Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Iran War is on a Slippery Slope: Another Doomed Republican Adventure

More US troops are heading to Iran. Marines of the 82nd Airborn division are making their way there. Trump thinks he's smart for being ambiguous: The statements he makes are so contradictory to one another that one should look at what he's doing, not what's he's saying. He says the war "might be winding down soon". That's a lie. He thinks he can de-alarm the Iranian regime and reduce its state of mobilization with statements like this, while he is sending more ground troops. He can fool his own MAGA morons, but not the rest of the world.

Trump plans to take over Iran. Which means that we are on the very dangerous slippery slope in which the US slowly gets trapped in its own arrogance, which makes any honorable exit increasingly difficult.

Trump has therefore engaged the US in a war whose outcome can only be guessed based on precedent. Every war the US fought since 1945 has ended in disaster, humiliation, tens of thousands of American deaths and millions of deaths among the civilian population of the targeted country, except the easy invasion of Kuwait in 1991 to expel Saddam Hussein back to Iraq.

The US generally operates with "quantity", not "quality". It can send half a million soldiers to invade and occupy a country with sophisticated flashy war technology, but it ultimately doesn't have the know-how to sustain the brutality of its invasion with the appropriate management of an occcupied population that is generally ready to suicide itself in its resistance to the occupier.

Iran is probably far more difficult than Afghanistan to control. Compared to the Taliban, the Iranians are far more organized and sophisticated, and their history shows they can pull all the cruelty and savagery that the Taliban were capable of.

Trump is sending thousands of US soldiers to die in Iran. For what? Not to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear bomb - that's pulling a George W Bush and Tony Blair WMD hoax pretext to invade Iraq in 2003. Trump's only concern is MONEY. He wants Iranian oil and gas to mitigate his destruction of American democracy and economy. He thinks money can solve ALL problems, and that is his Achilles heel. His own history of pursuit of wealth without any brains behind it has led all his entreprises to fail and go bankrupt. He hasn't learned from his experiences and he is gambling with the country by thinking he can salvage a declining America by waging yet another failed war.
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How Trump’s war is slipping out of control
Analysis by Stephen Collinson, CNN
Fri, March 20, 2026


US President Donald Trump listens during a roundtable in the White House in Washington, DC, on March 6. - Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

The question is no longer whether President Donald Trump has lost control of the narrative of his new war in Iran.

It’s whether he’s lost control of the war itself.

Wars, once begun, create their own insidious momentum that can outpace a White House’s political messaging. If they defy a president’s capacity to determine their direction, political quicksand beckons.

After the thunderclap opening of the conflict with the assassination of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Trump’s team might have hoped to be in a better place three weeks in. Instead, the way out remains impossible to identify.

While the United States and Israel have undeniably visited huge destruction on Tehran’s military industrial complex and machinery of repression, Iran has seized the initiative by widening the impact of the war. Its closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a vital oil shipping route, threatens to paralyze the global economy. Americans are already hurting, with average gasoline prices heading towards $4 a gallon.

Things could get worse.

Regional oil and gas installations across the Gulf region are under attack. Trump insisted Thursday he hadn’t known that Israel planned to attack Iran’s South Pars gas field. CNN sources contradicted his claim — which was hard to square given tight US-Israeli coordination. The president then said he’d told Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “don’t do that.”

But the episode only exacerbated concern among MAGA critics that Israel, and not the US, is running the war.

Gulf states hit by days of missile and drone alerts are frustrated that the economic miracle exemplified by their futuristic cityscapes is in danger from a war their US ally started that they didn’t want.

Trump meanwhile is fuming that he can’t simply order Europeans to send ships to open the Strait. “This is not our war,” German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said this week.

An administration that never got its story straight on the Iranian nuclear threat that is being used as a justification for the war has so far offered no plan for what Trump means when he says it will end “soon.” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth warned Thursday that there were no definite time frames for an exit. “It will be at the president’s choosing, ultimately, where we say, ‘Hey, we’ve achieved what we need to on behalf of the American people to ensure our security.’”

But lawmakers, who are about to be asked by the administration for as much as $200 billion to fund the war and possibly more, are going to need answers.

“The people in Alaska are asking me how long is this going on?” Sen. Lisa Murkowski told CNN’s Lauren Fox. “Are there going to be boots on the ground, how much is this going to cost?” These questions are especially acute in Alaska, which has one of the highest concentrations of active duty soldiers and veterans. The minuscule GOP majority is about to face its biggest test and this question: If dissident MAGA Republicans balk, will Democrats really help Trump fund his war in a midterm election year? Here’s House Speaker Mike Johnson’s answer: “We’ll find out.”

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth (L) arrives for a press briefing with Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Air Force General Dan Caine (R) at the Pentagon on Thursday in Arlington, Virginia. - Win McNamee/Getty Images

‘No forever war’: Hegseth

Trump is defiant. “We’ve obliterated just about everything there is to obliterate,” he said in the Oval Office Thursday.

And Hegseth rebuked reporters who “think just 19 days into this conflict that we’re somehow spinning toward an endless abyss or a forever war or a quagmire.”

Up to a point, he has a point.

Thousands of US and Israeli sorties and missile strikes surely delivered an operational victory. Iran’s capacity to threaten its region must be a fraction of what it was. But has the pummeling fatally weakened the regime’s political foundation? Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said Wednesday it was degraded but “appears to be intact.”

Iran might be losing Trump’s war. But it’s winning its own.

A brutal regime that has killed thousands of its people and which none of its neighbors would miss has one goal: its own survival. That means raising the economic price for the rest of the world — and therefore the political heat on Trump. It’s already shown that shutting down tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is a potent weapon. It’s odd then, the administration didn’t anticipate its use. “(You) don’t need to worry about it,” Hegseth said of the vital waterway — seven days ago.

Maritime experts warn that reopening the Strait will be dangerous. Aerial bombardment can only do so much. A substantial ground force might be needed to flush out drone and missile launch sites in mountainous terrain bordering the Strait. Trump therefore is nearing a fateful choice almost every modern commander in chief has faced: To get out of a war, must he escalate first?

Residents watch and take pictures as flames and smoke rise from an oil storage facility struck as attacks hit the city during the US–Israeli military campaign in Tehran, Iran, on March 7. - Alireza Sotakbar/ISNA/AP

“I’m not putting troops anywhere. If I were, I certainly wouldn’t tell you, but I’m not putting troops,” the president told reporters Thursday, but grasping for a way to change the subject, he produced a non sequitur. “Look, the Dow just hit 50,000 a couple of weeks ago.”

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested lifting sanctions on Iranian oil already at sea in a bid to lower oil prices. This would mean the US allowing its enemy a way to finance its war effort. Even if this is a bluff to soothe oil markets, it speaks of a fast-growing crisis.

It doesn’t seem like there’s a plan.

“I don’t think we have a clue what our objective is at this point. It seems to change by the day and, you know, it was just not foreseen that this was going to be a protracted war when really it should have been,” Nate Swanson, who was director for Iran on the National Security Council in the Biden administration and served on Trump’s Iran negotiating team in early 2025, told Becky Anderson on CNN International.

Washington has been betting for days on when Trump would declare victory and bring the troops home.

But the spiraling conflict means he may no longer have that option.

“Nobody can deliver perfection in wartime,” Hegseth said Thursday.

That’s fair, but “perfection” is nowhere close. After starting a new war, Trump doesn’t control how long it will last, where it will spread, how much it will cost and how badly it will complicate the lives of inflation-weary Americans.

And it’s in danger of defining his second presidency.

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Donald Dumb's Plan to Cheat and Steal Upcoming 2026 Elections

Remember DARVO? "Deny, Attack, and Reverse Victim and Offender" from [https://lebanoniznogood.blogspot.com/2026/03/just-like-zionists-trump-uses-darvo.html]

Trump is planning to cheat in the 2026 elections this coming November. His plan is to cheat by claiming the other side is cheating. That is, the criminal is planning to play the victim. Claiming "victimhood" has been successful throughout history; it invokes pity for one's cause and justifies the fake victim's use of violence and illegal means.

That is how the Anglo-Saxon Zionist colony in Palestine, known as "Israel", came to exist. "Oh," the Zionists told the Westerners, "have pity on us, victims of your European and American antisemitism; To atone for your barbarity, please let us be the barbarians this time around and rape some country, Palestine, and exterminate another people, the Palestinians."

The Zionists played the victim card, inflicted sufficient guilt on Western antisemites who then encouraged them to rape an innocent nation. And the criminal Western antisemites obliged: They prodded, funded, assisted, armed and encouraged hundreds of thousand European and American Zionist settlers invade the shores of Palestine, exterminate the indigenous Palestinians by the hundreds of thousands, expel more from their ancestral villages and towns into squalid refugee camps, both inside and outside of Palestine, eradicate 600 villages from the maps, rape, slash and burn, and demolish entire communities and replace them with fresh-off-the-boat fundamentalist settlers. If there is any truth to the theory of GREAT REPLACEMENT, it applies first and foremost to how the Palestinian people have been replaced by European and American fundamentalist barbarians.

Over the past 100 years, nothing has changed in the Zionist blackmail: In what remains of Palestine today, Zionist settlers continue to slash, burn, rape, demolish, uproot, expel, kill.... And the westerners who enabled this monumental crime do nothing about it. The Palestinian victims, deprived of all their rights and means, have become the "terrorists" for trying to salvage what remains of their country, as they continue to try and resist the 100-year-old assault on their existence.

Trump is cloning the Zionist strategy by being the criminal who plays the victim, and it unfortunately works with the imbeciles of MAGA who believe the criminal jackass.

Excerpts from:

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/trump-election-2026-ballots_n_69bc3dbfe4b06f4d9c81cfde?utm_campaign=yahoo-recirc

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‘Everything Is On The Table’: Officials Prepare For Trump To Try To Steal The 2026 Election
Paul Blumenthal
Fri, March 20, 2026

When the Department of Justice raided the election offices in Fulton County, Georgia, to seize ballots, tabulations and other materials related to the 2020 election on Jan. 28, it signaled a new phase in President Donald Trump’s efforts to prove his conspiracy theory about election fraud. It also raised a new fear that this president, who already tried to steal one election, may be setting the stage to try to steal another.

That raid wasn’t just about settling Trump’s old scores, but it also looked like “a test run for messing with election administrators and the counting of ballots in the midterm elections in 2026,” Richard Hasen, an election expert at UCLA Law School, wrote in Slate in January.

See also: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/donald-trump-2026-election-threat_n_688d1e69e4b022c2fddf099b?utm_campaign=yahoo-recirc

Since entering politics in 2015, Trump has claimed, falsely, that every election he has taken part in was marred by fraud. In his second term in office, he has moved to weaponize the federal government against this imaginary fraud by seeking to restrict voting and seize control of the electoral process from the states. This has led to mounting fears that he will seek to interfere in the 2026 midterms in various ways, including deploying the National Guard, surrounding the polls with immigration enforcement officers, declaring a national security emergency — and, following the raid in Fulton County, seizing ballots and voting machines.

.........

Democratic secretaries of state say they are getting ready for all possible forms of midterm election interference from the Trump administration such as seizing ballots like it did in Fulton County.

“If anything like that happened in Colorado, the first thing that we would do is immediately go to court to try to quash the effort,” said Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold. “We’ve been preparing for this event and many other scenarios of federal disruption in our election.”

In Minnesota, Secretary of State Steve Simon said his office is working with national groups and other secretaries of state to plan how to respond if the federal government interferes in the election by attempting to seize ballots or in any other fashion.

................

There are two legitimate ways that the administration could seize ballots in the aftermath of an election: issuing a warrant or a subpoena for them. Both must be approved by the courts.

“With a warrant, there is a judicial check in advance,” Weiser said.

The raid in Fulton County, however, raises the specter that a judge may approve a warrant based on false information. The legality of that warrant — which was riddled with disproven conspiracies while omitting key facts — is now being challenged in court by Fulton County election officials seeking the seized records be returned. The challenge specifically cites “Material Omissions and Misstatements” in the affidavit the government used as the basis for requesting the warrant. That may put judges on alert for misrepresentations from the administration in judicial warrants going forward.

“Because of the actions in Fulton County, election officials, law enforcement officials and magistrate judges are very well aware of the threat and are now able to prepare in advance for this potential abuse and to make sure that it is not disruptive,” Weiser said. “I would be very surprised if another judge approved a warrant like the one in Fulton County.”

Another potential line of defense, ironically, comes thanks to Trump’s own allies.

It stems from a Supreme Court ruling that only came down a few months ago. In Bost v. Illinois State Board of Elections, the court, in an opinion written by Chief Justice John Roberts, ruled that Rep. Mike Bost (R-Ill.), who backed Trump’s election fraud lies in 2020, had standing to challenge election rules — the timing of counting late mail-in ballots, in this case — before suffering any potential harm.

It’s a crucial distinction when it comes to potential election chicanery. Normally, those bringing suit have to be harmed first to have standing to sue. In election cases, that usually means that candidates cannot challenge new election rules until after the election has concluded and they perceive that the rules harmed the outcome of their race. But the justices ruled 7-2 that, even if they still win, “candidates suffer when the process departs from the law,” and that departure can “deprive the candidate of a fair process and an accurate result.”

It puts a potential new tool in the arsenal of those watching for election denial in 2026 and beyond.

“By this standard, a candidate undoubtedly has an interest in stopping the FBI from taking steps that would (in the chief justice’s words) ‘deprive the candidate of a fair process and an accurate result,’” Ohio State Moritz College of Law election law director Edward Foley wrote in a post for SCOTUSblog.

Seizing ballots, voting machines, tabulators or any other piece of election infrastructure directly threatens a “fair process” and an “accurate result” because it breaks the chain of custody that is required by state and federal law. Under Foley’s theory of Bost, a candidate could then file suit in advance of the election to seek an injunction barring any executive branch agency from seizing election materials.

But even if candidates choose not to test out the court’s Bost decision on the theory that it applies to threatened executive actions, states and election administrators can also step in.

Asked about using the Bost precedent to get a court order preventing federal interference in advance, Griswold noted that, while she wouldn’t divulge her litigation strategy, states have used preemptive action before: She pointed to Oregon and Illinois, which went to court to block National Guard deployments in 2025.

“So, absolutely, everything is on the table,” Griswold said.

Courts could also halt interference ahead of time by simply not approving DOJ warrants seeking ballots or other materials. The warrant in Fulton County also targeted materials from a now-six-year-old election, not an election that is underway or just completed. Any judge would be far more skeptical about a similar warrant for an ongoing election, Weiser said.

Similarly, a subpoena provides an opportunity to counter it: States and election officials may be able to step in and sue for an injunction before any materials are seized. And state election officials are already on high alert to the administration’s efforts to interfere in elections, having worked successfully to defeat Trump’s executive order on elections and lawsuits to seize sensitive voter roll records by getting judges to block the effort repeatedly in court.

“They are trying very aggressively to meddle in elections and expand inappropriate powers, but there’s been a lot of success in reining that in,” Weiser said of the administration. “These are not paths that are viable for them.”

Read the original on HuffPost

Solution for Iran's Nuclear Stalemate: Mutual Deterrence for All

Since nuclear weapons have prevented major countries from waging wars with one another (e.g. Russia vs US, or Pakistan vs India, or North Korea vs. US-Japan-South Korea), one solution to the Iran nuclear dilemma is for the US to allow radical Shiite Muslim Iran to pursue its nuclear program (assuming it is for military purposes) while giving nuclear weapons, or at least the means to develop them, to its beloved "allies and friends", the equally radical Sunni Muslim states of Saudi Arabia and the British colonialism-manufactured Gulf emirates and states.

I don't think the West in general and the US in particular are concerned about Iran because it is ruled by radical Islamists. Pakistan is ruled by radical Islamists, India by Radical Hindus, and North Korea by the radical nutcase family Kim family. Then again, Israel is ruled by radical Jewish Zionists. So I am not sure what the big problem is if Iran acquires a nuclear weapon while Saudi Arabia and others are also allowed to do so.

When everybody has a nuclear weapon, then everyone will be reluctant to use these weapons and thus will feel safe, knowing that they can't use nuclear weapons against their neighbors unless they are willing to commit their own nuclear suicide. Mutual deterrence has now worked for 80 years; that's a fantastic record. Why not spread the joy of mutual deterrence to the Middle East and bring an end to the endless torment of the peoples in the region? 

There will no longer be a need for more decades of acrimony, negotiations, inspections, sanctions and threats and, lately, a war that is supposed to bring an end to more wars. It's a vicious cycle, like the snake eating its own tail.

Then again, the nuclear club on the Security Council is very discriminatory. Imagine the absurdity of the veto, which allows a nuclear country to block any action to solve problems simply because it has a nuclear bomb. This is akin to extortion and blackmail. Why is it that the "nuclear" can bully the "non-nuclear" by imposing their will simply because they have a powerful weapon? It's just patently unfair. We've been told over and over that humanity has made progress.... I don't think so. I believe we are the deadliest animal species that never learns from its past. 

 

Friday, March 20, 2026

Trump is Literally Robbing Would-Be Immigrants

The Trump administration deliberately tells would-be immigrants to apply for legal visas, pay exorbitant fees, knowing full well it will never issue them a visa.

Marco Rubio, son of Cuban immigrants, with his big ears and his big shoes, is now ripping off Cuban immigrants. 

Note that immigrants from the main countries concerned - Cuba, Haiti and Venezuela - are overwhelmingly of Black Africa ancestry.
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Trump Accused of Stealing $1 Billion From Migrants
Will Neal, Tom Latchem
Thu, March 19, 2026

President Donald Trump is allegedly wringing eye-watering sums of money from the very same people he has decided not to let into the country.

The Cato Institute, an independent think-tank based in D.C., published figures on Wednesday on what it calls “the largest fraud in the history of the U.S. immigration system.

The non-profit accuses Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and outgoing Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem of charging a conservative estimate of $1.3 billion to migrants in fees for visa processing and other services they have precisely zero intention of providing.

Rubio, who is of Cuban heritage, is accused of a fraud disproportionately affecting Cuban nationals. / Rebecca Blackwell / via REUTERS

The administration is allegedly continuing to impose those costs on prospective immigrants from more than 90 countries despite the fact that they are, as a result of the Trump administration’s policies, effectively “banned from receiving immigrant visas and immigrating permanently to the United States.”

Under Rubio’s leadership, officials at the State Department have apparently even gone so far as to issue internal guidance actively prohibiting staff from informing those migrants they stand no hope of success, because “this could be seen as pre-adjudication” on their applications.

Trump fired Noem earlier this month amid outrage over a slew of scandals that engulfed her time as Homeland Security Secretary. / Kevin Dietsch / Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

“Cubans represent the largest group of affected applicants with nearly a million affected applications at a combined cost of $543 million,” the publication writes.

Rubio is of Cuban heritage. The Trump administration has increasingly threatened military action against the Caribbean island nation, which remains in the throes of a deep economic crisis marked by severe shortages of fuel, food, and medicine, along with prolonged blackouts and sky-high inflation.

“The second most common was Venezuelans, with 239,000 applications at a cost of $138 million,” the Cato Institute adds.

Trump carried out a lightning invasion of Venezuela—which has long suffered from human rights abuses, hyperinflation and economic mismanagement—to capture President Nicolas Maduro earlier in January. The attack has sparked widespread political instability and economic uncertainty, following years of financial collapse, corruption and political repression.

The fraud alleged by the Cato Institute stems from a trio of policies advanced by the Trump administration. In December, the president imposed an effective travel ban for citizens of 40 countries, disproportionately affecting nations in Africa as well as Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and Haiti, because he claims it’s too hard to “vet” people from those countries.

In November, DHS froze immigration benefits for individuals from those countries already living in the U.S., while the State Department imposed an indefinite halt on visa processing for 75 countries, citing unsubstantiated claims about welfare use.

The Daily Beast has contacted the White House, the State Department and DHS for comment on this story.

The Pimp-in-Chief is Now Bitching About his Hoe Israel

 February 4, 2025: Trump-Netanyahu joint press conference, US tariffs ...

By bombing the Iranian facility linked to South Pars, the largest natural gas field in the world, which Iran shares with Qatar, Trump's Israel bitch in the Middle East has jeopardized Trump's oil-soaked money-making schemes. So now he is angry at his own Zionist hoe, Benjamin Netanyahu.

Donald Trump has gone rogue on his war partner Israel for its attack on a vital energy facility in Iran. The Moron-in-Chief claims Israel did not ask for his permission. He and Israel are obviously playing good cop-bad cop with the credulous Arab Gulf morons: Israel did it, we didn't. 

South Pars is considered to be the largest natural gas field in the world. It was bombed by Israel as part of the shooting range orgy that the American Evangelicals are partaking in with their Israeli Zionist buddies. Problem for oil-greedy Trump is that South Pars is shared by both Iran and Qatar, and the latter is one of the decadent ultra-wealthy Arab Gulf states that are, for all practical purposes, the Islamist cognates of Zionist Israel in their incestuous relationship as vassals of imperial Christian America. So when the twin children of America, Qatar and Israel, fight each other, Daddy Trump gets upset.

He is mostly concerned that the war on Iran will ultimately turn against his ambition to siphon off some of that gas and oil for himself and his children whose business deals in the region are raising many eyebrows. Further, his Arab Muslim allies cannot sustain their enmity to Muslim Iran and their love affair with imperial US for too long. Their populations in such glitzy-on-the-surface but vapid-on-substance Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Bahrein etc, all now under the bombs because the imbecile in the Whouthouse, will at some point start asking questions. After all, these populations have agreed to become a kennel for the West because they have sedated their populations with money, brainless American movies, humongous cars and disgusting fast food. If the supply of the latter condiments of high American culture were to start drying up (I heard that 80% of all investments had fled the Gulf because of Trump's war), unrest and dissatisfaction might ensue.

Here is the Moron's verbal diarrhea on the subject:


Donald Trump posts about Israel's strike in Iran. / screen grab

“Israel, out of anger for what has taken place in the Middle East, has violently lashed out at a major facility known as South Pars Gas Field in Iran,” Trump wrote. “The United States knew nothing about this particular attack, and the country of Qatar was in no way, shape, or form, involved with it, nor did it have any idea that it was going to happen,” the Idiot added.

It has always been a hallmark of American policy in the region to strike a balance between embracing Zionist Israel's rape of Palestine on one hand, and keeping Muslim and Arab anger at bay on the other.

The argument of whether the US knew or did not know of Israel's attack on South Pars is not interesting because the two bullies sleep together every night. Such an argument between a pimp and his bitch is within the standard norms of fornicating relations. The bottom line is that Trump is distancing himself from his Israeli bitch in order to safeguard the Arab Gulf states' compliance with his dictates. He doesn't want to upset the Gulf Arabs because they have oil and they are rich. His plans to further enrich himself, his family and his billionaire buddies could run aground if he appears to have endorsed Israel's attack on Qatar.
 

To wit, the Moron said, “I do not want to authorize this level of violence and destruction because of the long term implications that it will have on the future of Iran", thus revealing his expectations to make money out of Iran's oil and gas once the war is over. It will cost him a lot to rebuild the energy infrastructures on Pars Island.

The latest attacks on energy fields in the Middle East have caused Brent oil prices to rise by over 7 percent to $111.23 a barrel after the strike.

Thursday, March 19, 2026

What do Republicans Fear from Public Hearings on Iran War? The Truth, the Facts

Jesus-freak and MAGA's House buffoon and King Trump's fool - Mike Johnson, a pathetically small (physically and mentally) man from the backward state of Louisiana - is denying the American public the truth on Iran, although superhero Jesus Loveman once told him, "The truth shall set you free". Alas, MAGAs are morons, just like their demented senile King.

Mike Johnson says public hearings "would adversely affect our mission." (Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images) (Anna Moneymaker)

Yup, secrecy and lack of transparency are usually a recipe for success in wars. Think Vietnam (50,000 conscripted US soldiers killed and several million innocent Vietnamese civilians were killed by bombings, Napalm burnings and Agent Orange sprayings). Asked, "did "the Republican criminal" Dick Nixon hide the mounting death toll in Vietnam?", AI responded:

"Yes, President Nixon and his administration were criticized for downplaying the death toll and the overall impact of the Vietnam War, often presenting a more optimistic view to the public. This included efforts to control information and manage perceptions about the war's progress and casualties." 

As the body bags were landing on US soil, Nixon (impeached GOP criminal) kept the mounting US presence and death toll in Vietnam a secret so as "not to compromise the mission". The "mission" ended up a monumental failure and the Americans ended up leaving Saigon like fearful rats in April 1975 after surrendering the country to the Communists.
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Republican leaders reject demands for public hearings on Trump's war with Iran
Scott Wong
Wed, March 18, 2026 

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said public hearings "would adversely affect our mission." (Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images) (Anna Moneymaker)

WASHINGTON — As the Iran war stretches into its third week, Democrats say they’re done with all of the classified briefings from top administration officials.

They now want public hearings into whether President Donald Trump plans to put U.S. boots on the ground in Iran, secure nuclear material there and how he plans to end the deadly conflict in the Middle East.

Few Republicans agree such hearings are needed. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., went even further, suggesting that public hearings would compromise the operation in Iran.

Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va. who has led unsuccessful efforts to pass war powers resolutions to rein in Trump’s military operations, said that Trump "hasn't given a rationale that’s convincing for this. ... We have now said we’re tired of the classified briefings. We’re tired of hiding this from the public."

“When you keep something in secret, there’s a reason you keep it in secret because you don’t believe it will stand analysis in the light of day,” he said.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., a member of the Foreign Relations Committee, agreed. “If this administration thinks it can defend this war — I don’t know how it can — then it should send Pete Hegseth and Marco Rubio to the Senate next week for a hearing in front of the relevant committees,” Murphy said of Trump’s secretaries of Defense and State.

If Republicans ignore their demands, Murphy and Kaine said, Democrats will force more votes on Trump's war powers, putting more political pressure on the GOP.

“I think they’ll lose votes in the Senate if they actually have to go in front of the American public and explain why gas prices are so high, explain whether we’re engaged in regime change or whether we’re not, explain how they’re going to get the nuclear weapons and the nuclear material without the ground invasion," Murphy said. "I don’t think they have answers for any of that.

There’s confusion on and off Capitol Hill about Trump’s strategy with Iran. Who exactly will seize Iran’s nuclear materials? Does the president want regime change? And how does he intend to end Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, which is causing oil prices to climb?

Just this week, NATO allies and other nations rejected Trump’s pleas to help pressure Iran to end its blockade of the key waterway. The president then wrote: “WE DO NOT NEED THE HELP OF ANYONE!”

One key Republican, Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who had been privately and publicly urging Trump to strike Iran this year, said he believes Republicans should hold public hearings at the “appropriate” time.

“I think we need to. I think we need to showcase what we did and why we did it, but we’re in the middle of doing it,” said Graham, who is running for re-election this year. “But it’s very important for me to tell people back home, Americans over there have to be over there to prevent the Ayatollah from getting a nuclear weapon.”

Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., a member of Armed Services, said he has no objection to doing public hearings, “but I still want my classifieds.”

And retiring Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., conceded that hearings will happen “at some point” because “we have to learn from our successes; we have to learn from any mistakes.”

But the top two Republicans in Congress — Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D. — both pushed back on Democrats’ call for public hearings.

Thune said top Trump officials have been holding “plenty of news conferences” with reporters and multiple closed-door briefings with lawmakers. Hegseth, Rubio and others have held separate classified briefings with all members of the House and Senate.

On Tuesday, Steve Witkoff, the U.S. special envoy to the Middle East, led a classified briefing with a small, bipartisan group of senators.

“I’m not sure what the Democrats’ objective would be in a case like that, other than to try and find some way to embarrass them,” Thune said of hearings. “But honestly, I think the hard questions you’re asking them, we’re obviously asking them in closed sessions.”

Johnson argued that holding public hearings on the war — just weeks after its Feb. 28 start — could harm the U.S. mission there.

“We’re in the midst of a couple-of-weeks-long operation that’s sensitive in its mission and scope, and you cannot go outside of the classified briefing to give to the public the information, because it would adversely affect our mission,” the speaker told reporters Tuesday. “They have well explained this to members of Congress in multiple briefings, both before, during and after the operation commenced.”

After receiving multiple classified briefings, Johnson said he was confident Iran posed an “imminent threat” to the U.S. and that had Trump not acted ​​there would have been “mass casualties of Americans.”

Asked if he plans to hold a public hearing on Iran, Senate Armed Services Chairman Roger Wicker, R-Miss. told NBC News: “I don’t have those plans."

Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., said she didn't think public hearings would be that helpful. Things she heard in the classified briefings she had already seen in the news, Lummis said.

“I have learned more about the war by listening to the news than I’ve learned in classified briefings by the administration," Lummis said in an interview. "You all know as much as we know, and so there’s no additive advantage to having hearings."

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

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Meanwhile, the same MAGA Moron from Louisiana wants more money to waste on Trump's war on Iran, despite saying America is not at war

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THE INDEPENDENT

House Speaker Mike Johnson has called for a supplemental spending bill amid President Donald Trump’s escalating war with Iran – despite the fact the speaker has said that the United States is not at war.

“The presumption is we would need a supplemental because we’ve used quite a bit of munitions and we’ve got to replenish the stock,” he told The Independent. “It makes logical sense, I think, to everybody.”

Earlier in the day, Johnson said in his weekly press conference that the war is in its final phases. “This is being watched very carefully, but we're in the midst of an operation that is winding down, according to the president himself,” he said. “We are very close to having the mission completed.” [Yet there's increasing talk of 2,500 US Marines making their way to Iran's coastline and to put "boots on the ground". Not very reassuring statements].

The Center for Strategic & International Studies estimated the U.S. has spent $16.5 billion by day 12 of the war. Tuesday marked the 18th day of the war.

Congress has debated the conflict that was started without legislative authorization. Congress is delegated the power to declare war by the Constitution.

Before the House adjourned two weeks ago, the House voted down a War Powers Act resolution led by Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) on Iran. That would have required that the White House inform Congress within 48 hours of troops being deployed and require that troops be withdrawn within 60 days if Congress had not filed a formal declaration of war or authorized the use of military force.

Johnson, on Tuesday, has also defended the fact that all of the briefings around Iran have been classified and there have been no open briefings.

“We're in the midst of a of a couple of weeks-long operation that's very sensitive in its mission and scope, and you cannot go outside of the classified briefing to give to the public the information, because it would adversely affect our mission,” he told reporters.

Despite Johnson’s repeated declarations that the United States is not at war, the White House and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have repeatedly used the word.

“We’re not at war right now, we’re four days into a very specific, clear mission and operation,” Johnson said a few days after the Trump administration and Israel began their joint attack on the Iranian regime.

The White House has said that the war is in the final phases, while at the same time hinting that troops might be sent into Iran.

Democrats have criticized the fact Congress have had its authority to rein in Trump significantly curtailed.

“Did no one ask whether this Strait of Hormuz would be closed by Iran? Did no one actually ask about what the extent of civilian casualties would be in Iran? Did nobody ask about what military casualties would be on our side?” Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland told The Independent. “So this is why it's got to be up to Congress for deliberation and debate and decision, it's not up to Donald Trump or JD Vance or Tulsi Gabbard.”

Democratic Rep. Yassamin Ansari of Arizona, who is Iranian-American, said Democrats should oppose a supplemental spending package.

“Democrats absolutely should not vote for a supplemental on a war that has again, never been justified to the American people,” she told The Independent.

The World Fears Trump Might Go Nuclear on Iran to Save Face



Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters

In [https://lebanoniznogood.blogspot.com/2026/03/can-us-win-war-against-iran.html], I suggested the possibility that the madman imbecile in the WhoutHouse might use nuclear bombs to force Iran to surrender and save himself from a colossal failure, inspired by President Truman's use of nuclear bombs to force Japan to surrender. But unlike 1945, when the US was the only country with a nuclear arsenal, many more countries have a nuclear bomb. If Trump goes ahead with nuking Iran, his fellow dictators in Russia (might nuke Ukraine), China (might nuke Taiwan), Israel (might nuke Lebanon), etc. could follow his example. Let the radiation-laden fireworks begin!
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Panicked Officials Preparing for Trump’s War Going Nuclear
Ewan Palmer
Wed, March 18, 2026

Officials at the World Health Organization are preparing for the possibility that President Donald Trump’s war with Iran could escalate into a nuclear catastrophe.

Hanan Balkhy, the WHO’s regional director for the Eastern Mediterranean, told Politico that U.N. officials are monitoring the region in case the U.S. or Israel targets one of Iran’s nuclear sites, adding that officials are “vigilant” about how far the conflict could escalate.

“The worst-case scenario is a nuclear incident, and that’s something that worries us the most,” Balkhy said. “As much as we prepare, there’s nothing that can prevent the harm that will come… the region’s way—and globally if this eventually happens—and the consequences are going to last for decades.”

Balkhy said WHO staff are preparing for several possible scenarios, including an attack on a nuclear facility or the use of a nuclear weapon. “We are thinking about it, and we’re just really hoping that it does not happen,” she said.

Donald Trump said the war aims to to “eliminate the imminent nuclear threat"

As part of those preparations, the WHO is reminding staff of protocols for responding to a nuclear incident, including how to offer guidance to officials about the long-term health risks linked to radiation exposure.

“I think those who read the history of previous incidents, whether intentional or accidental, are very aware of what we’re talking about,” Balkhy said.

Radiation from the 1986 Chernobyl disaster was blamed for a sharp rise in thyroid cancer and other diseases in surrounding regions for years after the explosion. As many as 240,000 people are estimated to have died as a result of the U.S. dropping atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.

The U.S. and Israel have a nuclear arsenal, but there is no evidence that Iran does. / Alex Wong/Getty Images

In response, White House spokesperson Anna Kelly told the Daily Beast: “President Trump is addressing the long-term threat that the terrorist Iranian regime poses to America and our allies. This is a perfect example of how WHO has become an incredible organization that no one takes seriously.”

Trump has justified the war in Iran by claiming the country is close to acquiring a nuclear bomb—something Tehran has vehemently denied—while also accusing it of plotting attacks on the U.S.

This comes despite the president previously boasting that the U.S. had “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear facilities during July 2025 airstrikes.

Joe Kent resigned as director of the National Counterterrorism Center on Tuesday, saying Iran posed “no imminent threat” to the U.S.

Trump has rejected suggestions that Israel could be the one to use a nuclear weapon against Iran.

“Israel wouldn’t do that. Israel would never do that,” Trump told reporters in the White House East Room.

The president was asked about the possibility of nuclear weapons being used after his cryptocurrency czar, David Sacks, raised concerns on the All-In Podcast about a potential “escalatory approach” in the conflict.

“Israel could get seriously destroyed,” Sacks said. “And then you have to worry about Israel escalating the war by contemplating using a nuclear
weapon.”

Trump is Proud to Have Doubled the National Debt

He cut millions of average Americans out of their jobs. He saved money. He withdrew the US from nearly all its international obligations (UN agencies, etc.). He saved money. He shut down all kinds of programs (equal opportunity, social security, parks, museums, etc.). He saved money. He imposed haphazard tariffs and made some money there (off the back of the average American who is now paying more for everything as a result). He stole other countries' oil to make some money. He saved money by not supplying Ukraine and deserving countries with weapons to defend themselves against Trump's favorite dictator Putin.

He waged wars that are uncessary and very costly. He gave free money to the dictator of Argentina to save his ass. He splurged many billions on colonial Israel so it commits genocide against the indigenous people of Palestine. He splurged on a useless ballroom and other government-owned buildings. He used his office to enrich himself and his family by grafting his businesses onto his supposed peace deals with, and between, other countries. He created clubs (the Board of Piss and others) with paying memberships. He gave a tax break to his billionnaire buddies. He extorted media and universities to force them to comply with his anti-Human Rights agenda.

All together, his "policies" have nearly doubled the national debt. Bottom line: He spent more than he brought in. He, his billionnaire friends, his Zionist handlers and his billionnaire family made money by plunging the country further into debt. The country is now at the mercy of Communist China to whom America now owes a lot of money. For all the promises he made during his campaign, virtually all have had a nefarious impact on the country. Thank you, MAGA morons.

The Trump administration is the textbook example of how ruinous is the Republican's "Small Government" political platform and how stupid is the tricke-down economy they've always advocated, particularly when it is acccompanied by giving free money to the top 1% wealthy Americans and corporations. Since WWII, ALL Democrat presidents managed to reduce the debt and reverse the trade deficit, while ALL Republican presidents managed to send the country further into debt. My fellow Americans, when will you ever learn to never again allow white collar criminals like Trump run the country if you truly want the country to be sustainable and civilized.  
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The national debt just crossed $39 trillion—almost doubling since Trump vowed to erase it
Nick Lichtenberg
Wed, March 18, 2026


U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent looks on as U.S. President Donald Trump delivers remarks during a roundtable discussion with farmers in the Cabinet Room of the White House on December 08, 2025 in Washington, DC. President Trump is expected to announce a $12 billion farm aid package, which includes one-time payments to those affected by the administration’s trade policies. (Alex Wong/Getty Images) 

The United States national debt crossed $39 trillion for the first time Tuesday, arriving at the grim milestone less than five months after it first hit $38 trillion in late October—a pace of accumulation that budget watchdogs and academic economists are now calling, with unusual unanimity, “unsustainable.”​

The milestone, confirmed in Wednesday’s Daily Treasury Statement, lands amid a politically charged moment: it comes roughly two weeks before the ten-year anniversary of President Trump’s 2016 campaign promise to eliminate the national debt within eight years. Instead, the gross national debt has roughly doubled since Trump first took office—it was $19.9 trillion in January 2017.​

“Our moral duty to the taxpayer requires us to make our Government leaner and more accountable,” President Trump wrote in March 2017, as he issued an executive order directing OMB Director Mick Mulvaney to submit a comprehensive plan to reorganize Executive Branch departments and agencies in order to keep his promise to put in place common sense reforms to eliminate waste so that the Government better serves all Americans. “We’re going to do more with less,” Trump said at the time.

“As America soars past $39 trillion in debt, we must recognize this alarming rate of growth and the significant financial burden we are putting on the next generation,” Michael A. Peterson, CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, told Fortune in a statement. “Borrowing trillion after trillion at this rapid pace with no plan in place is the definition of unsustainable.”​

A clock that doesn’t stop

At the current rate of growth, the Peterson Foundation projects that the debt will hit $40 trillion before this fall’s elections—another trillion-dollar jump in roughly the same compressed timeframe. Michael Peterson called the figure “staggering.” The speed of accumulation has accelerated sharply: the debt added its latest trillion in what the foundation estimates is less than five months, a rate of fiscal expansion that has few modern precedents outside of wartime or acute financial crisis.​

The milestone arrives as the Congressional Budget Office, in its February 2026 outlook, projected that the federal deficit will reach $1.9 trillion in fiscal year 2026 and swell to $3.1 trillion by 2036 under current law. Over that same decade, debt held by the public is projected to surge from 101% of GDP today to 120% of GDP by 2036, eclipsing the previous all-time record of 106% set just after World War II. The long-term picture is even bleaker: CBO’s extended baseline now shows debt rising to 175% of GDP over the next 30 years, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

The $1 trillion interest bill

Perhaps the most alarming dimension of the crossing is what it costs just to carry the debt. Net interest payments on the national debt are projected to exceed $1 trillion in fiscal year 2026—nearly triple the $345 billion in interest the government paid in 2020, at the onset of the pandemic. In the first three months of the current fiscal year alone, net interest payments reached $270 billion, already surpassing the nation’s defense spending for the same period.

Peterson’s statement underscored just how persistent that interest burden will be: over the next 30 years, the government is projected to spend nearly $100 trillion on interest alone—an amount that dwarfs every major federal program. For individual Americans, the Peterson Foundation puts the interest tab at an average of at least $47,000 per person over the next decade.​ “Interest is the fastest-growing ‘program’ in the federal budget,” Peterson said.​

What the numbers actually mean

Not all economists view the headline $39 trillion figure with equal alarm—though almost all agree the trajectory is dangerous. Kent Smetters, director of the Penn Wharton Budget Model and one of the nation’s foremost fiscal economists, argued that the gross debt number is actually less economically meaningful than debt held by the public, which now stands at $31.3 trillion. The gross figure of $39 trillion, he explained to Fortune, is intragovernmental debt, basically “the left hand of government owing the right hand.” Examples include the Social Security trust fund, and there’s no independent economic significance to this beyond its role as a political signaling device.​ Still, he added with his trademark understatement, “the fact that debt held by the public has now exceeded $31 trillion is not great.”

“The real problem,” Smetters said, agreeing with Peterson, “is that we are on an upward debt path that is unsustainable.” When you account for both explicit debt held by the public and the implicit liabilities buried in Social Security, Medicare, and other long-term obligations, Smetters’ model puts the true fiscal gap closer to $100 trillion.​

The Penn Wharton Budget Model has previously estimated that, without major policy changes, U.S. Treasury debt will become unable to roll over its accumulated obligations within roughly 20 years—a scenario that would force either explicit default on interest payments or an implicit default through inflation.​
A Credibility Gap in Washington

Smetters has also previously raised pointed concerns about the budgeting apparatus that’s supposed to help lawmakers navigate the crisis. Under rules dating to the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act, the Congressional Budget Office is legally prohibited from projecting discretionary spending growth faster than inflation over its 10-year window—an assumption that both the CBO and outside analysts agree bears no resemblance to historical reality. The result, Smetters argued, is that official projections “constantly underestimate the growth in the debt,” creating a feedback loop in which lawmakers are lulled into false confidence by numbers their own budget office knows are too optimistic.​

The CBO’s current projections, for instance, still assume Social Security will pay full benefits even after its trust fund is expected to deplete around 2032—effectively hiding a major future spending shock from the official forecast.​

Politics and the Public

The milestone arrives at a moment of acute public anxiety about federal finances. Nine in 10 Americans say the rising debt is driving up the cost of living and contributing to higher borrowing costs, according to a survey by the Peterson Foundation—a cross-partisan concern that has yet to produce cross-partisan legislative action.​

The U.S. fiscal position has deteriorated to what the Peterson Foundation now describes as the worst among peer nations. President Trump’s budget proposal is expected to be released during the week of March 30, setting up a political battle over spending and revenue that will play out against the backdrop of a debt counter that, by Peterson’s clock, will already be ticking toward $40 trillion.​

“America faces complex and critical challenges, both at home and abroad,” Peterson said, “and putting our debt on a sustainable path will support a stronger, more secure future.” The good news, he added, is that solutions exist. The harder news is that in the 10 years since the last major political promise to fix this, the debt has only grown.​

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Should We All Go Nuclear? The Pros and Cons

Check: [ https://lebanoniznogood.blogspot.com/2026/03/can-us-win-war-against-iran.html] on same subject from Monday, March 16, 2026.
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Going nuclear? Why a growing number of Washington’s allies are eyeing an alternative to US umbrella
Amy McAuliffe, University of Notre Dame
Tue, March 17, 2026


American allies contemplate a post-U.S. nuclear umbrella future. AP Photo/Alex Brandon

Canadians are openly discussing the merits and risks of pursuing a nuclear weapon. Europeans are similarly considering a nuclear deterrent for the bloc. In South Korea, public support for a nuclear weapon is at its highest level on record, and even in Japan some politicians are talking about the once-taboo subject.

Until just a few years ago, few experts would have predicted that these nations – all allies of Washington – might one day join the nuclear club. Since 2006, that club has consisted of just nine countries: the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France, China, India, Pakistan, North Korea and Israel, with its undeclared program.

The hope of nonproliferation advocates was that nine would be the maximum. But over the past few years, more and more nations are seriously exploring “going nuclear.”

As an expert on weapons technology and former assistant director of the CIA for weapons and counterproliferation, I have watched these developments with alarm.

Perceived national security threats still shape U.S. allies’ views of developing nuclear weapons – with North Korea a key driver for South Korea, China paramount for Japan, and Iran key for Saudi Arabia.

But what has changed demonstrably for many U.S. allies is a newfound skepticism over the credibility of the so-called U.S. nuclear umbrella, which for decades has offered allies an easy way of declining to pursue nuclear weapons. Concerned about the Trump administration’s foreign policy, some nations are considering developing domestic nuclear weapons programs or seeking new deterrence assurances.
New nuclear aspirants across the Atlantic

The U.S. deployed the first atomic bombs in Japan in 1945, with the Soviet Union conducting its own successful nuclear test four years later. The U.K. was next to get the bomb in 1952, followed by France in 1960 and China in 1964. Experts believe that Israel first tested a bomb in the late 1960s, while the last entrants into the nuclear club were India in 1972, Pakistan in 1998 and North Korea in 2006.

Experts have long wondered which country might be next. Often, speculation has included U.S. allies such as Egypt, Japan, Saudi Arabia, South Korea and Turkey.

For years, such nations were assumed to be under the U.S. nuclear umbrella, a tacit understanding that Washington will defend its nonnuclear allies, including by using U.S. nuclear weapons. Doubts about the credibility of the U.S. nuclear umbrella have existed for years and precede the Trump administration. However, current U.S. officials’ criticisms of NATO, focus on burden sharing, and policy positions on Ukraine have brought into stark relief for allies the need to consider other nuclear options. And with allies now focused on the limits of U.S. security guarantees, the list of possible nuclear aspirants has suddenly grown.

European leaders have crafted their public comments on the issue carefully, focusing on concerns about U.S. reliability in general versus the credibility of the U.S. nuclear umbrella.

French President Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech at a French nuclear submarine base in Crozon, France, on March 2, 2026. Yoan Valat/Pool Photo via AP

Rasmus Jarlov, the chair of the Danish parliament’s defense committee, perhaps best reflected the views of many U.S allies in Europe, telling The Associated Press: “If things got really serious, I very much doubt that Trump would risk American cities to protect European cities. We don’t know, but it seems very risky to rely on the American protection.”

In Europe, most public discussion has focused on the concept of a common nuclear deterrent for the bloc under the protection of French nuclear forces. In a major speech in March, French President Emmanuel Macron called for “forward deterrence” involving the temporary deployment of French nuclear-armed aircraft to nine other European countries, including Germany and Poland.

Meanwhile, the Swedish prime minister has had talks with Britain and France about deploying the two countries’ nuclear forces to Sweden during wartime.

But the French pledge does not extend a guarantee to defend allies with French nuclear weapons. Instead, France will use nuclear deterrence to defend French “vital interests,” a purposefully vague phrase. Only time will tell whether Macron’s offer will satisfy European partners – or prevent them from deciding to take matters into their own hands.

There has been growing speculation over whether Poland and Germany might be considering developing their own nuclear weapons. While German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has explicitly ruled it out, Polish leaders’ comments leave the option open.

In early March, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk told the Polish parliament that Poland “must reach for the most modern solutions related to nuclear weapons,” seeming to reflect personal support for Warsaw’s long-term pursuit of a weapon and near-term conversations with the French about a nuclear umbrella.

In Canada, meanwhile, the former chief of the country’s defense staff said in February that Canada should not rule out acquiring nuclear weapons. While the comments drew opposition from the current Canadian defense minister, the discussion of whether Canada would consider “going nuclear” did not seem out of line in today’s global security environment.

Heightened discussions in Asia

Similar discussions among current and former government officials have been percolating across Asia.

For Japan, such talks mark a significant development. Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution, largely drafted by U.S. occupation authorities after World War II, renounces war. And in 1967 Japan further pledged not to produce, possess or host nuclear weapons in its territory — the “Three Non-Nuclear Principles.”

A pall of smoke lingers over a scene of nuclear destruction in Hiroshima, Japan, on Aug. 7, 1945. AP Photo

But the issue is no longer taboo. In late 2025, an unnamed official in the new administration of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi expressed his personal opinion that Japan should begin discussions about developing nuclear weapons.

These remarks drew an official rebuke from Takaichi. Moreover, Japanese nuclear weapons are unlikely to be in the cards anytime soon, particularly given the sensitivity surrounding Japan’s status as the only nation to directly experience the consequences of nuclear weapons. Nonetheless, Takaichi’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party is reconsidering its position on Tokyo’s nonnuclear principles to discuss allowing U.S. nuclear weapons to enter Japanese territory.

South Korea is a different story. Last year, the foreign minister in the former conservative Yoon administration argued that an independent nuclear deterrent for Seoul “was not off the table,” given the unpredictability of the Trump administration. Left unsaid, but clearly in the background, were concerns about the U.S. nuclear umbrella.

South Korea’s previous nuclear weapons program and public support for reviving it could make a future South Korean nuclear weapon a real possibility, even though the current center-left administration stresses Seoul’s nonnuclear stance.

Yet the public mood has also shifted. A total of 76% of respondents now support an indigenous nuclear weapon, according to a March 2025 poll by the Asian Institute for Policy Studies. That was an increase of 5 percentage points since 2024 and the highest level of public support for Seoul pursuing a nuclear weapons capability since the poll originated in 2010.

Saudi Arabia’s focus on the fuel cycle

In the Middle East, the Washington ally most likely to pursue a nuclear weapon remains Saudi Arabia. In Sept. 2023, de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman reiterated his public stance that Riyadh would acquire a nuclear weapon if Iran did.

Perhaps more likely is Ryadh’s pursuit of a “latent” nuclear weapons capability, meaning that Saudi Arabia would develop relevant technology and expertise to be able to produce a weapon quickly if it made the political decision to do so. An indigenous capability to enrich uranium would be key.

President Donald Trump stands with Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on his visit to the White House on Nov. 18, 2025. AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File

Indeed, the crown prince has demonstrated an enduring interest in developing a Saudi nuclear fuel cycle. He continues to pursue domestic uranium enrichment, regardless of the state of Iran’s nuclear program.

In November 2025, members of the U.S. Congress wrote a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio expressing concern that “the administration has revived talks with Saudi Arabia to give it access to U.S. technology and to potentially allow it to enrich uranium.”

The willingness of the Biden and Trump administrations to pursue nuclear deals for civilian power reactors with allies that permit uranium enrichment could assist Saudi Arabia and South Korea in pursuing nuclear weapons. The “gold standard” U.S. nuclear cooperation agreement, called a 123 agreement, prohibits enrichment and reprocessing.

In September 2025, the Pakistani defense minister announced that Pakistan would extend its nuclear umbrella to Saudi Arabia, if needed, perhaps reducing Riyadh’s focus on obtaining formal U.S. security assurances. If genuine, this commitment provides Prince Mohammed the time and protection to develop Saudi nuclear weapons or a latent nuclear capability.

All of these developments suggest that despite decades of nonproliferation experts warning about the expansion of the nuclear club, new entrants are a very real possibility for the first time in decades.

This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: Amy McAuliffe, University of Notre Dame 

US War on Iran: A "Sinking Titanic" & Captain Trump is Scalping Tickets to the Show

But the jackass told us during the campaign that "he alone" can fix things and the "US alone" (no Nato) can rule the world... Not only did he fail abysmally to stop his Russian jackass friend Putin's war on Ukraine in 24 hours as he promised, he himself has started two wars and is promising new ones and is begging his forlorn no-longer-allies for help. 
 
You see, he's upset not only because his no-objectives-war is failing miserably, but because the stingy penny-counting idiot is spending billions every day on a failed Zionist-prodded entreprise (just like all his life career's failed and bankrupt entreprises)... 
 
Americans usually throw quantity on their projects with little quality. Theirs is a country with limitless natural resources, but their people are generally narrow-minded, ignorant and conceited. They can send 400,000 troops with fantasmagoric weapons to invade a puny country, but they typically end up losing. Americans have lots of brawn (that is why they love sports so much; doesn't require too much thinking), but little brain (that is why they hate nerds and intellectuals). 
 
MAGA morons, I am sorry, you may be nice people, but you are real morons for believing the criminal orange jackass. I hope you are learning about your own moronic selves by watching your beloved Mega-Moron you elected make an idiot of himself every hour of every day. Worst part: The moron is also senile. That is a double whammy to your bruised egos. I also noticed in some revealing photos that Trump is going bald underneath his flimsy gossamer-like hair which he weaves across to cover his blooming baldness. The man is slowly rotting before our eyes; you know what they say about golfers: They lose their brains after losing their balls!



French General Torches Trump’s Demands for Help With Scathing ‘Titanic’ Comparison
Harry Thompson
Tue, March 17, 2026


Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images (Anna Moneymaker)

A French general has said joining President Donald Trump’s war is like buying a discounted ticket for the Titanic after it had already hit the iceberg.

Retired three-star general and former commander of the French Foreign Legion, Michel Yakovleff, appeared on LCI, where he reeled off all the reasons not to follow Trump into battle.

The president has endured a chastening start to the week after ally after ally—including the U.K., France, Japan, Germany, South Korea, and even China—rejected the idea of offering military support for his war with Iran.

Global Insights Journal/Michel Yakovleff/X

“You can’t have an American operation where they’re bombing whatever they can, and then below that, the Europeans doing something else,” Yakovleff said. “No, no, no, it has to be one sole operation, under a NATO flag. I don’t think he’s understood that.”

He then went further, rejecting the idea that European ships would enforce his blockade while U.S. forces nearby waged a broader war all around them. Instead, he said the U.S. needed to make it crystal clear what it wanted from the conflict.

“The Americans have to put this in writing. Not tweets, not things that change every two minutes,” he said.

French President Emmanuel Macron has so far snubbed Trump's request for help. / YOAN VALAT / POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Yakovleff then claimed that sending ships to help Trump went beyond simply putting those vessels at risk. Instead, he said it opened the door to becoming involved in the conflict’s politics.

“It’s not a question of military means, the Strait of Hormuz,” he said. “It’s that he wants to share the political risk... not the military risk.”

His words echoed those of German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius, who said, “What does Trump expect from a handful of European frigates that the powerful U.S. Navy cannot do?” the BBC reports. “This is not our war. We have not started it.”

U.K. Prime Minister Starmer has also so far snubbed Trump's demands. / Leon Neal / via REUTERS

Iran has closed the Strait of Hormuz, a vital conduit for oil to the rest of the world. Around one-fifth of the world’s supply flows through it in peacetime, but since Trump’s attack on February 28, Iran has warned that ships’ safety cannot be guaranteed.

Tankers have come under fire, leading to a supply chain backlog and at least 17 vessels being hit. Meanwhile, gas prices are soaring.

Yakovleff, who served in NATO roles for seven years, has previously warned that Trump’s attacks on the alliance could destroy it.

Smoke rising from the Thai bulk carrier 'Mayuree Naree' near the Strait of Hormuz after an attack. / HANDOUT / ROYAL THAI NAVY/AFP via Getty Im

“He would let us down whenever it suited him,” he continued on LCI, before stating, “On the Titanic, it appears the captain wanted to sell tickets off cheaply for the dinner-dance after hitting the iceberg. It’s not the moment to be buying a cut-price ticket for the Titanic.”

“And the last argument is American: you don’t reinforce failure. I learnt that at the U.S. Army War College. You don’t reinforce failure, you move on, you find something else.”

France’s President Emmanuel Macron had already poured cold water on the idea of getting involved in the fighting directly. Instead, he said he would look into organizing a fleet of escorts to help ships navigate the strait, but only after the “hottest phase” of the fighting was over, according to the BBC.

U.K. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer struck a similar tone, saying in a news conference on Monday that he was looking at a “viable plan” but was “not at the point of decisions yet.”

Meanwhile, the European Union’s foreign policy boss, Kaja Kallas, told Reuters that “Nobody is ready to put their people in harm’s way in the Strait of Hormuz.”

The Daily Beast has contacted the White House for comment.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Daily Harvest of US-Born American Criminals

Welcome to the most violent country on earth during peacetime. Can you imagine what the US would be like if conflict erupts on its soil? 

Read through the headlines below and conclude what the "American way of life" is all about in the United Crimes of America.

Check: [ https://www.gunviolencearchive.org/last-72-hours ] for the number of gun-related crimes and mass shootings that occurred in the US over the past 72 hours. Please note that there are 7 pages to scroll through, each page listing some 25 shootings. That makes for at least 175 over 3 days or 60 per day. Note also that many gun-related crimes are never reported. These lists do not include gun-unrelated crimes such as rapes, theft, and all the fine scams that the American genius is capable of. And you wonder where Hollywood trash gets its inspiration from?

None of the crimes below involve migrants or immigrants (who generally stick by the rule of law and keep a low profile in racism-infested America), while US-born white trash feel entitled because they and Trump believe they "own" the country and can commit crimes without fear of deportation or denaturalization.  White racists complain that immigrants come to this country to join the welfare rolls, but the criminals below do in fact commit crimes in order to lead an easy comfortable life in America's posh prisons.
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People - ILLINOIS
Special Ed Teacher Christina Formella Allegedly Sexually Abused Her Student. Inside the Shocking Case and 55 Charges Against Her

NY Post - US
Young teen girls immediately hit with ‘explosion’ of sexually explicit messages and photos when they sign up for social media

KOLR Springfield - ARKANSAS
Marion County, Arkansas deputies arrest three in alleged rape case
Deputies have arrested three individuals after a victim claimed she had been raped in Marion County, Arkansas. According to a Marion County Sheriff’s Office press release, Steven M. Manson, 35, Steven L. Manson, 56, and Dezerae S. Manson, 19, all of Yellville, Arkansas, have been arrested after a victim reported an […]

Fort Worth Star-Telegram - TEXAS
Teen stuck pistol out SUV window, fired into stranger’s head, Fort Worth police say. The victim was upset that the suspect had been firing a gun in the victim’s neighborhood, a witness told detectives.

US Weekly - COLORADO
Colorado Bus Driver Arrested for Alleged Sexual Assault of a 10-Year-Old Student
A Colorado bus driver has been accused of sexually assaulting a 10-year-old, Us Weekly has confirmed. Robert Charles Watters is being held inside the Jefferson County Jail on $10,000 bond following his arrest Thursday, March 12, on a felony charge of suspicion of committing sexual assault on a child by a person in a position

Associated Press - UTAH
Utah woman who wrote a book on grief after husband's death found guilty of murdering him.
A Utah woman was convicted Monday of aggravated murder after poisoning her husband with fentanyl and then self-publishing a children’s book about coping with grief.

People - COLORADO
Man in 'Intimate Relationship' with Slain Hairstylist Jax Gratton Indicted in Death Probe.
Brandon Mumma, 45, faces one count of tampering with a deceased human body and one count of tampering with physical evidence, the DA says

People - FLORIDA
Spring Break Marred by Violence as 5 Shootings Erupt Over Weekend Near Daytona Beach, Injuring Cop. The police officer was shot twice but is in stable condition, while the alleged suspect suffered severe burns and is in critical condition

SURFER Magazine - CALIFORNIA
Gang Fight Erupts at Los Angeles Surf Beach as 15-Year-Old Boy Is Shot
Following an altercation on Saturday night at Dockweiler State Beach – a popular surf spot in Los Angeles – a teenage boy was shot and hospitalized.
USUs Weekly

Son Arrested In Homicide of His Father, Who Was Catholic Church Deacon, Says Nebraska Police

A man accused of killing his father, a deacon at a Catholic church in Nebraska, allegedly tried to flee police to avoid being caught, authorities said. Martin Zak was arrested on Thursday, March 12, on charges of criminal homicide, felony flight to avoid arrest and felony theft in connection with the death of John Zak,

02 min read
Us Weekly - NEBRASKA
Son Arrested In Homicide of His Father, Who Was Catholic Church Deacon, Says Nebraska Police.    
A man accused of killing his father, a deacon at a Catholic church in Nebraska, allegedly tried to flee police to avoid being caught, authorities said. Martin Zak was arrested on Thursday, March 12, on charges of criminal homicide, felony flight to avoid arrest and felony theft in connection with the death of John Zak,
WBNS Tegna Articles - OHIO
Fairfield County man sentenced to at least 50 years in prison for sex offenses involving minors
A Fairfield County man convicted of multiple sexually related offenses that happened as he worked at a campground will spend at least the next 50 years in prison. Rick Hawley was sentenced Monday after a jury found him guilty in February of nine counts, including rape, gross sexual imposition and unlawful sexual conduct with a minor. Authorities said the case began in June 2025, when one victim came forward.
 
Kvue ABC - TEXAS 
Round Rock man sentenced to life for child sexual assault after a Williamson County jury found him guilty of sexually assaulting a child.
 
FOX 6 -Milwaukee - WISCONSIN 
A Milwaukee man was sentenced to 22 years in federal prison. The 56-year-old man was convicted in a child sexual abuse material case. He was already a registered sex offender when the case was brought.
 
WZDX - ALABAMA
Indictment: Former Crossville High School teacher faces four counts of sexual abuse.
New court documents provide a clearer picture of the latest charges against Billy Carl Jones Jr., the former Crossville High School teacher booked early Saturday morning following his arrest by DeKalb County deputies.  Jones, 51, is facing four counts of second-degree sexual abuse, a Class C felony in Alabama. 
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal - TEXAS
A former Shallowater ISD band teacher accused of sexually abusing two students multiple times was arrested Thursday. Joseph Gonzalez, 27, was booked into the Lubbock County Detention Center on a first-degree felony count of continuous sexual abuse of a child, according to county jail records.

WSYR Syracuse - NEW YORK
Sex offender could face up to 50 years to life in prison. Previously convicted sex offender Ryan Pontello stood before an Onondaga County judge on Monday after a grand jury previously indicted him on 48 counts and accused him of predatory sexual assault against a child. Pontello’s indictment last February consists of 48 counts for conduct allegedly involving six different child victims, ages 3 to 5, from 2022 to 2025. 

KLFY Lafayette - LOUISIANA
Lafayette Parish murder-suicide investigation underway. The victims have been identified in what appears to be a double murder-suicide that occurred Sunday afternoon. Deputies responded to the 500 block of Braxton Drive in unincorporated Lafayette Parish near Youngsville in reference to three people found dead in a home. Detectives said 36-year-old Brett Richardson shot and killed his wife Kasie Richardson, 33, and their 6-year-old son before turning the gun on himself.

KRQE Albuquerque - NEW MEXICO
Suspect in shooting that injured Navajo Nation officers faces federal charges. 
On March 6 in To’Hajiilee, a small community about 35 miles west of Albuquerque, officers received reports of a man, Russell Secatero, shooting at cars and in the air. Investigators say he opened fire at police with an AR-style rifle from inside a closet, while someone was in there with him.
 
KGET Bakersfield - CALIFORNIA
Deputies open fire during standoff with domestic violence suspect: Kern County Sheriff’s Office
Kern County deputies opened fire during a standoff with a domestic violence suspect Friday, officials said. Deputies responded to the 16000 block of Highway 178 in Weldon for the report of domestic violence at about 6 p.m. on March 13. The suspect, identified as Michael Kemmeter, 30, was found traveling westbound […]

12NEWS -ARIZONA
Former high school coach pleads guilty to multiple counts of sex-related charges
Patrick Battillo was in court Monday where the Phoenix Suns fan known as "Mr. ORNG" pleaded guilty to one count of sexual exploitation of a minor and two counts of attempted sexual exploitation of a minor. The former basketball coach at Peoria High School faces allegations that he solicited sexually explicit photos and videos from five minors, boys ages 15 to 17, three more than previously reported.

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.... and many many more crimes (mostly related to underage sex), too many to list all here.... I think FOX News will run out of the few "migrant and immigrant" crimes they've been selectively reporting when Trump's crusade against darkie migrants and immigrants is completed, and will have to report the daily mountain of crimes committed by God-fearing natural-born Americans.