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Abier
Abier@abierkhatib·
@piersmorgan Blowing up children is apparently fine, but the moment a gas field is hit, suddenly that’s a red line. Fk’em all…
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Jon Wiltshire
Jon Wiltshire@JonathanWiltsh7·
He never had control of it Piers. It's clear he started this war under instruction from Netanyahu. Even US intelligence (if there is such a thing) has confirmed that there was no evidence of a threat from Iran, or any proof that they were developing a nuclear weapon. Between the US and Israel, or let's call them what they are, USrael, is committing war crimes on a daily basis in Iran, as well as in Lebanon, Gaza, and Cuba through the blockade. How you can't see this is and call Trump what he is, is undefendable. Along with Netanyahu, they are responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths through bombings, starvation, and blockades. Millions, and I mean MILLIONS more across the Middle East, and Cuba, let alone where is targeted next, have had their futures robbed through displacement, homes and infrastructure destroyed, and any sort of a normal life wiped out. It's sickening that ordinary people who have done absolutely nothing, pay the hardest price, with their life, or through lost figures, and all seemingly because Trump is beholden to Netanyahu over the Epstein files. Oh, and let's not forget, this is equally driven by the "Board of Peace," which is essentially an investment vehicle to profit from war, genocide, displacement, and imperialism. This has to stop now. Our government needs to be border and make a stand, forget trying to keep our "special relationship" with war criminals, and do the right thing by humanity. Equally the mainstream media, including YOU, need to stop providing cover for what's happening. Appeasing a war criminal is exactly what Starmer is doing, and you are no better.
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Abdul Hameed
Abdul Hameed@Ahameed449·
But even after all this, in reality, it is Israel that is benefiting the most. The advantage for Israel is that it is hitting two targets with one arrow—weakening both the Arab world and Iran at the same time. There may come a point where a conflict breaks out between the Arabs and Iran, and Israel can simply sit back and enjoy the situation. Iran should also consider this perspective: in the long term, who actually benefits from what it is doing, and who suffers the losses? In my view, whatever is happening these days is paving the way for the idea of “Greater Israel.” Although Iran may be acting out of compulsion to try to stop the war, the broader consequences tell a different story. Another major loss is being faced by developing countries. The crises in oil and gas, rising inflation, and increasing unemployment are becoming more alarming for them. In this context, the role of developed countries has also been disappointing. No one is stepping forward to stop this injustice. Instead, they are waiting for the conflict to end on its own so they can maintain a neutral stance, whereas they should have taken a front-line role.
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The Moderate Case
The Moderate Case@TheModerateCase·
@piersmorgan So when Israel does something we approve of, they control America. But when Israel does something we disapprove of, America is losing control. Seems it’s not that you really believe Israel controls America, but that America should wholly control Israel’s every move.
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Bushra Shaikh
Bushra Shaikh@Bushra1Shaikh·
@piersmorgan You're giving him too much credit. He was never in control. Trump is an arrogant, egotistical buffoon, who is obsessed with himself- it's what has got him embroiled in a war that will ultimately end him politically.
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Naresh Seervi🇮🇳
Naresh Seervi🇮🇳@Naresh__sirvi·
@piersmorgan Before the election: “I am the candidate of peace.” After the election: endless conflicts, rising tensions, and chaos. The gap between words and actions has never been this obvious.
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Muntu87
Muntu87@Muntu87·
@piersmorgan Week 1: “We have won” Week 2: “We are winning” Week 3: “Please send help” Week 4: ???
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America’s Ghost
America’s Ghost@planterspunch7·
@piersmorgan “Trump is losing control” 🤡 🤡 🤡 Trump never even had a concept of plan other than a child’s fantasy that his frightened lackeys endorsed — and pressure from Bibi and his big Zionist donors. Wake up, Piers.
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Fred
Fred@ChiefChinua·
@piersmorgan Well, goodluck to you if that's what you understood from the Trump's post you quoted.
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ن آل هاشم
ن آل هاشم@NAl1_Hashim1·
@piersmorgan TRYING TO PROVOKE BOTH A WORLD WAR AND CIVIL WAR AT THE SAME TIME WHILE DEMANDING A NOBEL PEACE PRIZE IS A LEVEL OF INSANITY I'VE NEVER SEEN BEFORE. #epsteinGang
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Wale Jimoh
Wale Jimoh@coolwales·
@piersmorgan BREAKING🚨 WHY THE US CANNOT SUCCEED IN TAKUBG OVER THE STRAIT OF HORMUZ.
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David
David@BoldPolitics·
@piersmorgan Actually, this is a good thing imo and I am completely against this war. But President Trump is exerting control over Israel here, and that is important given the optics of late.
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Evan Sur 🇺🇸☮️🕊️
@piersmorgan Trump never had control of this war. It is NOT America’s war Let’s not forget this 👇 Trump made the US army a proxy army fighting for Israel
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Broda
Broda@Broda_web4·
@piersmorgan not our War - but to keep America safe we will finish it OUR WAY...
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Efrahim
Efrahim@MrEfrah·
@piersmorgan Watching people actually believe this happened without U.S. knowledge:
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Ammanichanda
Ammanichanda@Arkasiraee·
American Debt and the Real Cost of War So far this war has already costed USA - $100 Billion. The real concern for Americans shouldn’t be a strike on Iran in isolation. The U.S. has carried out many such operations before. The danger lies in what comes next escalation into a prolonged regional war that demands enormous resources and pushes an already strained fiscal system even further. War has always been one of the fastest ways for the United States to accumulate debt. It is rarely paid for upfront. Instead, it is financed through borrowing, higher taxes, and money creation, which brings inflation and long-term obligations that last decades beyond the conflict itself. The cost is not just bombs and operations. It is equipment, logistics, reconstruction, veteran care, and interest payments that compound over time. History makes this very clear. During the American Civil War, U.S. public debt exploded by nearly 4,000%, rising from about $65 million to $3 billion. In World War I, debt jumped from roughly $1 billion to $25 billion. World War II cost around $4 trillion in today’s terms, pushing U.S. debt to 106% of GDP by 1946. The Korean War added an estimated $675 billion in modern terms, with defense spending reaching as high as 13 to 14% of GDP. The Vietnam War ultimately cost about $2.27 trillion when adjusted, much of it financed through taxes and inflation. More recently, the post-9/11 conflicts — Iraq, Afghanistan, and the broader War on Terror — have cost around $8 trillion. That includes $2.3 trillion in direct operations, $2.2 trillion in veteran care, and roughly $2 trillion in interest projected by 2030. These wars were largely financed through debt, not tax increases, pushing the burden into the future. Now consider Iran. There is no clean, limited version of this scenario. Any serious confrontation risks turning into a full-scale war. Iran is not a small state or a fragmented battlefield. It is a country of around 90 million people with deep strategic depth and a long-established missile program. Even short conflicts today are extraordinarily expensive. Estimates suggest that Israel has been spending between $1.8 to $2.4 billion per day during active operations. If the United States becomes directly involved, a conservative estimate could be around $4 billion per day, assuming no major losses. Stretch that over just three months, and you are already looking at roughly $360 billion in direct costs alone. That figure excludes losses, reconstruction, long-term care, and interest. In reality, it would likely be far higher. There is also a recurring assumption that a rapid, overwhelming strike could neutralize Iran’s capabilities early. History suggests otherwise. In Iraq, even after extensive bombing, missile launches continued. In Yemen, despite sustained operations, the Houthis have retained the ability to strike. Even in recent conflicts, large-scale bombardment has not eliminated missile threats entirely. The idea that a country the size and complexity of Iran could be quickly neutralized and contained is not grounded in past outcomes. At this stage, the situation is fragile enough that any major strike risks triggering a broader war. There is little room for controlled escalation or symbolic exchanges. Once it begins, it is unlikely to remain limited. And historically, there is one constant: wars of this scale are never short, and they are never cheap.
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Tech Frontier 007
Tech Frontier 007@TechFrontier007·
@piersmorgan So far the war has been 99.999% excellent. Trump has led the war like the greatest of military leaders.
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Gino
Gino@QeenKGino·
Don't be so bloody stupid 😂 Trump said from the start that they have different objectives Trump is responsible for the USA not Israel & he's making it clear that he didn't agree with Israel on this which is also reflected in Trumps statements about avoiding certain infrastructure since the start He isn't losing control at all .. He's succeeded in wiping out Irans immediate capabilities & threats & now they are after their proxies Iran's attacked all the Islamic countries Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, the UAE, Oman, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, Turkey & they are pissed at Iran too .. There's no loss of control from Trump
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