HomeAnalysis & InvestigationsOpinionWhy Trump’s sanctions strategy on Iran is different and working - opinion

Why Trump’s sanctions strategy on Iran is different and working – opinion

For decades, economic sanctions have been a preferred tool of international pressure: low-cost, visible, and designed to avoid war. Yet history shows that sanctions alone rarely achieve their intended goals.

From Cuba to Iraq, and across multiple rounds imposed on Iran, they have consistently failed to force decisive policy change. Without credible force behind them, sanctions lack the leverage needed to influence determined regimes.

Iran is a clear case study. Since the early 2000s, the international community, led by the United States and backed by the UN, has imposed extensive sanctions aimed at halting Tehran’s nuclear program. These included financial restrictions, limits on energy exports, technology bans, and asset freezes, especially after UN Security Council Resolution 1737 in 2006.

Yet, despite growing economic pressure, Iran did not abandon its nuclear ambitions. It advanced uranium enrichment and strengthened its resilience. Sanctions hurt, but they did not deliver results.

Trump’s sanctions strategy

This is where US President Donald Trump’s approach marks a strategic departure. His policy toward Iran, particularly around the Strait of Hormuz, does not treat sanctions as a substitute for force but as a prelude to it.

US President Donald Trump against the backdrop of the NATO flag, April 24, 2026; illustrative. (credit: CHIP SOMODEVILLA/GETTY IMAGES)

Instead of using sanctions to avoid conflict, Trump integrates them with a constant and credible threat of significant military action. In doing so, he takes a well-established theory in political science one step further.

Research has long shown that sanctions are only effective when combined with complementary measures, such as covert operations and limited semi-military activity. Trump raises the bar by moving from indirect pressure to overt, meaningful military readiness.

This is not incremental; it is a conceptual shift.

Results of the strategy

The result is a different equation. Iran is no longer facing economic pain alone; it also faces the real possibility of infrastructure damage and long-term disruption.

This alters decision-making within the regime. Instead of creating unity, as sanctions often do, the pressure generates internal disagreement over risk and escalation.

Two outcomes follow: Iran remains engaged in dialogue because escalation is credible, not because sanctions persuade, and internal fractures emerge within the leadership, something sanctions alone rarely achieve.

The core insight is simple – sanctions were designed to avoid war, and that is precisely why they failed. By removing the threat of force, they weakened themselves. Trump reverses this logic by restoring the link between economic pressure and military consequence.

Critics warn of escalation, and the risk is real. But history is clear: Sanctions without force lead to stagnation, not change.

Trump’s model shows that sanctions can work, but only as part of a broader, assertive strategy. This is not a new theory, but it is a more complete and effective application of it.

The writer is a former minister in the State of Israel and the author of The Abyss.


Source:

www.jpost.com

Hot this week

Israel’s wars are changing sleep, diet, and exercise in alarming ways – study

The protracted wars with Iran, Hamas, and Hezbollah have...

Asteroid the size of 60 sloths to fly past the Earth tomorrow

An asteroid the size of 60 sloths is set...

British Royals Crisscross Manhattan in Brief Visit Packed With Photo Ops

King Charles III of Britain fed chickens in Harlem....

Tel Aviv University, Weizmann scholars among 2026 Landau Prize winners

Mifal Hapayis announced the winners of the 2026 Landau...

UAE bars citizens from traveling to Iran, Lebanon, and Iraq

The United Arab Emirates on Thursday barred its citizens...

Two more minors arrested for killing of Yemanu Binyamin Zalka, 14 suspects in total

Police detained two new suspects on Saturday, linked with...

As Israel Entrenches, Frustration With Hezbollah Turns to Support

With the cease-fire fraying and Israel demolishing villages in...

Chris Mason: PM seeks to draw contrast with critics within his party and beyond

As Starmer acknowledged, it is balancing act that strikes...

The 35-minute miracle: Inside Jerusalem’s best-kept Dead Sea escape

For those of us navigating the hilly, stone-clad rhythm...

The striker quietly making a big noise at Arsenal

That is second again only to Shaw, but given...
Advertisementspot_img

Related Articles

Advertisementspot_imgspot_img