Trump (not America) threatens NATO again…

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
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European allies were not consulted by the U.S. on its decision to attack Iran late last month, and many leaders in the alliance opposed the action.
(YouTube & Why Doesn’t the World’s Most Powerful Military Just Seize the Strait of Hormuz?)
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“NATO just wasn’t there” when he asked for help with the Iran war, Trump told a Miami Beach investment conference sponsored by the Saudi sovereign wealth fund. That, he said, was “a tremendous mistake” by the Europeans.
"This was never the option we have supported because it is unrealistic," he said. "It would take forever, and would expose all those who go through the Strait to risks from the Revolutionary Guards but also ballistic missiles," French President Emmanuel Macron ‌said.
Trump provided no real indication that a ceasefire is in the offing, nor any real path toward fixing one of the major crises that the war has provoked: Iran’s closing of the Strait of Hormuz, through which some twenty per cent of the world’s oil and gas passes. (His suggestion: nations that rely on the energy supplied through the strait, which includes many of our NATO allies, should “build up some delayed courage . . . go to the strait, and just take it—protect it.”)

One of the big problems with what Trump had to say is a familiar one: it’s hard to know what, if anything, is actually true. Until now, essentially all his comments about the four-week-old war have been contradictory, confusing, or just outright false.

I was reminded of this on Wednesday morning, when Trump announced on his social-media network that “Iran’s New Regime President, much less Radicalized and far more intelligent than his predecessors, has just asked the United States of America for a CEASEFIRE!”

Putting aside the fact that Iran denies it has asked for a ceasefire, what can one do but cringe at Trump’s assertion that the new President of Iran is so vastly different from the old President of Iran, given that Iran has the same President today, Masoud Pezeshkian, as it did at the start of the war a month ago?
At times, Trump’s many false statements raise almost existential questions: If, as he said a couple of weeks ago, Iran’s military was a hundred per cent destroyed, then how is it still firing missiles, such as the barrage launched at Israel on Wednesday, sending millions of people to bomb shelters and safe rooms across the country as they were preparing to begin their Passover Seders?

More broadly, can everything be going according to the plan if there is no actual plan? Is a President required to articulate a clear strategy in order to claim that he has brilliantly executed it?
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
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(YouTube & Why Doesn’t the World’s Most Powerful Military Just Seize the Strait of Hormuz?)
View attachment 33931

"This was never the option we have supported because it is unrealistic," he said. "It would take forever, and would expose all those who go through the Strait to risks from the Revolutionary Guards but also ballistic missiles," French President Emmanuel Macron ‌said.
Trump provided no real indication that a ceasefire is in the offing, nor any real path toward fixing one of the major crises that the war has provoked: Iran’s closing of the Strait of Hormuz, through which some twenty per cent of the world’s oil and gas passes. (His suggestion: nations that rely on the energy supplied through the strait, which includes many of our NATO allies, should “build up some delayed courage . . . go to the strait, and just take it—protect it.”)

One of the big problems with what Trump had to say is a familiar one: it’s hard to know what, if anything, is actually true. Until now, essentially all his comments about the four-week-old war have been contradictory, confusing, or just outright false.

I was reminded of this on Wednesday morning, when Trump announced on his social-media network that “Iran’s New Regime President, much less Radicalized and far more intelligent than his predecessors, has just asked the United States of America for a CEASEFIRE!”

Putting aside the fact that Iran denies it has asked for a ceasefire, what can one do but cringe at Trump’s assertion that the new President of Iran is so vastly different from the old President of Iran, given that Iran has the same President today, Masoud Pezeshkian, as it did at the start of the war a month ago?
At times, Trump’s many false statements raise almost existential questions: If, as he said a couple of weeks ago, Iran’s military was a hundred per cent destroyed, then how is it still firing missiles, such as the barrage launched at Israel on Wednesday, sending millions of people to bomb shelters and safe rooms across the country as they were preparing to begin their Passover Seders?

More broadly, can everything be going according to the plan if there is no actual plan? Is a President required to articulate a clear strategy in order to claim that he has brilliantly executed it?
Who created this mess? Trump or Nutlessyahud?
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
31,873
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Regina, Saskatchewan
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pgs

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Exactly how I feel about being called a Joo hater.

If a piece of shit happens to be a Joo, it's still a piece of shit and I'll call it out for being a piece of shit.
Jews and or Israel are not responsible for all the wrongs in the world .
 
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Taxslave2

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(YouTube & Why Doesn’t the World’s Most Powerful Military Just Seize the Strait of Hormuz?)
View attachment 33931

"This was never the option we have supported because it is unrealistic," he said. "It would take forever, and would expose all those who go through the Strait to risks from the Revolutionary Guards but also ballistic missiles," French President Emmanuel Macron ‌said.
Trump provided no real indication that a ceasefire is in the offing, nor any real path toward fixing one of the major crises that the war has provoked: Iran’s closing of the Strait of Hormuz, through which some twenty per cent of the world’s oil and gas passes. (His suggestion: nations that rely on the energy supplied through the strait, which includes many of our NATO allies, should “build up some delayed courage . . . go to the strait, and just take it—protect it.”)

One of the big problems with what Trump had to say is a familiar one: it’s hard to know what, if anything, is actually true. Until now, essentially all his comments about the four-week-old war have been contradictory, confusing, or just outright false.

I was reminded of this on Wednesday morning, when Trump announced on his social-media network that “Iran’s New Regime President, much less Radicalized and far more intelligent than his predecessors, has just asked the United States of America for a CEASEFIRE!”

Putting aside the fact that Iran denies it has asked for a ceasefire, what can one do but cringe at Trump’s assertion that the new President of Iran is so vastly different from the old President of Iran, given that Iran has the same President today, Masoud Pezeshkian, as it did at the start of the war a month ago?
At times, Trump’s many false statements raise almost existential questions: If, as he said a couple of weeks ago, Iran’s military was a hundred per cent destroyed, then how is it still firing missiles, such as the barrage launched at Israel on Wednesday, sending millions of people to bomb shelters and safe rooms across the country as they were preparing to begin their Passover Seders?

More broadly, can everything be going according to the plan if there is no actual plan? Is a President required to articulate a clear strategy in order to claim that he has brilliantly executed it?
Everything is going according to plan. Oil prices are up. Insiders have made hundreds of millions. The world has been shown how dangerous it is to depend on third world thugocracies for their energy needs. Trump got his picture in the news.
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Not this one either. This one is the responsibility of muslim terrorists.
Muslim terrorists bombed Libya, Syria, Palestine, Lebanon, Iraq, Iran Yemen, Sudan, Egypt, Jordan, United Kingdom and USA? 7 of those were in the past year not to mention occupation of 3 of those and they want more.