On April 27, Friedrich Merz stood before students in Marsberg — a forgettable town in central Germany — and said the thing Washington has spent months trying to keep inside closed rooms.
"The Americans clearly have no strategy."
Not a diplomatic caveat. Not a carefully hedged concern. A flat statement, on camera, from a sitting NATO chancellor, about the country whose military umbrella Germany has sheltered under since 1949.
"You Don't Just Have to Go In — You Also Have to Get Out"
Merz didn't reach for hyperbole. He reached for history, which was more damaging.
"The problem with conflicts like this is always that you don't just have to go in — you also have to get out again. We saw that all too painfully in Afghanistan for 20 years. We saw it in Iraq."
Afghanistan. Iraq. Iran. The progression speaks for itself — and Merz knew it would.
He described Iranian negotiators as "very skilful — or rather very skilful at not negotiating." Getting American envoys to fly to Islamabad, then watching them leave without results. Making patience into a weapon. "An entire nation is being humiliated by the Iranian leadership," he said, "particularly by those so-called Revolutionary Guards."
The nation he meant was the United States.
The Real Reason He Spoke
DW's chief political editor Michaela Küfner was present when Merz was pressed further on his remarks. Her explanation strips away the diplomatic framing entirely: this is about Germany's economy, and Merz's political survival at home.
He was told, she said, by both Israel and the US that this war would last "a couple of days." He is disillusioned. Those were her words: not frustrated, not cautious. Disillusioned.
The economic pain has stopped being abstract. It's at the petrol pump. It's in product prices driven up by energy costs. Heading into summer, jet fuel shortages are a real possibility — cancelled flights, empty airports. Germany's GDP forecasts are being revised downward week by week, with the Iran war cited directly. Meanwhile, Merz's coalition is attempting deep cuts to Germany's social system and pension structure simultaneously. His own Social Democrat partners have started discussing lifting the debt ceiling — a last resort — if the crisis continues.
So he spoke.
Not because he woke up wanting to antagonize Donald Trump. He reached the point where silence cost more than candor. As Küfner put it: "The experience he's had time and time again with Ukraine, but also now with Iran, is that Donald Trump really doesn't seem to care that terribly much about how his European allies feel."
That observation — from Germany's public broadcaster, about Germany's oldest ally — deserves more attention than it's getting.
The Strait Nobody Can Open
The Strait of Hormuz. Twenty percent of the world's traded oil and gas in peacetime. Since February, a contested chokepoint with two blockades facing each other: Iran blocking Gulf shipping, the US Navy blockading Iranian ports. Brent crude at $108 a barrel, nearly 50 percent above where it started. Two hundred and thirty loaded tankers sitting idle inside the Gulf, waiting.
Iran has now put a proposal on the table via Pakistani mediators: reopen the strait, end the war, and deal with the nuclear file later. The offer is deliberately structured. By separating Hormuz from the nuclear question, Tehran is forcing Washington to choose — take a deal that surrenders American leverage on enrichment, or reject it and keep absorbing economic damage while the world watches.
Secretary of State Rubio called it "better than what we thought they were going to submit." Trump canceled plans to send Kushner and Witkoff to Islamabad. "Too much time wasted on traveling," he wrote. Then claimed Iran had followed up with a "much better" offer without saying what was in it.
Americans traveling to Islamabad. Leaving without results. Returning with Truth Social posts.
That is the diplomatic picture Merz was describing.
A Voice From Abu Dhabi
Merz wasn't the only German official speaking that day. Omid Nouripour — Vice President of the Bundestag, Greens, traveling in the Middle East — joined from Abu Dhabi and confirmed every word.
"The Americans are wasting a historic chance for stable and durable peace in the Middle East."
Nouripour was born in Tehran. He left with his family at thirteen. He still has contacts inside Iran, and what he describes from those conversations is worth sitting with: in the early weeks of the war, they were "just enthusiastic, just wanting to get rid of the regime." Then Trump promised help would come when people took to the streets. Three and a half million Iranians demonstrated. Nothing happened. The window closed. The regime cracked down and hardened.
"Now they just want the war stopped," Nouripour said.
Standing in Abu Dhabi, surrounded by a Gulf economy bleeding from the Hormuz closure, he was blunt about the immediate priority: freedom of navigation, a ceasefire, something workable — and then, only then, sustained pressure on the regime. "For now, it's about having gas prices which are affordable for our people." Not a grand vision. A desperate minimum.
On who has the upper hand: "The Iranian regime is massively weakened, but for now they feel like the winners."
What Europe Is Actually Calculating
A NATO chancellor said the US has no exit strategy. A Bundestag vice president called it a wasted historic opportunity. Germany's chief political editor said on live television that her chancellor has lost faith in the American approach. None of this happened in Moscow or Tehran. It happened in Germany — the country hosting tens of thousands of US troops, the logistical spine of NATO's eastern operations.
The Europeans were not consulted before this war started. Merz has said so publicly. He went to Washington, met Trump, and told him directly he would have advised against it. That conversation happened. It changed nothing.
What's shifting now is subtler than outright opposition. Merz confirmed Germany is working "in the background" on diplomatic concepts. That Germany will offer minesweepers for Hormuz — but only after fighting stops, only with a parliamentary majority, only alongside France, Britain, and potentially Italy. A military commitment that requires multilateral political consensus and a prior ceasefire is not the same as solidarity. It is hedging with legal infrastructure around it.
Germany is not leaving NATO. But it is quietly building its own foreign policy architecture while maintaining the public alliance. The gap between those two things is widening, and it shows no sign of closing.
The Iranians Watching From Inside
There's something in Nouripour's account that gets lost whenever this conflict is reduced to strategy and leverage.
The Iranians who wanted rid of the regime — who filled the streets because they thought, finally, something was going to change — have stopped believing help is coming. They are managing daily life under bombing and sanctions, under a regime that has used the war to consolidate rather than collapse. The historic window, Nouripour said, was missed. He hopes another opens after some kind of peace order is established.
Not exactly an optimistic assessment. But an honest one, from someone with a personal stake in getting it right.
What Stays on the Record
Here is what cannot be walked back.
A NATO chancellor has said, on camera, that the US entered the Iran war without a strategy and has no exit. He invoked Afghanistan and Iraq by name. He said America is being humiliated. He described his own disillusionment — the gap between what he was promised and what he sees. A Bundestag vice president called it a wasted historic chance and stood in the Gulf to say it.
These words are now in the archive. They will be cited in foreign ministries. They will factor into how governments across Asia, Africa, and Latin America calculate their own exposure to American commitments. They already have.
The Strait of Hormuz remains blocked. Two blockades, a fragile ceasefire, a stalled proposal, oil at $108, 230 tankers waiting. The war is not over. The exit Merz says doesn't exist hasn't materialized.
Right now a NATO ally is publicly grading American strategy in a war that isn't over, with no ceasefire holding and no deal in sight. Merz gave it a failing grade. Nobody in Washington has publicly disagreed.
Munaeem Jamal is a political blogger and commentator based in Karachi, Pakistan. He writes on international affairs and global power at munaeem.org and on Medium.
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