Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Saturday, June 20, 2026

And Now Trump's Fear-Driven Impulsive MoU Deal with Iran is Unravelling

The Great Moron is flailing about. He got into the Iran war without thinking. He then decided to end the war, also without thinking, driven by fear. And now, he regrets ending the war and is threatening again.

This is the behavior of an undecisive senile old man who has lost his bearings and doesn't know which shoe to put on which foot. What a sad spectacle to watch an 80-year-old narcissistic American president decaying in vivo, lashing out at the very few friends he's left with and hating the entire world because he is getting old and losing control. He's like a spoiled little 8-year old brat who didn't get ALL that he wanted and is still sulking.

[See: https://www.thedailybeast.com/trumps-doctor-cornered-over-his-startling-medical-anomalies/] for Trump's troubling health condition.

One moment he praises Iran leaders, and a moment later he attacks them.  He "imagines" that he forced Iran into an "unconditional surrender" and that he acted a "regime change" there, while the memorandum he signed with the Iranians is nothing more than an unconditional surrender by the US that postpones ALL the unmet war objectives set by Trump himself to an indefinite future. Furthermore, Netanyahu continues to shaft Trump and jeopardize the deal, bad as it is for the US, by continuously bombing Lebanon.

Please Congress, do something about it. The man is out of touch with reality. He poses a huge risk to national security and to world peace.

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Trump Says Iran Is ‘FINISHED’ After Cancelled Negotiations — As Israeli Attacks [in Lebanon] Threaten Deal

Sara Dorn, Forbes Staff
Updated Fri, June 19, 2026

President Donald Trump warned Iran is "FINISHED" and would "get no money" out of the newly signed deal with the U.S. after the two sides cancelled a meeting set for Friday in Switzerland—as the agreement appears fragile less than 48 hours after it was signed.

President Donald Trump arrives for a dinner with French President Emmanuel Macron to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the independence of the United States at the Chateau de Versailles in Versailles France on June 17, 2026. (Photo by Bastien Ohier / Hans Lucas / AFP via Getty Images)Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images

Trump said "we'll play out the 60 days. They get no money, not ten cents!" referring to the 60-day period after the agreement was signed overnight Wednesday to negotiate outstanding issues, including the future of Iran's nuclear program.

The deal included a commitment from the U.S. to lift sanctions on Iran and unfreeze Iranian assets in foreign accounts in the final agreement, to be made within 60 days.

Iran and the U.S. cancelled the first meeting of the second round of negotiations without explanation, though the White House suggested the delay was due to "logistics."

Three unnamed diplomats told The New York Times Iran backed out because of Israel's continued attacks on Iran-backed Hezbollah militants in Lebanon.

Israel and Hezbollah reached a ceasefire agreement Friday morning after Israeli airstrikes killed at least 47 people in Lebanon since midnight, Reuters reported, citing the Lebanese health ministry, while Israel said four of its soldiers were killed in southern Lebanon.

The deal between the U.S. and Iran required military hostilities between both sides and their allies to cease on all fronts, including Lebanon, though Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has made clear his country was not involved in the agreement and is not required to adhere to its terms.

In an earlier Truth Social post on Friday, Trump attacked critics of his Iran deal, claiming the U.S. has "diminished Iran! It doesn't, any longer, have an Air Force, a Navy, Antiaircraft Equipment, Radar, or practically anything else, and yet the Dumocrats say that Iran is better off now than it was four months ago." Trump has faced bipartisan criticism over the deal, including from some of his MAGA allies, and almost no one has said the U.S. came out ahead in the agreement.

Vice President JD Vance was scheduled to fly to Switzerland on Friday to begin negotiating a final agreement with Iran after Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian signed a memorandum of understanding on Wednesday. The initial deal ended all military hostilities between the two sides and required Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz without tolls during the 60-day negotiating period. The U.S. is also required to lift its naval blockade on Iranian ships within 30 days, and issue immediate waivers on exports of Iranian oil.
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Trump lashed out at Vance telling him, ‘Everyone just needs to copy what I say’ on Iran, book reveals



Josh Marcus
Fri, June 19, 2026

President Trump reportedly criticized Vice President Vance for not using his preferred language to describe the U.S. attack on Iran’s nuclear program.

President Donald Trump reportedly raged against Vice President JD Vance last year for not using the boss’s chosen line that American planes had “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear program.

“Trump vented to others that Vance hadn’t repeated his own new phrase that Iran’s nuclear program had been ‘totally obliterated,’” according to an excerpt obtained by Politico of the forthcoming Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump, from New York Times reporters Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan.

After the June attack on Iran, Vance had mildly undercut Trump in an interview with ABC News.

“Well, Jon, severely damaged versus obliterated, I’m not exactly sure what the difference is,” Vance said. “What we know is we set their nuclear program back substantially.”

(Intelligence on the strikes at the time reportedly suggested they did not in fact destroy the nuclear program.)

Tensions flared elsewhere between the pair over Iran, according to the book.

Vance, a military veteran and critic of U.S. foreign wars, reportedly appeared “anxious” after the strike and aides thought he was worried about further escalation.

When Vance allegedly suggested Trump soften some lines in his speech about the Iran operation, the president allegedly snapped at Vance, telling him, “I know what I’m doing.”

“Seemingly irritated by Vance’s second-guessing, Trump turned his back on the vice president without saying any more,” Regime Change claims.

The Independent has contacted the White House for comment.

Vance has often been one of the administration’s point people on Iran, shuttling between Washington and Pakistan for negotiations.

In recent days, Vance has taken to the media and the White House briefing room to defend the memorandum of understanding between the U.S. and Iran aimed at ending the war, which largely returns conditions to their pre-war status quo and does not represent a finalized peace deal.

Vance has also defended the deal from critics in Israel, the U.S. partner in the Iran war, who were nonetheless sidelined in negotiations to end the conflict.

Israeli leaders have taken issue with the emerging truce, which appears likely to leave existing Iranian leadership in place and eventually yield sanctions relief for Tehran, while kicking nuclear negotiations into the future.

Speaking to reporters this week, Vance chastised Israel, warning that if he were in their position, he “might not be attacking the only powerful ally that I have anywhere left in the entire world.”

Regime Change, which releases on Tuesday, has been sending shockwaves through the administration.

Trump officials believe sourcing for the book includes leaked secret recordings from inside the Situation Room, the strictly guarded area where the president makes and monitors critical national security decisions, one of the most high-security areas on Earth.

"We're afraid some of our most sensitive conversations were being recorded," an administration source said of the potential leak in an interview with Axios. "And we have no idea which ones."

The book also reportedly captures the tension inside the administration over the Epstein files.

Regime Change reportedly describes a Situation Room meeting about how to handle the fallout from the administration's slow-walking the release of the Epstein files, and it details a reported incident where then-FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino allegedly blew up at then-Attorney General Pam Bondi for what he called the “dumb f***ing charade” of giving an early batch of files to right-wing influencers, then declining to release much more for months.

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