This isn’t random—inside the plan shaping the Iran war
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Presented by Banyan Hill |
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Dear Reader, |
There’s a strategy behind the Iran war. |
I know because I heard it directly. |
In a closed-door meeting with a source whose connections run deep into global power networks. |
He walked me through the real purpose. |
The real objective. |
And the massive deal tied to it. |
I verified every piece. |
And what I found confirms it: |
This isn’t random. |
It’s planned. |
Click here to see the strategy behind the Iran war. |
The sooner you understand this… |
The better positioned you’ll be. |
Go here now to learn more. |
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To your future, |
Addison Wiggin |
Founder, Grey Swan Investment Fraternity |
This ad is sent on behalf of Banyan Hill Publishing. P.O. Box 8378, Delray Beach, FL 33482. If you would like to unsubscribe from receiving offers for Grey Swan, please click here. |
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Exclusive Headlines |
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The U.S. Just Weaponized Iran's Frozen Assets |
The ceasefire is holding in name only. Both sides struck again this weekend. And now the U.S. has introduced a new pressure point. |
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent directed a team to assess damage Iran has inflicted on Gulf allies, with the stated intent to redirect Iranian assets toward reconstruction costs. The language used was broad. It was not limited to frozen assets. |
For Iran, this changes the negotiating math. Tehran has been demanding $24 billion in frozen asset releases as a condition for any preliminary deal. The U.S. just signaled it may use those same assets to pay Kuwait and Bahrain instead. |
The battlefield picture is unchanged. U.S. forces struck Iranian radar sites in the Strait of Hormuz on Saturday after shooting down Iranian drones. Iran retaliated with ballistic missiles at U.S. bases in Kuwait and Bahrain. Six were intercepted. One fell short. |
Peace talks appear stalled. A Pakistani minister traveled to Tehran on Saturday carrying a letter for Iran's supreme leader. OPEC+ is set to approve its fourth straight output hike on Sunday, even though the war is still blocking several members from actually pumping more. |
Trump told NBC that Iran still has roughly 21% of its pre-war missile stockpile. That is the number the administration is managing around. It is still a lot of missiles. |
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The Hormuz Crisis Revealed a Problem No One Can Quickly Fix |
Iran didn't beat the U.S. military. It didn't have to. It closed a strait and watched the global economy seize up. That is the lesson governments are now sitting with. |
NATO's top military commander called it the "weaponization of economic interdependence." The concept isn't new. China has used rare earth supply chains as leverage for over a decade. The U.S. has wielded dollar dominance for longer. Iran just proved that geography works too. |
The fixes are obvious and slow. New pipelines to bypass Hormuz have been on drawing boards for years. Saudi Arabia has a Red Sea pipeline but it lacks capacity. Gulf states can route energy through the Gulf of Oman, but pipelines can be attacked and can't move the volume that the strait handles. |
Rebuilding crude reserves and stockpiling refined products will take time and money. The political will to follow through tends to fade once the crisis passes. |
The deeper trap is this: every workaround creates a new dependency. Europe reduced its Russian gas exposure and became more reliant on U.S. LNG. China controls the battery and renewables supply chain. Swapping one chokepoint for another is not resilience. It is just a different kind of risk. |
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Cuba's Economy Is Being Deliberately Strangled |
The corporate exit from Cuba is accelerating. Mastercard and Visa suspended transactions for foreign visitors effective Saturday. Spanish hotel chains Iberostar and Meliá are walking away from roughly two dozen properties combined. Canadian miner Sherritt International has suspended operations at the Moa nickel mine. It ran that mine for over three decades. Now it is negotiating a sale. |
The trigger was a Trump executive order targeting GAESA, Cuba's military-owned conglomerate. GAESA controls an estimated 40% of the island's economy. Foreign companies doing business with GAESA-linked entities now face secondary sanctions risk. Most decided the math doesn't work. |
The deeper damage is compounding. The administration cut off Venezuela's subsidized oil after Maduro's capture in January. That knocked out fuel supplies, grounded airlines, and triggered hours-long blackouts. The peso has collapsed to roughly 620 to the dollar on the informal market. Hundreds of thousands of Cubans have left. |
The companies that survived decades of embargo are now leaving too. There is no visible floor. |
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