Top World News
Trump just 'walked right into the trap' his predecessors were smart enough to bypass: host
Mar 15, 2026 - World 
President Donald Trump has stumbled into a geopolitical trap that previous administrations deliberately avoided, according to analysis by political show host David Pakman comparing Trump's approach to Iran with policies pursued by the Obama and Biden administrations.Former Secretary of State Antony Blinken revealed that both the Obama and Biden administrations spent years resisting pressure from Israeli leadership to launch preemptive military strikes against Iran. Obama refused repeated calls for action, instead pursuing diplomacy that produced the Iran nuclear agreement. Biden similarly rejected pressure for escalation after the October 7 attacks, reportedly coming within thirty minutes of authorizing a preemptive strike before deciding against it.Trump took a different path, with his administration launching military action against Iran—the exact scenario his predecessors had worked strategically to avoid.The danger lies in an asymmetric cost dynamic. Iran can wage conflict far more cheaply than the United States, deploying $20,000 drones while the U.S. responds with $4 million Patriot interceptors. This imbalance allows weaker adversaries to drain resources from stronger ones over time, Pakman noted.Experts warn that Trump may have succumbed to the same pattern that characterized his first term—believing flattering foreign leaders who promised dramatic breakthroughs, as happened with Putin and Kim Jong Un. The administration now faces a painful choice: commit to prolonged costly conflict or execute a politically humiliating exit.Read more here.
Trump ridiculed for 'sending out invitations to WWIII' as he 'pleads' allies for Iran help
Mar 15, 2026 - World 
President Donald J. Trump spurred a variety of alarmed reactions on Saturday after he asked other countries to help the U.S. with the Iran war amid escalating tensions in the Strait of Hormuz."The United States of America has beaten and completely decimated Iran, both Militarily, Economically, and in every other way," Trump wrote, before shifting to call for international cooperation. He urged countries reliant on oil transit through the strait to "take care of that passage," promising substantial U.S. assistance and coordination to ensure "everything goes quickly, smoothly, and well." Trump framed the effort as a long-overdue "team" approach that would foster "Harmony, Security, and Everlasting Peace!"The post drew immediate online backlash, with critics highlighting what they saw as a glaring contradiction: claiming total Iranian defeat while seeking help to secure the vital waterway, through which roughly one-fifth of global oil flows.Professor Phillips P. O'Brien, a noted historian and strategist, described the message as "a work of art" worthy of preservation. He pointed out the irony: if Iran's military capability is "100% destroyed," why plead with frequently insulted allies to intervene in the Gulf?Online reactions spread rapidly. PatriotTakes, which monitors right-wing extremism, quipped that Trump was "sending out invitations to WWIII."MS NOW's Chris Hayes called it an "instant classic."Detractors mocked the pivot as evidence of overreach in the ongoing U.S.-Iran conflict, where recent airstrikes—including on Kharg Island's military targets—have disrupted shipping but not fully neutralized threats like mines or asymmetric attacks. Supporters, however, viewed it as pragmatic leadership, emphasizing U.S. dominance and the need for shared burden in global security.The statement also underscores broader challenges in Trump's foreign policy approach: bold claims of triumph paired with appeals for multilateral support in a region where unilateral action has proven costly. As oil prices surge and tanker traffic remains vulnerable, the post highlights the delicate balance between projecting strength and acknowledging real-world limitations in securing critical chokepoints.
Trump's credibility crisis deepens as Pentagon contradicts president on war's status daily
Mar 15, 2026 - World 
President Donald Trump's inconsistent messaging about the Iran war is creating a credibility crisis, with his own Pentagon publicly contradicting him about the conflict's status, according to reporting from The Guardian.The contradictions have become stark and immediate. During a CBS News phone interview, Trump declared: "I think the war is very complete, pretty much." Yet that same day, the Pentagon's official X account posted: "This is just the beginning – we will not be deterred until the mission is over" and, "We have Only Just Begun to Fight."At a campaign rally in Kentucky, Trump compounded the confusion by claiming, "We won. The first hour, it was over," before immediately contradicting himself moments later, stating, "We don't want to leave early do we? We got to finish the job."Janessa Goldbeck, a Marine Corps veteran and leader of the Vet Voice Foundation, warned that such contradictions send dangerous signals. "That contradiction sends dangerous signals to adversaries about US resolve," she told The Guardian. "When the president says the war is basically over and his Pentagon says it's just the beginning, that tells the world the strategy is not under control."Presidential historian Jonathan Alter noted that Trump's approach reflects his characteristic style: "He doesn't think any further ahead than the next news cycle and so you get an on-again off-again zigzag foreign policy."The muddled messaging threatens to undermine congressional support for potential supplemental war funding and damage American credibility with both allies and adversaries, according to the report.Read the full piece here.
Iranians who backed Trump turn against him as president's wartime moves backfire
Mar 14, 2026 - World 
Anti-regime Iranians who initially embraced President Donald Trump's promise to "rescue" them from their oppressive government are now expressing deep disillusionment with his military campaign, according to new reporting from The Guardian.Many Iranian dissidents had harbored hope that Trump's administration would intervene militarily against the Islamic Republic. That hope transformed into despair after a fortnight of U.S. and Israeli airstrikes that have killed hundreds of civilians, destroyed critical infrastructure, and damaged irreplaceable cultural heritage sites."They are also lying! Like the regime has been lying to us," said Amir, a University of Tehran student and anti-regime protester, speaking to The Guardian. "You are all worse than each other."The turning point came when Israeli forces struck fuel depots in Tehran, coating the capital in toxic oil rain and blackening the sky. The strikes also damaged ancient landmarks including the 14th-century Golestan Palace and the 17th-century Chehel Sotoon Palace in Isfahan."I genuinely believe now they [the US and Israel] didn't have a plan," Amir told The Guardian. "If the regime is what you want to hit, where do you draw the line? What about us, the ordinary Iranians? We rely on this civil infrastructure."Many protesters now fear the conflict mirrors the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, which promised liberation but delivered civil war. Other Iranian dissidents report viewing the bombing campaign as "carpet bombing" that has killed civilians indiscriminately."A significant portion of the people I've been speaking to, after witnessing the killing of civilians, have altered their perception of military intervention," one Tehran protester told The Guardian.Read the full report here.
North Korean leader Kim observes test of rocket launch systems with his daughter
Mar 14, 2026 - World 
North Korea says leader Kim Jong Un has observed a live-fire test of multiple rocket launch systems to examine the country’s war deterrence

