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trump's nobel piss prize is in the pocket....‘If Iran falls, we’re next’: What Russian experts and politicians are saying about the US strikes
By Georgiy Berezovsky, Vladikavkaz-based journalist
On June 22, the United States, acting in support of its closest ally Israel, launched airstrikes against nuclear sites in Iran. The full consequences of the operation – for Iran’s nuclear program and for the broader balance of power in the Middle East – remain uncertain. But in Moscow, reactions were swift. Russian politicians and foreign policy experts have begun drawing conclusions, offering early forecasts and strategic interpretations of what may come next. In this special report, RT presents the view from Russia: a collection of sharp, often contrasting perspectives from analysts and officials on what Washington’s latest military move means for the region – and for the world. Fyodor Lukyanov, editor-in-chief of Russia in Global Affairs:The trap awaiting Trump is simple – but highly effective. If Iran responds by targeting American assets, the US will be pulled deeper into a military confrontation almost by default. If on the other hand, Tehran holds back or offers only a token response, Israel’s leadership – backed by its neoconservative allies in Washington – will seize the moment to pressure the White House: now is the time to finish off a weakened regime and force a convenient replacement. Until that happens, they’ll argue the job isn’t done. Whether Trump is willing – or even able – to resist that pressure remains uncertain. Most likely, Iran will avoid hitting US targets directly in an effort to prevent a point-of-no-return escalation with American forces. Instead, it will likely intensify its strikes on Israel. Netanyahu, in turn, will double down on his efforts to convince Washington that regime change in Tehran is the only viable path forward – something Trump, at least for now, remains instinctively opposed to. Still, the momentum of military entanglement has a logic of its own, and it’s rarely easy to resist. Tigran Meloyan, analyst at the Center for Strategic Research, Higher School of Economics:If Iran does nothing, it risks appearing weak – both at home and abroad. That makes a carefully calibrated response almost inevitable: one designed not to escalate the conflict, but to preserve domestic legitimacy and project resolve. Tehran is unlikely to go much further than that. Meanwhile, by continuing to build up its military presence, Washington sends a clear deterrent message – signaling both readiness and resolve in case Tehran miscalculates. Another option for Iran could be a dramatic symbolic move: withdrawing from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Such a step would be Tehran’s way of declaring that Trump, by striking nuclear infrastructure, has effectively dismantled the global nonproliferation regime. The NPT was supposed to guarantee Iran’s security; instead, it has delivered the opposite. Still, if Iran goes down that path, it risks damaging ties with Moscow and Beijing – neither of which wants to see a challenge to the existing nuclear order. The bigger question now is whether Iran will even consider returning to talks with Washington after this attack. Why negotiate when American promises no longer mean anything? Tehran urgently needs a mediator who can restrain Trump from further escalation – and right now, the only credible candidate is Moscow. Iran’s foreign minister, [Abbas] Araghchi, is set to meet with President Putin on June 23. It’s hard to imagine that a potential NPT withdrawal won’t be on the table. If in the past an Iranian bomb was considered an existential threat to Israel, the calculus has now reversed: for Iran, nuclear capability is quickly becoming a question of survival. Konstantin Kosachev, vice speaker of the Federation Council:Let’s state the obvious: Iraq, Libya – and now Iran – were bombed because they couldn’t hit back. They either didn’t have weapons of mass destruction or hadn’t yet developed them. In some cases, they never even intended to. Meanwhile, the West doesn’t touch the four countries that remain outside the Non-Proliferation Treaty: India, Pakistan, North Korea, and Israel. Why? Because unlike Iraq, Libya, and Iran, these states actually possess nuclear weapons. The message to so-called ‘threshold’ nations couldn’t be clearer: if you don’t want to be bombed by the West, arm yourself. Build deterrence. Go all the way – even to the point of developing weapons of mass destruction. That’s the grim conclusion many countries will draw. It’s a dangerous lesson, and one that flies in the face of global security and the very idea of a rules-based international order. Yet it’s the West that keeps driving this logic. Iraq was invaded over a vial of powder. Libya gave up its nuclear program and was torn apart. Iran joined the NPT, worked with the IAEA, and didn’t attack Israel – unlike Israel, which just struck Iran while staying outside the NPT and refusing to cooperate with nuclear watchdogs. This is more than hypocrisy; it’s a catastrophic failure of US policy. Trump’s administration has made a colossal mistake. The pursuit of a Nobel Peace Prize has taken on grotesque and dangerous proportions. Alexander Dugin, political philosopher and geopolitical analystSome still cling to the illusion that World War III might somehow pass us by. It won’t. We are already in the thick of it. The US has carried out a bombing strike against Iran – our ally. Nothing stopped them. And if nothing stopped them from bombing Iran, then nothing will stop them from targeting us next. At some point, they may decide that Russia, like Iran, shouldn’t be allowed to possess nuclear weapons – or find some other pretext to strike. Make no mistake: we are at war. The US can attack whether we advance or retreat. It’s not about strategy – it’s about will. Ukraine may not be Israel in the eyes of the West, but it plays a similar role. Israel didn’t always exist; it was created and quickly became a proxy for the collective West – though some Israelis would argue the opposite, that the West is merely a proxy for Israel. Ukraine has followed the same trajectory. No wonder Zelensky isn’t asking for Western support – he’s demanding it, including nuclear arms. The model is clear. And just like Israel bombs Gaza with impunity, Kiev bombarded Donbass for years – albeit with fewer resources and less restraint from Moscow. Our appeals to the UN and calls for peace have become meaningless. If Iran falls, Russia is next. Trump, once again, is firmly in the grip of the neocons – just as he was during his first term. The MAGA project is over. There is no “great America,” only standard-issue globalism in its place. Trump thinks he can strike once – like he did with Soleimani – and then walk it back. But there’s no walking this back. He has triggered a world war he cannot control, let alone win. Now, everything hinges on Iran. If it stays on its feet and keeps fighting, it might still prevail. The Strait of Hormuz is closed. The Houthis have blocked traffic in the Red Sea. As new players enter the fray, the situation will evolve rapidly. China will try to stay out – for now. Until the first blow lands on them, too. But if Iran folds, it won’t just lose itself – it will expose the rest of us. That includes Russia, now facing an existential choice. The question isn’t whether to fight. Russia is already fighting. The question is how. The old methods are exhausted. That means we’ll have to find a new way to fight – and fast. Dmitry Novikov, associate professor at the Higher School of EconomicsJudging by the remarks from Hegseth and General Cain at the press conference, the US appears to be signaling the end of its direct involvement – at least for now. Officially, Iran’s nuclear program has been “eliminated.” Whether that’s actually true is beside the point. Even if Tehran manages to build a bomb six months from now, the narrative is set: the operation was targeted solely at nuclear infrastructure, with no strikes on military forces or civilians. A narrow, clean, and – according to Washington – decisively successful mission. The job is done, the curtain falls. That doesn’t mean Washington is walking away. The US will continue to back Israel and retains the capacity to escalate if needed. But for the moment, the mood seems to be one of self-congratulatory closure. Of course, if they really wanted to go all in, they could’ve used a tactical nuclear weapon. That would’ve offered undeniable “proof” of an Iranian bomb: if it explodes, it must have existed. And second, it would’ve allowed the administration to claim it had destroyed nuclear weapons on Iranian soil. Both assertions would’ve been technically accurate – if strategically absurd. None of it would’ve been factually false. Just morally and politically radioactive. Sergey Markov, political analystWhy did the US choose to strike Iran now, after years of restraint? The answer is simple: fear. For decades, Washington held back out of concern that any attack would trigger a wave of retaliatory terror attacks – possibly hundreds – carried out by sleeper cells tied to Iran and its allies like Hezbollah. The prevailing assumption was that Iran had quietly prepared networks across the US and Israel, ready to unleash chaos in response. But Israel’s war in Lebanon dispelled that myth. The feared sleeper cells never materialized. Once that became clear, both Israel and the US realized they could strike Iran with minimal risk of serious blowback. And so, ironically, Iran’s restraint – its perceived “peacefulness” – has paved the way to war. There’s a lesson in that for Russia: when the West senses both a willingness to negotiate and a refusal to submit, it responds not with diplomacy, but with force. That is the true face of Western imperialism. Vladimir Batyuk, chief research fellow at the Institute for US and Canadian studies, Russian Academy of SciencesTrump has crossed a red line. We’re now facing the real possibility of a major military confrontation. Iran could retaliate by striking US military installations across the Middle East, prompting Washington to respond in kind. That would mark the beginning of a drawn-out armed conflict – one the US may find increasingly difficult to contain. What we’re witnessing looks very much like a victory for the so-called ‘deep state’. Many had expected Trump to hold back, to avoid taking the bait. But he allowed himself to be pulled into a high-risk gamble whose consequences are impossible to predict. And politically, this may backfire. If the standoff with Iran sends oil prices soaring, the fallout could be severe. In the United States, gasoline prices are sacrosanct. Any administration that allows them to spiral out of control faces serious domestic repercussions. For Trump, this could turn into a serious vulnerability. Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of the Russian Security Council; former president of RussiaSo, what exactly did the US accomplish with its midnight strike on three targets in Iran? 1. Iran’s critical nuclear infrastructure appears to be intact – or at worst, only minimally damaged. 2. Uranium enrichment will continue. And let’s just say it plainly now: so will Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons. 3. Several countries are reportedly ready to supply Iran with nuclear warheads directly. 4. Israel is under fire, explosions are echoing through its cities, and civilians are panicking. 5. The US is now entangled in yet another conflict, this one carrying the very real possibility of a ground war. 6. Iran’s political leadership has not only survived – it may have grown stronger. 7. Even Iranians who opposed the regime are now rallying around it. 8. Donald Trump, the self-styled peace president, has just launched a new war. 9. The overwhelming majority of the international community is siding against the US and Israel. 10. At this rate, Trump can kiss that Nobel Peace Prize goodbye – despite how absurdly compromised the award has become. So, congratulations, Mr. President. Truly a stellar start. https://www.rt.com/russia/620253-if-iran-falls-were-next/
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
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kiss my ass....
Chandran Nair
The unravelling of American exceptionalism: The inevitable decay of hegemony built on crassness - Part 1In early May 2025, as Roman Catholic Cardinals gathered to pick the next Pope, US President Donald Trump posted an AI-generated image of him as the Pope shortly after saying, “I would like to be Pope.”
Reactions from around the world were swift, but not everyone was shocked. After all, this was American crassness at its best and the world had got used to it. Trump is not the first nor the only one who has inured the world to American crassness. There is a long list.
When Trump announced sweeping new tariffs on global trading partners in April with China bearing the brunt, financial markets convulsed in their worst turmoil since the early days of the pandemic. Ignorance, arrogance, exceptionalism, and fear of the other all coming together: American crassness on steroids. Trillions of dollars evaporated from stock valuations, and when it got too hot, the US president took notice and paused tariffs for most countries. He then was forced to negotiate a deal with China in mid-May. But most of the American public missed the bigger picture: these tariffs haven’t been implemented to spark a trade war, and nor were they prompted because the world is ripping off America. They are a desperate gambit to prop up the American brand, maintained through decades of economic hegemony, reliant on the exorbitant privilege of the dollar, but which is faced with a perilous moment: it is past the peak of its influence.
Desperate to show the world he is winning in a zero-sum-game, Trump went on to say that leaders of other nations were queuing up to get a deal done and even “kiss my ass". Crass may be too polite a word for such a statement, but the world was not shocked. Such crude boastfulness is central to the American way and ego in almost all walks of life from entertainment, politics, media, finance and even sports. To most of the world it reflects the immature culture of an isolated and brash young settler nation that, as it got wealthy via colonisation of the bounty of the land of the original Native Americans, normalised its unfettered arrogance. The rest of the world playfully termed this the “Ugly American". But this playful tolerance simply emboldened the American psyche and produced today’s rogue state run by supremacists supported by a large majority.
The US trade deficit, often cited as the reason for the tariff protectionist measure, is merely a symptom of a deeper malaise. The real issue? American products, and the culture that sells them, are losing their appeal as the world — and especially nations such as China, South Korea and before them Japan — produce superior quality goods. The other contributing factor is that America began to believe in its own hubris about how globalisation works and shifted its economy to services, dominated by the financial sector — leveraging the exorbitant privilege of the dollar — thereby hollowing out manufacturing jobs. Yet Americans continued to borrow and consume like nobody else, encouraged by the state, living beyond their means and creating the debt which is now crippling the nation. At the same time, they have been led to believe that they are the most important engine of growth in the global economy and the American consumer the most important, even if the most indebted. American business media like Bloomberg, CNBC amd NBC, which for historical reasons continue to dominate the world, have for decades promoted such shallow propaganda and everyone drank the Kool-Aid. What was once irresistible now feels unsustainable, increasingly replaceable, and crass to the rest of the world. The world has now finally woken up to the realities of the current unsustainable workings of the global economy and the so-called US-led rules-based world order. So why did it take the world so long to realise that the “American dream” is a paper tiger and its export a poison chalice?
The myth of American superiority
The United States has long viewed itself as the world’s guiding light, a perception shaped by a blend of Puritan self-righteousness and 19th-century expansionist zeal, exemplified by the doctrine of Manifest Destiny. Rooted in Judeo-Christian ideologies and notions of white supremacy, early settlers and founders perceived their arrival in America as a divine mission, fostering a misguided sense of superiority. This was no different from the white Calvinist settlers who created the apartheid system in South Africa. This belief posited that Americans were divinely ordained to dominate the continent, asserting an unearned sense of entitlement rather than a genuine commitment to enlightenment. They justified their expansionist ambitions with religious rhetoric, insisting it was their moral duty to civilise other nations. Today, this same arrogance lingers, even as evidence of American decline mounts, reflecting a desperate attempt to maintain a facade of dominance in an increasingly multipolar world.
The propaganda that accompanied America’s global expansionist plans (which are predominantly driven by the narrow economic interests of its business leaders) is unmatched. It convinced a naïve and unsuspecting world, looking to the West for ideas after centuries of colonisation, of the virtues of crass consumption and exports such as junk food and B-movies, all as part and parcel of selling its allure and soft power. That is now coming to an end.
Consider even education as a much vaunted pillar of soft power: Americans display a peculiar cultural overconfidence that consistently overestimates their knowledge and capabilities – a trend supported by both objective data and self-perception surveys. While 16 industrialised nations currently outperform the US in science education and 23 surpass American math scores, remarkably, most Americans believe their country ranks among the world's top three in these areas. This collective self-deception, heavily reliant on its media and army of commentators, which has a global foothold, extends beyond academic performance, manifesting in production competitiveness, technological innovation, and workforce readiness (evident in Trump’s pompous claims about American manufacturing). The media, Hollywood, and Silicon Valley reinforce this delusion, packaging all aspects of American life as the global aspirational standard while ignoring its rot: obesity epidemics, opioid crises, gun violence, systemic racism and a political system that can’t tell if it’s supposed to work or put on a show. This is perhaps why it is called the “American Dream” because you have to be asleep at the wheel to believe in it. The world is no longer asleep.
It is important, however, to make a simple qualification. While other nations have their social, political, and economic issues and even their own version of crassness, none can match the shameless American promotion of itself as a provider of global good, the repository of unique soft power, and the extensive nature of the damage it has done globally. Of course, it also needs to be made clear that this does not mean the US has not made contributions to the world — like many other nations over time — but this article seeks to draw attention to its unrivalled and unabashed export of crassness to the world.
https://johnmenadue.com/post/2025/06/the-unravelling-of-american-exceptionalism-the-inevitable-decay-of-hegemony-built-on-crassness-part-1/
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky
POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.