THE WHEELS JUST CAME OFF: Israel blew up Iran’s biggest gas field, Iran torched the Gulf in retaliation, and America’s rapist-in-chief is rage-posting at 2 AM screaming “STOP!”
NATO told Trump to go to hell, the USS Gerald Ford is in a Greek repair shop, oil is at $110 a barrel, and the president of the United States is on Truth Social apologizing to Qatar. This is what losing is.
Dean Blundell (Substack)
Mar 19
GOD IS SENDING SIGNS, AND TRUMP ISN’T READING THEM: A Burning Carrier, $110 Oil, Gulf States On Fire, And Zero Allies — The Iran War Just Collapsed In Real Time.
Let’s talk about what a collapsing war looks like in real time—because we are watching it happen.
On Wednesday night, Israel did something the United States publicly claims it had zero warning about: it struck South Pars, the world’s largest natural gas field, jointly owned by Iran and Qatar. Then Donald Trump—the Commander-in-Chief of the United States military—went on Truth Social to publicly scold Israel, apologize to Qatar, and threaten Iran, all in the same unhinged post.
The president of the United States found out his “ally” bombed a critical energy facility from the news. Then he told the world about it on social media. Then he threatened to blow up the same field himself if Iran retaliated against Qatar.
Iran retaliated against Qatar.
Iran retaliated against everyone.
The Escalation Nobody Can Stop
Iran hit a Saudi refinery on the Red Sea, set Qatari liquefied natural gas facilities ablaze, and struck two Kuwaiti oil refineries in a massive wave of retaliatory attacks following Israel’s strike on the South Pars gas field. This isn’t a skirmish. This is a full regional energy war.
Qatar said firefighters extinguished a blaze at its Ras Laffan LNG facility after Iranian missiles caused “sizeable fires and extensive further damage.” Production had already been halted from earlier attacks. The world’s single most important LNG export hub — the one that keeps the lights on in Europe — is now a recurring target.
A drone attack on Kuwait’s Mina Al-Ahmadi refinery, one of the biggest in the Middle East with a petroleum production capacity of 730,000 barrels per day, sparked a fire.
Brent crude oil was trading above $110 US a barrel—up more than 50 percent since Israel and the United States started the war on February 28th.
And Trump’s response? A Truth Social post that reads like it was written by a man who just found out his house was on fire and decided to live-tweet it.
Trump’s Post Is The Clearest Evidence Of A Man Who Has Lost Control
Look at that screenshot again. In a single post, Trump:
Blames Israel publicly, in writing, forever
Exonerates Qatar completely (”Qatar was in no way, shape, or form, involved ”)
Acknowledges the U.S. had zero intelligence on the South Pars strike
Demands Israel stop attacking the field
Then threatens to obliterate the entire field himself if Iran doesn’t stop
This is not strategy. This is a man trying to manage twelve simultaneous dumpster fires with a wet napkin while telling everyone he’s never been more in control.
The truth is simple: Israel is running this war, not Trump. Netanyahu never asked permission to hit South Pars, and if he did (which the IDF says he did, so he’s lying, which should surprise no one), he doesn’t need to. He’s had Trump’s unconditional political cover since day one, and he’s using it. Trump signalled that Israel would not attack South Pars again—but that’s not a commitment from Israel; that’s a wish from Trump. There is a meaningful difference.
NATO Told Trump To Figure It Out Himself
Here’s where the coalition fantasy officially died.
(Worth noting that Trump has not officially asked NATO for help—just private begging and public demands and threats.)
Trump’s effort to corral an international coalition to police the Strait of Hormuz concluded in disappointment, leading him to lash out at European nations that rejected his demands to help with his war against Iran.
Australia, Japan, Poland, Sweden, and Spain all said they had no intention of sending military ships. Germany’s defence minister said there would be “no military participation.”
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer stated clearly that this was “never envisioned as a NATO mission.” Germany’s Boris Pistorius was blunter: “This is not our war; we did not start it.”
He’s right. NATO’s Article 5 collective defence clause has been invoked exactly once in history—after September 11th, when the United States was attacked. This time, it was the US and Israel that attacked Iran, giving other members no legal or political basis to intervene.
The Quincy Institute’s Trita Parsi put it perfectly: “Under normal circumstances, you build a coalition before you go to war, not afterward. Trump started an unnecessary war that none of these other countries supported or were consulted about. Now they’re paying the price for it and then being asked to come in and bail Trump out of this fiasco, despite the fact that there still is no plan.”
Trump’s response to all of this? He declared that America never needed NATO anyway. “WE DO NOT NEED THE HELP OF ANYONE!” he wrote on Truth Social. Senator Lindsey Graham, his own ally, told reporters he’d “never heard him so angry in my life.”
Cool. Totally in control. Everything’s fine.
The USS Gerald Ford: A Metaphor You Cannot Make Up
The crown jewel of American naval power — the USS Gerald R. Ford, the world’s largest aircraft carrier — is currently limping to a Greek repair base. Not because of Iranian missiles. Because of a laundry room fire.
The blaze (being investigated as sabotage) broke out on March 12th and took more than 30 hours to extinguish. Dozens of sailors suffered smoke inhalation. Over 600 crew members were left without beds, sleeping on floors and tables, with no access to laundry facilities because the laundry room is a crime scene.
The Ford’s vacuum collection system — which transports and disposes of wastewater — has been malfunctioning across its nearly 650 onboard toilets. The ship had called for toilet assistance 42 times since 2023, with 32 of those calls coming in 2025 alone.
The Ford has been deployed since June of 2025. As of this week, it was on its 266th day at sea—on pace to break the post-Vietnam War record for longest carrier deployment. The crew have been told their deployment will likely extend into May. The carrier is now sailing to Naval Support Activity Souda Bay in Crete for more than a week of repairs pierside.
A European diplomat told NBC, “He’s asking us to help for a war he started. There is not much enthusiasm for this. And even if European navies are sent to the Gulf, it would not ensure the strait is reopened. Iran can keep it closed as long as it likes because all it takes is a drone or a mine.”
The Bottom Line
This war is now three weeks old. Oil is at $110 a barrel. More than 20 vessels have been attacked in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has torched energy infrastructure from Kuwait to Qatar to Saudi Arabia. The U.S.’s most powerful aircraft carrier is in a Greek repair shop. Every major NATO ally has declined to participate. Israel is bombing whoever it wants without telling Washington first. And Trump is on Truth Social threatening countries that have already proven his threats mean nothing.
The Christian nationalist fever dream of a clean, decisive, victorious little war—the one that was going to finally silence the Epstein noise and make Trump look strong heading into the midterms—is dead. It is not coming back.
The question is no longer whether Trump has lost control of this war.
The question is how many more people have to die before he admits it.



