The Strait : The Deal that Ended the War and Saved a Nation
Overview
March 2026. IRGC gunboats are charging two million dollars a transit on the water that carries twenty percent of the world's oil. CIA officer Mason Cole - forty-two, fluent in Arabic and Farsi, professionally inconvenient in ways that have cost him his career advancement and his marriage - is sent to observe a back-channel meeting in Dubai between a Pahlavi delegation, the UAE's most capable diplomat, and the most dangerous journalist in any room she enters: Layla Shirazi.
Layla is Iranian-American, thirty-four, Dubai-based, and accurate in a way that makes her the most valuable and most unsettling person Mason has ever worked with. She is his contact, his analyst, and - over eight months of back-channel diplomacy conducted across souks and car parks and encrypted lines at two in the morning - the person who makes him believe the work still matters. He has spent twenty years in the gap between what American foreign policy claims to be and what it actually does. She has spent her career documenting that gap without flinching. They should have stayed professional. They didn't. What develops between them is not dramatic - there are no declarations, no rescues, no clean moments. It is quieter and more durable than that: two people who see the world the same way discovering, slowly and without quite deciding to, that they would rather see it together. Mason, who had stopped expecting that to be possible, finds it is. Layla, who had never needed rescuing, finds she doesn't need to be alone either. What begins as surveillance becomes negotiation. What begins as negotiation becomes the deal that nobody thought was possible - reintegrating Iran into the dollar-denominated energy order, opening the Strait, ending the war. Not a perfect deal. Not a clean one. A real one. And running through all of it, the question neither of them can fully separate from the work: what do you do when the person who makes you most honest is also the person you most want to protect?In North Tehran, Nasrin Shirazi is studying the Zagros fold-and-thrust belt - the geology beneath her feet, the oil that caused the sanctions, the sanctions that took her mother's medication. She is twenty-six years old and the most valuable geopolitical asset in the Middle East. Nobody thought to ask her anything. They should have.
The Strait is a geopolitical thriller about how deals are actually made - in spice souks and hotel corridors and car parks, by people who chose to stay in the room when leaving would have been easier. It is a story about what architecture costs, and what it produces when the people inside it are treated as partners rather than variables. And it is a love story - not the kind that happens instead of the world, but the kind that happens inside it, between two people who understood the stakes and stayed anyway.The deal saved Iran. The question is what kind of Iran it saved.
The Strait is the fictional narrative companion to Dollar Dominance: The Architecture of American Energy Strategy - ZeroState Press's analytical series mapping the petrodollar system that drives US foreign policy in the Middle East. Dollar Dominance built the architecture. The Strait puts human faces on what it costs. Both are available on Amazon under the ZeroState Press imprint.
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9798254803287
- ISBN-10: 9798254803287
- Publisher: Independently Published
- Publish Date: April 2026
- Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.38 inches
- Shipping Weight: 0.54 pounds
- Page Count: 176
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