Middott
839 posts






🚨🇺🇸🇮🇷 New reporting reveals the deal nearly died over a 17 hour marathon in Tehran, and it was an Israeli strike on Beirut that almost blew the whole thing up Iranian negotiators pushed last minute changes while Qatari mediators repeatedly threatened to walk. The talks were on the brink of success when Israeli airstrikes hit southern Beirut, the exact trigger Iran had warned would collapse everything. That crisis is what sparked Trump's furious call to Netanyahu. To save it, Washington handed Tehran a real concession, lifting the naval blockade immediately instead of phasing it out over 30 days. That got the strait reopened and let Trump declare victory. It confirms what the whole war kept showing. Beirut was always the wall, Netanyahu nearly knocked it down at the finish, and the deal survived only because Trump overrode him. Source: Bloomberg / Writer: Daniel





🇺🇸🇮🇷 VP Vance bodied O’Donnell, who tried pushing the idea that the Iran deal gives them hundreds of billions in sanctions relief and frozen funds. JD Vance: “None of those things flow to Iran unless Iran fundamentally changes how it behaves.” No blank checks or Obama 2.0.? Writer: Claudio











We the legal citizens and registered voters of Florida demand a gubernatorial debate. Why is the FLGOP not allowing this? @GovRonDeSantis ??? This is a powerful statement by the current Florida Lieutenant Governor @JayCollinsFL as to why we need greater transparency and discourse when it comes to the highest political offices in the nation. The Truth Fears No Questions!





🇺🇸🇮🇷 The agreement includes a $300 billion private investment fund. Reuters reports more than half is already pledged, backed by private companies from the US, Gulf states, Asia, South America and Africa. This reframes the entire deal. A government commitment to reconstruct Iran was always going to be politically impossible to sell in Washington. A private investment fund with $150+ billion already committed before the ink is dry is a different animal entirely. That's a coalition of global capital that has decided Iran's economic reopening is worth betting on, and it creates a constituency for the deal's success that goes well beyond any government's political will. The fund is also a pressure mechanism. If the final agreement collapses, $150 billion in committed private capital loses its entry point into one of the most resource-rich and underleveraged economies on earth. Not a diplomatic incentive. That's a financial one. And financial incentives tend to be more durable than political ones. Source: Reuters / Writer: Oliver






