The Iran ceasefire was less than three hours old when missiles began flying from Iran toward Israel and the Gulf states. That detail — documented in real time — tells you more about the durability of this agreement than any official statement. A pause is not peace. A handshake in Islamabad is not a settlement. And a region that has been at war for 40 days does not stand down because two governments issued parallel social media posts.
The two-week ceasefire brokered by Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Army chief Gen. Asim Munir is genuinely welcome. It stepped both sides back from a precipice with real humanitarian and strategic consequences. But Vice President JD Vance himself called it a "fragile truce." That is the most honest thing anyone in this administration has said about it. Hold that phrase.
What the Ceasefire Actually Says
Under the agreement, Iran has committed to allowing safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz during the two-week period, "with due consideration of technical limitations" — Iran’s qualifier, not ours. The United States and Israel have suspended bombing operations. President Donald Trump declared Iran’s 10-point proposal "a workable basis on which to negotiate," adding that "almost all of the various points of past contention have been agreed to." That claim requires scrutiny. Iran’s demands include lifting all sanctions, withdrawing U.S. combat forces from regional bases, war reparations, Iranian control of Hormuz transit at $2 million per vessel, and — critically — the right to nuclear enrichment. Iran’s Supreme National Security Council declared the ceasefire "an enduring defeat" for Washington. Trump called it a "total and complete victory." When both sides claim the same agreement as their triumph, what you have is a temporary suspension of hostilities while each side repositions.
Israel is not bound by this ceasefire in Lebanon. Netanyahu’s office stated plainly that the deal does not cover the fighting there, directly contradicting Pakistan’s public claim that the ceasefire applied everywhere. Hezbollah has issued no statement. Iran-backed militias in Iraq declared a two-week operations suspension — but that declaration came from a group that follows its own timeline. Oil futures dropped 13% on the news. Markets are relieved. They should also be watchful. A single maritime incident, a proxy rocket or an intelligence miscalculation could collapse this arrangement before talks in Islamabad even open.
The Hidden Winners: Beijing and Moscow
While Washington and Tehran negotiate, two other capitals are quietly counting their gains. Russia and China have not been idle spectators in this conflict — they have been active participants, and the ceasefire does not change that calculation one degree.
Russia’s role has been documented in intelligence assessments reviewed by multiple major news organizations. Russian satellites conducted at least 24 surveillance surveys of 46 military and infrastructure sites across 11 Middle Eastern countries in the final 10 days of March alone — including U.S. bases at Prince Sultan in Saudi Arabia, Al Udeid in Qatar and Diego Garcia. Within days of those surveys, Iran struck many of those same facilities. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was 100% confident Russia was sharing that targeting data with Tehran. President Vladimir Putin’s stated goal, according to Zelenskyy: a "long war in the Middle East."
The Fractures Are Already Showing
Israel is not bound by this ceasefire in Lebanon. Netanyahu’s office stated plainly that the deal does not cover the fighting there, directly contradicting Pakistan’s public claim that the ceasefire applied everywhere. Hezbollah has issued no statement. Iran-backed militias in Iraq declared a two-week operations suspension — but that declaration came from a group that follows its own timeline. Oil futures dropped 13% on the news. Markets are relieved. They should also be watchful. A single maritime incident, a proxy rocket or an intelligence miscalculation could collapse this arrangement before talks in Islamabad even open.
The Hidden Winners: Beijing and Moscow
While Washington and Tehran negotiate, two other capitals are quietly counting their gains. Russia and China have not been idle spectators in this conflict — they have been active participants, and the ceasefire does not change that calculation one degree.
Russia’s role has been documented in intelligence assessments reviewed by multiple major news organizations. Russian satellites conducted at least 24 surveillance surveys of 46 military and infrastructure sites across 11 Middle Eastern countries in the final 10 days of March alone — including U.S. bases at Prince Sultan in Saudi Arabia, Al Udeid in Qatar and Diego Garcia. Within days of those surveys, Iran struck many of those same facilities. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was 100% confident Russia was sharing that targeting data with Tehran. President Vladimir Putin’s stated goal, according to Zelenskyy: a "long war in the Middle East."
The financial incentive is equally clear. The Peterson Institute for International Economics calculates that Russia could pocket between $45 billion and $151 billion in additional budget revenues in 2026 from the oil price spike alone — revenues that flow directly into financing the war in Ukraine. The Trump administration’s temporary easing of sanctions on Russian oil, described as a market-stabilization measure, has compounded that windfall. Every dollar Moscow earns from Iran’s disruption of the strait buys another day of war against Kyiv.
China’s role is subtler, but equally calculated. Reports emerged after the ceasefire that Beijing had been working through intermediaries — including Pakistan, Turkey and Egypt — to quietly encourage Iran toward negotiations. China welcomed the outcome publicly. That is the posture of a power that wanted the crisis to end on terms it helped shape, not the posture of a bystander. Intelligence reporting also indicates that China may have provided Iran with financial assistance, spare parts and access to its BeiDou navigation satellite system — which analysts say may explain the improved accuracy of Iranian missile targeting throughout the conflict.
Trump has repeatedly identified China as America’s most significant long-term security challenge. That assessment is correct. Which makes the strategic arithmetic of the past 40 days deeply troubling: every Patriot interceptor fired over Riyadh is one fewer available for Kyiv or Taiwan. Every week consumed by ceasefire negotiations in Islamabad is a week not spent shoring up the Indo-Pacific deterrence architecture Beijing is systematically probing. The Washington Institute for Near East Policy noted bluntly that Putin hopes "successive crises in Iran will continue distracting the United States from pressuring him about the Ukraine war." Both Moscow and Beijing understand something Washington must not forget: the enemy of your enemy is your strategic opportunity.
The Nuclear Question Is the Whole Ballgame
I have spent years arguing — in my 2024 book "Preparing for World War III: A Global Conflict That Redefines Tomorrow" — that Iran’s nuclear ambitions are the engine driving this conflict. A ceasefire that leaves that question unresolved has postponed the most dangerous phase, not solved it. Trump said Iran’s uranium would be "perfectly taken care of," but declined to confirm whether the deal permits enrichment. Iranian state outlets reported it does. The English-language version omitted that clause. That is not a translation problem. It is a substantive gap of the kind that generates wars when it resurfaces. The Pottery Barn rule of my former battalion commander, Colin Powell, applies to diplomacy as surely as it applies to war: "You break it, you own it." If we accept terms that paper over the nuclear question to secure a headline-friendly announcement, we own every consequence that follows when enrichment resumes. The mullahs played that game in 2015. Nothing in this framework suggests a different outcome.
The Bottom Line
Catastrophe avoided is not a small thing. But the underlying issues remain: Iran’s nuclear program, its proxy network, its regional ambitions, and Russia and China calculating every move to their advantage behind the scenes. The next two weeks will reveal whether both sides negotiated seriously — or whether each used the pause to reposition for the next confrontation. A fragile truce in a volatile region, with two great powers working the margins, is not an endpoint. It is a moment of decision. Use it wisely.
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