There’s something faintly ridiculous about the position I find myself in, and I suspect I’m not alone in it. You watch events unfold, listen to what was said on Friday, then what’s being said now, and before you know it you’re thinking something you really ought not to be thinking. “Good on you, Iran.” Which is not a sentence you expect to find yourself uttering unless you’ve taken a wrong turn somewhere.
On Friday we had the full performance. Deadlines, ultimatums, talk of flattening infrastructure if compliance was not forthcoming. It was delivered with that familiar certainty, the sort that suggests the decision has already been made and we are simply being informed of it in advance.
A few days later, same voice, entirely different tune. “Productive conversations”, “major points of agreement”, and a neat five day pause on the bombs to let diplomacy run its course. Diplomacy that, slightly awkwardly, the other side says does not exist. At which point you do start to wonder whether someone, somewhere in the administration has been having perfectly cordial conversations with entirely the wrong country. Given past performances on geography, it would not be the greatest surprise.
Now, one does not normally lean on Tehran as a reliable narrator. Quite the opposite. But if one side says talks are well underway and the other says there have been none at all, and meanwhile the strikes that were imminent have been quietly shelved, you don’t need to be terribly clever to notice that something has shifted.
And when things shift that quickly, you start to notice who is at least sticking to a line, however disagreeable, and who is rewriting theirs as they go along.
There was a time when the word of a US President carried weight. Not infallible, not saintly, and occasionally derailed by the odd episode like Nixon’s, but broadly speaking if the White House said something, people assumed it bore some stable relationship to reality. That was rather the point.
It does not feel like that now. This has the faint air of the boy who cried wolf about it. You can only issue so many ultimatums, announce so many imminent actions, and then quietly step back from them before people stop taking you at your word. When the wolf is apparently back again, the reaction is no longer urgency, it is a raised eyebrow.
And that is where it becomes self-inflicted. If your story moves from threat to pause to “we’re nearly there” over the course of a weekend, you don’t just lose credibility on that one point. You make yourself unreliable on anything. Markets notice, allies notice, opponents certainly notice, and it has a habit of coming back to bite you in the bum at precisely the moment you would quite like to be believed.
Which is how you end up in this slightly awkward place. It’s not admiration for Iran. It’s that old underdog reflex. The smaller chap taking a punch and still standing there. You don’t approve of him, you wouldn’t trust him as far as you could throw him, but there is a moment where you find yourself thinking, well, at least he’s not changing his story mid sentence.
Then you remember who he is, and the moment passes. This is an authoritarian state with a long record of suppressing its own people and throwing its weight around the region. There is nothing admirable about that, and pretending otherwise would be self-indulgent nonsense.
But none of that rescues the credibility problem on the other side. If you threaten action, then delay it, then describe the delay as progress, and the people you claim to be negotiating with say there are no talks at all, you don’t get to be surprised when people start taking what you say with a pinch of salt.
It’s not that Iran has become trustworthy. It’s that the White House has made itself difficult to believe. And that leaves you in the mildly absurd position of watching a murderous regime hold its line, while the leader of the free world adjusts his, and finding yourself checking the clock afterwards, because if someone now says 3:23, you’re not entirely sure whether that means 3:23, 3:30, or whenever the story changes again.











