Showing posts with label KURDS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KURDS. Show all posts

Thursday, March 5, 2026

Thursday Afternoon News Updates as Noem is FIRED and Trump Loses Control of War — 3/5/26

                                   

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🚨Trump LOSES ALL CONTROL as WAR BACKFIRES!!.mp4
 
 

Thursday Afternoon News Updates as Noem is FIRED and Trump Loses Control of War — 3/5/26


It’s Wednesday afternoon and we’re finally in the back half of the week. A lot has happened over the past 24 hours, and if you’re trying to make sense of the rapidly escalating situation around the world, here are the latest updates I’m tracking.

First, let’s get into the breaking news. Kristi Noem is OUT as Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. Her cardinal sin: telling Congress that Trump signed off on her absurd $225 million ad campaign for the agency, which featured her prominently.

Noem was grilled on this issue by Republican Senator John Kennedy, and her answers were apparently the final straw for Trump.

Not because her agency killing multiple Americans on the streets. Not her disastrous handling of FEMA during natural disasters. Not her reported affair with Corey Lewandowski. Not her firing a member of the Coast Guard because he forgot to take her “blanky” off her plane.” Not because she didn’t deploy the Urban Search and Rescue teams for more than 72 hours after floods struck Texas. Not for admitting she killed her dog, Cricket. And I could go on and on and on… But rather, the final straw was her saying that it was Trump’s idea to spend over $200 million on commercials that she starred in.

Trump says Oklahoma Senator Markwayne Mullin will become the United States Secretary of Homeland Security, effective March 31, 2026, noting that Noem will be moving to be Special Envoy for The Shield of the Americas, a soon-to-be announced initiative.

We will have a full report posting on YouTube about this shortly. More on this as it develops…

Meanwhile, the war in Iran is getting more dangerous by the hour.

One of the major developments today involves the leadership transition inside Iran. After the killing of the Ayatollah during Trump’s strike, Iran appears to be moving toward elevating his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, into power. That’s significant because many analysts view him as even more hardline and extreme than his father.

Trump responded in a way that only further inflamed tensions.

During an interview with Axios today, Trump essentially argued that he should have a say in who becomes Iran’s next supreme leader. According to Trump, the choice of Iran’s new Ayatollah is “unacceptable” unless it aligns with his vision for the region.

I have to be involved in the appointment, like with Delcy [Rodriguez] in Venezuela,” Trump said.

The idea that the United States president would claim authority over the selection of a Shiite religious leader governing tens of millions of people in another country is the kind of rhetoric that only further radicalizes the region.

And we’re already seeing the consequences.

Overnight and into this morning, Iran launched a new wave of ballistic missile and drone attacks across the Middle East. Explosions were reported in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates. Iranian missiles struck the Bahrain Petroleum Company refinery, igniting massive fires that are still burning. Videos circulating online show multiple missiles slamming into the facility as flames spread across the complex.

Other footage shows Iranian ballistic missiles traveling at high altitude across Jordan.

There are also reports that Iran targeted infrastructure near an airport in Azerbaijan within the past twelve hours.

Meanwhile, rhetoric from Iranian leadership is becoming even more extreme. One of Iran’s most senior clerics went on state television declaring that the nation faces a “great test” and openly called for violence against both Israel and Trump.

Iran’s foreign minister also pushed back against reports that a ceasefire is being negotiated. According to him, there are no negotiations happening and Iran has not agreed to any pause in fighting.

Another flashpoint involves a naval incident that’s now drawing international criticism. Iran and several regional commentators say the United States sank an Iranian vessel near Sri Lanka using submarine torpedoes. The ship, called the Dena, was reportedly participating in a ceremonial naval parade connected to exercises in India.

India had required participating ships to be unarmed as a condition of the event. Iran claims the United States was aware of those conditions and still carried out the strike, killing potentially around one hundred sailors aboard the ship.

The U.S. position is that the vessel was a legitimate military target during wartime. But the optics of that strike are fueling anger throughout the region.

At the same time, reports continue to emerge about Trump attempting to pressure Kurdish forces into launching a ground invasion of Iran. This is particularly risky given the complicated relationships among Kurdish groups spread across several countries

From what I’m hearing, Kurdish leadership is resisting the push. Many of those groups remember being abandoned by Trump during his first administration when U.S. forces withdrew from Syria. Their concern is that they would again be left exposed after being pushed into a conflict.

There were even reports circulating yesterday claiming Kurdish forces were already invading Iran, but those claims appear to have been false. The concern among analysts is that leaking those reports may have been an attempt to provoke Iranian retaliation against Kurdish regions and drag them into the conflict.

Iraq’s Kurdish First Lady, Shanaz Ibrahim Ahmed, released a stunning statement telling Trump, “Leave the Kurds Alone. We Are Not Guns for Hire.”

Here’s her full statement below:

Sulaymaniah, Iraq - In 1991, the Kurds were urged to rise up against the regime of Saddam Hussein, only to be abandoned when priorities changed. No one came to our defense when the regime deployed helicopter gunships and tanks to crush the uprising. Those memories remain vivid and etched in our minds.

Today, we commemorate that chapter as “Raparin” and we do not forget what it taught us.

More recently, we saw what happened in Northeast Syria, or Rojava. After all the promises that were made, after Syria’s Kurds stood on the front lines of the war against ISIS, we witnessed how they were treated.

Today, the Kurds of Iraq have finally tasted a measure of stability and dignity in life. Because of this, it is very difficult, indeed impossible, for Kurds to accept being treated as pawns by the world’s superpowers.

The experiences are there. The empty promises are there. Too often, the Kurds are remembered only when their strength or sacrifice is needed. For that reason, I appeal to all sides involved in this conflict. Leave the Kurds alone. We are not guns for hire.

While all of this unfolds overseas, the administration in Washington can’t seem to agree on whether the United States is actually at war.

Trump himself has insisted the United States is not in a war with Iran. Yet his own administration officials keep describing the situation as war, and Trump keeps using the word “war” to describe the conflict. In interviews and congressional hearings, different officials have used phrases like “combat operations,” “significant military action,” or simply called it war outright.

Members of Congress are now openly acknowledging the contradiction. If this is a war, then the Constitution requires Congress to authorize it. That hasn’t happened.

Meanwhile, the economic consequences are already hitting Americans.

The Strait of Hormuz — one of the most important oil shipping routes in the world — is effectively closed due to the fighting. Oil markets have reacted instantly. Gas prices are surging across the United States at one of the fastest rates seen in years. Gas now costs more than it did before Trump was president.

The stock market is also collapsing, with the Dow more than 1,000 points. Side note: Hey Pam Bondi, does this mean you can start prosecuting the pedos now?

Lawmakers are scrambling for solutions, including proposals to temporarily suspend federal gas taxes to soften the price spikes. But those are short-term band-aids for a crisis that could last months or longer.

Despite all of this, Trump’s social media activity today paints a very different picture.

Instead of addressing the war, Trump spent much of the day posting about pardons for former NFL players, promoting his ballroom project, and sharing weeks-old articles claiming economic success.

One of the articles he posted celebrating falling mortgage rates was from February 19 — more than two weeks old. Another post touted a supposed $18 trillion wave of foreign investment into the United States, a figure that is just completely made up.

At the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth delivered a speech invoking something he called a “Trump corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine. The speech framed the administration’s global military actions — including recent troop deployments to Ecuador — as part of a broader campaign against what he described as “radical narco-communism.”

Hegseth’s comments are raising alarms among foreign policy experts who worry the administration is expanding conflicts across multiple regions simultaneously.

Back in Congress, some Republicans are already preparing Americans for a long and painful period ahead. Senators and representatives supporting the war have begun warning that things will be “bumpy” for a while. Administration officials continue to extend the timeline, with reporting now saying insiders in the Pentagon are admitting the war could last through at least September.

The GOP’s defense of these chaotic wars is a stunning, though unsurprising departure from campaign rhetoric from just a year ago, when many of these same politicians promised immediate prosperity and stability.

International backlash is also growing.

One of the most prominent voices speaking out today is Emirati billionaire Khalaf Ahmad Al Habtoor. In a public statement, he demanded to know who gave Trump the authority to drag the entire Middle East into war with Iran.

He warned that the countries most likely to suffer from escalation are the nations in the region themselves — the Gulf states that now find themselves directly in the line of fire.

He also raised another critical question: whether the war is undermining regional peace initiatives that Gulf countries had invested billions of dollars into supporting.

And perhaps the most important reality check right now is this: the expectation that killing Iran’s Ayatollah would trigger regime collapse has not materialized.

Instead, the opposite appears to be happening.

Analysts report that the Iranian government’s base has become more mobilized and unified. The former leader is now viewed by many supporters as a martyr. And his successor may prove even more hardline.

That’s where things stand as we head into the second half of the week.

A Trump administration in chaos. A widening war. Rising oil prices. Escalating attacks across the region. Confusion inside the U.S. government about what the mission even is. A collapsing stock market.

We’ll keep tracking these developments closely as the situation continues to evolve.

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Tuesday, January 20, 2026

FURIOUS World Leaders RIP Trump to SHREDS and TURN THE TABLES

                                                                   

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MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas reports on Donald Trump getting ripped to shreds by world leaders who smoked out his plan to shake them down and coerce them to join a board with Putin. Visit https://meidasplus.com for more! MeidasTouch relies on SnapStream to record, watch, monitor, and clip the news. Get a FREE TRIAL of SnapStream by clicking here: https://go.snapstream.com/affiliate/m... Support the MeidasTouch Network:   / meidastouch   Add the MeidasTouch Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... Buy MeidasTouch Merch: https://store.meidastouch.com Follow MeidasTouch on Twitter:   / meidastouch   Follow MeidasTouch on Facebook:   / meidastouch   Follow MeidasTouch on Instagram:   / meidastouch   Follow MeidasTouch on TikTok:   / meidastouch  

Wednesday, November 23, 2022

POLITICO NIGHTLY: The silver lining in the recession cloud

 


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BY BEN WHITE

A cashier counts U.S. dollars. Many Americans still have savings that are easing the pressure from inflation on the economy.

A cashier counts U.S. Dollars. Many Americans still have savings that are easing the pressure from inflation on the economy. | Ian Waldie/Getty Images

CASH IS KING — There’s one thing that tends to make recessions less likely to happen and less painful when they do occur: people having money. Sounds obvious. But it’s not always the case when recessions arrive. And right now, both U.S. households and corporations still look fairly flush.

Though Americans’ Covid-era savings are nowhere close to where they were at the height of the pandemic in the first half of 2020, households still have roughly $1.7 trillion in excess cash in the bank to keep spending even as record-high inflation slices away their wage gains.

This is among the many factors that still have some hopeful economists — and the Biden White House — thinking the U.S. can avoid recession even as the Federal Reserve jacks up interest rates.

We should start this discussion by noting that recessions can occur in very different shapes and levels of virulence. Generally, the simpler ones to navigate are driven by inflation, like we have now, rather than massive overhanging debt, like the Great Recession that hit in 2007 as the housing bubble burst.

The current level of U.S. household savings now is far higher than it was at the dawn of the financial crisis when lightly-regulated banks built up huge and highly risky debt which nearly toppled the financial system. Americans had essentially no excess cash saved at the time.

Credit to businesses went dry, consumers found themselves both with limited savings and much less valuable homes. Consumer spending, which drives two-thirds of the economy, swiftly vanished and unemployment shot to 10 percent.

Structural collapses in the housing and financial sectors took a decade to rebuild.

This year, consumer spending has held up remarkably well despite persistent 8 percent inflation. And that’s because of all that built up savings.

Some of the cash came from the over $4 trillion in federal stimulus money showered on the economy during and after the crisis, which is at least one factor in current high inflation.

A lot of federal cash, especially among lower-income consumers, has already been spent. But plenty of cash remains in the bank for those in middle and upper income brackets, a result of generally decreased spending during Covid and wages that until recently were rising faster than inflation.

It’s not just consumers either. Corporate America is in vastly better financial shape to weather a Fed-induced slowdown than it was when the housing bubble burst. Banks hold much stronger and safer capital buffers. Cash and cash equivalents per share among S&P-500 companies is about three-times what it was before the global financial crisis, according to Morgan Stanley.

The trends in all of this are not great, of course . The household savings rate plunged to 3.3 percent in the third quarter of this year, down 88 percent from its Covid-era high. Consumers are increasingly turning to credit cards to cover regular expenses with balances jumping an annualized 15 percent in the third quarter of this year to $930 billion — the biggest such increase in two decades.

The remaining excess cash will eventually run dry if the Fed really misses the mark and over-tightens the economy.

But right now, while polls show Americans still continue to despise this inflated economy, they are still spending money. That likely means fewer near-term layoffs as companies use some of their balance sheet strength to weather any downturn while not shedding massive numbers of workers in a labor market that remains very tight. Retail sales notched their biggest gain in eight months in October despite multiple Fed rate hikes.

All this helps explain why the outlook for Thanksgiving travel is so robust. AAA expects around 53.6 million Americans to hit the roads and airports over the holiday, nearly back to pre-pandemic levels. That simply would not be happening without Americans’ cash cushion. Holiday season retail sales are expected to show less growth than last year, but not fall off a cliff.

So as you prepare to stuff yourself and doze off to the evening football game on Thursday, take heart that while recession is still very possible — in fact quite likely — it is not inevitable. And it doesn’t have to be that bad.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at bwhite@politico.com or on Twitter at @morningmoneyben . A programming note: Nightly will be off for Thanksgiving this Thursday and Friday but back to our normal schedule on Monday, Nov. 28.

 

GO INSIDE THE MILKEN INSTITUTE FUTURE OF HEALTH SUMMIT: POLITICO is featuring a special edition of our “Future Pulse” newsletter at the 2022 Milken Institute Future of Health Summit from Dec. 6 to 8. The newsletter takes readers inside one of the most influential gatherings of health industry leaders and innovators solving the biggest global health issues to ensure a healthier, more resilient future for all. SUBSCRIBE TODAY TO RECEIVE EXCLUSIVE COVERAGE .

 
 
THE NEW CONGRESS

SURVIVOR — Rep. David Valadao, one of 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach President Donald Trump over the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection, on Monday became only the second one to be reelected .

Valadao (R-Calif.) held a 3 percentage point edge over Democratic challenger Rudy Salas, a member of the state Assembly, in California’s 22nd District when the race was called in his favor. The district is located in the state’s Central Valley.

Among the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump in early 2021, the only other winner was Rep. Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.), who won decisively earlier this month after surviving a challenge from Trump-endorsed Republican Loren Culp in the August all-party primary. Valadao had also made it out of an all-party primary.

Reps. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), Tom Rice (R-S.C.), Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-Wash.) and Peter Meijer (R-Mich.) all lost their primaries. The other four — Reps. Anthony Gonzalez (R-Ohio), Fred Upton (R-Mich.), John Katko (R-N.Y.) and Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) — did not seek another term.

WHAT'D I MISS?

— Biden extends pause on student loan payments amid legal limbo for debt cancellation: President Joe Biden is extending the pause on federal student loan payments , as his plan to cancel up to $20,000 in student debt for tens of millions of Americans remains blocked in court. The Education Department will postpone the restart of monthly student loan payments to “no later than June 30, 2023, giving the Supreme Court time to hear the case in its current term,” Biden announced on Twitter.

— Supreme Court backs House effort to obtain Trump tax returns: The Supreme Court today cleared the way for a House committee to obtain several years of Trump’s tax returns from the IRS , a significant win for lawmakers that brought to an end a three-year court battle. With no noted dissent, the court upheld the August ruling of an appeals court panel that unanimously cleared the way for the House Ways and Means Committee to obtain the former president’s tax returns.

— President of largest rail union predicts congressional intervention after ‘no’ vote: The president of the largest freight rail union is skeptical he’ll be able to reach a new agreement with carriers in time to prevent an economically devastating strike — and predicts Congress will likely soon step in. “I’m hopeful, but I doubt it’s really in the cards,” SMART Transportation Division President Jeremy Ferguson said in an interview Monday night. “I’ve got a lot of issues that are outstanding; that are reasons why our guys voted it down.”

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

President Joe Biden and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan talk during the G20 Summit on November 15, 2022 in Indonesia.

President Joe Biden and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan talk during the G20 Summit on November 15, 2022 in Indonesia. | Leon Neal/Getty Images

INCURSION — Turkey is threatening to kill more U.S.-allied Kurdish fighters in Syria — and the United States and Russia might not try very hard to stop it, write Alex Ward , Matt Berg and Lawrence Ukenye .

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan vowed to soon launch a ground attack on U.S.-backed Kurdish forces in northern Syria, claiming they were responsible for a deadly terrorist attack last week.

“We have been bearing down on terrorists for a few days with our planes, cannons and guns,” Erdoğan said today, alluding to Turkey’s recent lethal aerial bombardments in Syria. “God willing, we will root out all of them as soon as possible, together with our tanks, our soldiers.”

It’s unclear if it was Kurdish separatists who killed six people in the heart of Istanbul on Nov. 13. The Kurds deny the allegation, after all. But experts say it has presented Erdoğan with a pretext to delve deeper into northern Syria, a push he’s long wanted to do.

About 900 U.S. troops, meanwhile, are in Syria to keep ISIS at bay alongside Syrian Democratic Forces and fear heavy fighting could disrupt their plans.

Turkey has a legitimate right to defend itself and its citizens, National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby said during a news conference today, but added cross-border operations “might force a reaction by some of our SDF partners that would limit and constrain their ability to fight against ISIS…and we want to be able to keep the pressure on ISIS.”

NIGHTLY NUMBER

19,000

The number of Americans who made at least $1 million in 2020 who also collected jobless assistance that year , according to new IRS data. That included 4,500 people who earned between $5 million and $10 million and 229 people with eight-figure incomes or more. The figures also show how the total number of people receiving unemployment checks exploded in the wake of the pandemic, dwarfing what was seen in the Great Recession.

RADAR SWEEP

BRAVE NEW WORLD — It’s easy to find almost anything on the internet these days. That includes a growing collection of deaf people streaming silent content on TikTok or similar platforms and finding huge audiences for their content. For some deaf people, in particular in China, who have had trouble finding work, this universe provides a whole new host of possibilities. Amanda Florian reports in VICE World News.

PARTING WORDS

Supporters listen as former President Donald Trump announces that he will seek another term in office.

Supporters listen as former President Donald Trump announces that he will seek another term in office. | Joe Raedle/Getty Images

INNER CIRCLE — When Trump plunged into the 2024 presidential race last week at his Mar-a-Lago club, he was surrounded by sidekicks, superfans and self-described sycophants, writes Christopher Cadelago and Daniel Lippman .

Among them was another subset of Trump world figures who look poised to help form the coalition behind his third presidential bid: those sympathetic to or even a part of the riot on the Capitol on January 6 .

A POLITICO review of social media posts of the Mar-a-Lago guests, as well as encounters at the venue, revealed at least six who were in Washington the day of Trump’s speech and the insurrection. Some of them marched on the Capitol and then posted pictures and videos of themselves on social media in the hours and days after.

Trump refrained from mentioning Jan. 6 during his presidential bid announcement. But the inclusion of those who were in Washington on Jan. 6 at his Mar-a-Lago event underscores how closely linked he remains to the melee that unfolded that day. Rather than isolating and ostracizing Jan. 6 figures, Trump’s team has kept them in the fold, even promising pardons for those who were there.

And they’ve noticed. In interviews and social media posts, several of those who attended both the Jan. 6 events and Trump’s White House announcement continued to spread conspiracy theories. They believe the 2020 election may have been stolen. At least one insists that the storming of the Capitol was an inside job by Trump’s enemies designed to pin blame on him and his MAGA movement.

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