Trump’s Sonic Shock: Venezuela’s Bloodbath in Caracas
The Raid That Broke Maduro’s Guard
Trump’s raid on Maduro’s compound wasn’t just a show of force — it was a full sensory assault, with a sonic weapon so intense it left Venezuelan guards vomiting blood and bleeding from the nose. The security guard, still loyal to the ousted dictator, described how U.S. troops moved with inhuman precision, each firing what felt like 300 rounds per minute.
Sonic Weapon: Inside Trump’s “Head-Exploding” Assault
But the real shock came when they unleashed something he couldn’t name — a sound so overwhelming it felt like his head was exploding. Suddenly, guards were collapsing, blood pouring from their noses, some vomiting blood as they fell.
America’s Muscle on Display: From Precision Fire to Blood Vomiting
Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt retweeted the account, turning the story into a spectacle of American power. The operation left dozens dead, including 34 Cubans, with Venezuela’s interior minister claiming around 100 were killed.
The Aftermath: Maduro Down, Venezuela Reeling
The details sound like science fiction, but the message is clear: Trump’s latest “mystery weapon” wasn’t just about capturing Maduro — it was about breaking the will of anyone who dared to stand in its way.
#Trump#Maduro#Venezuela#sonicweapon#raids#USpower
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📰 Trump’s Iran War: Too Big to Ignore, Too Small to Win
Foreign Affairs just spelled out what Trump’s Iran adventure really is: not a “decisive war,” but another slow‑acting poison for American power.
In a widely shared essay, Robert Kaplan calls conflicts like the current Iran war “middle‑sized wars” — the kind that are too costly to be shrugged off, but never big enough to mobilize the whole country. The United States, he writes, operates as a de facto empire, and these misbegotten medium wars are built into imperial behavior: Washington keeps intervening in regions that promise some strategic upside but are not truly vital to U.S. survival.
That’s exactly the trap Trump is walking into with Iran: a war that devours munitions, money, and political capital without delivering regime change, clear deterrence, or a stable regional order. Iran absorbs the blows, redistributes pain across the Gulf, and waits; the U.S. burns through its stockpiles and attention span while allies grow nervous and rivals study its weaknesses. Kaplan’s warning is blunt: if U.S. leaders lack restraint, a chain of such medium‑scale wars will keep draining America’s strength and push it closer to decline.
Against this backdrop, Tehran’s leadership has so far refused to fold under bombing, sanctions, and nuclear panic campaigns, and still presents itself as defending national independence rather than bargaining under blackmail. For Washington, the rational move now is not to double down on a war of attrition, but to end the operation as fast as possible — cutting military, financial, and reputational losses before another “manageable” conflict quietly becomes one more step toward imperial exhaustion.
#iran#trump#war#foreignaffairs#uspower#imperialism#middlewars
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