General Keane Said No to the Ceasefire. My Questions Tell You Why We Did It Anyway. The IRGC Is Still Standing.
General Keane said it was better for Iran than America. He wasn’t wrong. I wrote this before we saw what the next day would bring. Iran is not playing ball — and I called it.
A “Whole Civilization Will Die Tonight” — And Then, the Ceasefire
At 6:32 PM Eastern on April 7, 2026 — just under 90 minutes before his own 8 PM deadline — President Trump posted on Truth Social that the United States would suspend bombing Iran for two weeks. He called it a “double sided CEASEFIRE.” That same morning he had written that a “whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again” if Tehran didn’t come to the table. Hours later, he accepted Pakistan’s offer to mediate.
This is the world we’re living in. This is the conflict we are in the middle of. And I was watching all of it at 3 AM, wide awake, with thoughts I needed to get out.
General Keane: A Good Man Who Said the Hard Thing
Let me be clear about something before I go any further. General Jack Keane is a very good, smart, savvy and solid guy. Retired four-star general. Former Vice Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army. Chairman of the Institute for the Study of War. Fox News Senior Strategic Analyst. This is not a man who grandstands. When he speaks, you listen.
What Keane Said That Night — And the Days After
Keane stated plainly that the ceasefire is better for Iran than it is for America. He said he was concerned about it. His exact words: “I am skeptical about where we’re heading with the Iranians because I flat don’t trust them, and I don’t like taking the pressure off them by going to a ceasefire, which is what they want in any event to force the United States to stop the war.”
He went further: “I wouldn’t have gone to the ceasefire. Because I think we should take control of the Strait of Hormuz ourselves. I really think that we lost our leverage by stopping the campaign.”
And perhaps most damning: Iran shut down the Strait of Hormuz with one objective — to stop the war. “They have achieved that objective. We have indeed stopped the war.” The IRGC Navy is still telling ships they need Iran’s permission to pass through. That is not victory. That is a concession.
“Their objective going into the negotiation will be to delay the negotiation, extend the cease-fire. They are masters at obfuscation and delay. They’ll say anything to convince our negotiators that we’re getting closer to a deal.”— Gen. Jack Keane, Fox News “America’s Newsroom,” April 9, 2026
I agree with him. Every word. Which brings me to where I was at 3 AM and exactly what I wanted.
Three Options Were on the Table. Here’s How I Ranked Them.
Don’t change a thing. Keep the pressure on. Keep degrading their capabilities. Don’t give them a minute to catch their breath or think. Put your foot on their necks. This is how you fight this kind of enemy. You don’t pause. You don’t blink. You accomplish your objectives. Period.
Go even harder. Hit the power plants. Take out the infrastructure that keeps the regime alive. Trump said he’d do it. The regime was desperate enough to threaten sending children out to protect their power facilities. When your enemy is showing you desperation, that is not the time to pull back. That is the time to keep going. Whatever brings the regime down and opens the Strait — I’m for it.
This was not what I wanted. Not even close. I wanted a deal, or no deal and we keep going. I did not want a two-week pause that gives Iran exactly what they’ve been looking for since day one: time to breathe, time to regroup, and an American military that has voluntarily stepped off the gas.
“The only time you agree to a ceasefire is when you have a need for a break. Let’s get that straight.”
So Why Did Trump Take the Ceasefire? And What Does It Tell Us?
Here is my caveat. And here is why I think Trump wanted this pause despite everything he said. Because I don’t believe the ceasefire reveals the weakness of this President. I think it reveals the fragility of our position. Those are two very different things. Let me explain.
When you look at the questions that no one wants to say out loud, the ceasefire starts to make a different kind of sense:
- Do our forces need to rest after 40+ days of sustained operations?
- Do we need time to resupply weapons and munitions?
- Is the price of oil — not just in America but across the world — creating political pressures that are becoming impossible to ignore?
- Are our Gulf State allies, our unspoken coalition that lets us launch from their bases, being pounded by Iranian drone attacks to the point of concern?
- Can we truly defend against the drone threat at the level we would hope?
- Is a ground assault even viable without the ability to mass forces in a neighboring country the way we did from Saudi Arabia in the Gulf War?
- Are Trump’s poll numbers and the midterm calculus becoming a real factor?
The Gulf states are being hammered. Kuwait alone faced 28 Iranian drone attacks in a single day on April 8th. The UAE took 35. A fire erupted at Abu Dhabi’s Habshan gas complex. A Saudi pipeline was hit directly. These are our friends. These are the countries whose soil we launch from. That relationship is not infinite.
And you cannot put boots on the ground without the ability to mass forces nearby — the way we came from Saudi Arabia in the original Gulf War. We don’t have that setup here. We are not going to march into Iran. So our leverage is air power, and air power has limits of its own kind.
Being a Lame Duck Means You Can’t Do Any Good. That’s the Trap.
Trump understands something that nobody wants to say plainly: if his poll numbers collapse and he becomes politically paralyzed, he can’t finish anything. A lame duck president is stuck. The people have spoken. You’ve done enough. Whatever political capital drives this operation forward dries up. And Trump knows it.
So he made a calculation. Not a surrender — a calculation. The man who said “a whole civilization will die tonight” twelve hours before announcing a ceasefire is not a man without nerve. He is a man trying to thread a needle under enormous pressure.
Trump is not asking for a ceasefire because he is feeling friendly towards the regime. He hit a roadblock and is not willing to go through it. And I don’t blame the leadership. I blame the position we’re in.— Cedric, 3:00 AM, April 8, 2026
Iran Doesn’t Have Our Problem. That’s the Whole Game.
Here is the deepest truth of this conflict and the one that keeps me up at 3 in the morning. Iran does not have the problem of being concerned with public opinion or civilian casualties. We do. That is not a weakness of our President. That is a weakness of our position as a democratic nation fighting a theocratic regime that answers to no one.
We worry about Iranian civilians. We should. But the regime in Tehran does not worry about Iranian civilians. They threatened to use their own children as human shields around power plants. Think about that for a moment. They threatened to send their children out. And when your enemy is willing to do that — that is not strength, that is desperation. We should have kept going.
Europe is not putting pressure on Iran to open the Strait. Not in any meaningful way that I can see. The world namely Europe is watching. The only real coalition pressure is coming from the Gulf states — and they are getting hit for it every single day.
Meanwhile, Iran is playing their oldest game. Delay. Obfuscate. Buy time. Let the pressure on the American president build until he no longer has the will to re-engage. General Keane called it Putin’s playbook. He’s right. Keep the war going. Don’t agree to a ceasefire. Because the ceasefire benefits the side that needed the break — and right now, that side is us.
“People are saying Iran won. I don’t know if that’s true. But they were able to cause America to give up on our goals. At least for two weeks. That’s a fact.”
I Wrote This Before the Next Day Told Us Anything. Iran Showed Us Exactly Who They Are.
I want you to remember the context here. Everything above was written before we got to see the temperature of this ceasefire in daylight. Before Iran accused the United States of violating it. Before Iranian-allied groups in Iraq hit a diplomatic support center at Baghdad International Airport during the ceasefire itself. Before JD Vance called it “a fragile truce” — not a victory, not a deal, not peace.
I said what I said at 3 AM on Facebook, and I stand by every word. Iran is not playing ball. The Strait is not open free and clear. The IRGC Navy is still demanding ships ask their permission to pass through. That is not a win. That is a managed pause with a regime that has been playing this game longer than most of us have been paying attention.
I wanted us to keep the foot on their necks. I wanted us to finish what we started. Not because I want war. But because the only thing this regime respects is overwhelming and unrelenting pressure. The moment you let up, they breathe again. And the moment they breathe again, they start plotting the next move.
General Keane said he wouldn’t have done it. I wouldn’t have done it either. But here we are. Two weeks. Islamabad. And a regime that just got exactly what they needed.
We’ll see.
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