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J.D. Vance Admits Iran Peace Deal Is Cover to Restock U.S. Weapons and Oil

Redacted · Everything is fake and gay, just like Trump's Iran peace deal · July 2, 2026
J.D. Vance Admits Iran Peace Deal Is Cover to Restock U.S. Weapons and Oil
Redacted
Redacted
Everything is fake and gay, just like Trump's Iran peace deal
"So I think what the president has told us to do is use this MOU to sort of refill the world's oil economy. Yeah, to refill some stocks and then to see where the hand is. Okay, there you go. So this is what the president has told us."
Vice President J.D. Vance stated in an interview that the Iran Memorandum of Understanding is being used as a stopgap measure to allow the U.S. to restock oil and weapons supplies, not as a genuine peace agreement. This admission comes amid reporting that President Trump has considered returning to all-out war with Iran but is sticking with diplomatic talks temporarily. The revelation confirms suspicions that the MOU was never intended as a lasting peace framework.

About this episode

In a revealing discussion about U.S.-Iran relations, Vice President J.D. Vance admitted that the Iran Memorandum of Understanding is being used as cover for the United States to restock weapons and oil supplies rather than as a genuine peace agreement. The hosts of Redacted discuss this admission alongside Wall Street Journal reporting that President Trump has held multiple conversations with Defense Secretary Pete Haigseth and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Dan Cain about resuming full-scale attacks on Iran, with some advisers describing the option as 'finishing the job.' Guest Brandon Weikert, author of The Weikert Brief on Substack, argues that U.S. military arsenal depletion is the real constraint preventing renewed conflict, not diplomatic progress. Weikert claims both the U.S. and Israel face severe weapons shortages while Iran does not, forcing the administration to buy time through diplomatic theater. The discussion reveals that Iran has indicated it is not meaningfully engaged in negotiations and won't begin talks until the U.S. unfreezes Iranian assets and lifts sanctions. Weikert suggests the U.S. is establishing a Cold War-style deconfliction hotline with Tehran, potentially signaling a shift toward normalizing relations because military victory is not achievable. He predicts that Russian and Iranian oil will need to be reintegrated into global markets to prevent economic calamity, and that Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Qatar are planning to remove U.S. military bases within nine to ten months. The conversation paints a picture of an overstretched American empire facing the limits of its Middle East military footprint, with all parties using the current lull to rearm for potential future conflict rather than pursuing genuine peace.

Key takeaways

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