
Trump's grim secret condition for resuming bombing campaign leaks
President Donald Trump has privately told aides he would consider resuming bombing campaigns against Iran under one specific condition, and it has the fragile ceasefire teetering on the edge.Trump privately told aides he would consider ending the ceasefire if Tehran becomes responsible for the deaths of American troops, according to U.S. officials cited by the Wall Street Journal. The president has signaled a willingness to tolerate smaller military flare-ups for weeks or even months rather than risk a broader conflict.The leak comes as the ceasefire — originally signed April 7 as a two-week pause and later extended indefinitely — faces its most serious test yet. On Tuesday, U.S. forces struck and disabled an Iranian-linked oil tanker, prompting Iranian drone attacks on Gulf shipping and U.S. airstrikes on Iranian military sites on Qeshm Island. The escalation peaked Wednesday when Iran launched its largest barrage since the truce began, firing missiles and drones at Kuwait and Bahrain, temporarily shutting Kuwait's international airport and causing casualties.Trump addressed reporters in the Oval Office Wednesday with a characteristic shrug. “In that part of the world, ceasefire is when you’re shooting in a more moderate manner,” Trump said. He claimed the situation was under control and peace talks were progressing.“It takes two to tango. We hit them very hard on something else and so they were responding,” he said.Experts warn the cycle of retaliation is making the ceasefire increasingly unstable, with each side feeling compelled to respond to avoid appearing weak. Meanwhile, the House voted this week to invoke war powers to end the conflict entirely, with four Republicans breaking ranks to pass the measure.Steve Bannon captured the growing sense of alarm among Trump's own allies, according to the Daily Beast."Is this how MAGA ends — with a whimper, not a bang?"
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Trump claims without proof Democrats are ‘trying to steal’ California primaries
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Top executives warn Trump that even worse price hikes are coming – and soon
At a time when voters are ready to hand Republicans a midterm revolt over the economy, Politico reported this week that top executives warned President Donald Trump that prices are about to get much worse if he does not solve the war in Iran.Trump remains embroiled in negotiations for a lasting ceasefire and resolution to the war, which he started, with Iran's new hardline leadership refusing his demands. As that situation continues to spiral, the Strait of Hormuz remains either closed off or dangerous, depending on the day, sending global oil prices surging as a result.According to a Thursday report from Politico, oil executives have warned Trump and his administration that, as bad as things are now, they are about to get much worse if the Strait is not reopened in a matter of weeks, citing sources close to the discussions. Without the oil that gets shipped through the body of water, global oil reserves will start to dwindle to a dangerous degree, sending prices to new heights."Industry executives have flagged the issue to senior White House officials and Cabinet members in recent weeks as part of the Trump administration’s ongoing dialogue with the U.S. energy industry, the people said," the report detailed. "The warnings came as recently as late last month as data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration and other sources began showing that fuel makers were increasingly relying on oil and fuel from their storage tanks to replace products no longer arriving from the Middle East."It added later: "Some of the conversations have been general warnings while others have focused on tight inventories of specific fuel types in particular locations, such as jet fuel on the West Coast, a second person involved in the conversations said."In response to Politico's query about the supposed warnings, the White House gave only a terse response blasting the outlet for citing anonymous sources.“We’re at dangerously low levels already,” one of those sources, an anonymous industry executive, told Politico. “We have shared those concerns at the highest levels of government about what’s coming in mid-to-late June. … I hope they are paying attention to inventories right now. You’re hitting tank bottom.”Exxon executive Neil Chapman recently told investors that crude barrels could reach $150-160 in two or three weeks. Another anonymous executive told Politico that the White House has already been made aware of that and warned of the crunch coming for consumers during the big holiday travel rush.“Don’t think that an open strait is going to mean your July 4 gasoline bill isn’t going to be higher than what it is today," they said. "It’s going to be.”
Trump expected to announce $700M boost for coal
President Trump is expected to announce that his administration will put about $700 million to bolster coal. Trump is set to use wartime authority under the Defense Prevention Act to dole out $425 million to 13 existing coal plants and $75 million for an export terminal in California. He is also expected to announce $185…
Trump Accuses California Democrats of ‘Cheating’ Over Pace of Vote Counts
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Democrats to Target Trump IRS Immunity in Hearing, Senate Votes
The Treasury secretary has so far demurred, citing ongoing litigation and attorney-client privilege
Fuming Trump tears into ‘unpatriotic’ Dems and grandstanding Republicans after war powers vote
Tom Barrett of Michigan, Warren Davidson of Ohio, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Thomas Massie of Kentucky voted with 211 Democrats to approve the resolution.
'We were played': Iranians turn on Trump after his stunning embrace of their Ayatollah
In foreign policy U-turn that has left citizens inside Iran utterly bewildered, President Donald Trump has completely flipped his script on Tehran's leadership.







