Iran to close Strait of Hormuz, strike twice as many targets in response to any US attack

Iran Drone Hits Cargo Ship in Hormuz, Halts UN Evacuation

Press TV

Iran has issued a firm warning that it will not back down from its management of the Strait of Hormuz and is prepared to fight to maintain control over the strategic waterway, an informed security source told Press TV on Wednesday.

The source revealed that developments over the past 48 hours have solidified Tehran’s resolve, with a new military and strategic doctrine now in place.

According to the source, Iran’s updated strategy dictates that in the event of any fresh attack on Iranian soil or interests, the Islamic Republic will respond with overwhelming force.

The source elaborated on Iran’s new retaliatory framework, stating that following any strike against Iran, two immediate actions will be taken: first, the Strait of Hormuz will be completely closed to all maritime traffic; and second, Iran will strike enemy targets at a ratio of at least two to one, meaning that for every Iranian target hit, at least two enemy targets will be struck in return.

“The memorandum of understanding signed on this matter clearly states that Iran will reopen the Strait in accordance with its own arrangements. Therefore, Iran will not permit the establishment of any new route outside the framework of its own arrangements,” the source said.

The source also addressed recent threats made by US President Donald Trump, delivering a blunt message to Washington.

“Any threat will receive a powerful response. Iran does not distinguish between the United States and its partners in the region,” the source told Press TV.

“Trump will gain nothing from these recent threats, but he will certainly lose both the Strait of Hormuz and the negotiations over a final agreement. The choice is now his.”

The warning comes amid rising tensions in the Persian Gulf region, after the US military carried out a fresh round of illegal and unprovoked strikes against Iran’s coastal areas early on Wednesday.

US launched military strikes on a number of coastal bases and non-military stations in Iran’s southern Hormozgan province and Mahshahr, which openly violates the ceasefire.

In response, the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) struck 85 US military targets in Bahrain and Kuwait with missiles and drones in an initial response to the American aggression.

The IRGC said the strikes hit facilities at Port Salman, the US Fifth Fleet’s area in Bahrain, and Ali Al Salem Air Base in Kuwait. It also announced the downing of an MQ-9 drone, saying the aircraft attempted to interfere with the operation before it was shot down.

In a statement earlier on Wednesday, Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters said any source of support for the “aggressor US army” will be considered a legitimate target for Iranian armed forces.

“The source of any support for the aggressor US army to violate the sovereignty and territory of Islamic Iran will be a legitimate target for the armed forces,” the top military command center warned.

It said that the only safe route for commercial ships and oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz is the path designated by Iran, and that Tehran will not allow any interference in the management of the Strait.

Iranian parliament speaker and lead negotiator Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf also slammed the US for committing major violations of the Iran-US memorandum of understanding (MoU), stressing that Washington’s “era of bullying and extortion” is over.

“Major MoU violations by the US: [1.] Violating Iranian adjustments in the Strait, [2.] Reinstating oil sanctions, [3.] Attacks on southern Iran, [4.] Continued Zionist aggression on Lebanon,” he said.

“The era of bullying and extortion is over. It leads nowhere. We don’t fold.”

[…]

Via https://alethonews.com/2026/07/08/iran-to-close-strait-of-hormuz-strike-twice-as-many-targets-in-response-to-any-us-attack-source/

Iran says it targeted 85 US military sites in response to US attacks

July 8 2026

Al Mayadeen English

Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) announced that it carried out a retaliatory operation targeting 85 sites belonging to key United States military facilities following

In a statement issued by the IRGC Public Relations Department, the force said its naval and aerospace units conducted a joint missile and drone operation against US military facilities in Salman Port, the Fifth Naval Region of Bahrain, and Ali Al Salem Air Base in Kuwait.

The IRGC also announced that it had downed a US MQ-9 drone that was attempting to interfere with the operation.

The statement came hours after the US Central Command (CENTCOM) announced that it had carried out a series of “powerful strikes” against Iran.

IRGC operation, US attacks on southern Iran

The IRGC said the US attacks targeted several coastal bases and civillian locations in Hormozgan and Khuzestan provinces in the early hours of the morning.

The force said the attacks came as millions participated in the funeral procession and farewell ceremonies for Iran’s martyred leader, accusing Washington of violating agreements and undermining the Islamabad Memorandum.

The IRGC said the US attacks followed the global impact of the large-scale funeral ceremonies, which it said represented a defeat for Washington.

The announcement followed reports of explosions near Bandar Abbas, Qeshm, and Sirik in southern Iran. Iranian media reported that strikes in Sirik targeted a commercial pier and fishing port, with several people wounded by shrapnel.

Gulf states activate air defenses amid escalation

The IRGC announcement came amid heightened security measures across the Gulf.

Kuwait’s military announced that it was responding to missile and drone attacks, while reports and footage showed the activation of air defense systems in Bahrain.

The escalation follows a series of developments across the region, including Iran’s condemnation of the US decision to reinstate sanctions on Iranian oil.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry said Washington’s revocation of the temporary sanctions waiver violated Article 10 of the Islamabad Memorandum and demonstrated “bad faith, instability, and unreliability” by the US administration.

The ministry warned that the United States would bear responsibility for the consequences of breaching the agreement and said Tehran would take measures necessary to protect its national interests and security.

[…]

Via https://english.almayadeen.net/news/politics/irgc-says-it-targeted-85-us-military-sites-in-response-to-us

Brazil sounds alarm over US invasion threat

Brazil sounds alarm over US invasion threat
RT
8 Jul, 2026 

The US decision to brand Brazil’s two biggest criminal groups as terrorist organizations could serve as a pretext for military intervention, the Brazilian Foreign Ministry has warned.

Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira issued the warning in a letter sent to Brazil’s Chamber of Deputies last week, responding to lawmakers’ questions about Washington’s decision to designate the Primeiro Comando da Capital (PCC) and Comando Vermelho (CV) as terrorist organizations, CNN Brazil reported on Tuesday.

The US added the gangs to its list of Foreign Terrorist Organizations (FTOs) on June 5, placing them in the same legal category as groups such as Al-Qaeda and Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS).

Although framed by Washington as a crackdown on transnational crime, Brasilia fears the move could give the US sweeping extraterritorial powers and turn a domestic security issue into a matter of counterterrorism policy.

Addressing lawmakers, Vieira argued that Washington’s existing designation of the gangs as ‘transnational criminal organizations’ already allows broad cooperation with Brazil in combating organized crime, making the FTO listing unnecessary.

“Such application can occur with a wide degree of discretion… with serious possibilities of implications for Brazilian citizens in financial, immigration, and criminal matters. Finally, there is the possibility of the use of military force by the United States on Brazilian territory,” CNN Brazil cited the Foreign Ministry as saying.

The designation will “not bring concrete benefits” to US-Brazil cooperation in combating organized crime, it added. Vieira stressed that the US acted unilaterally and did not formally notify Brasilia, meaning Brazil had no official communication to respond to.

Established under executive orders issued by President George W. Bush after 9/11, the FTO designation does not require approval from Congress and blocks any assets controlled by US persons or entities.

“CV and PCC are two of the most violent criminal organizations in Brazil… Their influence and illicit networks extend far beyond Brazil’s borders, across our region, and into our country,” US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in May, adding that the Trump administration would use “all available tools” to disrupt “violent narcoterrorists.”

Brasilia’s warning comes months after US commandos abducted Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, during a raid in Caracas. Washington accused Maduro of narcoterrorism, drug trafficking, and weapons offenses. Caracas condemned the operation as an act of military aggression. Maduro pleaded not guilty in a Manhattan court.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva later described Maduro’s capture as the first direct US military attack on South America in more than 200 years of independence, warning that the same practice is now spreading across Latin America and the Caribbean.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/642729-brazil-us-invasion-threat/

Trump’s Iran backstab: another manufactured crisis to manipulate oil and tech markets?

Geopolitics Prime

The Iran ceasefire is dead, with the Treasury’s move to revoke a key sanctions waiver and US attempts to undermine Iran’s maritime control over Hormuz culminating in an exchange of deadly strikes. “To me [the deal is] over,” Trump raved at the NATO summit, calling the Iranians “scum” (projection much?)

The market’s reaction was swift: Brent surged over 5.5%, with WTI up 3.2%. Asian stocks plummeted from 2.1% (Nikkei) to 5.4% (South Korea’s Kospi), while in Europe, exchanges shed ~1%+ within hours of the opening bell. Major Asian AI and tech stocks including SK Hynix and Samsung dumped 5.7-6.3%.

Suspicion is rife that this could all be another of Trump’s attempts to manipulate markets. The logic is simple:

🔴 Trump announces ceasefire/peace deal -> lower geopolitical risks, oil falls, tech rises.

🔴 Trump threatens escalation/fighting resumes -> higher risk premiums, physical supply shortage fears, oil rises, tech tumbles.

🔴 The key? Knowing what’s going to happen before it does, and placing massive bets accordingly, taking advantage of rapid price swings, to make a killing. Trump-tied businesses reported up to $750M in trading activity in the early stages of the Iran war alone, and the DoJ has launched a probe into $2.6B worth of suspiciously-timed oil trades.

Playing with fire

📌 The longer Trump and his friends play their crooked market games, the greater the risks to the US and world economies:

1️⃣ An internal Treasury report leaked to media this week warned of the formation of an AI bubble – far larger and more deeply integrated into the US economy than the dotcom bubble was. If it pops, it could trigger a cascading collapse.

2️⃣ The ‘oil glut’ manipulation – a trend analysts noticed early on in the Iran conflict, with oil prices seeming wildly out of whack from what they should be based on actual supply concerns. The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve is down to 320M barrels, approaching its congressionally-mandated minimum. A June IEA analysis revealed that 1.3B barrels have disappeared from global markets.

👉 The world is running on empty, but prices are somehow still below $100 a barrel.

Trump hinted the gravity of the situation at the G7 meeting in June, letting slip that the world would have “run out of reserves at about four weeks” and triggered “bedlam” if a deal with Iran wasn’t reached when it was. Trouble is, he just can’t seem to let good sense get the better of greed and pride.

Via https://t.me/healthimpact/3662

Trump says Iran cease-fire is dead after responding to attacks on Strait of Hormuz with hellfire and fury

U.S. President Donald Trump speaking, with the American and NATO flags in the background.

By Steven Nelson

July 8, 2026

ANKARA, Turkey — President Trump said Wednesday that he believes his memorandum of understanding with Iran is dead after he ordered overnight airstrikes on 80 targets in response to Iranian attacks on commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz.

“I don’t like them at all. And frankly, I think we wasted a lot of time with them, I think we should just do our business,” Trump said in his first public remarks after ordering the airstrikes.

When asked by a reporter if the preliminary peace deal, which Trump signed at the Palace of Versailles in France June 17, was dead, the president replied: “To me, I think it’s over. I don’t want to deal with them anymore. They’re scum.”

President Trump meets with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte at the Bestepe Presidential complex, Ankara, Turkey, July 8, 2026. AP Photo/Alex Brandon

“They’re vicious, violent people… so far as I’m concerned, it’s over,” Trump added.

“So far as I’m concerned, it’s just a waste of time dealing with them. They’re liars… They’re liars, they’re cheats, they’re sick people.

“Frankly, I don’t want to waste my time with them,” the president went on. “Now I’ll let our wonderful negotiators keep talking if they want, but I don’t see it.”

Trump’s comments caused the benchmark Brent crude oil price to jump nearly two full dollars in pre-market trading early Wednesday, with the rate eventually settling at around $76.50. Stock futures also plunged ahead of the opening bell, with the Dow Jones Industral Average slumping nearly 600 points while the S&P 500 lost nearly a full percentage point of value.

Iran’s lead negotiator, Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, defiantly said in a morning statement that “the era of bullying and extortion is over. It leads nowhere. We don’t fold.”

The 14-point memorandum of understanding called for a 60-day window to reopen the Strait of Hormuz as the two sides negotiated the final status of Iran’s nuclear program, the destruction of which was Trump’s core war aim, along with potential sanctions relief and unfreezing of Iran assets.

An explosion in Bandar Abbas, Iran, after US forces conducted strikes against more than 80 Iranian targets on July 7.

Iran attacked three commercial ships in the strait on Monday and Tuesday after insisting that all vessels use a Tehran-approved sea route [which Trump agreed to when he signed the MOU], rather than a different route along the Omani coast preferred by the US and its allies.

Although there have been similar flare-ups over the status of the strait since the memorandum was signed, Trump’s response Wednesday was more emphatic and turned personal when he noted past Iranian plots to assassinate him.

They want to take out the US leader, me. I’m on every list,” he said.

[…]

Via https://nypost.com/2026/07/08/world-news/trump-says-iran-peace-deal-likely-dead-he-no-longer-will-deal-with-sick-people/

The New Pseudoscience of Climate Attribution

Every time a hurricane makes landfall, a wildfire burns, or torrential rain causes flooding, the headlines follow a familiar script. We are told that climate change made the event “twice as likely,” “35 times more likely,” or “virtually impossible without human influence.” These figures are repeated by politicians, journalists, and activists as though they were direct scientific observations.

They are not. They are the output of computer models.

This distinction matters because modern climate policy is increasingly being built not upon observed evidence, but upon simulated realities generated by mathematical models. The growing field of “extreme weather attribution” illustrates this transformation perfectly. Rather than simply studying weather events after they occur, attribution studies attempt to calculate how much more likely an event supposedly became because of human emissions of CO2. The numbers appear precise and authoritative, yet they rest upon assumptions that deserve far greater scrutiny than they usually receive.

Extreme weather attribution did not emerge in isolation. It represents the next stage of the same modelling paradigm that produced speculative emissions scenarios such as RCP 8.5. Once those scenarios were accepted as plausible descriptions of the future, it became possible to use similar modelling techniques to attribute individual weather events to human emissions with apparently precise numerical confidence. In other words, attribution science is not a departure from the climate modelling enterprise—it is its logical extension.

Most people assume these studies compare today’s weather with historical observations. In reality, they compare the present world with a hypothetical world that never existed—a computer-generated version of Earth’s climate in which industrial carbon dioxide emissions never occurred. The difference between the two simulations is then presented as the human contribution to the event[1].

When headlines claimed that the 2024 heatwave across the US Southwest, Mexico and Central America was “35 times more likely” because of climate change, most readers assumed this figure came from direct observations. It did not. The estimate was derived from ensembles of climate models that compared today’s climate with a simulated pre-industrial world.

That sounds scientific until one asks a simple question: how do we know the model accurately represents a climate that no one has ever observed?

Climate models have long struggled to reproduce observed temperature records accurately, with many projections diverging significantly from other observational datasets[2]. They have difficulty reproducing important regional climate patterns, and one of their most important tests—hindcasting, or reproducing known historical climate changes—remains problematic. If a model cannot reliably reproduce the past, confidence in its simulation of an imaginary pre-industrial climate should naturally be limited. Yet attribution studies depend precisely upon this capability.

The growing reliance on attribution studies reflects a broader pattern within modern climate science. For years, speculative emissions scenarios such as RCP 8.5 and its successor SSP5-8.5 shaped thousands of climate-impact studies, policy reports and media narratives, despite repeated criticism that they did not represent realistic future pathways. More recently, the scientists responsible for designing the next generation of climate scenarios acknowledged that these highest-emissions pathways had become implausible. Yet projections derived from them had already influenced climate litigation, net-zero policies and public perceptions worldwide. Attribution science extends this same modelling paradigm by using simulated climates to assign numerical probabilities to individual weather events. The question is not whether computer models have scientific value, but whether increasingly speculative model outputs are being treated as empirical evidence rather than as hypotheses open to testing and revision.

In a recent article I examined how unrealistic emissions scenarios such as RCP 8.5 have been repeatedly presented as plausible futures despite criticism from numerous scientists. Yet the modelling problem goes much deeper. Today, the new branch of climate science—known as extreme weather attribution—claims it can determine how much more likely an individual flood, wildfire, drought or hurricane became because of human emissions of CO₂. These claims now dominate media coverage of extreme weather, but they rely upon many of the same modelling assumptions that have already proven controversial.

The much larger question is whether carbon dioxide is the dominant driver of climate, as claimed by the IPCC, and whether current climate models are capable of isolating its influence with the extraordinary precision implied by modern attribution studies. If the models themselves remain highly uncertain, then the confidence attached to attribution claims becomes equally questionable.

Many highly qualified scientists argue that CO2 is not the dominant driver of climate and that natural variability plays a far greater role than is commonly acknowledged.

Another problem is that weather itself is extraordinarily variable. Floods, droughts, hurricanes, heatwaves and wildfires have always occurred. Long historical records often reveal cycles, clusters and natural fluctuations extending over centuries. In many cases, the evidence does not show the simple upward trends portrayed in media coverage. Historical datasets presented during recent research on attribution science show little or no long-term increase in many categories of extreme weather, while some records even display declining trends over the periods examined.

This does not mean that climate never changes. Of course it does. Earth’s climate has always changed. The question is whether modern attribution studies can confidently separate natural variability from human influence to the extraordinary degree claimed.

Consider how attribution studies are reported. A study may conclude that an event became “twice as likely” because of climate change. The media almost never explain that this conclusion depends upon dozens of climate models, numerous assumptions about historical temperatures, statistical methods, and confidence intervals that may span a wide range of possible outcomes. Instead, the public receives a single dramatic number stripped of its uncertainty.

This creates the illusion of certainty where considerable uncertainty still exists.

Perhaps even more revealing is how attribution science has come to play an increasingly prominent role in climate policy, public discourse, and litigation. The discipline did not emerge simply from scientific curiosity about individual storms. As attribution studies became more sophisticated, they also acquired significant political, regulatory, and legal importance. If specific weather events could be attributed to fossil fuel emissions, then litigation against fossil fuel energy companies would acquire an apparently scientific foundation. Establishing causation is central to liability, and attribution studies attempt to provide precisely that link[3].

Beyond the legal implications, attribution studies also reinforce a broader technocratic agenda. International organisations, governments and regulatory bodies increasingly justify far-reaching energy, financial, industrial and social policies by appealing to climate models that are presented as settled science rather than as evolving scientific hypotheses open to testing, revision and debate.

Whether such lawsuits ultimately succeed is almost beside the point. Once the public is repeatedly told that every wildfire, flood or hurricane carries a measurable carbon fingerprint, the political narrative begins to reinforce itself. Governments demand more intervention. Journalists report increasingly alarming conclusions. Research funding follows the same direction. A feedback loop develops in which models generate headlines, headlines generate policy, and policy demands further modelling.

This pattern extends well beyond climate research. We increasingly inhabit a world governed by computer simulations. Economic models shape monetary policy. Epidemiological models justified unprecedented lockdowns during the COVID era. Artificial intelligence systems increasingly guide hiring, lending, policing and even medical diagnosis. Everywhere, mathematical models are beginning to replace direct observation and human judgment.

History repeatedly teaches the opposite lesson. Scientific progress depends upon challenging models whenever observations contradict them. Models must remain servants of evidence, never its master.

Perhaps that is the most important lesson of the current debate over extreme weather attribution. Public policy affecting trillions of dollars and billions of lives increasingly rests upon simulations of hypothetical worlds that cannot be directly observed or experimentally verified. Such models deserve careful examination, open criticism and continual testing—not unquestioning acceptance simply because they produce impressive-looking numbers.

Real science advances through observation, replication and scepticism. It welcomes uncertainty because uncertainty is the engine of discovery. Pseudoscience, by contrast, often presents confidence that exceeds the available evidence while discouraging dissent.

As climate policy continues to reshape energy systems, economies and individual freedoms, the burden of proof should remain where it has always belonged: on those making the extraordinary claims.

Computer models are valuable scientific tools. But they remain tools, not evidence in themselves. Public policy should be guided first by empirical observation and only second by simulation. When models acquire greater authority than the reality they seek to represent, science risks becoming ideology rather than inquiry.

Readers interested in a more detailed examination of climate modelling, emissions scenarios such as RCP 8.5, extreme weather attribution, and the scientific evidence discussed here will find a fuller treatment in the newly updated 2026 edition of my book Climate CO₂ Hoax: How Bankers Hijacked the Real Environment Movement. This revised edition includes a new chapter examining the quiet retreat from RCP 8.5, the rise of climate attribution science, and recent challenges to the measurement of global ocean heat content. Its purpose is to distinguish genuine environmental concerns from claims that, in my view, are not supported by robust empirical evidence.

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/climate-computer-models-replacing-observation/5932435

US Has Lost War Against Iran: American Influence and Its Military Bases Occupying the Middle East Have Ended

It’s hard to think of a time when the United States suffered a total defeat in a conflict, a setback so decisive that the strategic loss could be neither repaired nor ignored. The calamitous losses suffered at Pearl Harbor, the Philippines, and throughout the Western Pacific in the first months of World War II were eventually reversed. The defeats in Vietnam and Afghanistan were costly but did not do lasting damage to America’s overall position in the world, because they were far from the main theaters of global competition. The initial failure in Iraq was mitigated by a shift in strategy that ultimately left Iraq relatively stable and unthreatening to its neighbors and kept the United States dominant in the region

Kagan clearly says that the outcome of the war can never be reversed, that Washington’s status quo has been permanently damaged. In other words, there is no turning back:

Defeat in the present confrontation with Iran will be of an entirely different character. It can neither be repaired nor ignored. There will be no return to the status quo ante, no ultimate American triumph that will undo or overcome the harm done. The Strait of Hormuz will not be “open,” as it once was. With control of the strait, Iran emerges as the key player in the region and one of the key players in the world. The roles of China and Russia, as Iran’s allies, are strengthened; the role of the United States, substantially diminished. Far from demonstrating American prowess, as supporters of the war have repeatedly claimed, the conflict has revealed an America that is unreliable and incapable of finishing what it started

The New York Times recently published an article ‘President Trump Lost this War’ which also admits the obvious:

Since the war began, he has said the United States would achieve “total and complete victory” and that Iran must agree to “unconditional surrender.” He suggested that regime change would occur. He said that Iran would be permitted “no enrichment” of uranium and that “the United States will, working with Iran, dig up and remove all of the deeply buried” near-bomb-grade nuclear material that it already holds.

None of this appears to be true. Iran’s hard-line government remains in place. The specifics of the nuclear agreement will apparently be negotiated over the next two months, but the terms seem likely to resemble those of a 2015 deal that President Barack Obama negotiated and that Mr. Trump canceled in 2018

The mainstream media still manages to downplay Iran’s military capabilities when it can. It is true that Iran has suffered losses of its navy (which is not a major part of its military), army, air force and military-industrial production plants that manufactures their lethal missiles and drones, but they still have military capabilities that can counter any attack and cause considerable damage to both the US and Israeli militaries. In fact, Iran still has a standing army, navy and air force and enough missiles that can last for at least a decade or more despite their losses:

On balance, Iran emerges the strategic winner of the four-month war. It did suffer substantial losses, including much of its navy, air force, military-industrial capacity and political leadership, including Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader, who was killed on the war’s first day

In fact, The New York Times had to admit the reality of Iran’s true capacity, ‘U.S. Intelligence Shows Iran Retains Substantial Missile Capabilities’, Iran has rebuilt 30 out of 33 missile facilities and more than 90 percent of its underground storage facilities, in other words, Iran is prepared for an endless war with the US and Israel:

The Trump administration’s public portrayal of a shattered Iranian military is sharply at odds with what U.S. intelligence agencies are telling policymakers behind closed doors, according to classified assessments from early this month that show Iran has regained access to most of its missile sites, launchers and underground facilities.

Most alarming to some senior officials is evidence that Iran has restored operational access to 30 of the 33 missile sites it maintains along the Strait of Hormuz, which could threaten American warships and oil tankers transiting the narrow waterway

With missile sites already rebuilt, Iran still has more than 70 percent of their mobile launchers and its most advanced missiles intact, “Iran still fields about 70 percent of its mobile launchers across the country and has retained roughly 70 percent of its prewar missile stockpile, according to the assessments.” So, Iran has most of its mobile launchers and missiles, and on top of that, they still have about 90 percent of its underground missile storage facilities. Various reports from multiple intelligence sources and satellite images that were analyzed say

“that Iran has regained access to roughly 90 percent of its underground missile storage and launch facilities nationwide, which are now assessed to be “partially or fully operational.”

Once again, The Atlantic published another article by Jonathan Lemire admitting that the US lost the war against Iran with severe consequences, in ‘Trump in Defeat’ it says that

“The United States is left weaker, diminished militarily, strategically, economically, and perhaps morally” and that “The war, which the United States fought alongside Israel, accomplished none of the goals that Trump named at the outset.”

[…]

Trump literally allowed Netanyahu to convince him to attack Iran, setting himself up for a trap that he would not be able to get himself out of:

Trump won’t admit to any of this. He has spent recent days furiously spinning the tentative deal as a clear win and has seethed at unflattering comparisons with the deal that President Obama struck with Iran more than a decade ago, aides and outside advisers told me. Trump, they said, has privately denounced Iran hawks, some of whom are among his closest allies in the Republican Party, for questioning the strength of the agreement. Within the administration, there is a divide on the deal, but Trump sided with those advocating for the war to wind down, no matter the terms, as fears mount about the economic toll on Americans and the political costs for Republicans in the midterms

The End of US Dominance in the Middle East: US Military Bases have been Destroyed

More than 20 US bases and other military sites used for ‘Black Ops’ by the CIA and other intelligence agencies have been destroyed with hundreds, possibly thousands of soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines who have been killed, but Washington is not releasing the real numbers despite claims that Trump made that there “only” has been 13 US soldiers killed in action.

According to the ‘BBC Verify’ who investigated the extent of the damages inflicted by Iran, and confirmed that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has destroyed more than 20 US military sites by verifying satellite images and various videos.

“Iran has damaged 20 US military sites since the start of the war, satellite images and videos analyzed by BBC Verify show, suggesting the attacks are more extensive than publicly acknowledged.”

It further went on to say that

“Tehran has targeted both US bases and shared military facilities in retaliation to the US-Israeli strikes across Iran and Lebanon over the past three months. The Pentagon says it has hit more than 13,000 targets in Iran since the start of Operation Epic Fury.”

All US military bases in the Middle East will eventually have to shut down permanently since Iran’s defensive capabilities proved that the US military cannot protect the Gulf monarchies. The New York Times, ‘Gulf Countries Confront Questions About Relying on U.S. for Protection’ interviewed Sanam Vakil, the director of the Middle East and North Africa program at Chatham House said that, “The U.S. security guarantee is no longer reliable in the way they thought it was.” Why?  well, Iran did considerable damage to US military bases and at the same time, they gained complete control over the Strait of Hormuz:

During almost four months of war, Iran and its allies struck military bases, energy facilities, and hotels in countries throughout the region and shut down the Strait of Hormuz, the strategic waterway for oil and gas shipments. The preliminary deal, Gulf leaders hope, will allow their countries to resume exporting oil and gas without Iranian interference, and permit their residents to return to daily life without fear of Iranian missile and drone attacks.

Some Iranian drones were able to evade American defense systems, and the U.S. government and military appeared unprepared for Iran’s closure of the strait

Unprepared indeed, now that the Strait of Hormuz is under Iranian control, the Trump Regime is in a bind that they cannot get out of. This alone proves that the US was defeated on the world stage militarily.

The Memorandum of Understanding is Just a Piece of Paper Because History Tells Us So

Does the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) guarantee peace in the Middle East? No, not at all, it’s just a piece of paper and the Iranians know this. It does not mean anything. It is sort of like the 368 Treaties the US signed with Indigenous nations between 1778 and 1871 to establish a so-called “peace” by recognizing their sovereignty that defined their borders, but with westward expansionist policies, the U.S. government constantly violated or simply ignored those same treaties that resulted in massive land losses which led to forced relocations.

A trail of broken treaties, peace deals or MOUs is in the US government’s DNA. Washington’s main ally, Israel has violated numerous UN resolutions regarding illegal settlements and military conduct that has resulted in numerous war crimes. In this point in time, who could be surprised that the US has already violated the MOU?

As the MOU (Memorandum of Understanding) was signed by both Iran and the United States, Israel continues its genocide on Gaza and Lebanon making the MOU meaningless. The first point of the memorandum is clear which does call for an “immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon, and undertake from now on not to initiate any war or any military operation against each other, and to refrain from the threat or use of force against each other, and ensuring the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Lebanon” obviously, that part has been ignored by Israel since they recently declared that they will not leave southern Lebanon, “The final deal will confirm the permanent termination of the war on all fronts, including in Lebanon and other provisions of this paragraph” but since Trump signed off on the MOU, the US military and Israel has violated Lebanon and Iran’s borders numerous times. Now Israel is trying to permanently occupy Lebanon’s southern sphere as part of the Greater Israel Project. 

Press TV reported on a statement released by the IRCG who said that the

“attacks carried out by the enemy against five Iranian coastal outposts earlier in the day” and that “the aggressor enemy, whose very nature is characterized by breaking commitments and violating agreements, attacked five coastal outposts of the Islamic Republic in the early hours of today under the pretext of responding to the IRGC Navy’s confronting a trespassing vessel [in the Strait of Hormuz.”

The MOU is clearly a way for Washington and Tel Aviv to buy time in an effort to prepare for another attack on Iran. The Trump Regime, Washington’s political establishment and Israel will not accept a defeat although Iran has destroyed more than 13 major US military bases and several other military and intelligence installations who now controls the Strait of Hormuz which is a major transit point for 20 percent of the world’s oil; however, the US and Israel will continue to attack Iran even though thousands of US soldiers, sailors and marines will be sacrificed by a five-time draft dodger who still claims in his delusional world that he is the “peace president.”

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/us-lost-war-iran-american-influence-military-bases-middle-east-ended/5932565

 

College Students Testing at Level of 10-Year-Olds

A stylized photo illustration featuring a college student on his laptop with his hands placed over his mouth in a gesture of anxiety and difficulty.

Illustration by Tag Hartman-Simkins / Futurism. Source: Shutterstock
Gone are the days of university freshmen reading classical philosophers like Plato or contemporary pedagogues like Ta-Nehisi Coates. These days, incoming college students are lucky if they can get through Judy Blume’s “Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing.”

According to a new “Survey of Adult Skills” conducted by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development — a forum for 38 high-income, predominantly Western countries — a not insignificant number of adult students enrolled in higher education are now reading and doing math at a level which, in a more functional society, would be alarming for a middle schooler.

The survey, first spotted by the Economist, tested around 160,000 people of all ages, across all 38 member states. It found that across all OECD member countries, a full 8 percent of college students are reading at the level of a ten-year-old, if not worse. While countries like Germany and France rang in at under 5 percent, countries like Poland, Israel, and the United States blew the curve at 21, 20, and 14 percent, respectively.

The numbers aren’t much better when it comes to math. Across OECD countries, 9 percent of college students do math at or below a ten-year-old level. In Italy, the US, and Slovakia, that figure jumps to over 15 percent — only outdone by Israel, where roughly 21 percent of college students were underachieving at the same low benchmark.

It seems there are numerous compounding explanations for these test results: pandemic-era learning gaps leading to lower levels of preparation, declining college enrollment forcing schools to lower admissions standards, and lower levels of public funding for education, to name a few.

The results also coincide with the explosion of large language models like ChatGPT, which by many accounts have carved out a new floor for academic failure in both K-12 and college-level education.

While there’s no denying how complicated the issue is, there is evidence that removing technology from classrooms altogether could offer an immediate boost.

In one classroom in Minneapolis, for example, a literature and English teacher banned phones and laptops, requiring all coursework to be done on pencil and paper. As the school-year started in September, just 46 percent of the students involved said they felt confident about their reading skills. A few months later in February, that number stood at 95 percent.

Though it’s just one classroom, something is clearly off the rails in the education systems of the richest countries of the world — and the longer it goes unaddressed, the more students will be pushed into the world with the reading skills of 4th graders.

[…]

Via https://futurism.com/future-society/college-students-oecd-reading-literacy-10-year-old

Hamas leaving government, not resistance

A view of the destruction caused by Israeli attacks on Gaza since October 7, 2023, as seen from Israel on June 02, 2026. [Mostafa Alkharouf – Anadolu Agency]

MEMO | July 7, 2026 

Hamas’s decision to dissolve the Government Emergency Committee in the Gaza Strip and transfer civilian administration to the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza marks a significant strategic shift. To interpret it as capitulation or defeat is to misunderstand the current stage of the Palestinian national liberation struggle.

The movement has reaffirmed its commitment to implementing the ceasefire agreement and fulfilling its responsibilities until Gaza’s civilian administration is fully transferred.

The decision should be understood as a tactical repositioning aimed at preserving three strategic objectives: Hamas’s political survival, the reconstruction of Palestinian national unity and the continuation of resistance.

The first is to preserve Hamas as a political, social and military force deeply rooted in Palestinian society.

For almost two decades, the movement has carried the dual burden of governing and resisting, administering a population subjected to blockade, repeated wars and the systematic destruction of the material conditions necessary for life.

After the most devastating war in contemporary Palestinian history, the occupation failed to achieve one of its principal declared objectives: eliminating Hamas.

Leaving Gaza’s day-to-day administration allows the movement to reduce its institutional exposure, reorganise its structures and concentrate on its historical reason for existence: the Palestinian national liberation struggle.

The second objective is to contribute to rebuilding Palestinian national unity.

The political and geographical fragmentation between Gaza and the West Bank, together with internal Palestinian divisions, has long constituted one of the occupation’s greatest strategic advantages.

By transferring civilian administration to a Palestinian national body, Hamas signals that governmental control over Gaza is subordinate to the broader objective of rebuilding national unity.

Gaza does not belong to Hamas. It belongs to the Palestinian people.

The new administration, however, cannot become an instrument of foreign tutelage or a mechanism for excluding political forces with genuine roots in Palestinian society.

The central challenge remains rebuilding a representative Palestinian leadership capable of speaking for Palestinians in the occupied territories, refugee camps and the diaspora.

The third objective is to preserve the continuity of resistance.

Governing and resisting are different political functions. A national liberation movement may participate in elections, administer territories, negotiate ceasefires and accept transitional governments. It may also withdraw from administrative structures when remaining within them threatens higher strategic objectives.

To confuse tactical flexibility with strategic abandonment is to misunderstand the history of anti-colonial struggles.

For years, “Israel” claimed that Hamas’s presence in government justified the blockade, military aggression and collective punishment imposed on Gaza.

Now that the movement has completed the procedures necessary to transfer civilian administration, the occupation is seeking to obstruct the implementation of the agreement, prevent the National Committee from assuming its responsibilities and create an administrative vacuum capable of prolonging Palestinian suffering.

The contradiction is revealing. The objective was never simply to remove Hamas from government, but to deprive the Palestinian people of their capacity to resist.

By demanding that mediators and guarantor states pressure “Israel” to comply with the agreement and allow the National Committee to begin its work, Hamas is also confronting these actors with their responsibilities.

The establishment of the new administration could restore essential public services, strengthen Palestinian resilience and begin confronting the humanitarian catastrophe produced by the war.

Hamas’s decision therefore puts the occupation’s own narrative to the test.

If the war was necessary because Hamas governed Gaza, then the movement’s departure from government should pave the way for the withdrawal of occupying forces, the opening of border crossings, reconstruction and an end to military aggression.

If new conditions continue to be imposed, the political reality will become impossible to conceal: the problem was never simply who governed Gaza, but the existence of a people who refuse submission, displacement and disappearance.

Hamas may leave ministries, dissolve committees and transfer civilian administration. But leaving government does not mean abandoning resistance.

Governing Gaza was a historical circumstance. The liberation of Palestine remains the strategic objective.

Le Pen cleared to run for president

Le Pen cleared to run for president

RT

7 July 2026

A French appeals court has upheld Marine Le Pen’s conviction over misuse of EU funds but reduced her election ban, reopening the path to the 2027 presidential race

Veteran French politician Marine Le Pen has announced that she will run for president in 2027 after an appeals court shortened the ban on holding elected office imposed last year while upholding her conviction over the misuse of European Parliament funds.

A three-time presidential candidate who reached the runoff in 2017 and 2022, Le Pen had been widely viewed as the frontrunner to succeed President Emmanuel Macron before last year’s conviction sidelined her from the race. She has denied any wrongdoing.

On Tuesday, the Paris Court of Appeal upheld Le Pen’s conviction but reduced her five-year ban on holding elected office to 45 months, with 30 months suspended, making her eligible to stand in 2027. The court also sentenced her to three years in prison, including two years suspended, ordered the remaining year to be served under home detention with electronic monitoring, and imposed a €100,000 ($114,000) fine.

The judges said that Le Pen had already been serving the ban since March 31, 2025, and credited that time when reducing the restriction.

The case centered on European Parliament funds intended for parliamentary assistants that the court found had instead been used to pay National Rally staff working in France. The ruling said that the scheme caused €2.8 million in losses to the European Parliament. The National Rally was also convicted and fined €2 million, with half the amount suspended.

French media reported that Le Pen left the courthouse without speaking to reporters and was due to give a television interview later on Tuesday.

Patrick Maisonneuve, the European Parliament’s lawyer in the case, said that the ruling demonstrated that “justice is independent.”

Le Pen’s lawyer, Rodolphe Bosselut, called the decision “a good start” and said no decision had yet been made on whether to appeal to the Court of Cassation.

Le Pen took over the National Front from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011 and transformed the party – renamed the National Rally in 2018 – into France’s largest opposition force. Her protege, Jordan Bardella, had been preparing to replace her as the party’s presidential candidate if she remained barred from running. Opinion polls have consistently placed both among the leading contenders for the 2027 election.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/642674-france-le-pen-2027-race/