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After weeks of emphasizing diplomacy and urging restraint, President Donald Trump has authorized U.S. military strikes against Iranian targets following escalating tensions in the Strait of Hormuz. According to U.S. officials, the operation targeted air-defense systems, radar installations, surveillance assets, and command infrastructure in what was described as a defensive response to threats against American forces and international shipping. The move has fueled debate over whether Washington’s strategy toward Iran is shifting from negotiation to direct military pressure. Critics and supporters alike are now assessing the broader implications for U.S.-Iran relations, regional stability, and the risk of further escalation.


#Trump #Iran #Israel #Netanyahu #StraitOfHormuz #MiddleEast #USMilitary #BreakingNews #WorldNews #Geopolitics #USIran #ForeignPolicy #GlobalSecurity #MilitaryNews #LatestNews

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00:00No, I said do what's right, but I want you to stop as quickly as you can, because they have
00:06to stop.
00:07It's had to do with Lebanon, and it has to stop.
00:10For weeks, Trump warned Israel to hold back.
00:14He publicly urged restraint.
00:16He spoke of diplomacy, of negotiations, of a great deal with Iran.
00:22But now, American bombs are once again falling on Iranian targets.
00:27And critics are asking a simple but explosive question.
00:31Was President Trump's criticism of Israel genuine, or was it merely buying time before Washington entered the fight itself?
00:40The debate intensified after U.S. forces launched fresh strikes against Iran following the downing of an American Apache helicopter.
00:49The operation marks one of the most direct American military responses against Iran in recent months,
00:56raising questions about whether Washington's strategy has fundamentally changed.
01:01According to U.S. Central Command, American forces conducted what they described as self-defense strikes on June 9th.
01:09The operation targeted Iranian air defense systems, radar installations, surveillance sites,
01:16and command and control infrastructure near the Strait of Hormuz.
01:20CENTCOM said the strikes were ordered by President Trump and carried out in response to attacks on U.S. forces
01:27and international shipping.
01:29The military described the mission as a proportional response.
01:33But politically, the implications are far larger.
01:37Only days earlier, Trump had been presenting himself as the leading advocate for de-escalation.
01:44In interviews and public statements, he repeatedly stressed that negotiations with Iran remained possible.
01:51He openly pressured Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to avoid actions that could derail diplomacy.
01:58In a widely reported conversation, Trump reportedly warned Netanyahu that Israel could find itself alone if it returned to full
02:07-scale war with Iran.
02:09The message appeared clear.
02:11Give diplomacy a chance.
02:13Avoid escalation.
02:15And let negotiations work.
02:17But that image is now colliding with a different reality.
02:22Following the Apache helicopter incident, Trump's tone changed dramatically.
02:26The president accused Iran of dragging out negotiations and issued a series of unusually aggressive statements.
02:35He declared that Iran's military had been largely destroyed.
02:39He mocked Tehran's capabilities.
02:41And he warned that Iran would now pay the price.
02:45Those comments were followed almost immediately by military action.
02:49The shift has fueled intense debate among analysts and political observers.
02:53Some argue Trump's strategy was always designed around maximum pressure, using diplomacy and military force simultaneously to compel concessions.
03:04Others see a contradiction.
03:07They point out that while Trump publicly criticized Israeli escalation, U.S. military actions are now targeting many of the
03:15same Iranian capabilities Israel has sought to degrade for years.
03:19The question becomes even more significant when viewed through the lens of Israeli policy.
03:25Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has consistently argued that Iran, at its regional network of allied groups, posed the greatest long
03:33-term threat to Israeli security.
03:36He has repeatedly advocated strong military pressure against Iran's military and nuclear infrastructure.
03:42Although tensions reportedly emerged between Trump and Netanyahu over timing and tactics, their broader strategic objectives may overlap more than
03:53public disagreements suggest.
03:55Netanyahu himself recently emphasized that the struggle against Iran and Hezbollah is far from over.
04:01And despite announcing a temporary halt in operations, Israeli officials continue to warn of future action if attacks resume.
04:10For now, the United States insists its strikes were defensive and limited.
04:16The White House continues to say diplomacy remains the preferred path.
04:20But the reality is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore.
04:24American aircraft are striking Iranian targets.
04:27Iran is retaliating with strikes on Israel and U.S. bases in the Gulf region.
04:33And the risk of a wider confrontation remains dangerously high.
04:38The question dominating geopolitical circles is not whether tensions are rising.
04:44It's whether Washington's diplomatic outreach was a genuine effort for peace or simply part of a broader strategy that ultimately
04:52leads back to military pressure.
04:57The cure for peace or fique to childcare.
05:04They are Nukemolo.
05:06Sh싸an Rao.
05:08USA.
05:11USA.
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