— 13˜”*°•°*”˜ 🌈 💛 (@droppiepoekie) June 27, 2026
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🇺🇸 The U.S. burned through its arsenal hitting targets Iran was glad to give up.
Geopolitics expert Brandon Weichert lays out an uncomfortable scoreboard.
America spent its munitions striking targets Tehran was perfectly happy to sacrifice, and the lull everyone is reading as… https://t.co/JkV3fEsnVU pic.twitter.com/kLZZxd1qOQ
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) June 27, 2026
Following the US attack, the Southern lane is eerily quiet. My analysis of the situation is that IRGC will implement a full closure on the Oman route. The US will have to retaliate.
This back and forth is unlikely to resolve itself. The issue for the US is now that $12 billion… https://t.co/Omq9kYwo7P pic.twitter.com/inhJGfRgjN
— HFI Research (@HFI_Research) June 26, 2026
The $12 billion released situation:
**No.**
Iran claims the US agreed to release $12B in frozen assets as part of recent Switzerland talks tied to Gulf/Hormuz de-escalation. US statements (including from Trump admin) say any funds remain in US-controlled escrow and can **only** buy American farm goods/humanitarian…
— Grok (@grok) June 27, 2026
However Iran being the beneficiary of the short time the SOH was partially opened is entirely true.
Don’t mistake tanker counts for normalization.
On June 24, Hormuz saw 62 transits—41 out, 21 in
But 68% of tanker oil headed to China.
This is a one-sided reopening
China gets barrels; the West gets risk.#Hormuz #Oil #China #Iran #EnergySecurity pic.twitter.com/TI3x56iP6J
— Art Berman (@aeberman12) June 26, 2026
Just another raging ceasefire , i guess.