Donald Trump Pulls the Trigger and the World Goes “Boom!”

By Phillip Giraldi

Many Americans are coming around to the view, based on what comes out of President Donald Trump’s mouth and what he writes down on his Truth Social site, that the US Head of State is insane.

Larry Johnson is reporting “shocking details of what is going on behind the scene at the White House [where] Donald Trump began exhibiting signs of early dementia in September 2025… He frequently confabulates, he routinely loses his temper and unleashes screaming rants, and he is incapable of doing critical thinking. [As a result] Trump’s senior White House staff are behaving like children with an abusive, drug-addled father… i.e., they walk on egg shells fearful of saying anything that might ignite Trump’s rage.”

And the American public is beginning to pick up on the dysfunction. A broad understanding is developing among voters that the war against Iran undeniably has nothing to do with actual American national or security interests and has been covered by a tissue of scarcely credible lies and dissimulations to conceal the truth.

This wide divide between truth and fiction has become clear to nearly everyone. And the actual source of the war, which is enabling and “helping” Israel to destroy Iran, has become increasingly evident to the public as well, as has the reality that the brutal war criminal Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu controls both Trump and most of the US Congress.

Beyond his mental breakdown, Trump’s foreign and domestic policies are characterized by their belligerency, full of threats directed against imaginary enemies, friends and allies unwilling to go to war for nothing, and anyone in the media or among the public who dares to criticize what comes out of the White House. That means that Trump is not only crazy he is a dangerous psychopath in his preferred interaction with political and social developments that he is supposed to be examining rationally to benefit the United States and the American people.

So what we Americans get is wars plus killing of fishermen in international waters as well as abductions and assassination of foreign politicians and even bombing school girls for no reasons at all. When he is on a roll, Trump is full of threats to “obliterate” foreign countries, and includes unconscionable diatribes against folks like the Roman Catholic Pope Leo for daring to ask for an end to wars and to seek peaceful coexistence among nations. After Trump posted an Artificial Intelligence picture of himself as Jesus, the Pope argued “Woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic, and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth.” Trump responded by taking aim at the Pope on Truth Social with

“I don’t want a Pope who thinks it’s OK for Iran to have a Nuclear Weapon. I don’t want a Pope who thinks it’s terrible that America attacked Venezuela… and I don’t want a Pope who criticizes the President of the United States because I’m doing exactly what I was elected, IN A LANDSLIDE, to do… If I wasn’t in the White House, Leo wouldn’t be in the Vatican. Unfortunately, Leo’s Weak on Crime, Weak on Nuclear Weapons, does not sit well with me…Leo should get his act together as Pope, use Common Sense, stop catering to the Radical Left, and focus on being a Great Pope, not a Politician.”

The attack on the Pope was followed by a summoning of the Vatican’s Washington based diplomatic top representative in the US Cardinal Christophe Pierre to the Pentagon where he received a “bitter lecture” and warning that lest the Pope behaves there will be retaliation employing the superior military might of the United States.

In January Cardinal Pierre had been warned that the United States has the military power to do “whatever it wants” and that Pope Leo, the first American-born pontiff, “better take its side” over US interference in Latin America. Interestingly, on the night following Pierre’s Pentagon visit there was a bomb threat directed against the Pope’s brother in Illinois, perhaps intended to send a message! The good side of that Trumpean rant and the hateful behavior of his supporters, which has produced outrage not only among Catholics, might well be that Trump will lose his majority in Congress and could even be impeached, hopefully successfully this time around.

Trump is also outraging America’s former loyal allies in NATO. One might argue reasonably that NATO has outlived its relevance but that is not the argument Trump is making. He wants NATO to fully support his illegal war of aggression in Iran and also ignore Israel’s war crime of genocide in Gaza. Spain was the first country to deny use of its NATO airbases and its airspace to US warplanes transiting to attack Iran. England, the most loyal lapdog of all, has also turned non-cooperative with Prime Minister Keir Starmer denying use of British airbases in both the UK and Cyprus and declaring that he has had enough of Trump.

But perhaps the cruelest cut of all came from Italy, which was outraged by Trump’s attack on the Pope. Prime Minister Georgia Meloni, hitherto a strong Trump European supporter, struck back against the US President, first deciding that Italy would no longer supply arms to Israel before declaring that Rome would stand by the Pope in his condemnation of war while also finding Trump’s denunciation of the Pontiff “unacceptable.” She elaborated that

“The Pope is the head of the Catholic Church, and it is right and normal that he calls for peace and condemns every form of war.”

Trump, who has given Israel $880 million in new bombs just this week to continue its depredations while also surging thousands more troops to the Middle East, of course went on the offensive. In a subsequent interview with the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera, Trump responded that Meloni is “unacceptable,” and Iran “would blow up Italy in two minutes if they had the chance.”

But unfortunately there is much more than the trading of insults at stake in the Donald Trump debacle. We now know the extent to which Netanyahu and Israel control Trump and a large part of our government, so much so that Netanyahu boasts of having Vice President Vance and the White House staff “report to him daily.” That means that the likelihood that the Israelis will have US backing to use their “secret” nuclear weapons to strike and destroy Iran if the war is resumed and is going against them, which is quite possible, maybe even likely. They might also have the leverage to get an ignorant and aggressive Trump to use America’s nukes on Iran, the first employment of such weapons since their use on World War 2 Japan in 1945. As Netanyahu and his intelligence chiefs appear to have regular access to the White House including being able to convince a gullible Trump falsely that the war against Iran would be a cakewalk, they might be able to talk him into using America’s nukes to finish the Persian job, possibly coupled with some lies to the tune that Iran was about to use its hidden nukes to strike the United States. The president’s spokesperson and leading sycophant Karoline Leavitt has assured us that the president is looking at “all options” regarding Iran and just what do you think that means? This would accomplish the same goal of destroying Iran without the onus of Israel being the source of yet another appalling war crime since it already has plenty of such crimes to its credit in Gaza and Lebanon.

I have previously suggested that Israel could energize US military activity against Iran in particular by staging some kind of false flag attack on American forces in the Persian Gulf region while making it appear to have been done by the Iranians. With the possibility that Trump might go nuclear rolling around in my head I decided to do some research into how easy it would be for him to start a nuclear war without any real provocation on the part of anyone to justify it. To my astonishment, it would be very easy, in fact, certainly within the capabilities of a mentally addled insane man. Indeed, there is pretty much nothing in the process to go nuclear that would stop Trump and prevent him from acting out his “feelings,” as he is wont to put it.

So for the benefit of all those, like myself, who want to learn what happens when the United States President pushes the so-called button or pulls the trigger, whichever metaphor one prefers, to start a nuclear war, I will outline what I have discovered. The biggest surprise to me was that there are not really any checks and balances on what takes place to make sure that no president is making a mistake or exceeding authority to go nuclear. Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution states that “The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States” and both courts and legal scholars have long interpreted this clause as giving the President direct command over military operations, including decisions about when and how to use specific weapons. Indeed, no statute or constitutional provision requires the President to get approval from anyone else before ordering a nuclear strike.

The President’s status as Commander-in-Chief of all US military forces includes those delivery systems for nuclear weapons, and he has absolute authority to launch when, in his or her judgement, there is a proportionate imminent threat coming from a hostile state. Which de facto authority is not to say that there has not been a legal debate over the context of using a nuclear weapon. When incoming warheads are minutes away, there is virtually no legal debate: the President has full authority to respond with nuclear force without seeking prior authorization from Congress. The War Powers Resolution itself recognizes that the President’s Commander-in-Chief powers as the sole nuclear launch authority may be exercised in response to “a national emergency created by attack upon the United States, its territories or possessions, or its armed forces.”

But a nuclear first strike is a different story, raising the issue of possible use against Iran. If a President contemplates using nuclear weapons preemptively, before any attack has begun or become imminent, there is a strong legal argument that congressional authorization is required. The Constitution gives only to Congress the power to declare war, and initiating nuclear hostilities without an imminent threat looks far more like starting a war than responding to one. Many legal scholars would agree that a President must seek congressional authorization before ordering a first use of nuclear weapons in any non-emergency scenario.

Nevertheless, in practice, every President retains the physical ability to order a first strike without asking Congress first as the launch system does not distinguish between retaliatory and first-use orders. The button to push is located on an electronic “nuclear football” that is carried around in close proximity to wherever the president is at by a military aide.

The control football includes a number of features that require confirmation of the action ordered and the targets as well as the identity of the originator who must be the president, or, in his absence, the vice president. That done, the electronics essentially enable a launch order programmed to carry out whatever aggressive action the president or vice president has chosen to engage in. If the US is actually under attack, the entire process from first detection of “incomings” to US missiles leaving their silos can take roughly 25 minutes. The President’s role is limited to approximately 10 minutes during which he or she has to inter alia make a judgement call regarding the legitimacy of what he has been informed of to justify beginning a nuclear war.

There are various other issues involved in staging a nuclear strike, but the fact is that Donald Trump even in his mentally addled state could no doubt both legally and practically initiate a nuclear weapons attack on Iran or any other country based on his “feelings” about what is going on with that country’s foreign policy. In shaping any such a judgement he will no doubt have plenty of false information fed to him by his good friend Benjamin Netanyahu. Netanyahu, of course, has his own nuclear arsenal but most likely has a mindset that impels him to let the Americans do the work and pay whatever price becomes relevant to the horror that would no doubt be the worldwide response. Trump, to be sure, is the second president in a row who has not been of sound mind and the danger that he might stumble into doing something awful is all too real. It would be reasonable to suggest that it is past time for Congress to act to disable the “nuclear football” in any situation where the United States is not itself actually and demonstrably under attack. The thought that Donald Trump might be considering pulling the nuclear trigger to make Israel happy is just too frightening to bear but Americans must be aware of that possibility!

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/donald-trump-pulls-the-trigger-and-the-world-goes-boom/5922845

Hezbollah’s Fiber Optic Controlled Missile-laden Drones Pose Serious Threat to ‘Israel’ in Any Upcoming Battle

Uprooted Palestinians

18/4/2026

The Zionist newspaper Yediot Ahronot reports if fighting resumes, Hezbollah is expected to intensify its use of missile-laden drones connected via fiber optics.

The Israeli newspaper “Yedioth Ahronoth” stated that the importance of these drones lies in their resistance to jamming, quiet operation, precise guidance, and ability to cover the entire area of ​​operations of the “army” in southern Lebanon, up to the border settlements.

Yedioth Ahronoth” reported that Hezbollah used this type of drone extensively against Israeli army forces in southern Lebanon, as well as against border targets inside ‘Israel’, which imposes on ‘Israel’ finding a solution to this threat.

Related Videos

[…]

Via https://uprootedpalestinians.wordpress.com/2026/04/18/hezbollahs-missile-laden-drones-connected-via-fiber-optics-poses-serious-threat-to-israel-in-any-upcoming-battle-yedioth-ahronoth/

Russia: US sought to take control of Iranian oil in Persian Gulf 

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov says the United States was seeking to take control of the vital oil route through the Strait of Hormuz as the primary objective of its aggression on Iranian soil.

“I do not think there really were plans to destroy civilization. I think it is just a figure of speech,” Lavrov said at the Antalya Diplomacy Forum on Friday. “But the plans were to control the oil that passes through the Persian Gulf, through the Strait of Hormuz.”

Despite repeated claims of victory by President Trump, he was forced to announce a two-week ceasefire just hours before his self-imposed deadline for what he described as the annihilation of “the whole civilization” of Iran. The ceasefire is set to expire on April 21.

Iranian military officials have emphasized that while the Islamic Republic does not seek war, it remains fully prepared to defend its national sovereignty.

Throughout the conflict, Iran’s naval forces successfully secured full control over transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

On Friday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi announced the reopening of the Strait following the implementation of a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon.

The Islamic Republic had identified the ceasefire as an indivisible part of its 10-point proposal to Washington.

On his Truth Social platform, Trump reacted to Araghchi’s announcement, alleging that Iran had “agreed to never close the Strait of Hormuz again.”

He said the United States’ “naval blockade will remain in full force and effect as it pertains to Iran, only, until such time as our transaction with Iran is 100% complete.”

Iran categorically refuted his claims. Iran said Saturday that the Strait of Hormuz was closed again as the US refused to lift its so-called blockade of the Iranian ports.

The Persian Gulf waterway is a major transit point for about 20 percent of global oil and liquefied natural gas shipments.

This unprecedented disruption has fueled inflation and slowed the global economy, with an impact expected to last for months.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/18/767119/Russia-US-sought-to-take-control-of-Iranian-oil-in-Persian-Gulf

Iran Fires on Two US Ships and Fully Closes Strait of Hormuz

In Crisis With Iran, U.S. Military Officials Focus on Strait of Hormuz ...

CAIRO (AP) — The standoff over the Strait of Hormuz escalated again Saturday as Iran reversed its reopening of the crucial waterway and fired on ships attempting to pass, in retaliation after the United States pressed ahead with its blockade of Iranian ports.

The strait is closed until the U.S. blockade is lifted, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard navy said Saturday night, warning that “no vessel should make any movement from its anchorage in the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman, and approaching the Strait of Hormuz will be considered as cooperation with the enemy” and be targeted.

New attacks on the strait, through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil normally passes, threatened to deepen the global energy crisis and push the countries into renewed conflict as the war entered its eighth week.

A fragile ceasefire is due to run out by Wednesday. Iran said it had received new proposals from the United States, and Pakistani mediators were working to arrange another round of direct negotiations.

Iran’s joint military command earlier said “control of the Strait of Hormuz has returned to its previous state … under strict management and control of the armed forces.”

Revolutionary Guard gunboats opened fire on a tanker and an unknown projectile hit a container vessel, damaging some containers, the British military’s United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations center said. India’s foreign ministry said it summoned Iran’s ambassador over the “serious incident” of firing on two India-flagged merchant ships, especially after Iran earlier let several India-bound ships through.

For Iran, the strait’s closure — imposed after the U.S. and Israel launched the war on Feb. 28 during talks over Tehran’s nuclear program — is perhaps its most powerful weapon, threatening the world economy and inflicting political pain on President Donald Trump. For the United States, the blockade keeps up pressure and could strangle Iran’s already weakened economy.

Iran’s new supreme leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, issued defiant remarks on Saturday, saying the navy stands “ready to inflict bitter defeats on its enemies.” He has not been seen in public since being elevated to the post following his father’s death in Israel’s opening barrage.

A turnaround a day after Iran said the strait was open

On Friday, Iran announced the strait’s reopening to commercial vessels after a 10-day truce was announced between Israel and the Iranian-backed Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon. The reopening caused oil prices to fall.

Trump, however, said the U.S. blockade of Iran’s ports “will remain in full force” until Tehran reaches a deal with the United States. Trump had imposed the blockade after a round of historic face-to-face talks in Pakistan between the countries ended without an agreement.

U.S. forces have sent 23 ships back to Iran since the blockade began on Monday, U.S. Central Command said Saturday. Trump’s comments triggered an outcry.

“Americans are risking the international community, risking the global economy through these, I can say, miscalculations,” Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Saeed Khatibzadeh told The Associated Press, adding that the U.S. is “risking the whole ceasefire package.”

Iran’s Supreme National Security Council issued a statement calling the blockade a violation of the ceasefire and said Iran would prevent “any conditional and limited reopening” of the strait. The council has recently acted as Iran’s de facto top decision-making body.

Since most supplies to U.S. military bases in the Gulf region come through the strait, “Iran is determined to maintain oversight and control over traffic through the strait until the war fully ends,” the council said. That means Iran-designated routes, payment of fees and issuance of transit certificates.

The Revolutionary Guard navy statement later indicated that no vessel should attempt a transit at all.

Pakistan pushes for progress toward a new deal

The renewed standoff over the strait came hours after Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said his country was working to “bridge” differences between the U.S. and Iran. Pakistan is expected to host a second round of negotiations early next week.

Iran’s Supreme National Security Council said “new proposals” from the U.S. had been put forward during a visit to Iran by Pakistan’s army chief and were being reviewed.

But Khatibzadeh said the Iranians were not ready for a new round of face-to-face talks because the Americans “have not abandoned their maximalist position.”

He also said Iran will not hand over its stock of 970 pounds (440 kilograms) of enriched uranium to the United States, calling the idea “a nonstarter.” Khatibzadeh did not address other proposals for the enriched uranium, saying only that “we are ready to address any concerns.”

Trump said Saturday that Iran “got a little cute” but that “very good” conversations were happening, and more information would come by day’s end. “They can’t blackmail us,” he added.

On Friday, Trump said the U.S. will go into Iran and “get all the nuclear dust,” referring to the enriched uranium, which is believed to be buried under nuclear sites badly damaged by U.S. military strikes last year.

[…]

 

Trump’s post ‘prohibiting’ Israeli strikes on Lebanon leaves Netanyahu ‘stunned, alarmed’

US President Donald Trump (R) and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was personally “stunned and alarmed” by a social media post by US President Donald Trump, in which the latter said the Israeli regime was “PROHIBITED” from attacking Lebanon, a report says.

American website Axios published the report on Friday, citing sources as saying that Israeli officials first saw the post in media reports rather than finding out about it through official channels.

In an interview, he reinforced his position, saying, “Israel has to stop. They can’t continue to blow buildings up. I am not gonna allow it.”

Trump had announced on Thursday that the regime and Lebanon had agreed to a 10-day ceasefire.

It followed the US president’s announcement of a two-weak lull in unprovoked aggression targeting Iran. Making the latter announcement, Trump said a 10-point ceasefire proposal forwarded by Iran was a “workable basis on which to negotiate and the main framework” for talks with the Islamic Republic. Among other things, the proposal has identified cessation of Israeli attacks on Lebanon as an indivisible part of termination of the cycle of unprovoked aggression and retaliatory strikes across the region.

Under the agreement with Lebanon, the Israeli regime is barred from carrying out offensive military operations against Lebanese targets, including civilian and state infrastructure.

The Israeli officials experiencing alarm at Trump’s post, including ambassador to Washington Yechiel Leiter, have sought clarification from the White House, moving quickly to determine whether US policy has shifted and raising “concerns” with the White House.

Trump’s announcements regarding the cessation of attacks on Iran and the ceasefire in Lebanon both followed scores of determined and successful retaliatory strikes staged by the Islamic Republic’s Armed Forces and regional resistance movements, including Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Some of the strikes would be carried out through coordination among the forces staging the reprisal.

[…]

The chance of a Türkiye-Israel war has never been more real

The chance of a Türkiye-Israel war has never been more real

By Murad Sadygzade

The latest wave of discussion about a possible Turkish-Israeli confrontation was triggered by media reports claiming Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened to invade Israel.

Soon afterward, however, that interpretation was challenged in Türkiye. The specific quote turned out to be old and taken out of context, and Turkish voices insisted that Erdogan had made no direct statement about being prepared to launch a war against Israel. Still, he has undeniably been escalating his harsh rhetoric towards Israel, including calling it a terrorist state and comparing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Hitler.

Yet even setting aside the dispute over the precise wording, the intensity of the reaction to the ‘invasion threat’ reports is revealing in itself. It shows that relations between Ankara and West Jerusalem have already reached a stage at which even an ambiguous phrase is instantly treated as a political signal, and any sharp comment can become part of the wider picture of a major regional confrontation. The ground for such a perception has long been prepared by the very trajectory of Turkish-Israeli relations.

A slide towards conflict

At first glance, this may appear to be no more than another burst of emotional rhetoric of the kind that has long been common in the Middle East, where dramatic threats and demonstrative statements have become part of the political language. But that explanation is too shallow and therefore misses the real point. What we are witnessing in fact reflects a much deeper and more dangerous process. Türkiye and Israel are gradually ceasing to see one another merely as occasional opponents divided by particular disputes, and are increasingly beginning to view each other as strategic rivals in a long game. That is what makes the current exchange of statements especially alarming. Once states enter a phase of systemic rivalry, rhetoric itself starts shaping how elites, societies, and security institutions imagine a future conflict as something almost natural.

In one sense, there is nothing surprising about this. The Middle East is structured in such a way that several ambitious centers of power can rarely coexist without an escalating competition between them. When multiple states claim exceptional status, the role of regional guarantor, or the right to speak for the region or at least for a large part of it, their interests will sooner or later collide. Türkiye and Israel are now moving ever more clearly toward precisely that point. Both states lay claim to a special mission. Both want to be indispensable to outside powers. Both believe that yielding to a rival today may become a historic defeat tomorrow. And both build their strategies not only around the defense of national interests but also around the idea of regional primacy. In such a context, even temporary tactical cooperation does not alter the deeper reality. Competition over space, influence, routes, alliances, and symbolic leadership continues to accumulate at a systemic level.

A history of partnership

It is particularly important to understand that Türkiye and Israel were by no means destined for hostility. On the contrary, for decades their relations developed along a very different trajectory. Ankara became the first Muslim-majority country to recognize Israel in the middle of the twentieth century. During the Cold War, the two maintained working ties grounded in pragmatism, shared links to the Western world, and an understanding that in an unstable regional environment it was better to have additional channels of interaction than to turn ideological differences into a permanent source of conflict. But the true flourishing of Turkish-Israeli cooperation came in the 1990s. That was when both sides began to see in the other an important element of their own security strategy.

In those years, Turkish-Israeli relations did indeed approach a near-strategic level. Military and intelligence cooperation was particularly close. For Türkiye, this meant access to technology, modernization, coordination on security matters, and the strengthening of its armed forces. For Israel, an alliance with a large Muslim country occupying a position of immense geographic importance carried both symbolic and practical value. It demonstrated that the Jewish state was capable of building durable ties in the region and moving beyond the usual boundaries of diplomatic isolation. Joint exercises, military contacts, defense agreements, technical modernization, intelligence exchanges, and political coordination all created the impression that a long-term axis was taking shape between the two states.

It is to that period that the story of Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Ocalan belongs, a story that still carries symbolic weight for understanding how Turkish-Israeli closeness was perceived both in Türkiye and across the region. What remains a confirmed fact is that Ocalan was captured by Turkish intelligence in Kenya in 1999. Yet almost immediately, a broader narrative took hold suggesting that Israeli intelligence may have assisted Türkiye in the operation. That theme became part of the half-shadowed political memory of the region. For some, it was evidence of the depth of the Turkish-Israeli partnership. For others, it became part of a wider myth that Israel, at critical moments, stood with the Turkish state in its struggle against the Kurdish movement. Even if one leaves aside the question of how accurate those perceptions were, the more important point remains. Such narratives could only take root because, in the 1990s, Turkish-Israeli cooperation appeared so close that many found it entirely plausible that Israel might have had a hand in some of Türkiye’s most sensitive operations.

And this is where one of the most striking ironies of modern Middle Eastern history lies. What once seemed like a durable strategic partnership gradually turned into a field of irritation, mutual suspicion, and then near-open rivalry. Erdogan’s rise to power did not produce an immediate rupture, but it steadily altered the ideological framework of the relationship. The new Turkish leadership viewed the region differently. It sought not merely to preserve ties to the Western security architecture, but to construct its own autonomous axis of influence, drawing upon the Islamic factor, a more active policy across former Ottoman spaces, and the projection of moral leadership on issues tied to the Muslim world. Within that model, Israel could no longer remain for Ankara simply a pragmatic partner. It increasingly became a convenient point of ideological contrast and at the same time an important target of foreign policy pressure.

Much more than just Palestine

The turning point in public perception came with the Mavi Marmara incident of 2010, when Israeli forces raided a flotilla of ships carrying aid to the blockaded Gaza, which Türkiye had helped to organize. During the attack, nine people were killed aboard the Turkish ship Mavi Marmara, most of them Turkish nationals. After that, relations deteriorated sharply, and mutual distrust moved far beyond the walls of diplomatic offices. It became part of mass political consciousness. For Turkish society, Israel increasingly appeared as a state acting from a position of force and disregarding moral restraints. For much of the Israeli establishment, Türkiye came to look like a former ally moving rapidly toward radicalization, using the Palestinian issue for its own rise, and shifting toward a more confrontational model of behavior. Later, both sides made efforts to normalize relations. There were apologies, negotiations, a return to formal diplomatic channels, and eventually the restoration of full relations. But that warming proved to be more of a pause than a lasting reversal. The war in Gaza shattered the relationship once again, and it became obvious that the old level of trust no longer existed.

The current tension cannot be reduced to the Palestinian issue alone, even though that remains the most powerful emotional accelerator of the conflict. In reality, Türkiye and Israel now diverge along several strategic lines at once. The first is linked to Syria. For Türkiye, the Syrian arena is directly connected to questions of national security, the Kurdish issue, refugees, border control, and its own capacity for projecting force. For Israel, Syria forms part of a much broader equation involving Iran, Hezbollah, weapons routes, and the danger of hostile military infrastructure taking shape near its borders. For the moment these interests overlap only in part, but the sheer density of the two states’ presence in the same theater is gradually increasing the risk not only of political friction but of operational military clashes as well.

The second line runs through the Eastern Mediterranean. Here the question is not only about energy and maritime boundaries, but about the very architecture of the region’s future order. Türkiye sees itself as a natural center of power in this space and reacts sharply to any configuration in which it is isolated or pushed aside. Israel, meanwhile, seeks to deepen ties with coalitions capable of constraining Turkish ambitions while at the same time expanding its own strategic room for maneuver. The more actively each side searches for an external support system, the more the other interprets that effort as a project of encirclement and exclusion.

The third line concerns the struggle for symbolic leadership. This is an especially important factor, although it is often underestimated. Israel proceeds from the assumption that it must preserve military and technological superiority, as well as political initiative in questions concerning regional security. Under Erdogan, Türkiye has become ever more insistent in claiming the role of a state that speaks for a broad Muslim audience, especially where Palestinians, Jerusalem, and resistance to Israeli policy are concerned. For Erdogan, this is part of a long-term project in which Türkiye is meant to appear not as a peripheral member of the Western world, but as an autonomous center of power combining military capability, historical memory, and civilizational ambition. From that perspective, confrontation with Israel brings Ankara not only risks but political dividends.

Yet for Israel as well, the current escalation is not devoid of internal logic. In a climate of chronic crisis, military tension, and deep social fractures, the image of an external enemy once again becomes an instrument of consolidation. For a government accustomed to thinking like a besieged fortress, an outside threat is a useful tool of political survival. After the conflict in Gaza, after tensions on the northern front, and against the background of constant confrontation with Iran, Türkiye may begin to be seen by part of the Israeli establishment as the next major systemic challenge. And it’s a challenge unlike any Israel has faced before: not an ideological enemy on the margins and not an ostracized rogue state, but a strong regional power with ambitions, an army, industry, demography, and a desire to reshape the regional balance in its own favor.

In that sense, the danger of Turkish-Israeli confrontation does not lie in the idea that the two countries stand today on the threshold of immediate war. What matters far more is that they are increasingly placing one another on their long-term maps of threat perception. Once that happens, political rhetoric begins to perform a preparatory function, accustoming society to the idea that a future clash is inevitable. It generates expert justifications for greater harshness. It legitimizes force buildups, new alliances, more aggressive moves in adjacent arenas, and a lower threshold of sensitivity to risk. At such moments, conflict may remain below the threshold of open war for a long time, but the underlying developments already start working in favor of its arrival.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/638595-israel-turkiye-war-real/

New Federal Bill Would Bring Age Verification to Every Operating System in America

Image: Deposit Photos
Image: Deposit Photos

C da Costa

Your laptop might soon demand proof of age before letting you browse freely. H.R. 8250, a federal bill winding through Congress, requires every operating system provider in America to verify user ages and expose that data through APIs. This isn’t limited to social media apps—we’re talking about the core software running your PC, smartphone, and smart home devices.

The bill mirrors California’s A.B. 1043, which passed unanimously and takes effect January 2027. Similar legislation is advancing in Colorado, Illinois, Louisiana, New York, Texas, and Utah. The pattern is clear: age-gating is coming to your desktop whether you like it or not.

Your Internet Gets the Training Wheels Treatment

Apps default to most restrictive settings when operating systems can’t provide age signals.

Here’s where things get dystopian. Under these laws, apps and websites query your OS for age bracket information. No signal? You get treated like a child regardless of your actual age. System76, a Linux manufacturer, warns that “Linux distributions that do not provide an age bracket signal will result in a nerfed internet.”

You are trying to access news sites, streaming services, or productivity tools only to hit content restrictions designed for elementary schoolers. Open-source operating systems—beloved by developers and privacy advocates—face impossible compliance burdens. Small Linux distributions can’t afford the infrastructure for age verification, potentially facing fines up to $7,500 per violation.

The Surveillance State Wears a Child Safety Mask

Critics argue the legislation enables government monitoring while failing to protect minors.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation argues these mandates strike at “the foundation of the free and open internet.” They’re not wrong. Creating government-mandated user tracking systems affects everyone, not just kids. Your age verification data becomes another point for potential surveillance abuse.

The cruel irony? This probably won’t protect children. Savvy teens already use virtual machines and fake birthdates to bypass restrictions. Meanwhile, legitimate users face privacy invasion and restricted access to information.

Your Computing Freedom Hangs in the Balance

Device fragmentation and compliance costs could reshape how Americans interact with technology.

If H.R. 8250 passes, expect your device costs to rise as manufacturers build compliance infrastructure. Operating systems might fragment between “verified” and “unverified” versions. The free, open internet that made modern computing possible gets replaced by walled gardens and government oversight.

This represents a fundamental shift from personal computing freedom to state-supervised digital experiences. Your choice: accept surveillance as the price of internet access, or watch your devices become increasingly hobbled by regulations disguised as child protection.

Trump thanks Iran for opening Strait of Hormuz as oil prices in freefall

Trump follows through on 14-year history opposing Iranian nukes | Fox News
RT
Published 17 Apr, 2026 13:45 | Updated 17 Apr, 2026 17:21
The US president vowed, however, to continue to blockade Iranian ports

Iran has announced that it will allow passage for “all commercial vessels” through the strategic Strait of Hormuz following the declaration of a 10-day Israel-Lebanon ceasefire. However, US President Donald Trump has vowed to maintain his blockade of Iranian ports.

The announcement was made by Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi, who said that the strait is “completely open” for the remaining period of the truce on the route approved by the Iranian authorities. The statement marks a significant shift from Iran’s previous stance, when Tehran prohibited passage for any US or Israeli ship.

The 10-day ceasefire entered into force on Friday following several weeks of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, which claimed more than 2,000 lives in Lebanon.

Here are the latest developments:

• Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the Strait of Hormuz is “completely open” to commercial vessels for the remainder of the ceasefire, which is due to expire on Tuesday

• Trump thanked Tehran and said the strait is “open and ready for business,” but added that the US naval blockade on Iran “remains in full force” until a deal is “100% complete”

• Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) warned the US and Israel they will face a “regret-inducing” response if attacks continue

• A ten-day Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire came into force on Friday, with Trump insisting the group is part of the US-Iran ceasefire deal

• At least 2,196 people have been killed and 1.2 million displaced in Lebanon amid Israeli airstrikes and evacuation orders to expand a “security zone”

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/638566-trump-thanks-iran-hormuz/

Tehran announces complete reopening of Hormuz strait for duration of ceasefire in Lebanon

Iran declares Hormuz ‘completely open’ to all commercial vessels

RT

April 17, 2026

Passage for all commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz is now completely open, Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi declared on Friday. He added that the waterway will remain open for the remainder of the ceasefire in Lebanon.

Araghchi’s announcement came shortly after a 10-day truce came into force between the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and the Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon, which has been one of the major obstacles to a peace deal between Iran and the US.

Writing on X, the Iranian minister stated that “in line with the ceasefire in Lebanon, the passage for all commercial vessels through Strait of Hormuz is declared completely open for the remaining period of ceasefire.”

He noted however, that the vessels would be allowed to move along the “coordinated route as already announced by Ports and Maritime Organisation of the Islamic Rep. of Iran,” suggesting that the strait will remain under Tehran’s control.

US President Donald Trump has responded to Araghchi’s announcement on his Truth Social account, appearing to thank Tehran for fully reopening the “strait of Iran.”

The Strait of Hormuz has been shut down ever since the US and Israel launched an unprovoked attack on Iran in late February. The closure has driven up energy prices and rattled the global economy, disrupting one of the world’s most important trade arteries, which handles around 20% of global crude exports.

In the minutes following Araghchi’s announcement, oil prices plummeted by more than 10%, with Crude oil dropping to just over $83 per barrel and Brent coming in at around $88.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/638564-iran-opens-hormuz-strait/