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June 2025

Did You Catch Trump’s Epic Response to Israel’s Strike on Iran? Matt Margolis

https://pjmedia.com/matt-margolis/2025/06/14/savage-did-you-catch-trumps-epic-response-to-israels-strike-on-iran-n4940789?utm_source=pjmediavip&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl_pm

President Trump didn’t hold back when asked about Israel’s latest airstrikes that reportedly took out several top Iranian hardliners. In a brief but blistering phone call with CNN’s Dana Bash, Trump offered a firm message of support for Israel—and a stinging reminder of what happens when enemies of the United States ignore his warnings.

“We, of course, support Israel, obviously, and supported it like nobody has ever supported it,” Trump told Bash flatly. Unlike the Obama and Biden years of waffling appeasement, Trump’s approach to the Middle East has always been clear: strength first, and don’t mess with America or its allies.

According to Bash, Trump went on to say something remarkably pointed: “Iran should have listened to me when I said—I gave them a 60-day warning. And today is day 61.” In other words, the mullahs in Tehran knew exactly what was coming. And now they’re paying the price.

“And then he said, ‘They’—meaning Iran—’should now come to the table to make a deal before it’s too late,’” Bash recounted. “And then he said something really noteworthy. He said, ‘The people I was dealing with are dead, the hardliners, to which I just wanted to underscore.’”

Bash, clearly taken aback, pressed Trump further on what that meant.

“So what you’re saying is Israel has now killed the people who you were dealing with,” she asked him.

“They didn’t die of the flu. They didn’t die of COVID.” No ambiguity. No walking on eggshells. Just the truth.

“He is hoping that instead of escalating the situation… this forces Iran to come to the table,” Bash noted. That’s a strategy built on the peace-through-strength doctrine that worked wonders during Trump’s first term—from the Abraham Accords to the decimation of ISIS leadership.

Still, the media can’t help but fixate on whether Trump had “signed off” on the Israeli strikes, and Bash was no exception. Bash said flatly that “he definitely did not say ‘I signed off on this.’ He said, ‘I support Israel. We support Israel. We support Israel like no one has ever done before.’”

The distinction matters only to people looking for a gotcha. The Trump administration was notified, according to Secretary of State Marco Rubio, but the real headline here isn’t whether Trump gave Israel a formal thumbs-up—it’s that Trump had warned Iran, and Iran ignored him. Now, some of the most dangerous figures in Tehran’s orbit are dead.

Alas Poor Democrats We Knew Them Ray DiLorenzo

https://standupamericaus.org/

Poor Democrats are suffering their lowest favorability ratings in at least 50 years, possibly since the Civil War. They have no moderate leader to help them climb out of the doldrums. Their wannabe leaders, like Newsom and Walz, look more foolish every day.

They can’t seem to break out of their state of affairs. They’ve lost their footing and are now limping and moving in circles.

They hold a minority position in the Senate, the House, and the Supreme Court, and they are notably absent from the executive branch. Young voters are decidedly trending conservative, and ‘supporters’ are leaving blue states.

Democrat retirements will make it tough for them to flip both the House and the Senate. The influence of Democrats in the media is dwindling due to the rise of right-wing podcasters and social media platforms.

Currently, these ‘law-abiding’ illegal aliens are rioting in Los Angeles with hundreds more cities promised; they are destroying both public and private property, looting hard-working small businesses, and assaulting police and the National Guard with rocks, bottles, and Molotov cocktails, while waving Mexican flags, telling the press that they demand a return of the land the US allegedly stole, as well as throwing water balloons filled with urine. Sounds more like insurrection than protest.

The Dems want you to think it’s spontaneous. It isn’t. Trucks pull up and unload gas masks, flags, placards, and supplies for the rioters. It is well funded.

It underscores the tension surrounding issues of immigration and land rights, reflecting deep-seated grievances within the community pertaining to matters of culture, political persuasion, and the future of our country. Issues well fed by Democrats.

Why? Democrats are nuts. Their antisemitism is becoming apparent. Their affinity for criminals, lying, hypocrisy, depravity, chaos, and drama is well known. And everyone knows what drama is in Hollywood: nothing real going on.

They feed on despair, not solving any of it. Drama queens, all.

Notes on a New War Mark Steyn

https://www.steynonline.com/15383/more-war

Is this a new war? Lindsey Graham, member of the Order of Prince Yaroslav the Wise, seems to think so and is panting like Jeffrey Toobin on a Zoom call:

Game on.

Washington has also revealed that it shared its heads-up from Israel with one of its Arab allies – presumably the Saudis.

So far, for Israel, it’s going well: they have destroyed the Republican Guard headquarters and killed its commander, General Salami. In other targeted assassinations, the head of the Iranian army is dead, as are more than ten nuclear scientists, and various other bigshots, including at least one potential successor to Ayatollah Khamenei, who for the moment appears to be alive. It’s the biggest military action on the soil of the Islamic Republic since the Iran/Iraq War forty years ago.

~To get the obvious out of the way, what should America do?

That’s probably correct as far as the politics of it is concerned. But the other reason for not getting America involved is, of course, that the Pentagon is totally crap at war. So, if the US is on your side, you’ll lose. See, most recently, Afghanistan and Ukraine – the former an international humiliation, and the latter having been micro-managed from Washington until January 20th with equally disastrous results, at least for the dwindling number of Ukrainians living in Ukraine. US military effectiveness is fading from living memory: for three-quarters of a century now, Washington has been utterly unable to use war to achieve any strategic national objective – despite accounting for forty per cent of the entire planet’s military expenditures. There is nothing to suggest Iran is likely to be an exception to the rule.

~That presents Israel with certain challenges. If you want to end the Iranian nuclear programme – or at least set it back twenty years – you have to have state-of-the-art bunker-busters that can penetrate all the way down at the Fordow enrichment facility just south of Qom. I’m not sure Israel has such weapons, and I doubt Netanyahu will know until they try it and it works. I note that Freddie Forsyth, who died a few days ago, has a scene in one of his novels in which the Fordow plant is taken out by a precocious computer hacker, which would probably be the best way to do it. Alas, in the real world, the mullahs are more sophisticated than all the “Death to America!” street-dancing would suggest.

~That said, as always with Israel, the creativity and innovation is impressive:

~Will the new war remain finely focused – alternating barrages raining down on Tehran and Tel Aviv – or will it spread beyond? For three years, setting aside occasional provocations such as the Nordstream pipeline, the war in Europe has been contained within Ukraine. In the Middle East Iran has proxies throughout the region – Hamas, Hizb’allah, Houthis… It would seem unreasonable to expect the mullahs to show the same forbearance as Putin.

Israel Was Left with Only One Choice on Iran

https://www.nationalreview.com/2025/06/israel-was-left-with-only-one-choice-on-iran/

On early Friday morning Middle East time, Israel launched an extensive strike on Iran’s nuclear program. Airstrikes hit Iran’s ballistic-missile facilities and its nuclear-enrichment site Natanz along with other targets, while further precision operations (reportedly involving the Mossad) took out top Iranian military brass along with nuclear scientists. The operation, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, would continue “for as many days as it takes” to neutralize any threat from Iran’s nuclear program.

While the prospect of an Israeli strike on Iran’s nuclear capacity has long been discussed, several factors made it more urgent, and more possible. Iran had significantly ramped up its enrichment capacity, with even the U.N.’s International Atomic Energy Agency (not exactly friendly to Israeli militarism) having determined that Iran had been enriching uranium well beyond the level of civilian use, and closer to military grade. With just some more refinement, Iran would be in the position to produce ten nuclear bombs.

A nuclear Iran dedicated to Israel’s destruction is an existential threat. An overwhelming majority of Israel’s population lives either in Jerusalem or in a small strip of coastal land that includes Tel Aviv — and all of those targets are well within range of Iran’s missiles. Even if Iran never pulled the trigger on a nuclear weapon, their mere possession of one would allow the radical Islamist regime that vows “Death to America” to operate with impunity as it financed terrorist attacks, targeted U.S. assets and service personnel, and engaged in other malign behavior that destabilizes the region.

Several developments since the October 7 massacres have also made the current attack more feasible. Last fall, Israel managed to cripple Iranian air defenses in a retaliatory attack without losing a single pilot, which both demonstrated Israel’s ability to strike inside Iran and made the nuclear sites more vulnerable. During the strikes overnight, there was no evidence of any response from Iran’s air defense. Additionally, on two occasions (April and October of last year), Iran launched hundreds of drones and ballistic missiles at Israel but was not able to do much damage thanks to a joint Israeli and American defensive effort. So far in response to the current Israeli strikes, Iran has fired 100 drones at Israel, to no avail.

Another crucial factor behind the timing of these strikes is having an ally in the White House. Over the past several months, the administration was in a tug-of-war between those seeking to prevent an Israeli strike and the Iran hawks that played out via leaks and public debates. This likely reflected Trump’s own internal debate. Several months ago, he urged Israel to back off attacking Iran and had his envoy Steve Witkoff conduct multiple rounds of nuclear talks, which created concerns from hawks that he may sign onto a bad deal. Even hours before the attacks, Trump announced he was still dedicated to pursuing a negotiated solution. Whether or not he was actively participating in a ruse to keep Iran from thinking an attack was imminent, this was clearly helpful in adding an element of surprise to an operation that involved very obvious tells, including the recent removal of U.S. embassy staff and other military assets within striking distance of Iran.

Iran Saw What Looked Like Weakness – Then Time Ran Out by Majid Rafizadeh

https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/21684/iran-weakness

These empty threats [to Hamas in January and Iran in March], more than anything, seem to have reinforced Iran’s belief that it could stall, maneuver, and harden its position while the U.S. scrambled, desperate for a leverage it appeared to have dropped.

The U.S. appeared afraid of escalation. The U.S. seemed to want a deal more than Iran did.

Iran’s negotiators dragged their feet, demanded more concessions, and eventually made it unmistakably clear that they would not halt uranium enrichment. Khamenei, in a rare address, explicitly stated that uranium enrichment was Iran’s “sovereign right” and “not subject to foreign dictates.”

Instead of walking away, Trump did something that most likely stunned even Iran’s most skeptical officials — he reached out to Russia. He asked Russian President Vladimir Putin, Iran’s closest global ally, to help mediate a deal. After drawing red lines and watching them crumble, after declaring enrichment a non-negotiable issue, the U.S. turned to Russia — the same Russia that Iran is arming in the Ukraine conflict — for help. For Iran, this was not just weakness. It was a full display of incompetence.

In Tehran’s calculus, this moment confirmed everything it had suspected: that the U.S. was willing to crawl, plead and negotiate on its knees to get Iran to… sign a piece of paper! They saw Trump’s pivot to Putin as a validation of their strategy — stall, resist, and wait for Washington to blink.

Meanwhile, Israel had been sounding the alarm for years. Its intelligence services repeatedly uncovered secret Iranian sites, hidden stockpiles and covert operations…. Time had run out.

The Islamic Republic of Iran was no longer hiding its ambitions or disguising its defiance. It was openly confronting the United States, discarding every red line and ultimatum Washington drew in the sand.

At the center of the regime’s defiance lay one uncompromising reality: Iran would not stop enriching uranium. U.S. President Donald J. Trump made it clear: if Iran wanted a deal, enrichment had to stop. Period. Iran repeatedly came back with “no.” Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and his top nuclear negotiators declared again and again that enrichment was off the table. In fact, they escalated it. Iran’s leaders mistook Trump’s preference not to use crushing military force for a lack of resolve to stop them.

Iran is everything they accuse Israel of being This war-mongering, genocidal rogue state has terrorized the Middle East and its own people for too long. Tim Black

https://www.spiked-online.com/2025/06/13/iran-is-everything-they-accuse-israel-of-being/

For decades, an aggressive, quasi-imperial state has been at the centre of conflict in the Middle East. It has consistently antagonised its neighbours and in some cases threatened their very existence. And through its shadowy military operatives, it has sought to impose its will on allies and enemies alike.

That state is the Islamic Republic of Iran. It is everything the West’s bourgeois leftists imagine Israel to be. It has a genuinely ‘rogue’ and far-right government. A regime that, through its infamous Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and heavily armed regional proxies, has sought to project its power and influence throughout the Middle East. Unlike Israel, it even has a genuinely genocidal objective – namely, the eradication of the Jewish State, or the ‘Zionist entity’ to use its leaders’ own patois. As its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, put it in 2020, Israel is a ‘cancerous tumour’ that ‘will undoubtedly be uprooted and destroyed’.

That is why the prospect of the Islamic Republic developing nuclear weapons has always terrified Israel’s leaders. Because for a regime ideologically committed to the destruction of Israel, nuclear weapons are much more than a deterrent – they are a means to a Jew-annihilating end.

And that is why, early on Friday morning, the Israel Defence Forces carried out lethal aerial attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities, scientists central to Iran’s atomic plans and several senior generals. Because Israel’s leadership was rightly concerned that Iran would soon be in possession of its own nuclear warheads.

Indeed, on Thursday, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which monitors signatories to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, ruled that Iran had violated its treaty obligations. It claims Iran has amassed 400 kilos of highly enriched uranium, which is ideal for military use. Within hours of the IAEA’s announcement, Israel had started an operation designed, in the words of Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, to roll back ‘the Iranian threat to Israel’s very survival’.

It really didn’t have to be this way. Indeed, it is only in recent decades that Iran has posed, as Netanyahu puts it, ‘a threat to Israel’s survival’. Indeed, after Israel’s founding in 1948, Iran under the Shah actually had a cordial relationship with the fledgling Jewish State. Iran was seen by Israel as a regional mediator, at points even an ally. And vice versa – the Iranian novelist and anti-Western critic, Jalal Al-e Ahmad, visited Israel in 1963 and subsequently praised the collectivist spirit of Zionism.

So, while anti-Semitic violence ravaged Arab nations like Egypt, Iraq, Libya and Syria during the 1950s and 1960s, there were no pogroms or purges in Iran. While an estimated 60,000 Iranian Jews did leave for Israel during its first three decades of existence, by 1978, there was still a thriving 85,000-strong Jewish community within Iran. It constituted perhaps the largest Jewish population in the Middle East outside Israel.

But that all changed in 1979, with the Iranian Revolution and the eventual ascendency of the Ayotallah Khomeini and his Islamist clique. With the foundation of the Islamic Republic, Iran’s relationship towards Israel became markedly hostile almost overnight. Its Islamist leaders, burning with anti-Semitic zeal, effectively turned the destruction of Israel into a raison d’être, and made life within Iran near enough intolerable for its Jewish population. Just 9,000 Jews live there today.

Israel’s bravery shames our pusillanimous Prime Minister Opinion by Stephen Pollard

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/06/13/starmer-and-lammy-are-empowering-iran-after-israel-strike/
It would, to say the least, be helpful if we had a Prime Minister who understood even his own supposed principles. Since taking office last year, Sir Keir Starmer has been admirably strong and consistent in supporting Ukraine against Russian aggression, at least in his statements, if not in actual firepower.

But his response to the Israeli strike on Iran’s nuclear and military sites is not just naïve, it is pusillanimous and shows how empty a vessel he really is: “The reports of these strikes are concerning and we urge all parties to step back and reduce tensions urgently. Escalation serves no one in the region. Stability in the Middle East must be the priority and we are engaging partners to de-escalate. Now is the time for restraint, calm and a return to diplomacy.”

Starmer grasps the need to stand up to Putin’s aggression, but crumbles into spineless diplo-speak when confronted by a theocratic tyranny. 

For a leader with a clear understanding of the Iranian threat – of reality, in other words – there should be relief, not consternation. Just yesterday, for example, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) declared that Iran was in breach of its non-proliferation obligations, refusing to answer questions on uranium particles found in undeclared sites in the country and the stockpiling of uranium enriched to nearly weapons grade. Iran then revealed it is operating a previously secret new uranium enrichment centre. The threat of an Iranian nuclear weapon has not been theoretical but very real and increasingly imminent.

According to Sir Keir, “Now is the time for restraint, calm and a return to diplomacy.” This is the precise opposite of what it is the time for. Diplomacy led us to the disastrous Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) which relaxed sanctions on the regime, handed it huge amounts of money from oil exports, and thus funded not just the Iranian proxies Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis but the nuclear weapons programme. 

In this sense Israel has been acting not only on its own behalf but on behalf of all those Middle Eastern states which have been destabilised by Iran – and on behalf of the West itself.

Death to Iran’s Regime Israel took “Death to Israel” seriously. We should take “Death to America” seriously. Daniel Greenfield

https://www.frontpagemag.com/death-to-irans-regime/

Last month, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei told an enraged crowd of Islamists that President Trump’s statements weren’t even “worthy of a response.”

As the crowd chanted “Death to America”, Iran’s leader called Trump a liar, and warned that, “America should leave the region, and leave it will.” Then he called for the destruction of the Jewish State while the crowd chanted, “Death to Israel.”

The only question was whether America and Israel would take the regime’s threats seriously.

That question was answered when Israel, after two decades of trying to get the mostly fictitious “international community” to do something about Iran’s nuclear program, finally took action.

The endless negotiations in pursuit of an impossible deal that would somehow allow Iran to have nuclear technology without nuclear weapons were based on refusing to listen to what the Islamist terror regime said, as recently as weeks ago, and refusing to believe that it meant it.

To believe in a nuclear deal, you also had to believe that a terror state that gets its electricity from its abundant natural gas resources for a fraction of the cost of our electricity wanted a civilian nuclear program. To believe in any kind of deal with Iran, you had to believe, as the New York Times insisted to sell Obama’s nuke deal, that Iran “has a complicated relationship with the phrase” and that when it says, “Death to America” and “Death to Israel”, it doesn’t really mean it.

“The situation between America and Iran is this: When you chant ‘Death to America!’ it is not just a slogan – it is a policy,” Ayatollah Khamenei explained in 2023.

What did that policy look like in practice?