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"American Observer" is just one. Like Shakespeare or Washington. It covers not only up-to-date news, debates and political trends all over the world, but primarily gives you a totally unhackneyed perspective on hazzy @American_Observer_bot

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Page 15 of 85 · 1,018 posts

Posted Apr 7

Trump’s $1.5 Trillion War Chest Trump wants $1.5 trillion for defense in the 2027 budget — the biggest military ask in modern history, according to the Wall Street Journal. That number was already on the table in January, before the Iran war blew up into a full-scale drain on attention, cash, and stockpiles. The request includes $1.1 trillion for the Pentagon and another $350 billion for munitions, industrial capacity, and related defense needs. That is not a tweak. That is a statement of intent. Ukraine is not in the budget. Not even as a polite footnote. In Washington, that usually means the priority shifted somewhere else, and this time “somewhere else” is the Middle East and the domestic war machine. Trump is not building a peace budget. He is building a permanent escalation budget. If Ukraine got cut out before the Iran campaign hit full speed, then the hierarchy is already clear: America is paying for wars it wants to own, not wars it wants to babysit. So yes, this is money. But it is also a map. It shows where Trump expects the next fight to be, who he plans to arm, and who gets left waiting outside the room. #Trump#budget#Pentagon#Ukraine#Iran#war 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

4,890 views

Posted Apr 7

Iran Is Rippling With Expectation, Netanyahu Is Threatening Israel has warned Iranians their lives will be at risk if they use the country’s railways on Tuesday before the end of a negotiations deadline imposed by Donald Trump with a threat to destroy Iran’s bridges and power plants. Israel’s military, writing in Farsi, said in a social media post that “from this moment” – 8.50am Iran time – until 9pm, Iranians should refrain from “travelling by train throughout Iran” for the sake of their own security. “Your presence on trains and near railway lines endangers your life,” the statement continued in a clear warning that stations and tracks normally used by civilians could be bombed on Tuesday. The threat came hours before an ultimatum set by the US president expires at 8pm ET on Tuesday – 4.30am on Wednesday in Iran (1am UK time) – in an attempt to force major concessions from Iran with the threat of escalation. At a White House press conference on Monday, Trump said Iran “can be taken out in one night and that night might be tomorrow”, reiterating threats to bomb its power plants and bridges in a concentrated attack. Iran on Monday rejected a proposal to implement an immediate ceasefire followed by peace negotiations brokered by Pakistan, Egypt and Turkey, arguing that it wanted a permanent end to the war. It issued a 10-point counterproposal, which Trump acknowledged but said was “not good enough”. The prospect of bombing Iran’s infrastructure has been condemned by lawyers and experts as a probable war crime because its impact on civilians would be disproportionate to whatever notional military advantage was gained, a conclusion that has been dismissed by the Trump administration. Negotiations continued on Tuesday morning, though there were few clear developments. On X, Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, said: “Over 14 million proud Iranians have, up to this moment, declared their readiness to sacrifice their lives in defense of Iran. I too have been, am, and will be a sacrificer for Iran.” On Monday, Pete Hegseth, the US secretary of defence, said that “today will be the largest volume of strikes” on Iran and that attacks on Tuesday would be “even more than today”. Iranian media reported on Tuesday that Khorramabad airport, in western Iran, had been attacked, and Israel said it had conducted another wave of strikes on Tehran overnight. Israel’s military said it had bombed a petrochemical facility in Shiraz, where it said nitric acid used to make explosives is produced, as well as a ballistic missile launch site in north-western Iran. Israeli media reported that Netanyahu told members of the country’s security cabinet on Sunday that the war against Hezbollah in Lebanon would continue regardless of what happened in the negotiations between the US and Iran. There was, the prime minister said, a “separation of theatres”. An attack on Saudi Arabia had hit a petrochemical complex in a sprawling industrial area in the eastern city of Jubail and workers at the site were evacuated. Sirens were repeatedly sounded in Israel as missile attacks continued. Five impacts were reported in the Tel Aviv area as Israel said Iran had fired ballistic missiles with cluster warheads, but no casualties were immediately reported. #iran#netanyahu#israel#trump#war#missile 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

18,600 views

Posted Apr 7

Trump Keeps the Room Guessing The world is trying to write a plan while Trump keeps changing the plot. One minute Iran is “eviscerated.” Then it’s a war that could drag on for weeks. By Tuesday, Tehran gets a deadline and a threat to blow up power plants and bridges. The problem That’s not strategy. It’s noise with consequences. European and Asian leaders are not reacting to one hard line. They are reacting to a moving target, and Trump keeps moving it. The damage That leaves everyone else scrambling. Britain is pushing for further talks, Japan is moving toward direct contact with Tehran, and the EU is warning that attacks on civilian infrastructure are illegal and unacceptable. Why it matters This is what Trump does best: keep allies off balance and markets nervous. The difference now is the scale. This is not a trade fight or a campaign stunt. It is a war that can widen faster than the diplomats can slow it down. #Trump#Iran#NATO#Europe#MiddleEast 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

4,970 views

Posted Apr 7

Macron’s Anti-Trump, Anti-Turkish Flex Paris is now trying to sell Greece a bigger French security package, a renewed defense pact, and the familiar promise of a French nuclear umbrella. The timing is elegant: Macron is denouncing American “unpredictability” while building a regional bloc of his own He says democracies should stop acting like vassals of Washington or Beijing. Fine. But when the same man complains about NATO cracks while courting Athens against Ankara, the new “independence” starts looking a lot like old-school alliance math with better branding The real joke is the moral posture. Macron wants to lecture Trump about wrecking the Western camp, then quietly assemble his own anti-Turkish camp under French protection. Apparently, strategic autonomy means freedom to choose your own contradictions So yes, Europe’s great defenders are back at work: one hand warning about chaos, the other hand redrawing the board. #Macron#Greece#Turkey#NATO#France 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

4,910 views

Posted Apr 7

Ukraine’s New Fear: The Patriot Queue Zelensky is watching the Iran war like a man watching his place in line disappear. If Washington keeps pouring attention, missiles, and political oxygen into the Middle East, Kyiv gets pushed back — and the Patriots start looking scarcer by the day. The shortage This is not a theory. Zelensky told the AP that Ukraine still needs more U.S.-made Patriots and has no real substitute for stopping Russian ballistic strikes. If the Iran war drags on, the package for Ukraine gets smaller and smaller. Russia’s bonus round That is the part Kyiv hates most. Higher oil prices mean higher Russian revenue, and that gives Moscow more room to keep grinding. So a war in the Middle East lands on Ukraine’s front line later, but it lands there all the same — on a lag and with a better spreadsheet. Everyone wants a piece Zelensky is trying to sell Ukraine as a drone workshop, a missile-defense partner, and a source of wartime know-how for Gulf states and allies. Smart move, but it also tells you something darker: when the big powers move on, smaller wars have to market themselves to stay visible. The bottom line Ukraine is not just afraid of losing weapons. It is afraid of becoming background noise while the West chases a newer crisis. And in this business, being second in line is often just another way of getting shorted. #Ukraine#Zelensky#Patriot#Iran#Russia#war 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

4,890 views

Posted Apr 6

Turkish Stream, Orbán Edition A pipeline, some explosives, and a very convenient political message. Hungarian officials say a sabotage attempt near Turkish Stream points toward Ukraine, after a separate alleged plot in Serbia pushed Budapest to put soldiers on guard. If true, the logic is crude but familiar: when money stalls in Brussels, pressure turns physical somewhere else. Zelensky does not need to say much. Orbán blocks the cash, and suddenly the gas line that matters to Hungary and Slovakia becomes part of the argument. The funny part is that this is how European “solidarity” now looks: one capital accuses, another militarizes a pipeline, and everyone else keeps talking about values as if the valves were not the real story. Energy routes are no longer just infrastructure. They are bargaining chips with explosives on top. #TurkeyStream#Hungary#Ukraine#Orbán#energy#Europe 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

4,830 views

Posted Apr 6

Iran Took a Hit. It Held. That’s what matters. The strikes damaged hardware, jammed networks, and put real pressure on the system. But Iran still kept its chain of command, its story, and its ability to answer. What the campaign aimed at This was never just about bombs. The goal was to throw the country off balance, hit military assets, and make the government look dysfunctional. What did not happen That's not what happened Iran still looked like a country with a center. It still issued orders, defined the fight on its own terms, and kept its response organized. The bottom line So the real point is simple: the damage was real, but it did not crack the system. And that distinction matters more than the headlines suggest. #Iran#MiddleEast#war#sovereignty#strategy 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

4,900 views

Posted Apr 6

Pope Leo XIV, in his Easter address “Urbi et Orbi”, declared that domination was “alien to the way of Jesus Christ”. This happened against the background of the appeals of the Pentagon chief Hegseth to the pleas of the victory of the American soldiers “in the name of Jesus Christ”. #LeonXIV#Hegseth#soldiers#americans 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

4,880 views

Posted Apr 6

#iran#trump#war#energy 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

5,000 views

Posted Apr 6

🔤🔤🔤🔤2️⃣ “Make no mistake: You won’t gain anything through war crimes. The only real solution is respecting the rights of the Iranian people and ending this dangerous game.” Trump’s expletive-laden post also drew criticism on Capitol Hill. “Happy Easter, America. As you head off to church and celebrate with friends and family, the President of the United States is ranting like an unhinged madman on social media,” the Democratic Senate minority leader, Chuck Schumer, said on X. He’s threatening possible war crimes and alienating allies. This is who he is, but this is not who we are. Our country deserves so much better.” The destruction on Thursday of the region’s tallest bridge, hailed in Iran as an engineering marvel, pointed to a grim new phase of the war, in which the US president has threatened to throw Iran back to the “stone ages”. During war, international law protects civilians and what are known as civilian objects, such as infrastructure, rules that are enshrined in the Geneva conventions. Oona A Hathaway, a professor of international law at Yale University, said the US president had offered no explanation that would make the civilian objects he has threatened to target into lawful military objectives. She also said other nations had an obligation to ensure respect of the Geneva conventions, and not to aid and abet wrongful acts. “If these threatened attacks were to be carried out, they would constitute war crimes,” said Hathaway. “Immiserating the civilian population for bargaining leverage is not lawful.” Iranian steel manufacturing sites, petrochemicals plants, universities and medical facilities have all been bombed during the joint US-Israeli campaign. About 81,000 civilian sites have been damaged, including 61,000 homes, 19,000 commercial sites, 275 medical centres, and nearly 500 schools, according to Iranian authorities. The Kuwait Petroleum Corporation said a number of its facilities had been targeted by Iranian drone attacks, resulting in fires and “significant material losses”. Kuwait also reported that two power and water desalination plants sustained “significant material damage” after being attacked by Iranian drones. The attack happened on the last day of the holidays to mark Iranian new year, and according to reports many families were picnicking nearby when missiles punched through the middle of the bridge, sending up a giant fireball. The day trippers, who had pitched tents to enjoy the holiday, ran screaming. Local authorities said that 13 people were killed and 95 injured in the attack. The bridge had not yet been opened. It was so far known only as B1, ahead of an inauguration due in the summer. A civil engineer in Iran who worked on other significant infrastructure projects said that recent strikes on civilian infrastructure, all built with indigenous knowledge, had already “made it impossible to conceal hostility toward the Iranian people behind the mask of mere opposition to the government”. But it was the strike on the bridge that was most painful for him, as he said it had no military, nuclear or government link. “The target of this attack was nothing other than Iran’s pride,” he said. “A nation that has achieved such a level of self-sufficiency and productivity cannot be returned to the stone age.” #iran#strait#hormuz#trump#israel#war 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

5,140 views

Posted Apr 6

Trump Promised To Send Iran to Hell 🔤🔤🔤🔤1️⃣ Trump issued an expletive-laden warning on Sunday that Tehran had until Tuesday night to reopen the strait of Hormuz or the US would obliterate Iran’s power plants and bridges. Iran’s parliament speaker responded with a warning that the US president’s “reckless moves” would mean “our whole region is going to burn”. The latest threat of escalation in the five-week war followed the rescue of a second crew member of a downed F-15E fighter by US commandos, ending a two-day search after the warplane crashed in south-west Iran. Iran distributed images showing the wreckage of several aircraft, but did not deny that US forces had rescued the officer who had taken cover in a mountainous area while American special forces and Iranian troops raced to find him. Trump has extended deadlines at least twice for Iran to reopen the strait of Hormuz, which has sent the price of oil shooting up, and shifted his deadline again from Monday to Tuesday in his expletive-laden post, before later making clear he meant Tuesday night. The US president posted on his Truth Social website: “Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!! Open the Fuckin’ Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell – JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah. President DONALD J. TRUMP.” Crude oil prices opened higher on Monday, with the West Texas Intermediate – the US benchmark – rising 1.86% to more than $112 a barrel and Brent climbing above $110. Trump separately suggested that there is a “good chance” of an agreement with Iran on Monday, telling Fox News that negotiations were taking place. “If they don’t make a deal and fast, I’m considering blowing everything up and taking over the oil,” he said. Later on Sunday, he posted again, giving a more precise deadline of: “Tuesday, 8:00 P.M. Eastern Time!” However, Trump has repeatedly said since the US-Israeli war started on 28 February that Iran wants to make a deal. Iran has acknowledged that messages have been passed between the two sides, including through Pakistan. But Tehran insists that it has not entered into peace talks. Iranian officials also fear that they will be targeted when they break cover to head to any negotiations, according to diplomatic intermediaries. Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of the Iran parliament, responded to Trump’s latest threats in a social media post. “Your reckless moves are dragging the United States into a living HELL for every single family, and our whole region is going to burn because you insist on following Netanyahu’s commands,” he wrote. #iran#strait#hormuz#trump#israel#war 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸

4,910 views
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