We will teach Trump how to solve for "X"!

The unhinged President of the United States has made a dangerous strategic and miscalculated blunder by ordering a military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities — particularly Fordow. Before analyzing this blatant mistake, we must first address a fundamental point regarding the concept of "solving for the unknown" in Trump’s foreign policy framework.
In foreign relations, each country’s capacity to "solve for the unknown" is based on balancing costs and benefits, resulting in a final outcome or value. In his short return to the White House, Trump has repeatedly proven incapable of calculating this balance correctly. He promised to end the Ukraine war within 24 hours, yet failed to grasp the true nature of the cost-benefit matrix, and clumsily mishandled the tools and levers necessary to advance any meaningful solution.
This same faulty logic applied to his trade war with China, his tariff policy, and his support of the Zionist regime’s war on Yemen’s Ansarullah. In all these cases, there was a clear disconnect between Trump’s abstract assumptions and the tangible outcomes of U.S. actions.
Now, Trump is entangled in an even more complex equation, one whose consequences for Washington will be far graver.
He reneged brazenly in negotiations: during the third round of indirect talks, he withdrew prior U.S. consent to Iran’s right to industrial enrichment and instead demanded zero-percent enrichment and the complete dismantling of Iran’s nuclear program.
Simultaneously, he gave the green light to the illegitimate Zionist regime to attack Iran’s nuclear sites — ultimately dragging his own country into direct confrontation with Iran.
Trump claims all these measures are catalysts for an “imposed peace” on Iran. But the facts are crystal clear: Iran will neither accept an imposed peace nor remain silent in response to the recent U.S. aggression against the Fordow facility.
Trump is so lost in his delusions that he cannot fathom the reality that Iran’s nuclear infrastructure has not been destroyed — despite his high-stakes gamble, which was doomed from the outset.
However, Trump won’t remain trapped in these manic illusions forever. Iran will soon teach him how to solve for “X” — the unknown variables in this equation.
By the time this forced lesson ends, Trump may no longer exist — politically or otherwise — to apply what he’s learned to future decisions in foreign policy. Yet this historic lesson will stand as a defining turning point in the global power structure.
The U.S. president will soon discover that brutality, ambiguity, and madness are not viable variables in any war equation — certainly not one that aims to deter Iran. Instead, they will lead to a reconfiguration of the equation that ensures the collapse of his entire worldview.
And the collapse of that worldview will also signify the collapse of Trump’s plans, his war-hungry allies, and perhaps even their final removal from the global power equation altogether.
That moment is not far away.