We do not have long to wait before Trump is forced to admit his defeat

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامی

US law sets a 60-day limit on unauthorized wars


A post-Vietnam law puts a 60-day clock on the use of military force without congressional authorization.

The war on Iran – for which the Trump administration sought no approval – hits that 60-day mark May 1, according to the text of the law, the War Powers Resolution.

The law lays out a timeline:

First, 48 hours. The president must notify Congress within 48 hours of introducing the armed forces “into hostilities” and explain the scope, justification and likely duration of the effort.

In his lies to Congress about Iran, Trump, like other American aggressors, said he committed troops under a president’s inherent authority in the Constitution to “conduct United States foreign relations.”

Second, 60 days. Congress must authorize the use of force within 60 days of receiving that notification or, the law says, the military action must be terminated.

Some believe the 60-day clock started from the date hostilities began (which would make the deadline April 29), while others cite the text of the law to argue it’s 60 calendar days from the date the White House officially notified Congress (which would put the deadline at May 1).

Either way, all of America's efforts will be in vain soon.
 

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Americans don’t want Iranians killed



View: https://x.com/CMonteroOficial/status/2041502287995056279



Was it the guy in the dungarees with the Vans sneakers? Maybe the girl with the nose piercing? Or the one with the pink hair? The parade of achingly cool sunglasses?

I suspect it was a combination of all of the above that caused a strange reaction from western viewers, particularly in the US, when a video of young Iranians being spoken to on the streets of the capital Tehran recently went viral.

"This is the civilization that US President Donald Trump just said will die tonight," one tweet said.

What was striking was the bewilderment that greeted the clip. This is Iran?! Are you serious? With tote bags and iPhones and beautiful people? It can’t be.

Stranger than that, though, was the discernible uptick in sympathy for a country that the US and Israel were in the middle of bombing to smithereens.

"But they look like … us?" people seemed to be saying, in a reaction similar to the shock that accompanied images of Ukrainians fleeing Russia’s invasion back in 2022 because, to western eyes, they didn’t fit the profile of victims of war.

The video became the first salvo in an ongoing row about what constitutes the real Iran, as footage of the metro, malls and numerous hipster coffee shops went viral.

And, yes, Roostar is probably nicer than that café you went to in New York or London.

This week, street interviews carried out in Tehran by Reuters, again featuring coffee and tea shops and stylish young professionals, caused a similar furor and went similarly viral.

In those vox pops, which canvassed people enjoying themselves, none of the women interviewed wore hijabs.

That fact seemed to anger those, both American and expat Iranians, who begged the US and Israel to attack Iran and who want the bombing to resume.

Because the more people who see these images, the more they chip away at the carefully constructed image of Iran as a medieval backwater refusing to join the "civilized" world.

It’s an obvious thing to say, even though the most rabidly entrenched American will not admit it, but there is no simple answer to what "the real Iran" is.

It’s a huge country of more than 93 million people with diverse ethnic and religious backgrounds. Some live in cities, some live in rural areas. Some are rich, some are poor. Some are devout, some are not.

Strict dress codes mandating that women wear hijabs are loosely enforced in some areas, if at all.

Like any other country in the world, Iran doesn’t lend itself to shorthand.

But that doesn’t stop Western governments and the pliant international media from weaponizing shorthand when covering one of the world's most ancient nations.

Those images communicate two things to audiences already deluged with propaganda: "Muslims and the people of the Middle East are backward and uniquely prone to war".

Americans - in whose name Iran is being bombed - are the only people prone to it.
 
Id never thought Id say this but at this point Id rather trump just surrender already. All this ceaseless begging for a ceasefire is just piling humiliation on top of humiliation.
 
He is looking for any kind of an offramp the Iranians choose to give him.
well hes not getting one and all this begging is not making his position all that much better. If hes not going to fight then he may as well surrender now instead of begging.
 
well hes not getting one and all this begging is not making his position all that much better. If hes not going to fight then he may as well surrender now instead of begging.
Iranians smell blood in the water with all the backing down and begging Trump has been doing.
 

Iran’s national pride strengthened


The recent US-Israeli-imposed war against Iran has strengthened the country’s sense of nationalism and taught Iranians not to rely on outsiders, Fatemeh Mohajerani said on Saturday.

“The recent war increased our sense of nationalism and national pride, and we understood that we should not hope for foreigners,” Mohajerani said.

She expressed confidence in Iran’s future, citing the country’s resilience after the Mongol invasion as proof that Iran emerges stronger from adversity.

“After the Mongol invasion, Iran became more scientific because we were able to guide even the Mongols toward science and civilization,” she said. “Iran’s civilization has the capacity, with God’s grace, to become stronger than before.”
 

Bill Maher Slams 1 Exhausting Trump Trait Emerging ‘Every Day’ Of His Iran War



Real Time” host Bill Maher called out President Donald Trump Friday over his series of “********” claims about the ongoing war on Iran, calling his baffling declarations of victory a “problem” as negotiations amid the current U.S.-Iran ceasefire have yet to produce results.

Maher noted during his opening monologue that Trump has “erratically” veered from threats to destroy Iranian civilization earlier this month to being “so chill” about the conflict. Trump indeed claimed Thursday that he is “the least pressured person ever to be in this position.”

Trump has frequently described his war as an “excursion” or “military operation.” He openly admitted last month that there’s “a legal reason for that,” stating that a U.S. president requires congressional approval before officially — and legally — declaring war.

“And now it’s like, is it really a war?” Maher asked Friday. “It’s more of a ‘situation,’ really, I think. And the problem is he keeps saying we won, and we didn’t. We didn’t. Hormuz is not open. The people did not do an uprising. The regime is still in place. We did not win. Sorry!”

He continued, “And in social media, he keeps rubbing their noses in the victory we don’t have. Every day — every day — he tweets out stuff that’s inflammatory and contradictory, all these ******** claims. I gotta say, you can say what you want about his negotiating tactics.”

Maher then quipped that “the silent treatment” is one tactic Trump hasn’t mastered.

Trump recently extended an originally two-week U.S.-Iran ceasefire deal and has frequently claimed the war is already “won.” He said last month “it was over” in “the first hour” of the conflict and declared the latest ceasefire a “total and complete victory” for the U.S.

Maher was all for bombing Iran when Trump launched initial U.S. strikes in February, which led Iran to close the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil passes. Maher even mocked former Vice President Kamala Harris at the time for opposing the war, and recently needed his guests to explain why the U.S. couldn’t just forcibly reopen the strait.

He has since urged Trump to “cut and run” from the war, admitting earlier this month that he believed bombing Tehran would liberate the country and see Iranians rise up against the regime’s armed forces.
 
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