Category Archives: History

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.

Yglesias Defends Big Tech Bros Fleecing the Poor: “Let Them Eat Shovels”

Matthew Yglesias runs a Substack called Slow Boring where he routes every problem in American political economy through zoning reform. His latest piece asks why Silicon Valley hasn’t done more for most Americans, and his answer is: not enough apartments near Cupertino.

Facepalm.

Paul Krugman had pointed out that tech generates a negative externality by producing billionaires who corrupt democracy. True.

Yglesias called this “puzzling” and used it to change the subject to housing density.

The problem is that Yglesias doesn’t seem to know the history of the examples he’s citing. Yup, I said it. HISTORY. Pull up a chair because I’m about to open a can of whoop-history on Yglesias.

He invokes Chicago in 1900, Detroit in 1920, the California Gold Rush, and Shenzhen. My God. He pulls all of that to our attention without appearing to notice that every one of these is a well-documented case study in the exact failure mode he’s ignoring.

Imagine being the guy who says Germany 1938 is a great example of how broken windows can fuel the economy.

Yeah, that bad.

The Fabian Society was founded in 1884 specifically because the industrial boomtowns Yglesias romanticizes were producing spectacular wealth for owners and squalor for everyone else. It’s like Krugman was so right that he didn’t even have to use history to know it, but if he had it would have cemented his point even more. Meanwhile Yglesias responds by walking through a minefield of his own examples and stepping on every one.

Here’s what Yglesias says, and what Fabians discovered over a century ago. Like explaining water is wet, I humbly present now, something hopefully obvious.

What Yglesias Says vs. What Fabians Would Say

Dimension Yglesias (Slow Boring) Fabian 1880s Critique
Why hasn’t tech helped most Americans? Housing constraints prevented a megacity from forming around Silicon Valley Private capture of publicly-funded innovation prevented democratic benefit
Proposed mechanism for shared prosperity Build denser housing near tech campuses so service workers can “sell shovels during the gold rush” Graduated taxation, public ownership stakes, municipal enterprise, democratic governance of technology
Role of the state Get out of the way — remove zoning restrictions Capture monopoly rents, fund universal public goods, regulate concentrated power
Who creates value? Tech founders and employees, radiating outward through spending Public universities, government-funded research, workers, infrastructure — tech founders captured value others created
What “the boom” looks like Population growth, construction, rising property values — Shenzhen, 1900s Chicago Rising wages, universal healthcare, public education, democratic workplace governance — postwar Britain
The billionaire question Not addressed — Krugman’s point about political corruption is replaced with a housing supply argument Billionaires are a policy failure. Concentrated wealth is concentrated political power. That’s the point.
Historical model invoked Industrial-era boomtowns (Chicago, Detroit) — workers flocking to capital The very boomtowns that produced child labor, tenement squalor, and Pinkertons — prompting the Fabian movement in the first place
Utopian vision Apartment towers in Marin County (cites Star Trek: Picard) Star Trek’s actual economy: no money, no landlords, replicators are public goods
What’s invisible Ownership. Power. Democratic control. Who decides what gets built and for whom. Nothing, these are the starting questions
Treatment of Krugman’s argument “Puzzling assertion” claim to dismiss the political corruption claim and jazz hands into housing Krugman understated it. The corruption is the business model. It’s not external.
If you force enough Stanford kool-aid into the mix, does it even matter what else exists?

Let me just reiterate that Shenzhen is government-owned land, state-directed investment, and party-controlled development. It’s literally the Fabian model, as the state captured the land value. Yglesias completely inverts reality and cites his error as his evidence for removing zoning restrictions.

Similarly, “selling shovels during the gold rush” is famous precisely because the miners with shovels went broke. It proves Yglesias wrong. Sure, Levi Strauss and Sam Brannan got rich by being smart while hard workers lost everything and died as nobodies. We’re supposed to want that? But the real lesson not to avoid is the abject cruelty, like the man who built the university at the center of Silicon Valley who got rich through government fraud, racism and genocide. That’s some devastatingly real harm Yglesias is romanticizing.

But what do I know. I’m not on Substack.

Haw Haw Hegseth of Iran: How Nazis Praised the Desert Rats Into Victory

A “water rat” in German (Wasserratte) is someone who swims extremely well. Think of it like “book worm”. A “book rat” (Leseratte) is someone very proficient at reading. The compound logic is simple: an animal plus an environment equals command. It belongs there.

A “desert rat” (Wüstenratte), following the same grammar, is something in command of a wasteland. The more you bomb them the better they thrive.

The Tobruk Problem

Britain in 1941 had a weak, conciliatory commander in North Africa. After pushing the Italians out of the Libyan port of Tobruk the resulting apathy allowed Rommel’s Afrika Korps to reclaim it. A garrison of Allies who refused to give it up, approximately 14,000 Australians of the 9th Division, along with British, Indian, and Polish troops, dug themselves into underground positions. Rommel couldn’t budge them, as they held for eight months.

William Joyce, broadcasting Nazi propaganda from Hamburg, Germany under the name “Lord Haw-Haw,” described them thus:

Poor desert rats of Tobruk, who live like rats and will die like rats.

Joyce clearly, calling people rats, was not German. He was born in America, raised in Ireland, and held a first-class honours degree in English literature from the University of London. Goebbels hired the Irishman to be fluent in English. In English, to Joyce, calling someone a “rat” was meant to convey filth, cowardice, treachery. To the Nazis, hearing the Allied forces were to be known as Tobruk rats, their own propaganda signaled a foe of great competence and command.

Joyce foolishly had peddled English “rat” to mean an insult, but facts on the ground kept delivering the German meaning of the word instead to the Germans. Everything he described about Allied troops burrowing, surviving bombardment, refusing to leave, outlasting the siege was all proving to be competence. The nouns insulted. The verbs complimented. The garrison struck medals celebrating the rat, cast from the aluminium of a downed German bomber, and tuned in nightly for more.

Tobruk rat medals were said to have been made by the Australian diggers from scrap metal of Nazi planes they shot down.

One defender recalled that Lord Haw-Haw broadcasts “never failed to cheer us”, opposite to what Goebbels expected.

Lord Haw Haw, the Irishman who gladly served Hitler

Every broadcast confirming they were still there was an advertisement that Rommel couldn’t fight, the Afrika Korps could not take the port. Nobody in the German propaganda ministry apparently caught the problem. Their translation of propaganda was becoming notoriously “witzig”.

Indian troops in the Egyptian desert get a laugh from one of the leaflets which Field Marshal Erwin Rommel has taken to dropping behind the British lines now that his ground attacks have failed. The leaflet, which of course are strongly anti-British in tone, are printed in Hindustani, but are too crude to be effective. (Photo was flashed to New York from Cairo by radio. Credit: ACME Radio Photo)

Nazis had found an Irishman happy to be their native English speaker precisely so they would not have to think how the words landed. Consider Joyce much like an AI agent today. Nazis inherently are so clumsy and didactic they aren’t going to know how to generate useful, nuanced results.

Joyce took a German compliment, translated it into English contempt, and the compliment kept showing through because it fit the ground truth of adaptation, persistence, mastery of a hostile environment. And he never knew, just like how an AI agent is always in “hallucination” mode.

The Australian War Memorial notes that Joyce’s insults “were often turned into badges of honour.”

Propaganda leaflets dropped by Nazis on Australian troops were comical at best, and helped Montgomery boost morale against Rommel.

The standard account explains this as defiant reclamation where soldiers seized an enemy’s slur to wear it proudly. That is the English-language reading that gives Joyce’s mistake far too much undeserved credit instead of ridicule. The German-language reading is clearer: there was nothing to reclaim. The German propaganda produced praise when it attempted to insult. Joyce was a stage clown who couldn’t stop hallucinating, and deserves to be called out for it.

Advice from Walt Disney on the appropriate reaction to Nazis

The Pentagon Podium, March 2026

Fast forward to the modern day Haw Haw, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Last Friday he told reporters that U.S. forces in Iran would proceed with “no quarter, no mercy for our enemies.”

“No quarter” has a specific meaning in military law, and it’s not a good one for Hegseth. It means kill those who surrender. The Hague Convention prohibits it. The Geneva Conventions prohibit it. The Pentagon’s own law of war manual prohibits it. The Nuremberg tribunals prosecuted German officers for it.

Senator Mark Kelly, a retired Navy captain, translated for anyone who missed it:

An order to give no quarter would mean to take no prisoners and kill them instead.

Hegseth perhaps thought he was going to communicate resolve by acting like he is a Confederate General who can order prisoners to be tortured and killed. Does he think this is 1865 and the southern states won? He produced instead, on the record, a war crime platform. A statement that the Pentagon’s own legal framework classifies as a war crime. The audience he intended to reach sits among the war crimes prosecutors, allied governments weighing coalition support, and Iranian propagandists looking for recruitment material. They all heard the same Haw Haw.

The same day, Hegseth described Iran’s military as “destroyed” and its attacks on shipping in the Strait of Hormuz as “sheer desperation.” At the time of this statement, the strait was functionally closed to commercial traffic, global energy prices had spiked, the U.S. Navy still refused to provide armed escort to tankers, and 13 American service members were dead. Iran’s capacity to close the world’s most important oil transit route is the asymmetric capability its military was built around. It is the opposite of desperation. It is the plan working.

Hegseth called it desperation for the same reason Joyce called the Tobruk garrison rats.

The framework is meant to show contempt. However that contempt cannot process evidence of enemy competence, even when the propagandist is the one presenting it. “Destroyed” is English framing about a closed strait that has a very different ground truth. And if there’s one thing I learned in forty years of working with disinformation history, ground truth matters a LOT more than spin doctors realize.

Source: Me on Twitter, 2016

At an earlier briefing, Hegseth addressed reporters about American casualties:

When a few drones get through or tragic things happen, it’s front-page news. I get it, the press only wants to make the president look bad.

Six soldiers had been killed in Kuwait by a drone that struck a shipping container serving as an operations center. “A few drones get through” is a description of a force protection failure, command failure, delivered in the register of a complaint about media coverage.

The Pentagon has also been releasing propaganda videos set to music, missile strikes intercut with video game footage, produced in the idiom of social media content. The White House communications director responded to criticism of one video by posting a Grand Theft Auto cheat code for unlimited ammunition. In the videos, every missile hits. There are no American casualties. There is no closed strait.

There is no girls’ elementary school in Minab where at least 165 children were killed in a school America double-tap (war crime) bombed on the first day.

Joyce broadcast every night to a garrison he said was doomed, the end, and yet every broadcast served to confirm they were alive. The Pentagon releases daily videos of a war it says is won, over and done any minute, and every video confirms the need to keep persuading people it is still winning, and maybe needs help.

The Grammar

Joyce’s problem was simple. The traitor needed the English meaning of “rat” to produce contempt, but the garrison’s behavior matched the German Wüstenratte, not vermin, psychologically having the exact reverse effect on soldiers in the fight. The insult misfired at the level of language itself.

Hegseth’s problem is structural as well as linguistic, and the mechanism is identical. “No quarter” in his register means strength. In the legal framework he is bound by, it means weakness because a prosecutable offence. “Destroyed” in his register means victory. On the operational map, it means the opposite, an enemy whose most effective threat of waterway disruption is functioning. “Desperation” in his register means weakness. In strategic terms, it means an adversary executing the doctrine it was designed around.

Each statement delivers two messages simultaneously. Hegseth thinks there is only one. The people that matter most probably hear both if not just the other.

Joyce was hanged for treason in January 1946. His broadcasts had, by the assessment of the Imperial War Museum, minimal impact on Allied morale. The insults were adopted as honours. The nightly confirmation of a garrison standing became the proof of its own endurance.

The question with Hegseth is not whether his primitive Goebbels-like propaganda errors will fail. Propaganda built on contempt for an enemy who is performing competently always fails. The question is what it costs America before it does. And will he be hanged for it.

What he said Who What he meant What he actually described
“Poor rats caught in a trap” Joyce You are vermin and will die Garrison adapting and holding
“Live like rats, die like rats” Joyce Subhuman conditions, imminent collapse Mastery of hostile environment
Nightly broadcasts to the garrison Joyce You are doomed Garrison still standing
“No quarter, no mercy” Hegseth We are strong and will win A war crime under the Hague Convention
“Their military is destroyed” Hegseth Victory is achieved Enemy closing the Strait of Hormuz
“Sheer desperation” Hegseth Enemy is collapsing Enemy executing its core strategy
“A few drones get through” Hegseth Press exaggerating minor setbacks Six soldiers dead in Kuwait
“Boom Boom” videos, daily briefings Hegseth We already won, wait no, we are winning We need help
Enemy response Joyce Adopted insults into badges of honour
Enemy response Hegseth TBD
Outcome Joyce Garrison held. Joyce hanged.
Outcome Hegseth TBD

Stephen Colbert also has exposed Haw Haw Hegseth errors using simple humor:

Fire Discipline: What China Hears When America Goes Rambo in Iran

Sitting at my desk in San Francisco, sometime around 2016, I got an email from a master sergeant. A recording of a firefight. And then a phone call. Play it, he said. So I played it. Gunfire. Chaos. Then a voice: Grenade.

Play it again, he said. Listen.

I played it again. The voice wasn’t scared. It was factual. Grenade. Like hearing “pastrami on rye” at a deli counter. The same calm. The same precision. The same total awareness of what’s happening and what matters right now.

That’s fire discipline. That’s what Delta is world famous for. Sprint and fire at maximum efficiency, nothing wasted. The decisive calm that comes from knowing exactly how many rounds and what each one needs to do. Every shot placed. Every word functional. Nothing lost to bravado or panic, nothing spent on performance.

Play it again, he said. What’s really happening in this fight? What works? What’s blunder? Do you hear it?

I’ve been thinking about that “grenade” for two weeks. Because the sound coming out of Operation Epic Fury, and the war crime theatre of Hegseth, is the exact opposite of that voice. It’s all fluff. All blunder. Do you know what the Pentagon sounds like right now? 1950 Korea. And China is listening to the same tape.

…during the 2016 campaign, Trump repeatedly declared that Douglas MacArthur was his “favorite general.” At rallies, Trump would invoke MacArthur’s name almost as though he were in direct communication with his ghost. […] MacArthur had been outwitted and outflanked by a guerrilla army with no air force, crude logistics, and primitive communications, an army with no tanks and precious little artillery. As David Halberstam put it, MacArthur had “lost face not just before the entire world, but before his own troops, and perhaps most important of all, before himself.” All of this happened because MacArthur was almost criminally out of touch with reality.

And so here we are.

The Deterrence Illusion

The “China is deterred” narrative runs something like this: the US popped Venezuela in January with overwhelming ratios, like blackouts for 3 million people to arrest one guy. Then the US blockaded a weak Cuba, as it has no sea defenses, and then Trump launched a surprise attack on Iran while his own negotiations were actively ongoing, decapitated the supreme leader, and declared total air superiority within 72 hours, boasting “not a fair fight”.

Beijing must be so scared now.

Yet this analysis assumes China’s baseline expectation was about Iranian air defenses working. Nobody thought they would. Certainly not Venezuela. Certainly not North Korea, which has spent decades putting everything that matters under granite for exactly this reason. Certainly not China, whose military planners have been studying US strike capabilities since long before Desert Storm.

What China actually witnessed in American hamfisted pray-and-spray salvoes wasn’t just “America bomb things, America make fire and noise, America so nasty.”

The Peers report on the My Lai Massacre found that Captain Medina had instructed his men to “burn the houses, kill the livestock, and destroy the crops and foodstuffs.”

They knew that. What they got was specifics about weakness: F-35 and F-22 electronic signatures under combat conditions, operational tempo sustainability, jamming profiles, cyber-kinetic integration patterns, kill chain logistics from ISR to strike. That’s the structured data leak you never get from exercises or satellite imagery. As technologist Amir Husain put it in the Jerusalem Post, the American rush into unilateral war is “a dataset goldmine for China” for building automated detection and threat classification models.

The US demonstrates the opposite of deterrence. It held an unnecessary live-fire exhibition with free admission to telegraph its entire playbook, revealing the entire spectrum of Trump’s options and thoughts.

MacArthur’s Ghost

Those who say China should fear American willingness to fight clearly forget Douglas MacArthur wasn’t fired for being unwilling to fight. He was fired for being so willing he nearly started a nuclear war with China. Truman understood that willingness without discipline is what the Greeks long ago classified as the most self-defeating capability a military can possess. It’s like running into a minefield.

The historic parallel maps cleanly for China, not least of all because among the regressive all-show-no-go white supremacists that Trump calls out as his role models, MacArthur is right up there. The thunder and lightning had worked once for MacArthur, so he thought escalate, go bigger, roll right up to the Chinese border. He pushed to the Yalu drunk on the Inchon success, without a clue. Then 300,000 PLA troops crossed the Yalu and pushed him back to roughly where he started. That willingness was the vulnerability. It showed Beijing exactly when and how to intervene.

The same mindset that made MacArthur unable to read Chinese capabilities in 1950 is operating in the analysts who think China is “deterred” by watching the US flatten Iran. They don’t see China as the disciplined party, because their framework doesn’t allow it. The French Generals turned off their radios while the Germans rolled tanks through the Ardennes. MacArthur’s intelligence staff stopped reporting Chinese troop movements because he’d made clear he didn’t want to hear it.

To be clear, MacArthur’s father was the general known for genocide in the Philippines.

…Arthur MacArthur … brought to the archipelago the genocidal mentality that accompanied their warfare against Native Americans in the American West. Filipinos were branded “n—ers” by U.S. troops, though another racist epithet, “gugus,” was also widely used for them. When Filipinos resorted to guerrilla warfare, they were dehumanized … to legitimize all sorts of atrocities against them. The war of subjugation was carried out without restraints with General Smith ordering his troops to convert Samar into a “howling wilderness” by killing any male over 10 years old.

Source: Evening Journal, New York, May 5, 1902. A vulture replaces the bald eagle above the caption: “Criminals Because They Were Born Ten Years Before We Took the Philippines”.

Chinese political scientist Zheng Yongnian told the South China Morning Post that “America’s war-making capability depends solely on its will to deploy such power.” The deterrence pundits read that as a compliment, when it’s actually a cynical vulnerability assessment. A power that acts on will rather than calculation can be drawn into commitments that exhaust it into extreme embarrassment.

”I tried to stop it, but I don’t own the licensing rights.” [Stallone told movie critic Siskel that during the holidays, he had been asked to give away a “truckload” of Rambo toys to sick children in the hospital.] ”I told ’em, ‘Get this … the hell out of my driveway and burn it. Don’t give it away,’ It’s not for kids. The movie was not supposed to be for little kids, and I wouldn’t let my own children play with those toys.”

Mao understood this about MacArthur in 1950. Montgomery understood this about Rommel in 1942. The more willing, the further he extended, the more exposed he became, the weaker. China, like Britain, waited for the overreach, then moved.

Trump overwhelmed Venezuela as it sat quietly, Trump launched a blockade of empty waters around Cuba, and Trump tricked Iran into believing negotiation wasn’t a lie. None of that projects strength. Now he appears as just a tail on the Israeli dog, if not the flea, pulled into the largest invasion of Lebanon since 2006. With what to show for it? Emptied stockpiles and wreckage, requests going to everyone to help him get out. Taiwanese analyst Cheng-Yu Wu assessed that the PLA learned Trump’s administration “will do whatever it takes to achieve its own national interests, whether or not there are negotiations.”

Some analysts really think they can frame that dictatorship signal as deterrence. A drill sergeant would call it a fighter closing his eyes, throwing wild haymakers and claiming whatever he hit is losing. Both descriptions can be true. Only one of them is meaningful to a trained opponent.

Fire Discipline

That voice on the recording knew something everyone is supposed to learn before stepping down range. Don’t fire until you see the whites of their eyes wasn’t academic poetry. It’s always been scarce resource management. The NRA was founded by Union Generals who said 1,000 rounds per kill was unsustainable to defend American Blacks against the KKK. Every round you fire at nothing is a round you don’t have when it matters.

The US is emptying interceptors against cheap Iranian drones. Burning Tomahawks on targets that were already assumed destroyed, or worse, killing nearly 200 little girls at school. America is expending precision munitions far faster than the industrial base will replace them. And doing all of it on camera for everyone’s intelligence collection, let alone China.

The Heritage Foundation warned before the Iran war started that SM-3, SM-6, PAC-3 MSE, and THAAD interceptors would be exhausted within days of sustained PLA salvoes. Aggregate US vertical launch system inventories were insufficient for even one full fleet reload. CENTCOM officials thus warned of a “Winchester” scenario: complete ammunition depletion.

Now look at what draft-dodging Trump ordered since February 28. The US burned over 2,000 precision munitions against more than 3,000 targets, only to announce repeatedly it’s not done yet. Allies have fired hundreds of interceptors. THAAD components have been redeployed from South Korea. The Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group was pulled from East Asia. Patriot interceptors, which Lockheed produces at about 620 a year, were depleted in the hundreds over the first 36 hours alone. We’re still debating who shot down the three F-15E in one night so efficiently without a trace, evaporating the mythology of American Air superiority.

And on the other side of the ledger: China has barred the export of rare earth elements for military use, which means the exact materials required to build the missiles the US is burning through. China is watching the US deplete stocks it can’t rapidly replenish because China controls the supply chain for those replacements.

The Asymmetry

Compare the two sides and see what America has been doing to itself, unprovoked.

United States China
Munitions Depleting Accumulating
Intelligence Broadcasting Collecting
Carrier groups Redeployed to Gulf Positioned in Pacific
Strategic reserves Drawing down Building up (104 days coverage, projected 140-180 by year end)
Industrial base Years behind demand Expanding offensive capacity
Rare earths Import-dependent Export ban in place
Diplomatic posture Overcommitted on four fronts Restrained, summit-focused

That’s not passivity on China’s part. That’s basic discipline. China is doing what any wise fighter does when the opponent is dancing and swinging wildly to amp up the audience: cover and wait, read the rhythm, count the punches, feel the decline, watch for the opening.

Nixon’s Tar Baby

Foreign Policy drew a parallel to 1964, when the Peking Review described US interventions in the Congo as Washington’s “second South Vietnam”, about keeping American assets tied down far from China’s borders. But that reference is far too diplomatic. The actual historical pattern is worse, and it has a name Americans should be embarrassed about.

Kissinger and Nixon adopted NSSM 39 in 1969 called the “Tar Baby” option. Their policy was strengthening ties with racist white-minority governments in Rhodesia and apartheid South Africa to deny Blacks power. The premise was that apartheid was an unpleasant but permanent reality, and Washington should accommodate it pragmatically and prolong white nationalism. Its own internal review later concluded that its only real result was to mire the United States deeper on the side of obvious oppressors. The name told you the outcome of the strategy. You punch the tar baby and you get stuck.

The destabilization model ran in parallel. Congo’s leader Lumumba was assassinated in 1961. The CIA sent poison to its station chief; when that fizzled, Lumumba was deposed in a CIA-backed coup and shot by Congolese assassins. UN Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld was shot down by U.S.-backed mercenaries, as he flew in to negotiate a ceasefire. Mobutu seized power with US help and misruled the country for three decades. Congo never recovered. Similarly Mondlane, a professor in America positioned to become leader of Mozambique, was assassinated in 1969.

Same trajectory.

Stuart Reid has put it precisely: for the Congolese people, the events of 1960-61 represented the opening chapter of a long horror story. For the US government, they provided a playbook for future interventions.

The playbook: assassinate leaders, destabilize the country, back the regional oppressor as the “stable” partner, let the region deteriorate, use the chaos to justify permanent intervention. The people who live there never recover. The strategic partner gets a free hand. And the great-power competitor watches you get stuck to the tar baby.

Apartheid South Africa formalized this as doctrine. P.W. Botha’s “Total Strategy” required a buffer of deliberately failed states on their border. They used the ugly term cordon sanitaire. The logic was self-sealing: a thriving Black-governed neighbor would quickly falsify the racist claims that only whites were capable of self-rule, so the Black neighbor had to be destroyed. South Africa armed RENAMO to terrorize Mozambican civilians, backed UNITA through decades of Angolan civil war that killed half a million people, and used proxy forces to turn a drought into a famine that killed over 100,000. The manufactured chaos confirmed the racist ideology that manufactured it.

Substitute “Palestinians” or “Iranians” and the sentence requires no other edits. Gaza flattened. Lebanon invaded. Iran decapitated with no successor structure. A stable, self-governing neighbor is an existential ideological threat to an ethno-supremacist state. The vacuum is the feature. In the latest news from Israel troops call non-Jews dogs and stop their vehicles to shoot people in the head at close range.

Just like ICE in Texas.

Just like ICE in Minnesota.

It’s a procedural thing.

The US knows this model so intimately because it ran the active version against the Soviets. In 1979, Brzezinski’s explicit goal in Afghanistan was, in the words of Defense Department official Walter Slocombe, “sucking the Soviets into a Vietnam quagmire.”

It worked.

The Soviets bled for a decade and many argue the stickiness was what accelerated power collapse. Now the question is whether China needs to engineer anything at all, or whether the US has been punching into a tar baby scenario on its own initiative while Beijing simply watches.

Kissinger dismissed the cost of millions killed as “the unhappiness of a bunch of Africans and the self-righteous indignation of a few minor NATO allies.” That contempt is the through-line. The people destroyed by the policy don’t register as costs. They’re externalities. Then as now.

The Missing Synthesis

I bring all this up because the gap I keep seeing in the pundit class is that almost nobody is synthesizing all the threads simultaneously: the munitions math, the intelligence exposure, the fire discipline asymmetry, and the destabilization pattern that ties them together.

The Heritage guys get stockpile numbers. The intelligence community people get collection problems. The strategists get the overextension risks. But nobody puts the full picture together, perhaps because the conclusion is too uncomfortable? Trump is systematically degrading American capacity to fight the war it actually needs to deter, while running the same Nixon playbook that failed across southern Africa for three decades.

Oh, I remember the problem now. Nobody studies African history.

Khamenei was decapitated February 28. The Assembly of Experts was bombed while meeting to elect a successor. No governance structure is left. And within days, Israel launches its largest ground invasion of Lebanon since 2006, explicitly modeled on the genocide in Gaza. No really, an Israeli official told Axios: “We are going to do what we did in Gaza.” Already 800,000 Lebanese civilians are displaced. Nearly 800 killed. The imperfect ceasefire was at least something, until the US removed the one actor whose deterrent capability was constraining Israeli expansion.

Iran was a threat, but Israel reframed it into the leash. Remove the leash and the immediate result is genocide expanded into Lebanon, conducted openly, described in those terms by the people conducting it. The regional partner gets a free hand.

Korean War Arithmetic

One of the hallmarks of 1950s military failure was the US flattened every standing structure in North Korea. Ran out of targets, just as Trump says today. The war ended in a stalemate on roughly the same line it started. The shock and awe, air superiority, technological dominance, more bombs dropped faster than ever before, worked for a minute as domestic propaganda and not at all as strategy.

Same pattern now. Trump declared Iran had no navy, no air force, no radar and “just about everything’s been knocked out” within days. And then? Two weeks later, Iranian drones are still destroying billion-dollar radar systems and THAAD subsystems on video. American soldiers are dead. Domestically manufactured surface-to-air missiles are shooting down $32 million Reaper drones. Civilian trucks are launching ballistic missiles produced en masse.

The grind is on. Zero ground gained. No articulated end state. And every day it continues, China’s relative advantage in the Pacific grows, again not because China is doing anything at all, but because the US is spinning like a drunk doing everything, everywhere, all at once, to itself.

North Korea drew the simple conclusion from American air power decades ago: you can’t stop the bombs, you can make the bombs irrelevant. Eritrea knows exactly the formula too, as it used the same rubric to defeat the largest standing army in the world. China, full of ardent historians, has been watching that model. Hardening, dispersal, redundancy, underground facilities, quantity over quality in offensive systems. The Iran war is leaking all the exact parameters needed to calibrate against.

The analysts celebrating American willingness are celebrating their MacArthur heritage for all the wrong reasons. Drunken, stupid overreach hasn’t become a virtue just because the explosions look good with social media tricks. The tar baby was a disaster, in the way everyone learns the most powerful tiger in the world never escaped La Brea.

Play the tape again. Listen. Grenade. Calm. Factual. Disciplined. That’s the voice China recognizes, and right now the US sounds nothing like it.