[Updated with The Independent's details on how Trump "made" the decision to go to war]
It is clear to everyone that the American Moron-in-Chief's was bamboozled by the Zionists into the war on Iran. Trump has never articulated one or two clear objectives for the war simply because 1- he's an idiot, and 2- he was led like a jackass by his war criminal buddy Netanyahu. Was it nuclear weapons? Was it oil? Was it ballistic missiles? Was it regime change? This weird soup of objectives suggests Trump wasn't interested in the war, which is consistent with his repeated campaign promises to never engage the US in foreign wars.
But like the dumb idiot that he is, Trump was convinced by the Zionist regime to FOLLOW the Israelis in their warmongering on the premise that he'll be making money from oil (which Trump has not stopped trumpeting around) while the Israelis would continue claiming to be hypothetical victims of a future nuclear Iran. Trump and his imbecile goons at one point were so confused by the messaging that they adapted the nuclear threat: They were claiming that the US was under an immediate threat of Iran attacking the US with a nuclear device.
The second point of the incestuous but failed Zionist plot to drag the US into the war was to provide Trump with the deniability of 1- not wanting the war, but 2- feeling obligated to support and defend the Israelis. Trump can now say (in aniticipation of the midterms next November) that he had to join the war effort only to support Israel (which is usually a winning argument with a Zionist-brainwashed American public).
Now that the Israelis, with US military support, have failed to achieve any of the objectives in the soup, other than inflict massive damages that Iran can eventually recover from, Trump feels he has been trapped by the Zionists. He has to defend a war that he didn't want and that his MAGA base rejects, and which could be very costly in the November 2026 midterms. The fool was trapped by the Zionists and now he is lashing out at them.
So according the the Daily Beast, "Donald Trump is seemingly done taking cues from his Israeli counterpart", who in turn is incensed that Trump unilaterally agreed to the ceasefire. That is usually a problem when you partner with an easy-to-fool moron, only to find out later that the partner is unreliable. It is the typical blind leading the blind situation.
For example, the Pakistani mediator says the ceasefire extends to the Israeli-Hezbollah war in Lebanon, which the Israelis vehemently deny. To prove their disagreement with the Pakistani - US ceasefire accord, the Zionists ratcheted up their bombing of civilian infrastructure in Lebanon and killing hundreds of Lebanese over the past 24 hours.
The Lebanese in general feel that a Republican administration will, again, betray them as Reagan, Bush Sr and Bush Jr did since the 1980s: Lebanon is a small country with zero interest. It is usually sold out by US foreign policy to countries like Syria, Israel, Saudi Arabia and others in exchange for interests-minded concessions. Right now, as Trump is clearly trying to change course away from the war because of the looming midterms and is hoping for some form of arrangement with the Iranians, he might be tempted to pacify Lebanon in some other way (just as Kissinger did in the 1970s by selling Lebanon to the Stalinist regime of the Assads in Syria), which might include allowing Hezbollah to survive until the next war. This is surely going to be a major point of contention between the US and Israel.
The US has no real objectives in Iran (and by extension in Lebanon), while Israel has nurtured instability in Lebanon for decades (rejecting all UN resolutions as well as scuttling the May 1983 Accord signed after the 1982 Israeli invasion). Will the US again fall for the Israeli trap of maintaining an unstable Lebanon as a pretext for continued intervention?
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Trump’s War Partner Fumes After He Blindsides Them
Laura Esposito
Wed, April 8, 2026
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is fuming that the 79-year-old American president reached a temporary ceasefire deal with Iran without consulting his wartime partner, The Wall Street Journal reported.
Trump announced Tuesday night that he had agreed to a two-week ceasefire with Iran in the war he launched alongside Israel on Feb. 28. The decision came minutes ahead of his deadline for the country to reopen the Strait of Hormuz—a vital waterway for the global economy—or “a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again.”
According to the Journal, Israel had no role in brokering the deal and was only informed after it had been finalized. Netanyahu begrudgingly agreed to the terms, but Israeli officials “weren’t happy”—particularly with Lebanon’s inclusion in the deal.
That frustration was evident in the early hours of Wednesday, not long after Trump had effectively declared peace, as missile and drone attacks continued to rain down across the Middle East while Israel pressed ahead with its offensive.
As of 3 p.m. EST Wednesday, Israel’s bombardment of Lebanon had killed 254 people and wounded more than 1,165 since the ceasefire deal was announced, Al Jazeera reported.
Pakistan, which negotiated the deal between the U.S. and Iran, asserted that the agreement included Lebanon—a claim both Israel and, later, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt denied.
Meanwhile, Iran and the U.S. are publicly disputing what, exactly, the 10-point framework both countries allegedly agreed to actually entails.
Iran’s publicly reported plan diverges sharply from Trump’s claims, including provisions the U.S. had previously rejected before the war. What’s more, the regime appears intent on continuing uranium enrichment, while Trump insists Iran is willing to abandon both its uranium stockpile and its nuclear weapons program.
The dispute comes as new details emerge about the extent of Netanyahu’s influence over Trump.
A bombshell New York Times report on Tuesday revealed that Netanyahu pitched Trump on the joint war effort against Iran before it was launched without congressional approval on Feb. 28. During a secret meeting with Trump’s top advisers, the far-right Israeli leader outlined an outcome that U.S. officials later described to the president as “detatched from reality.”
Days after the meeting, CIA Director John Ratcliffe summed up Netanyahu’s pitch to Trump in one word: “farcical,” the Times reported.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio also weighed in, reportedly telling Trump: “In other words, it’s bull—t.”
The Daily Beast has reached out to the White House and the Israeli prime minister’s office for comment.
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How the Jester and the Fool worked the Moron King who is now very angry at having been hoodwinked.
"Dumb McNamara" Pete Hegseth is the fool. Netanyahu is the jester.
‘Sounds good to me’: Trump ignored wary advisers as Israel’s Netanyahu talked him into war with Iran, report claims
Rhian Lubin
Wed, April 8, 2026
President Donald Trump was persuaded to unleash war on Iran by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu despite deep skepticism from his inner circle, according to a new report about the high-stakes meetings that took place in the buildup to the conflict.
The New York Times also reported that despite polling his top advisers, he often only heard “what he wanted to hear,” and his team wound up serving as an echo chamber for his gut instincts.
Vice President JD Vance was the most vocal in his opposition to the United States going to war with Iran, while CIA Director Jim Ratcliffe, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Gen. Dan Caine, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned Trump that Netanyahu had “oversold” him on what could be achieved by the bombing campaign, according to The New York Times.
None of them, though, except Vance, went as far as to say to the president that war was a “terrible idea,” according to the report. The vice president is said to have played a key role in negotiating a ceasefire between Iran and the U.S. as Trump threatened to wipe Iranian civilization off the map.
On Feb. 11, the Israelis gave a secret presentation to Trump and his closest advisers in the Situation Room, where they persuaded him that initiating a war on one of the most hostile regions in the world was a good idea, according to the Times report, which is based on reporting from the upcoming book, Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump by Jonathan Swan and Maggie Haberman.
President Donald Trump was persuaded to unleash war on Iran by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu despite deep skepticism from his inner circle, according to the report (Getty Images)
“Sounds good to me,” Trump reportedly told Netanyahu after the presentation, which the leader then took as a likely “green light” for the joint U.S.-Israeli operation that has since killed more than 3,500 people, including 1,600 civilians and 13 U.S. service members in the Middle East.
But at a follow-up meeting on Feb. 12 that consisted only of the Americans, U.S. intelligence officials broke down Netanyahu’s presentation into four parts; killing Ayatollah Ali Khamenei; destroying Iran’s capabilities to project power; a popular uprising inside the country, and regime change with a secular leader installed, according to the report.
While U.S. officials deemed that parts one and two were achievable, Ratcliffe said regime change as an objective was “farcical.”
“In other words, it’s bull****,” Rubio reportedly weighed in, while Vance “expressed strong skepticism” about the prospect.
Caine took it further and said the president had been “oversold” by the Israelis. “Sir, this is, in my experience, standard operating procedure for the Israelis,” Caine said, according to the Times. “They oversell, and their plans are not always well-developed. They know they need us, and that’s why they’re hard-selling.”
The Independent has contacted the White House for comment.
Some of Trump’s top advisers warned him that Netanyahu had ‘oversold’ him on what could be achieved by bombing the regime (AFP/Getty)
Vice President JD Vance was the most vocally opposed to the United States going to war with Iran and told the president his objections in the Situation Room, according to the report (Getty Images)
Over the following days, Caine reportedly shared with Trump “the alarming military assessment” that waging war with Iran would “drastically deplete” stockpiles of American weapons. In particular, he warned about supplies of missile interceptors, which had been strained after supporting Ukraine and Israel. Vance shared the same concern.
Caine also “flagged the enormous difficulty of securing the Strait of Hormuz and the risks of Iran blocking it,” and yet Trump “dismissed” the possibility. The president assumed that Iran would surrender before it got to that point, according to the report.
But Iran’s grip on the Strait has remained intact, with the regime blocking vessels that transport a fifth of the world’s oil, likely prompting Trump to post an expletive-laden Truth Social over the weekend.
While Caine gave Trump these warnings, “at no point during the deliberations did the chairman directly tell the president that war with Iran was a terrible idea,” the Times reports.
Two days before Trump gave the order to bomb Iran on February 28, he gathered the most senior members of his team and went around the room “one by one” to ask them for their personal opinions about going to war.
But by this point, Trump had “effectively made up his mind weeks earlier, several of his advisers said,” according to the newspaper.
Vance, who told Trump that going to war with Iran could unleash regional chaos and create mass casualties, also warned him that it risked splitting his base — and that it could be seen as “a betrayal” by many of his voters.
‘Sounds good to me,’ Trump reportedly told Netanyahu, which the Israeli leader was said to take as a likely ‘green light’ for the joint U.S.-Israeli operation (Getty Images)
White House communications director Steven Cheung also spoke of the “likely public relations fallout” given Trump campaigned on being opposed to launching wars overseas, according to the report.
Ultimately, Cheung reportedly said that “whatever decision Trump made would be the right one.”
Trump’s chief of staff Susie Wiles reportedly told colleagues that “she worried” about the U.S. “being dragged into another war in the Middle East,” but opted to “sit back” in the high-stakes meeting. According to people close to her, she believed it was not her place to air those concerns to the president in front of others and instead encouraged military advisers to share their expertise with him.
White House counsel David Warrington, who represented Trump during the House select committee investigation into Jan. 6, was pressed by the president to share his personal view.
“He said that as a Marine veteran he had known an American service member killed by Iran years earlier,” the Times reports. “This issue remained deeply personal. He told the president that if Israel intended to proceed regardless, the United States should do so as well.”
The White House declined to comment when approached for comment by the newspaper.


