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TrumpTV
My Take

Time to Change the Channel, Mr. Trump, Before You Become LBJ and Vietnam

Defanging Iran and its global terror network is a noble goal. That being said, what’s happening now is something else. If he wanted regime change, the time for President Trump to strike Iran was when protestors were dying by the tens of thousands. Instead, Trump followed Bibi Netanyahu’s lead into a forever war. Granted, the strike at the beginning that took out the Ayatollah Khamenei and other top leaders was a brilliant stroke. At the time, even Trump’s public comments seemed to indicate a two- to four-day foray. It’s now entering three weeks, and Trump is suddenly calling for an unconditional surrender, which will never come unless you obliterate every last Revolutionary Guardsman. I honestly believe that Trump thought the people would rise up as soon as the U.S. and Israel struck — that is, within two to four days. When that didn’t happen, Trump — as is his wont — dug in his heels and committed to a Bibi devastation-of-Iran plan. To save face, in other words. This is now smacking too much of previous U.S. ventures overseas to topple hostile regimes, going all the way back to Vietnam and Lyndon Baines Johnson (LBJ), who kept pouring in the

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Hegseth2
Currently...

Trump’s Fantasy Armada to the Rescue of a Problem ‘Strait” Out of the IRGC

A childish TV outburst by Secretary of Defense/War Pete Hegseth notwithstanding, the Trump administration clearly did not have a plan in place if Iran chose to choke off the Strait of Hormuz. Indeed, the problem with this narrow sea passage for oil-laden vessels mirrors what I see as the administration’s failure in its overall war scheme. It chose to take out Iranian national assets, including its navy, its air and land defense systems, and its ability to build and launch missiles. This strategy failed to take into account the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the boats it controls in the Strait of Hormuz, and the drones and mines it can send to bottle up the strait. Faced with this crisis of his own making, President Trump has taken to social media to announce that “many countries” will be sending naval assets to the region to keep the Strait of Hormuz open. This is interesting because Trump just a week ago dismissed Great Britain’s offer of sending an aircraft carrier as basically “too little, too late.” As for Trump’s fantasy armada, who is going to join it? If the Gulf nations have any naval assets, they might join in — might.

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Hormuz
Currently...

Trump Can’t Escape the ‘Strait’ Jacket Iran Fabricates

Khamenei Redux is here, and Iran is flexing its muscles in the Strait of Hormuz, the 21-mile passage that transports 20 percent of the world’s oil. That is, it transports that amount in peacetime, but with Israel and the U.S. bombing Iran’s land-based assets to pieces, the country has taken to the seas with drones and mines to gain an upper hand in the ongoing battle. Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) targeted multiple commercial vessels, including the Thai-flagged Mayuree Naree, the Marshall Islands-flagged Star Gwyneth, and a Japan-flagged containership, using projectiles and drones, causing fires and trapping crew members aboard some ships. Even after releasing 170 million gallons of oil from the nation’s Strategic Reserve, the U.S. — and the world — is still seeing gas prices soar. President Trump, in response, tried the spin that higher oil prices mean greater wealth for the U.S. Problem is, voters don’t see that wealth. They only see pump prices that are jumping almost daily. Trump’s envisioned two-day spanking, leading to a popular uprising in Iran, is now entering its third week with no clear path to “unconditional surrender” in sight. Trump needs to go ‘strait’ back to the drawing board and figure out

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TrumpWar
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Trump Enters ‘Dubya’ Spin-o-Sphere with Iran Assessment

Stocks did a turnaround today when President Trump told a reporter that military action in Iran was “very complete.” A few hours later, he did his best George “Dubya” Bush mime job when he proclaimeed on TV that the air and sea campaign against Iran would end “very soon.” As I posted earlier, Dubya — shortly after launching his campaign to unseat Saddam Hussein in Iraq — told the nation “mission accomplished,” as U.S troops occupied the country. Soon thereafter, bolstered by mobilization and money from Iran, Iraqi resistance groups rose up and continued the conflict for another eight years. Now, do I think something similar will happen in Iran? Frankly, I fear it might. I wouldn’t be surprised to see: a) an order by Trump within the coming days to halt all strikes against the country, and b) shortly thereafter, a resurgence by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to stifle any dissent, even if it means killing another 50,000 civilian protestors. I will be more than happy to be wrong, but I don’t see how Trump figures the action against Iran’s current regime is anywhere near “very complete.” They’re still in power, last I looked, and even just

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NoemAd copy
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Kristi Noem’s 2028 Presidential Campaign Cut Short

Now, there were lots of reasons to fire DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, such as the mishandling ICE and calling everyone a domestic terrorist once they are murderized, but it came down to a $200 million ad campaign that she was running. The ads featured her as “problem solver on the job,” but in truth, they were mainly just glamour poses for a presidential run in 2028. President Trump, of course, didn’t take kindly to someone in his cabinet stealing his spotlight, so Noem was given the axe today. In her place will step loyal Trumpista Markwayne Mullin, senator from Oklahoma. To gloss over matters, the White House tried to spin everything as a resignation and as a new opportunity for Noem as a special envoy for the so-called “Shield of the Americas” initiative on Truth Social, whatever that could possibly be. Noem has also been suspected of an extramarital affair with her aide, Corey Lewandowski. To quell those rumors, Noem announced recently that she was having the bedroom removed from her private DHS jet. That should do the trick.

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Bush
My Take

Shades of Dubya’s ‘Mission Accomplished’: Victory Declarations Can Come Back to Haunt

On May 1, 2003, President Geroge W. Bush, aka “Dubya,” stood on the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and proclaimed, with banner and words, “Mission Accomplished” in the U.S.-Iraqi War. Problem was, terrorist groups rose from the ashes and that conflict came roarin’ back. Dubya’s words were:  “Major combat operations in Iraq have ended. In the battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed … because the regime [of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein] is no more.” After this proclamation, fighting in Iraq continued for another eight years. Now, in Iran — so far, at least — we have not committed any ground forces, so presumably once Iran’s military might is no more, we can simply quit bombing and leave the rest to the people of Iran, which President Donald Trump has been urging all along. In short, Operation Epic Fury is not necessarily about U.S.-led regime change. That task is being left to the Iranians. Good luck, huh? Even if the remaining Iranian guardsmen have only rifles, they will have more than the population. They can mow down insurrections as easily as they are accustomed to. My point is, though I’m certainly not rooting against our success, is

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Phone copy2
My Take

Trump Succumbs to Another Form of TDS: Turncoat Derangement Syndrome

Three days into the war with Iran and President Trump is sullen, refusing to talk to reporters, and clearly freaked out that matters aren’t going his way in Persia. He thought that, by now, he could find the Iranian male equivalent of Venezuela’s Delcy Rodriguez, the VP “turncoat” to Nicolas Maduro who is now running things to the beat of Donald Trump and crew in the South American nation. What a frustrated Trump is suffering from I’ve labeled “Turncoat Derangement Syndrome,” or another form of TDS, now virulent in many forms in the White House. (A little over a week ago, Trump succumbed to another TDS — Tariff Derangement Syndrome — when the Supreme Court stripped him of willy-nilly authority to raise tariffs whenever he saw fit, for whatever reason.) On the flight back to D.C. aboard Air Force One, Trump stayed locked in his cabin, not interacting with reporters. Deboarding Air Force One, he was still sullen and didn’t interact with reporters; the same happened when the Marine One helicopter landed at the White House. Shouts of “find my Iranian Delcy” could be heard emanating from the Oval Office as the president huddled with aides after his return from

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