Trump’s push for war with Iran is driven not by strategy, but by political survival—a desperate attempt to silence critics.
Browsing: Iran
The U.S. has assembled its largest military force in the Middle East since the 2003 Iraq War—two carrier strike groups and over 60 jets in Jordan.
Trump demands that Iran return to its own borders—abandon its nuclear dream, curb its missiles, and end proxy wars.
In Iran, sovereignty is priced in dollars; U.S. pressure has created “governance by weather,” where daily life pivots on external signals.
Regime change in Iran would not bring liberation—it would set the region ablaze, as Iraq, Libya, and Syria show.
Nasrallah’s assassination was a blow from which Iran and Hezbollah cannot recover; an era has ended.
Iranian students are back in the streets, defying a bloody crackdown, chanting for the supreme leader’s overthrow.
With the USS Gerald R. Ford in the Mediterranean, the U.S. is poised for a strike on Iran; diplomacy narrows.
China is hardening Iran’s defenses ahead of a potential U.S. strike, supplying intelligence and missile technology.
Claims that Iran supports ISIS-K ignore key facts: ISIS-K killed 90+ Iranians in 2024—the worst terror attack in Iran’s history.
