The Announcement Economy Goes to War
Sullivan's 100-Year Alliance Bet, the Ghost of the Shah, and Why Wartime Law Cannot Survive the Historical Record It Ignores
Senator Dan Sullivan has spent the better part of a decade building what might be called the Alaska LNG announcement economy — a carefully orchestrated sequence of declarations, testimonials, and political milestones designed to create the appearance of inevitability before the underlying economics arrive to spoil the party.
The architecture is deliberate. A USINDOPACOM admiral testifies that Alaska LNG would be a "game changer" for Indo-Pacific security. The Trump administration lists it as a Day One executive priority. The One Big Beautiful Bill creates an Energy Dominance Financing Program Sullivan describes as purpose-built for the project. And on April 20, 2026 — the culmination — President Trump invokes the Defense Production Act, wartime industrial law written during the Korean War, to authorize federal financing for a project whose developer will not disclose its true cost to the legislators overseeing the state's 25% ownership stake.
Each announcement feeds the next. Each milestone makes the project feel more real than the numbers justify. That is the announcement economy's primary product — not gas, not energy security, but momentum. Momentum that outpaces scrutiny. Momentum that converts political will into legal authority before anyone can honestly examine whether the statutory requirements are met.
The DPA invocation is where the announcement economy becomes legally consequential. It is no longer just politics. It is a presidential certification — a legal document making specific factual findings that must survive judicial review. And it is at precisely this point that the announcement economy collides with history.
The Three Certifications — and Why Each Fails
The Defense Production Act's Section 303 is not a general grant of emergency financing authority. It is a specific statutory mechanism with three mandatory presidential certifications that must be satisfied before a single dollar of federal financing can flow. The Trump administration's April 20 determination checked all three boxes. A serious examination of the underlying facts suggests none of them hold.
The administration certified that the United States faces a domestic industrial base shortfall in natural gas transmission, processing, storage, and LNG capacity. The inconvenient fact sitting directly beneath that certification: the United States set a record LNG export record in 2025, shipping 111 million metric tons to 43 countries. The world's largest LNG exporter has certified a shortfall in LNG capacity. These two facts cannot coexist in the same legal document without inviting the question a reviewing court will eventually ask — what shortfall, precisely, is being averted?
The answer the administration cannot give is the honest one: there is no domestic shortfall. There is a private developer's financing problem. The DPA is being used to solve Glenfarne's capital stack, not America's energy security.
This certification requires that private industry, acting alone, cannot reasonably be expected to provide the needed capability in a timely manner. Sullivan and the administration offer this as self-evident — of course private capital needs federal support for a $44 billion project in the Alaskan wilderness.
What they do not say is why private capital walked away. ExxonMobil examined Alaska LNG. BP examined it. ConocoPhillips examined it. All three are among the most sophisticated energy investors on the planet. All three walked away. The administration's certification treats their departure as market failure requiring government intervention. The more legally honest reading is that three major oil companies independently reached the same conclusion about the project's economics — and that conclusion was not favorable.
Private industry's rejection of Alaska LNG is not evidence of market failure. It is the market functioning exactly as intended, delivering a verdict the announcement economy cannot afford to acknowledge.
This is where the certification becomes legally indefensible. Section 303 requires the President to certify that government financing is the most cost-effective, expedient, and practical alternative method for meeting the identified need. That certification is a legal finding. Legal findings require factual grounding.
The true cost of Alaska LNG is proprietary. Glenfarne will not release it. Alaska's own Senate Resources Committee chair — a Republican — publicly declared in March 2026 that she has lost confidence in the developer after it refused to provide updated cost figures to legislators overseeing a state-owned asset. Official estimates place the project at $44 billion. Independent analysts suggest the number exceeds $70 billion. The gap between those figures is larger than the entire annual budget of most states.
A presidential certification of cost-effectiveness made without access to the actual cost figure is not a legal finding. It is a guess dressed in statutory language. Under the Administrative Procedure Act's arbitrary and capricious standard, a reviewing court examining that certification would find either that the true cost was incorporated — making the cost-effectiveness finding untenable at $70 billion — or that it was not incorporated, meaning the certification was made without the information necessary to make it. Either path leads to the same destination.
Congress wrote the Defense Production Act so the government could guarantee Americans could defend themselves in a crisis — not so a private developer from New York could use emergency wartime subsidies to build export infrastructure for Japanese and Korean gas buyers.
— Thomas A. LambThe Ghost of the Shah — Why Sullivan's 100-Year Alliance Bet Fails History's Most Basic Test
Senator Sullivan stood before the Alaska Legislature in February 2026 and declared that the economic, strategic, and military justifications for Alaska LNG "get stronger by the day." The project, he told lawmakers, would provide America's Pacific allies a 50 to 100 year supply of energy security. USINDOPACOM's commander testified before Congress that it would be a "game changer" for the Indo-Pacific. The national defense certification embedded in the DPA determination assumes, as its foundational premise, that the allies receiving that gas will remain allies.
History has a pointed response to that assumption.
In 1975, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi was America's most important strategic partner in the Middle East. Iran under the Shah was the anchor of American energy and security policy in the region — a massive oil producer, a purchaser of American military hardware, and a counterweight to Soviet influence. American policymakers did not merely assume the alliance would hold. They built their entire regional architecture around it. They called it the Twin Pillars policy. They sold the Shah billions in advanced weapons. They trained his military. They treated the relationship as permanent.
Four years later it was gone. Not gradually. Not through negotiation. Through revolution. The Shah fled in January 1979. The hostage crisis followed in November. The alliance that American policymakers had treated as a permanent strategic foundation inverted completely within a single presidential term — and has remained hostile for 45 years since.
The Pattern Sullivan's Argument Cannot Survive
Germany — America's most destructive enemy in 1917, and again in 1941. Today the cornerstone of NATO. Japan — attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941. Today hosts the largest concentration of American military forces in the Pacific. Vietnam — cost 58,000 American lives. Today a trading partner courted as a counterweight to China. Iran — America's closest Middle East ally in 1975. Today its most persistent regional adversary.
The pattern is not that alliances occasionally shift. The pattern is that they shift completely, repeatedly, and on timelines that make a century-long infrastructure bet not merely optimistic — but historically illiterate.
Sullivan is asking the American taxpayer to finance $44 to $70 billion in export infrastructure on the assumption that Japan, South Korea, and Thailand will remain stable, friendly, and economically aligned with the United States for 50 to 100 years. He is asking Alaska to commit its most significant natural resource corridor to that assumption. He is asking the Defense Production Act — a statute written to defend Americans — to guarantee it.
The Shah was not an aberration. He was a pattern.
Which brings us to George Patton.
In the summer of 1945, with Germany defeated and the war in Europe won, General George S. Patton stood among his closest wartime allies — the Soviet forces with whom American troops had fought side by side — and said what Washington did not want to hear. "Sooner or later," Patton told anyone who would listen, "we're going to have to fight them anyway." He recommended against demobilizing the American army. He was relieved of command for saying it publicly.
He was vindicated within two years. The Iron Curtain descended across Eastern Europe. The Cold War began. The alliance that had just defeated Nazi Germany became the defining adversarial relationship of the next half century.
Patton's insight was not military genius. It was historical literacy. He understood that alliances are transactional, that common enemies create temporary alignments, and that the moment the common purpose disappears the underlying interests reassert themselves. He was relieved for saying it. History proved him right within 24 months.
Sullivan's 100-year alliance argument requires Patton to have been wrong. It requires the Shah's fall to have been an anomaly. It requires Japan, South Korea, and Thailand to remain not merely friendly but committed offtake partners for a pipeline that will not reach full operation until the 2030s and whose financing assumes alignment through the 2120s.
This is not energy policy. It is historical faith — and it is faith that history has not earned.
The DPA certification's "essential to national defense" finding is built on this foundation. Strip away the alliance stability assumption and the national defense justification does not merely weaken — it disappears entirely. Gas flowing exclusively to foreign buyers under long-term offtake agreements with foreign companies cannot be essential to American national defense on any honest reading of that phrase. It can only be essential to the national defense of Japan, South Korea, and Thailand — nations whose governments, as history repeatedly demonstrates, are not guaranteed to remain allies for the duration of a pipeline's operational life.
What Sullivan's Argument Actually Requires
Strip the Alaska LNG campaign to its essential components and what remains is a single load-bearing assumption: that the United States military and its Pacific allies will maintain sufficiently stable relationships over the next century to justify treating export infrastructure as a domestic defense necessity. Every other element of Sullivan's argument — the USINDOPACOM testimony, the DPA certification, the Energy Dominance Financing Program, the Day One executive priority — is superstructure built on that foundation.
Sullivan has never stated this assumption explicitly. That is the announcement economy's most important function — it keeps the foundational assumption from being examined by ensuring the next announcement arrives before the last one is scrutinized.
Consider the sequencing. Admiral Paparo's USINDOPACOM testimony that Alaska LNG would be a "game changer" for Indo-Pacific security was not offered as analysis. It was offered as momentum. A combatant commander testifying about civilian export infrastructure is not a military assessment — it is a political event staged to attach the credibility of American military authority to a private developer's financing problem. The announcement economy converted Paparo's testimony into a headline. The headline converted into political pressure. The political pressure converted into the DPA determination. The DPA determination converted into federal financing authority.
At no point in that chain was the foundational assumption examined. At no point did anyone in the announcement economy ask Admiral Paparo the question his testimony implicitly requires answering: which specific American military capability is degraded by the absence of Alaska LNG? The answer, on current offtake agreements serving zero domestic consumers, is none.
Sullivan knows this history. He is not an uninformed actor. He has traveled four times to Japan and Korea promoting Alaskan gas. He has hosted dozens of meetings with Asian LNG importers and government leaders. He has pitched the project personally to Defense Secretary Hegseth and his deputy. He has shepherded the Energy Dominance Financing Program through the One Big Beautiful Bill. He is the most informed advocate Alaska LNG has.
Which makes his silence on the alliance stability question not an oversight. It is a choice.
A senator who has spent years studying Pacific energy markets knows that Japan's domestic politics have produced significant foreign policy shifts within living memory. He knows that South Korea's relationship with the United States has been repeatedly tested by peninsular politics that Washington does not control. He knows that Thailand's government has changed hands through military coup as recently as 2014. He knows that the offtake agreements his office celebrates as milestones are letters of intent — non-binding expressions of commercial interest that dissolve the moment the economics or politics shift.
He knows all of this. And he has built a legal architecture — culminating in a wartime emergency determination — that depends on none of it being true for 100 years.
Patton was relieved of command for stating the obvious about an ally. The obvious, in Sullivan's case, is this: the nations receiving Alaska's gas are today's allies. The Shah was yesterday's. The distance between those two sentences is not reassuring. It is the entire argument.
— Thomas A. LambThe Legal Convergence — When the Announcement Economy Meets the Courthouse
The Defense Production Act has been invoked 75 times in its history. It has financed titanium for jet engines, rare earth processing facilities, semiconductor manufacturing capacity, and medical countermeasure stockpiles. In every prior invocation of Section 303, the industrial capability being financed served an identifiable American defensive need. In every prior invocation, the beneficiary of the federal financing was American defensive capability.
April 20, 2026 is the first time in 75 years that Section 303 has been used to finance infrastructure whose entire commercial purpose is export to foreign buyers.
That fact alone is legally significant. Courts interpreting statutory authority treat consistent historical practice as powerful evidence of congressional intent. Seventy-five years of Section 303 determinations financing domestic defensive capability, followed by a single determination financing foreign export infrastructure, is not evolution. It is departure. And departure of this magnitude — from a statute with a documented legislative history explicitly limiting export authority — triggers the Supreme Court's major questions doctrine with considerable force.
The doctrine's application here is straightforward. In a series of decisions since 2022, the Court has held that when an executive agency claims authority to resolve questions of vast economic and political significance, Congress must have clearly authorized it. The question being resolved by the April 20 determination is not small: whether wartime industrial capacity law authorizes multi-billion dollar federal financing of export infrastructure for foreign energy buyers. The 1980 energy amendment to the DPA explicitly withheld export authority. The legislative record contains no authorization for this use. The 75-year practice of the statute contradicts it.
The administration's answer to the major questions challenge will be national security. It always is. But national security is not a magic phrase that dissolves statutory limitations. It is a factual predicate that must be grounded in actual defensive necessity. And the factual predicate here — allied energy security over a 100-year horizon — does not survive the historical record that Sections II and III of this analysis establish.
A reviewing court examining the April 20 determination under the Administrative Procedure Act's arbitrary and capricious standard will confront a specific and uncomfortable sequence of facts. The domestic shortfall certification contradicts the United States' own 2025 export record. The private industry certification ignores the market verdict delivered by ExxonMobil, BP, and ConocoPhillips. The cost-effectiveness certification was made without access to the true project cost. And the foundational national defense justification rests on alliance stability assumptions that the Shah's fall, Patton's vindication, and 80 years of alliance history demonstrate cannot support a 100-year infrastructure commitment.
Each of these failures is independently sufficient for an arbitrary and capricious finding. Together they describe a certification process that was not designed to satisfy the statute. It was designed to satisfy the announcement economy.
The multistate attorneys general who challenged Executive Order 14156 in May 2025 have a straightforward path to amend their complaint. Unlike the emergency declaration itself — which courts have treated as largely non-justiciable — Section 303 agency actions are expressly subject to judicial review. The Alaska determination is a concrete, identifiable agency action with a documented factual record that contradicts every statutory finding. It is the strongest Administrative Procedure Act target the challengers have yet encountered.
The stronger case, however, may not require the full weight of the APA challenge. It may rest on the simpler and more direct question that the Shah and Patton together answer: can infrastructure that sends every molecule of gas to foreign buyers — buyers whose governments history demonstrates will not remain allies for the duration of the project's operational life — satisfy the statutory requirement that the financed capability be essential to American national defense?
The statute says national defense. The determination says allied energy security. Those are not the same thing. They were not the same thing when Congress wrote the DPA in 1950. They were not the same thing when Congress added energy to the statute in 1980. And they are not the same thing today, regardless of how many admirals testify, how many letters of intent are announced, and how many times Senator Sullivan declares that the justifications get stronger by the day.
Patton was relieved of command in 1945 for telling an uncomfortable truth about an ally. The uncomfortable truth in 2026 is simpler and requires no military genius to state: you cannot invoke wartime law to defend a nation by building infrastructure that serves a different nation — particularly when history's most instructive lesson is that today's ally is under no obligation to remain one.
Alaska deserves a gas pipeline. Alaska deserves honest accounting of what it will cost, who it will serve, and what legal authority actually exists to finance it. What Alaska does not deserve — what the law does not permit — is a private developer from New York using emergency wartime subsidies, a classified cost estimate, and a century-long alliance bet that history has already graded to convert the announcement economy's momentum into federal financing authority.
The courthouse is where momentum runs out of road.
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