


The Houthi missile hit just 75 meters from Terminal 3 at Ben Gurion Airport, narrowly avoiding a direct strike that could have triggered a full-scale war. . .
. . .In mid-March, President Donald Trump ordered a “decisive and powerful military action” against the Houthis, resulting in a wave of U.S. airstrikes against key terrorist targets in Yemen.
Since Jimmy Carter allowed the Mullahs to take control of Iran 45 years ago, Israel, America and much of the west have endured bloody terrorist attacks that have left hundreds of innocent people dead and maimed.
As far as triggering a full-scale war, with Iran still moving closer and closer to a nuclear bomb, sooner or later there indeed will be either a preemptive strike or heaven forbid a much more devastating retaliatory strike by Israel on Tehran that could involve the major powers.
That they have gotten this far, despite Israel's best efforts to derail them is directly attributable to Jimmy Carter as well as the preternatural Israel hatred and anti-Semitism that has been endemic to the denizens of Foggy Bottom going back to Cordell Hull that continues to this day, despite the efforts of Donald Trump to cleanse it and the rest of DC of the globalist Deep State.
Regardless of President Trump's tough stance vis a vis the Houthis and this insane effort at negotiations which will accomplish nothing, except give Iran time and cover to complete the building of their bomb.
That the President is playing the negotions game is very disheartening, unless he's got cards he's not showing and, despite the fact that the Mullahs have got to go for the sake of preventing a regional if not a global war that could easily go nuclear, the idea of American armed forces engaging directly against Iran for me is a very bright red line.
America has spent over a decade attempting to negotiate with the Islamic Republic of Iran. From Obama’s JCPOA to Trump’s “maximum pressure” campaign and now renewed talks under Trump’s second term, the pattern remains: Iran makes promises it doesn’t keep, while the U.S. oscillates between diplomacy and sanctions.
Washington still doesn’t grasp the fundamental truth: the mullahs don’t keep promises—except those made to Allah. . .
. . . Now, in Trump’s second term, the signals are scrambled. After running on a platform of toughness, the administration has stunned observers by floating new talks with Iran—even sending a personal message to Supreme Leader Khamenei through unofficial channels. . .
. . . Just recently, Iran accused the U.S. of “contradictory behavior and provocative statements,” citing backchannel proposals followed immediately by Treasury sanctions on Iranian banks and officials. Meanwhile, Trump himself stated in a campaign-style rally that “we will never let Iran go nuclear,” while his administration quietly signals openness to a “limited freeze” in exchange for sanctions relief. The result? Strategic incoherence. Tehran smells weakness—and buys time.
Don't get me wrong. I am a huge fan of President Trump, especially with what he has been able to do in just his first 100 days despite the rhetorical slings and arrows and literal bullets, of outrageous fortune hurled against him. But With this Iran garbage, and his actions with Zelensky and Putin, I get a nagging suspicion that he's angling for a Nobel Prize. Even if he were successful in stopping that war or preventing Iran from starting World War 3, does he think he'd even be given the recognition, considering he is regarded as the second coming of Adolf Hitler by the same global elites whom he craves recognition?
I hope to God I'm wrong, because the stakes are so insanely high.
Just give Israel the logistical and intel support it needs and it can get the job done. The question is what job? Striking nuclear weapons sites or the reactors? That in and of itself would be problematic to say the least. But from what I have read, Iran's faltering economy along with the insanity of the mad Mullahs and a severe water crisis has only fueled the Persian citizenry's decades-long hatred of their government, so perhaps crippling their oil refineries and electrical grid could lead to the long awaited regime change.
Will we get what we got in Syria by swapping out the Baathists for an ISIS offshoot or does Iran's future hold even the slightest glimmer of hope for a stable and sane non-Islamic government.
We'll have to wait and see, I suppose.
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