Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

World

Tense meeting looms for Trump as world leader vows to be 'candid' about US-sparked chaos

President Donald Trump’s upcoming meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi may end up becoming a tense standoff after the newly re-elected leader vowed to be “candid” about the economic pain the Trump administration had inflicted on the East Asian nation.

“If President Donald Trump is expecting effusive praise for his war on Iran when Japan’s prime minister arrives in Washington on Thursday, he is likely to be disappointed,” wrote Bronwen Maddox, director of the British foreign-policy think tank Chatham House in the organization’s report Sunday.

Keep reading... Show less

MAGA national security expert makes damning prediction about US 'losing the war'

David Pyne, a prominent America First conservative and national security analyst, issued a stark warning about the trajectory of the Iran war, arguing that Iran possesses a straightforward path to victory regardless of military losses.

"All Iran has to do to win its war of independence against the US and Israel is for its regime to survive and outlast the war while inflicting maximum financial and economic pain on its enemies to pressure Trump to end his unwinnable war of aggression," Pyne wrote on social media.

Keep reading... Show less

Senator flags Trump's 'only way to prevent an even bigger disaster' in Iran

Senator Chris Murphy outlined a cascading series of military crises stemming from Trump's Iran war, warning that the president lacks any coherent strategy to contain the escalating regional conflict.

Murphy identified four interconnected crises threatening to spiral out of control. First, he noted that while U.S. and Israeli forces destroyed Iranian missiles, Iran's arsenal of cheap, weaponized drones poses an indefinite threat to regional oil infrastructure. Iran successfully destroyed a critical Oman oil depot two days ago, demonstrating the vulnerability.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump just 'walked right into the trap' his predecessors were smart enough to bypass: host

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.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump ridiculed for 'sending out invitations to WWIII' as he 'pleads' allies for Iran help

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!"

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's credibility crisis deepens as Pentagon contradicts president on war's status daily

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."

Keep reading... Show less

Iranians who backed Trump turn against him as president's wartime moves backfire

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.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's Iran conflict becomes de facto 'tax increase' on struggling Americans: report

President Donald Trump's military actions in Iran are effectively functioning as a hidden tax on American households, economists warn, as soaring energy costs threaten to erase anticipated benefits from larger tax refunds this filing season.

Americans are poised to receive bigger refunds than last year, with the average federal tax refund reaching $3,742 as of late February—about 10.6% higher than 2025. However, the economic fallout from the Iran conflict is rapidly negating that windfall, according to a new report.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump begs for help from other countries with Iran: 'This should be a team effort'

President Donald Trump called for international cooperation on Iran policy in a Truth Social post, arguing that securing the Strait of Hormuz should be a collective responsibility rather than falling solely on the United States.

Trump claimed that, "The United States of America has beaten and completely decimated Iran, both Militarily, Economically, and in every other way," but emphasized that nations dependent on oil passing through the strategic waterway must share the burden of protecting it.

Keep reading... Show less

Lawmaker's answer on 'boots on the ground' in Iran earns him rolled eyes on MS NOW

An answer by a California conservative, scrambling to keep his job in the House, was on the receiving end of rolled eyes on MS NOW on Saturday morning after he repeatedly ducked a question about US military potentially being deployed to Iran if Donald Trump’s war drags on.

Appearing on “The Weekend," Rep. Kevin Kiley, who switched his affiliation from Republican to independent after redistricting put his job at risk, was asked by co-host Jackie Alemany, “A quick yes or no question, do you support boots on the ground in order to accomplish regime change?”

Keep reading... Show less

Vance nailed for 'astonishingly self-serving maneuver' as he distances himself from Trump

Vice President JD Vance is orchestrating a calculated political retreat from Trump's Iran war, carefully positioning himself to emerge unscathed if the conflict becomes a quagmire while simultaneously undermining his 2028 rival, Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

According to New Republic analyst Alex Shephard, Vance's public tepidness masks a deliberate strategy: stay loyal enough to avoid Trump's wrath while privately signaling opposition to the war through carefully orchestrated leaks to sympathetic journalists.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump may face LA Olympics ban: report

The World Anti-Doping Agency is considering a rule change that could attempt to bar President Donald Trump and other top U.S. officials from attending the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics over a long-running dispute involving unpaid American dues.

The Associated Press reported Friday that the proposal is on the agenda for next week’s executive committee meeting and stems from years of tension after the U.S. government withheld funding in protest of the agency’s handling of a string of high-profile doping cases, including one involving Chinese swimmers.

Keep reading... Show less

‘I don’t want to go to prison’: JD Vance ducks tough Iran question

Vice President JD Vance tried to evade a question about his real thoughts on the war in Iran on Friday.

Vance was taking questions from reporters following his speech in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, where he campaigned for GOP candidates in a district Republicans were hoping to flip. Associated Press reporter Bill Barrow asked the vice president what advice he gave the president regarding military strikes and the economic fallout, including surging gas prices.

Keep reading... Show less