News and Views on the Global Stage....

Graham
My Take

‘Iran Most Wanted’ Lindsey Graham Dies Sudden, Mysterious Death

President Trump vowed the destruction of Iran if he were to die at their assassins’ hands, so what if it’s shown that Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina were an Iranian victim? After all, during the staged funeral procession for the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei this past week, (paid) mourners toted placards (top image) calling for Graham’s death. Then today, after he suddenly died from what has been unofficially termed an aortic rupture, Iranian State Media cheered his demise. A TV anchor told Iranians that Graham had been “sent to hell.” I’ve seen enough TV crime dramas to know that one way to get rid of someone is to make their death look like it came from natural causes. There had better be a thorough autopsy of the late senator’s body to determine the exact cause. Graham was in Ukraine on Friday, the day before his death, so it appears more likely that the Russians would have had some access to the senator, perhaps putting something in the food he ate or the tea or coffee he consumed. It’s also possible that an Iranian stooge in Kyiv might have done the same (though Russia is famous for concoctions that kill its

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StraitGhost
Currently...

Trump and the World Face Another Iranian ‘Strait’-jacket

Iran has again closed the Strait of Hormuz, which means it won’t allow ships to travel through its territorial waters (which used to be international), and it will fire on ships trying to traverse Oman’s waters. Which is what it did yesterday by firing on two vessels. In response, the U.S. escalated its attacks, hitting some 140 targets in Iran. For once, Secretary of Defense/War Pete Hegseth had a great pithy comment: “Iran made a poor choice. Now they pay.” Of course, the world is paying too, as the Strait is the route for 20 percent of the world’s oil supply, as well as for fertilizer. As part of the memorandum of understanding (MOU) that Trump and Iran signed, the Strait was supposed to be open, but yesterday, Iran announced it was closing it. Some negotiations toward a settlement, however, were still ongoing in Oman before Iran yesterday opened up a drone-and-missile barrage in retaliation for the U.S. attack. Oman was one of the Islamic Republic’s targets. Iran’s non-military leaders seem intent on closing a deal and keeping the Strait open, but the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) sees things differently and is responsible for attacks on ships in the

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Khanna2
My Take

If Ro Khanna Loves Palestine So Much, He Can Relocate

Representative Ro Khanna (D.-Calif.) is in the news, making a big issue out of his treatment during a visit to an occupied — but abandoned — West Bank settlement. He claims he was detained by settlers and harassed by the IDF (Israeli Defense Forces). The IDF denies the charge. According to Khanna, his visit to Khirbet Zanuta was interrupted by settlers who detained him, while masked men with guns then moved in, whom evidently the Congressman believed to be IDF. A photographer traveling with the Californian verified the incident. Khanna says the only thing that got him and his crew extricated was a call to the U.S. Embassy and the arrival of local police to break things up. “If this can happen to an American member of Congress, imagine what life is like for Palestinians who have no smartphones, no security, and no national platform,” Khanna told supporters. (He’s eyeing a 2028 presidential bid.) The IDF has a different version. “Upon receiving the report [from the Embassy], IDF troops were dispatched to the scene, quickly dispersed the Israeli civilians, and reopened the blocked road,” the military said in a statement. “The IDF soldiers operating in the area did not take

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Wheelbarrow
Currently...

Hunter Biden Gets $1.7M Haul in Defamation Lawsuit Victory

Former No. 1 Son Hunter Biden is walking away with a $1.7 million victory in a defamation lawsuit over a Trump ally who claimed Hunter was involved in a bribery scheme on behalf of Iran. Former Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne was on the losing end. Byrne had claimed that Hunter had accepted an $800M Iranian bribe to get his father, then-President Joe Biden, to unfreeze $8 billion in frozen Islamic Republic assets. Byrne claimed an Iranian official had informed him of the scheme, but he was unable to present any evidence in court to prove his allegation. Byrne was involved in attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election on Trump’s behalf. When he levied his bribery allegation against Hunter, No. 1 Son sued for defamation. Byrne failed to show up for the first trial in October, but this time got his clock legally cleaned. Presiding U.S. District Judge Stephen Wilson of California wrote in his judgment yesterday that “the evidence is clear and convincing that defendant has engaged in intentional misrepresentation with conscious disregard towards plaintiff’s rights.” He awarded Hunter $1 in nominal damages along with $1.7M in punitive damages.

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daily_planet_arrest_scene
Currently...

Feds Subpoena Reporters Who Questioned Security Features of Qatari Force One

The Trump administration has issued subpoenas to four reporters for the New York Times who wrote a piece questioning safety features on the Qatari-gifted new Air Force One. Reporters Julian E. Barnes, Eric Lipton, Tyler Pager, and Eric Schmitt were served subpoenas, in some cases by federal agents at their homes on Friday, according to the Wall Street Journal. The article was spurred by President Trump’s switching to the old Air Force One — pre-Qatari — on returning from the NATO summit in Turkey, then switching back to the new one in Great Britain. The switcheroo came after Israel warned of new Iranian threats on Trump’s life. Widespread reporting on the plane switch, in print and on TV and not just by the NYT, questioned whether the refurbished new Boeing was up to snuff on all the necessary security features found on the older version. The New York Times called the subpoenaing  a “brazen act.”  The National Press Club issued a statement, saying: “The National Press Club calls on the Justice Department to immediately withdraw these subpoenas and reaffirm a principle that has long distinguished the United States: a free and independent press serves the people, not the government.” The Justice Department responded by saying the

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4CD4C7F9-8C04-4C7B-94AD-F8C8022C8786
My Take

Do ‘Threats Away!’ Outnumber ‘Bombs Away!’ in Epic Fury?

By the numbers, President Donald Trump may have threatened Iran more times than he actually bombed it. Since Operation Epic Fury launched on February 28, 2026, Trump has issued what experts estimate to be dozens—perhaps even hundreds—of verbal and written threats against the Islamic Republic. They’ve come via Truth Social posts, televised addresses, press briefings, and off-the-cuff remarks to reporters. They’ve targeted everything from Iranian power plants to oil wells, from naval bases to the Supreme Leader himself. The actual bombs? Those numbered in the thousands during the initial 38-day campaign. But the threats to drop bombs? Those may have been even more numerous. This raises a provocative question about modern warfare and presidential communication: In an era of social media and 24/7 news cycles, can the threat of military action become as central to strategy as the action itself? And when does aggressive rhetoric cross the line from diplomatic pressure to potential war crimes?

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diplomats_grammar_chaos
Current Affairs

Lose All Battles, Win All Wars with Word Play: Iran 101A

When Western diplomats finally emerge from marathon negotiation sessions with Iran, exhausted but triumphant, they often believe they’ve secured a binding agreement. They haven’t. What they’ve actually signed is the opening move in an entirely different game—one where the rules are fluid, the language is deliberately vague, and patience isn’t just a virtue, it’s a weapon. Iranian negotiators are widely regarded by international relations experts as some of the most skilled, patient, and precise dealmakers in the world. But their genius isn’t in what they agree to. It’s in how they’ve already planned to reinterpret it. Rather than viewing an agreement as a final, static contract, Tehran treats every signed document as a fluid baseline for the next phase of competition. This approach is deeply rooted in a blend of traditional bazaar-style haggling, historical grievances, and specific cultural and religious concepts that most Western negotiators barely understand—and certainly don’t anticipate. The result? Iran consistently “loses” individual negotiating battles—and often the battlefield ones too—while positioning itself to win the longer war. Here’s how they do it.

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