack cardio. He’s been eating himself into cardiac arrest.

Everyone Else Learned

While Trump was on the couch, the rest of the world was in the gym.

Iran scaled a drone production capability that can sustain weeks of saturation attacks against the most expensive military on earth. Ukraine built an entire domestic defense industry from scratch under fire. The Houthis demonstrated that a non-state actor with cheap missiles could disrupt global shipping and tie down a carrier group. Europe started rearming independently, having concluded that American protection is a depreciating asset.

Every country watching this conflict is learning two things at once: American protection is unreliable, and cheap asymmetric systems work against American power. The Saudis, Emiratis, South Koreans, and Taiwanese are all running the same calculation right now, and none of their answers include depending on Washington.

Pride Before the Fall

Empires typically don’t fall to direct or even peer competitors. They fall to the accumulated cost of refusing to progress from mistakes. Spain, Britain, the Soviet Union and so forth were convinced that unregulated excess was an answer right up until it wasn’t. Stripping legal constraints doesn’t project strength. It signals a system that has lost the capacity for self-regulation, which is exactly the vulnerability of rapid excess that a smart adversary probes.

David doesn’t beat Goliath because David is stronger. David beats Goliath because Goliath is so convinced of his own size that he can’t imagine losing, can’t adapt when the fight doesn’t go as planned, and exhausts himself swinging at air while the smaller, faster opponent waits for the opening.

Trump announced he would play the Goliath, without awareness. Then he proved it, in every way that matters.

Trump’s New Minesweepers for Hormuz Go MIA, Spotted in Malaysia

Minesweeping Elvis has left the building.

Two-thirds of America’s Persian Gulf “mine countermeasure capability” just got busted by a shipspotter in Penang, Malaysia. Not declared by the Pentagon. Not briefed in Congress. A guy with a camera at a container terminal said, uh, what the hell.

Source: Twitter

USS Tulsa and USS Santa Barbara, two of three Independence-class Littoral Combat Ships known as the entire US Navy mine warfare force in the Middle East, were photographed docked at North Butterworth Container Terminal on March 15.

Their homeport is Bahrain. Bahrain is 3,500 nautical miles away. You know, where the US has been at war with Iran since February 28.

Iran’s mine doctrine is the reason these ships exist in their current “countermine” configuration.

The Gap

Again, as I’ve recently blogged, Trump had his four best minesweepers in January loaded onto a heavy lift ship and sent to Philadelphia for demolition. The Royal Navy decommissioned its last traditional minesweeper in Bahrain this year too.

And the official replacements are the Tulsa, Santa Barbara, and Canberra. These three LCS ships were just fitted with modular MCM mission packages at huge expense. Three large metal ships replacing four small non-metal ones, introducing an untested system, unfit for Gulf waters, against an adversary that has thousands of mines and decades of doctrine for deploying them in exactly the strait where traffic has now slowed to only what the Iranians decide.

Two of those three ships now sitting on the wrong side of the Indian Ocean is curious at least. Canberra’s location is “unknown”.

Finger Pointing

The War Zone reached out to CENTCOM, which directed them to Fifth Fleet. Fifth Fleet directed them back to CENTCOM. The Royal Malaysian Navy, which normally announces foreign warship arrivals on social media, said nothing. USNI News sources described it as a “logistics stop” and declined further comment.

Planet Labs satellite imagery shows no US warships in port in Manama since February 23, five days before strikes began. Clearing the port was prudent. Sending the mine warfare assets 3,500 miles east was… something else.

The Ol’ Switcheroo

Defense officials told reporters on Friday that missiles, definitely not the Iranian sea mines, are currently the largest threat to merchant shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. Read that slowly. Consider how many press conferences we have heard that Iranian missile capability has been “obliterated”. It’s not a reassurance here. The Navy sounds like it’s reframing the threat environment to match a capability it no longer has in theater. Or maybe the Navy realized the three ships have a critical vulnerability, beyond sucking a minesweeping.

At least twenty crude oil tankers and cargo ships have been struck by projectiles since February 28. Trump is failing to convince his former enemies, the NATO allies, to contribute ships for a convoy operation to reopen Hormuz. US officials say American escorts are unprepared, won’t be ready for weeks. So what’s with these new mine clearance ships sneaking off to Malaysia?

Are they being used to chase ships instead? Did someone decide a 40-knot trimaran with anti-ship missiles and boarding capability is more useful chasing Iranian sanctions traffic through the Malacca Strait than hunting mines it probably can’t find anyway?

LCS Can’t Find Itself

The LCS MCM mission package has been a decade late and plagued with reliability problems since inception. The concept envisions laboriously hunting individual mines one by one with unmanned systems, giving an estimated clearance rate of roughly two mines per hour against minefields that are expected to number in the thousands. Tulsa’s unmanned surface vessel, riddled with points of failure, infamously went rogue after its tow bracket quit.

Something Smells Rotten

The US appears to have pre-conceded capabilities it spent decades building. The Avengers were retired by Trump as a bureaucratic fait accompli a month before they were needed. The snowflake LCS MCM system was declared operational abruptly as an institutional checkbox. And when the contingency these systems were specifically designed for actually arrived, given headlines announcing Iran mining the Strait of Hormuz as everyone expected, the LCS fleet pushed off to somewhere else and nobody in the chain of command wants to say why.

The ships arrived in Penang on March 14 and departed March 16. A Russian task group had just left the same berth two weeks earlier. That’s probably just a coincidence. The rest of it isn’t.

Trump Oil Bankrupt in Six Months: Promised Boom is Already Bust

Trump bankruptcy is on the horizon again, this time on the ocean. Trump Steaks, Trump Vodka, Trump University, Trump Airline and now… Trump Oil.

Court filings tell the story. Trump applying the American military, like the mob flexes protection racket muscle, to monopolize a market isn’t what he thought it would be. Trump is spending tens of millions of taxpayer money grabbing and maintaining aging ocean tanker rust buckets that he can’t sell, holding oil he can’t offload, and continuing the program anyway into an expanding disaster.

Here’s a table for every tanker seized so far under his ill-considered “Operation Southern Spear”.

The Trump Junk Fleet

Tanker Seized Cargo (barrels) Est. Cargo Value Vessel Value Known Cost to U.S. Status
Skipper Dec 10, 2025 1.8M $120–$135M ~$10M $47M + $450K/mo + $5M pending Held; DOJ asking court to sell
Centuries Dec 20, 2025 ~2M ~$130M Unknown Unknown (moored at Galveston) Held
Bella 1 / Marinera Jan 7, 2026 Empty $0 Unknown Atlantic chase + ongoing Held; pure cost center
Sophia Jan 7, 2026 ~2M ~$130M Unknown Seizure costs; cargo returned Returned to Venezuela
Olina Jan 9, 2026 Loaded Unknown Unknown Seizure costs; cargo returned Returned to Venezuela
Veronica Jan 15, 2026 Empty $0 Unknown Unknown (moored off Puerto Rico) Held; pure cost center
Sagitta Jan 21, 2026 Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown Held
Aquila II Feb 9, 2026 ~700K ~$45M Unknown 15,000 km pursuit + ongoing Held; not formally seized
2 additional (unidentified) Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown Unknown Held per NYT

That’s just eight confirmed seizures already painting the obvious picture.

The NYT reports ten total with Venezuelan ties. Two (Bella 1 and Veronica) were empty when seized. Two more (Sophia and Olina) were returned to Venezuela. The U.S. absorbed the full operational cost of every seizure and got nothing back on four of them.

The Asset Trap

A tanker is not a seized bank account. It’s not a pile of gold. It is like a slumlord grabbing a condemned property, a decaying organism that consumes capital every second it sits unrepaired. Taking the decrepit hulls means the U.S. government has made itself into the world’s most expensive and insolvent shipping company.

For what?

The Skipper’s court filings are Trump Steaks all over again.

The U.S. government was forced to spend $47 million in three months on repairing and maintaining a vessel worth $10 million. Instead of all the things $47 million could have done domestically, it’s tangled up in acquired foreign debt.

Read that Trump businessman genius move again.

He’s blowing 4.7x a ship’s value just to keep it afloat in Texas. Oil storage runs $15,000 a day. Another $5 million is pending for insurance and crew. The DOJ’s own asset manager wrote that these costs “far outstrip standard assets.”

Grade school children understand the math showing this is bad, but not Trump. Previous American procedure was to seize the assets (oil) at sea with a siphon and let the liability (ships) sail on. Makes sense, right? The Trump model has been to take all the liability, immediately undermining the assets.

The Storage Bottleneck

Trump’s army of sycophants can’t simply sell the oil, deteriorating on old ships. These are civil forfeiture cases tied up in U.S. District Court in Washington. The Skipper’s cargo — worth $120 to $135 million — has been sitting unsold since December. At $450,000 a month in storage alone, a 12-month legal process would burn up $5.4 million before a buyer is found. Add the $47 million in catch-up maintenance and $5 million in pending costs, and nearly half the cargo value evaporates before a single barrel is sold.

The DOJ is now asking the court to allow an emergency sale of the Skipper’s oil before the massive losses become obvious to the public. That’s the Trump circus creating emergencies by admitting their strategy is hemorrhaging money faster than they can bully people into covering it up.

Net Recovery Projection

Only the Skipper has detailed cost data. But the Skipper is the template. These are all aging, end-of-life shadow fleet tankers that were past commercial retirement when they were seized. If the Skipper’s costs are even roughly representative, here’s what the full fleet of eight held tankers looks like over time.

Assumptions: maximum recoverable cargo across the fleet estimated at $500 million. Initial repair costs averaged at $20M per tanker (conservative — the Skipper hit $47M). Ongoing monthly costs per tanker estimated at $2–3.5M (maintenance, crew, insurance, storage). Neither scenario includes military operational costs, legal fees, or cargo depreciation.

Scenario Initial Repair (fleet) Monthly Burn (fleet) Total Cost at 6 Mo. Total Cost at 12 Mo. Max Recoverable Cargo Net at 12 Mo.
Conservative ($20M avg repair, $2M/mo per tanker) $160M $16M/mo $256M $352M ~$500M +$148M
Skipper Rate ($40M avg repair, $3.5M/mo per tanker) $320M $28M/mo $488M $656M ~$500M –$156M

Under the conservative scenario — which assumes each tanker costs less than half what the Skipper actually cost — the operation barely breaks even at 12 months. Under the Skipper rate, the operation goes underwater at roughly month 6 and never recovers. By month 12, the U.S. has spent $156 million more than the oil is worth.

Month six!

The Risk Nobody’s Pricing: Environmental Liability

Everything above is the optimistic scenario. It assumes nothing goes wrong with the ships themselves. That assumption deserves scrutiny.

These are single-hull, end-of-life “ghost fleet” tankers. They were built over two decades ago. They have been running intentionally dark, spoofing locations, skipping important inspections, and operating without valid safety certifications for years. So Trump has targeted absolute worst junk assets, with the least chance of positive return, for seizure.

Several were already rusting through, for obvious reasons. The Skipper’s $47 million in immediate repairs were totally avoidable by not seizing it.

I suspect the people who never maintain anything and have no concept of safety are the ones assuming all ships are equally valued.

Seizing unfit vessels on the verge of disaster actually makes the U.S. government the “responsible party” under the Oil Pollution Act of 1990. OPA 90 imposes strict liability on the owner or operator of any vessel from which oil is discharged into U.S. waters.

Bush signed OPA 90 in response to the Exxon Valdez disaster. But as the Netflix documentary The White House Effect now documents using his own presidential library memos, his chief of staff John Sununu was simultaneously running a back channel with Exxon to neutralize every environmental commitment the administration made.

Perhaps that’s the Trump plan too.

The filmmakers found never-before-seen correspondence between oil executives and the White House chief of staff — memos in which, according to director Jon Shenk, Sununu openly bullied the President. EPA chief Bill Reilly told the filmmakers that even he was shocked by the tone.

The oil industry’s reaction to the Valdez spill was not remorse. It was to circle the wagons — applying the tobacco industry playbook of deny, counter, and split the electorate. Exxon wrote directly to Sununu as their line into the government. He convened a confidential “Global Warming Scientific ‘Skeptics’ Meeting” stacked with climate contrarians funded by coal companies. And the Bush White House forced NASA scientist James Hansen to alter his own congressional testimony to downplay climate risks.

The law survived the Bush corruption that is responsible for growing climate change disasters we experience today. The intentions behind it didn’t, perhaps by design. And now that same OPA 90 framework — strict liability, uncapped when safety regulations are violated — is the one that’s governing Trump’s seized tanker fleet. What are the chances it holds?

“Strict” means no-fault, so if the oil spills, the responsible party pays. And the current OPA liability cap for a single-hull tank vessel over 3,000 gross tons is the greater of $4,000 per gross ton or $29.6 million. But the cap vanishes entirely if the spill resulted from “violation of an applicable Federal safety, construction, or operating regulation.” These ships have no valid classification, no current safety certificates, and no double hulls. The cap would not survive a normal courtroom.

Here is what the uncapped liability looks like.

Spill Scenario Volume Historical Comparable Cleanup Cost Range Total Liability (incl. damages)
Minor hull breach (1 tanker, partial cargo) ~500K barrels Larger than Exxon Valdez (262K bbl) $2–4 billion $3–7 billion
Major structural failure (1 full tanker) ~1.8M barrels Approaching Deepwater Horizon scale $5–15 billion $10–25 billion
Cascading failure (2+ tankers at anchorage) 3–4M barrels No historical precedent $15–40 billion $25–65 billion

The numbers have precedent. Exxon spent roughly $2.5 billion on cleanup alone for 262,000 barrels — about $9,500 per barrel spilled. BP’s total Deepwater Horizon liability exceeded $20.8 billion in settlements, with total costs above $65 billion. The Skipper is sitting in the Galveston Offshore Lightering Area with 1.8 million barrels of heavy Venezuelan crude — nearly seven times the volume of the Exxon Valdez spill — in a hull that required extensive repairs so it wouldn’t wreck Texas.

And the government plans to add even more debt from captured Iranian tankers to this fleet. Iranian shadow fleet vessels are notoriously among the worst-maintained ships afloat. By seizing them, the U.S. takes the environmental and safety liability another step deeper. One major hull breach in a U.S. port turns a hundred-million-dollar waste into a multi-billion-dollar ecological disaster. Talk about sunk cost.

The Ledger

Trump is pushing deranged reports of gross cargo value, to generate $130 million headline figures, as money he magically made. That’s clearly not how anything works. The actual balance sheet looks very different.

Line Item Headline Number Actual Number
Gross cargo value (all held tankers) ~$500M ~$500M (if every barrel is eventually sold)
Emergency repairs (fleet) Not reported $160–$320M (based on Skipper rate)
Ongoing maintenance, crew, insurance Not reported $16–$28M per month, compounding
Oil storage Not reported ~$3.6M per month (est. across loaded tankers)
Military operations (carrier groups, SEALs, 160th SOAR, CG cutters) Not reported Classified / buried in defense budget
Legal fees and court costs Not reported Unknown; 10 separate forfeiture cases
Empty tankers (Bella 1, Veronica) “Seized!” Pure liability; $0 revenue
Returned tankers (Sophia, Olina) “Seized!” Sunk cost; $0 revenue
Environmental tail risk (OPA 90) Not mentioned $3–65 billion per incident, uncapped
Net position at 12 months “Financial boon” +$148M (best case) to –$156M (Skipper rate)
Net position if one hull fails –$3 billion to –$65 billion

Every day Trump’s seized liabilities sit in U.S. waters, the gap between artificially gross headlines and the balanced reality ledger widens.

The one number that should keep the DOJ’s asset manager awake at night is the OPA 90 tail risk of a single-hull structural failure in a Texas anchorage, which doesn’t appear in any press conference. Bush signed that law. Sununu gutted the intent. And now Trump is parking the exact category of vessel it was designed to eliminate — single-hull, uncertified, end-of-life tankers loaded with heavy crude — in American waters, on the American taxpayer’s tab, with the American coastline as collateral.

This is what Trump Oil looks like, just like every other Trump bankruptcy, as court filings reveal the disinformation behind his toxic press releases.

Where’s Ed: Anthropic Told Court $5 Billion But Public $19 Billion

Ed Zitron just published two pieces on Where’s Ed: “The Beginning of History” (March 10) and “Why Are We Still Doing This?” (March 17).

They land a clean hit on Anthropic’s hallucinations in financial storytelling. The math is simple enough that it can’t be denied. Let me show you how.

What Anthropic Told the Court

Anthropic’s Chief Financial Officer Krishna Rao filed an affidavit on March 9, meaning he swore it was true, in their lawsuit against the Department of Defense. It stated that Anthropic’s total revenue “to date” was “exceeding $5 billion.” That’s all the money Anthropic has ever made, from its founding day through March 9, 2026.

What Anthropic Told Everyone Else

Throughout 2025 and into 2026, Anthropic repeatedly announced its “annualized revenue”, which doesn’t match the affidavit.

Say you run a lemonade stand. In July, you sell $10 worth of lemonade. Someone asks how your business is doing. Instead of saying “I made ten dollars, that is true,” you say: “I have a $120-a-year pace no doubt!” That’s annualized revenue. You take one month of actual money, multiply by twelve prediction months, and report the biggest number you can.

Here are the annualized revenue figures Zitron compiled from Anthropic’s own announcements and press coverage, with sources:

Date Annualized Revenue Implied Monthly Revenue
January 2025 $1 billion $83 million
March 11, 2025 $1.4 billion $117 million
March 30, 2025 $2 billion $167 million
May 30, 2025 $3 billion $250 million
July 1, 2025 $4 billion $333 million
July 31, 2025 $5 billion $417 million
October 2025 $7 billion $583 million
December 2025 $9 billion $750 million
February 12, 2026 $14 billion $1.17 billion
March 3, 2026 $19 billion $1.58 billion

The right column is the story. If annualized revenue means “this month times twelve,” then dividing by twelve gives you what they actually made each month.

The Addition

Now when we add up the monthly revenues we see a problem. This is where Where’s Ed earns his keep. Anthropic told the world at ten different points how much it grew. Each implies starting from an actual monthly number. Add them up, estimate the gaps between announcements, and you get a total.

Zitron’s figure: roughly $6.66 billion in implied cumulative revenue through early March 2026.

The CFO’s sworn figure: “exceeding $5 billion.”

Those numbers are not a match.

Ten reports across fourteen months, each covering a distinct measurement period. Zitron’s gap-period estimates are even conservative for the uncovered stretches between reports. He uses the lower ARR figure rather than interpolating upward. The $6.66 billion is a floor way higher than $5 billion, not a ceiling.

The Speedometer and the Odometer

You don’t even need the full table to see the problem. Just take the last four months. December 2025 through early March 2026, using Anthropic’s own ARR figures, implies roughly $4.25 billion in revenue ($750M + $750M + $1.17B + $1.58B). That would have to mean everything before December 2025, which would be the entire prior history of the company, produced less than $750 million. Look at the table again. That’s impossible.

Think of ARR like a speedometer. It reports how fast you’re going right now. Total revenue is your odometer. It tells you how far you’ve actually traveled.

If the speedometer says you’ve been doing 100 miles per hour for the last hour, but the odometer says you’ve only gone 40 miles, the speedometer is lying. Or more precisely: when you hit 100 for a split second you reported it as your cruising speed.

Rao’s low revenue word choice matters here. He said “exceeding $5 billion” and not “nearly $6 billion,” not “approaching $6 billion.”

In a filing where Anthropic was trying to impress a federal court with its commercial scale, Rao is expected to use the biggest number he can. “Exceeding $5 billion” tells you his real figure is much closer to $5 billion than to $6.

That puts overstatement implied by the ARR figures somewhere around 25–35%!

Which Anthropic Do You Believe?

If the $5 billion lifetime figure is the truth, as sworn under oath in federal court, then the annualized revenue figures don’t mean what they are meant to say. “Annualized” at Anthropic may not mean “last month times twelve.” It might mean best week times fifty-two. Or best day times three-sixty-five. Or something else entirely that makes the number as large as possible.

There is one charitable reading. ARR sometimes counts signed contracts with money promised, not money received. Rao’s “revenue to date” likely means recognized revenue, only money actually earned. If Anthropic has billions in contracts where service hasn’t been delivered yet (possible given the huge boost in February), the ARR looks huge while total revenue stays lower.

But if that’s the explanation, Anthropic was reporting unearned contract value to the press as though it were operating revenue, while reporting actual revenue to the court. That’s not an accounting distinction. That’s two different stories tuned for two different audiences.

Either way, the conclusion is the same.

Every headline that reported Anthropic’s annualized revenue as though it indicated actual business scale was wrong. Every valuation model built on those figures was fed inflated inputs. Every investor who used ARR trajectory to justify Anthropic’s $380 billion valuation was working with a disinformation number.

The lemonade stand making $10 in July that told everyone it is a $120-a-year business? Anthropic somehow screwed that reporting up despite regulators, sophisticated investors and the global financial press. Oh, and despite having AI as its core product. Or is it because of AI?

To believe both the ARR headlines and the CFO’s affidavit, you have to believe that Anthropic’s business was essentially non-existent for its first four years and then suddenly processed 85% of its entire lifetime volume in the last 100 days. Wow.

Zitron cleverly asked for proof.

Anthropic math implies flawed integrity. Just like AI.