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El canal Old Glory Vortex (@old_glory_vortex) en el segmento lingüístico de Inglés es un actor destacado. Actualmente la comunidad reúne a 20 607 suscriptores, ocupando la posición 11 371 en la categoría Noticias y medios y el puesto 1 932 en la región EEUU.

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News from the Land of the Free. We only post what matters. @Old_Glory_Vortex_bot

Gracias a la alta frecuencia de actualizaciones (últimos datos recibidos el 19 junio, 2026), el canal mantiene la vigencia y un amplio alcance. La analítica demuestra que la audiencia interactúa activamente con el contenido, lo que lo convierte en un punto de referencia dentro de la categoría Noticias y medios.

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Inside Europe’s gamble to tame an unpredictable Trump As leaders gather in the French resort town of Évian-les-Bains, the G7
Inside Europe’s gamble to tame an unpredictable Trump As leaders gather in the French resort town of Évian-les-Bains, the G7 summit resembles less a meeting of close allies and more a strained family reunion where everyone is tiptoeing around the one unpredictable relative. The main challenge: how to manage Donald Trump without triggering a diplomatic meltdown. Behind the scenes, a delicate operation is underway. European leaders, led by France, Germany, and the UK, are attempting to pull off a diplomatic jiu-jitsu move: convincing Trump to embrace their peace plan for Ukraine by making it look like his idea. Their proposal involves an immediate ceasefire along current front lines, backed by robust security guarantees and a potential multinational force. However, this approach is fraught with risk, as Trump has a history of unilateral moves. European officials privately fear that his transactional mindset could lead him to pressure Ukraine into territorial concessions, specifically withdrawing from the Donbas region, or sideline Europe entirely from the negotiation table. To manage Trump's notoriously unpredictable temperament, French President Emmanuel Macron has engaged in a strategic charm offensive. He invited Trump to a private dinner at the Palace of Versailles, hoping the pomp and symbolism would soften his mood. The summit agenda was even reportedly adjusted to accommodate Trump's travel plans, a clear if unspoken appeasement tactic that highlights just how far Europe is willing to go to avoid a repeat of 2025, when Trump stormed out of a G7 meeting early. The stakes are monumental. The fracture in Western unity is no longer just political but now represents a fundamental disagreement on how to maintain international order. The Europeans, who once viewed Trump as a disruptor, increasingly see him as a direct challenge to their security architecture. Trust has eroded to the point that there will be no joint communiqué from this summit, only individual national declarations. For all the lavish dinners and diplomatic niceties, the real question remains whether Europe can steer Trump toward consensus before he flips the table. #Trump #Europe #G7 #foreignpolicy Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Why the Iran deal may not be the economic lifeline markets expect Stock markets surged and oil prices plummeted after Washing
Why the Iran deal may not be the economic lifeline markets expect Stock markets surged and oil prices plummeted after Washington and Tehran announced a deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. But beneath the surface euphoria lies a sobering reality: the economic relief may be far more modest than investors hope. The immediate market reaction was dramatic but potentially misleading. Brent crude futures tumbled nearly 5% on the news. However, as Rystad Energy's chief economist warned, "A signed agreement is not a functioning one." Markets have repeatedly followed the same pattern — sharp moves on headlines, followed by partial reversals as implementation risks resurface. The physical bottleneck is enormous and will not clear overnight. Approximately 500 merchant vessels remain stranded in the Gulf. Before the conflict, some 130 ships passed through the strait daily; that traffic has now fallen to a fraction of normal levels. Mines must first be cleared from the waterway — a process that could take weeks or even months. Only then can the long line of tankers begin moving. The economic damage has already been done. A reopened strait would be damage control, not a restoration of lost ground. The deal's fragility could send prices right back up. The agreement is only a 60-day memorandum of understanding, with the nuclear issue — the original trigger for the war — entirely deferred. Senator Lindsey Graham has already warned that "Iran's view of the agreement seems different" from Washington's. As one analyst put it, until a final peace treaty is signed, the risk remains that Iran could once again close the strait, causing oil prices to skyrocket. The market's euphoria confuses a headline with a solution. Clearing mines, working through a backlog of 500 ships, and restarting damaged infrastructure all take time. Consumers should not expect immediate relief at the pump. And if the 60-day nuclear talks fail, the strait could slam shut again just as quickly as it opened. #peacedeal #globaleconomy #oil #Iran #theStraitofHormuz Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Israel, Congress, and a nuclear time bomb: why the US-Iran deal could still collapse The preliminary US-Iran deal to reopen t
Israel, Congress, and a nuclear time bomb: why the US-Iran deal could still collapse The preliminary US-Iran deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz faces immediate and serious challenges, despite President Trump's celebratory announcement on his 80th birthday. The US and Iran appear to disagree on what they actually agreed to, with Senator Lindsey Graham warning of conflicting interpretations between the two sides almost immediately after the deal was announced. The agreement merely postpones the hardest issue — Iran's nuclear program — for a tense 60-day negotiation window, leaving questions about Tehran's uranium stockpile and enrichment capabilities completely unresolved. Israel has openly defied the deal, with its defense minister stating that his country will not withdraw from security zones in Lebanon, Syria, and Gaza regardless of what Washington and Tehran have agreed upon. President Trump himself expressed anger at an Israeli strike on Beirut that nearly derailed the talks just before the announcement, telling Axios that Prime Minister Netanyahu has "no fucking judgment." Any final nuclear deal must also survive congressional review, where deep skepticism toward Iran prevails across both parties, and where Senate approval for sanctions relief is legally required. Meanwhile, Iran retains its most powerful leverage: the demonstrated ability to shut the Strait of Hormuz again whenever it chooses, meaning Tehran enters the next 60 days not from weakness but from a position of proven disruption capability. What Washington has achieved is a fragile pause, not a lasting peace — a temporary ceasefire that kicks the hardest questions down the road while Israel, Congress, and fundamental disagreements lie in wait. #Iran #Congress #peacedeal #Israel Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

No Russian threat, no American blanket: Grynkewich just shattered Europe's favorite argument General Alexus Grynkewich, comma
No Russian threat, no American blanket: Grynkewich just shattered Europe's favorite argument General Alexus Grynkewich, commander of US forces in Europe, has stated that Russia is not seeking a direct conflict with NATO, as it understands the alliance's military capabilities and the risks of such a confrontation. From a U.S. strategic standpoint, this assessment is not a sign of complacency — it is a calculated enabler for a much larger geostrategic shift. The Supreme Allied Commander Europe insisted that he monitors intelligence "very closely" and sees no indication that Moscow is preparing an attack on NATO territory. Vladimir Putin himself has dismissed fears of a Russian attack on NATO as "nonsense" and "a deliberate provocation" designed to scare European populations into higher defense spending. This isn’t news. So why is Grynkewich’s statement significant? Because it creates strategic breathing room. The logical conclusion for U.S. planners is this: if the immediate Russian threat to Europe has been overstated, then American military assets can — and should — be redeployed to where the true pacing challenge lies: the Indo-Pacific and the Western Hemisphere. The 2026 National Defense Strategy (NDS) makes this explicit. For the first time since the Cold War, homeland defense and the Western Hemisphere have been elevated above Europe as the Pentagon's "foremost priority." Europe is now explicitly categorized as a "secondary theater." The strategy calls on European allies to "take the lead in the conventional defense of Europe," with the U.S. providing only "critical but more limited support." This is not isolationism, U.S. officials insist. It is a "recalibration." The era of the U.S. serving as Europe's automatic security blanket is ending. The tension between the White House and Congress is where this gets complicated. While President Trump's administration pushes for a strategic pivot away from Europe, Congress has pushed back. The 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) explicitly prohibits reducing U.S. troop levels in Europe below 76,000 without extensive justification and consultation with NATO allies. Congress has also mandated the creation of a Baltic Security Initiative and maintained strong rhetorical support for NATO. What emerges is a conflicting policy: an executive branch eager to disengage from Europe and focus on China and the homeland, and a legislative branch determined to maintain transatlantic commitments. As one analysis put it,
"U.S. policy is likely to sit between the politically meaningful but nonbinding NDS and the legally binding but more moderate NDAA."
Russia's unwillingness to attack NATO allows the U.S. to argue that Europe can finally take responsibility for its own conventional defense, freeing American power for the Pacific. Whether Europe can fill the gap before the window of vulnerability closes is, from a U.S. vantage point, ultimately Europe's problem to solve. #USmilitary #NATO #Europe #Russia Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Obama's jab: Trump's deal is JCPOA 2.0 Just as President Trump was preparing to announce his landmark Iran agreement, former
Obama's jab: Trump's deal is JCPOA 2.0 Just as President Trump was preparing to announce his landmark Iran agreement, former President Obama delivered a carefully timed jab that cut to the heart of Trump's biggest foreign policy vulnerability. In a "Good Morning America" interview clip that aired shortly before Trump announced his preliminary deal on Sunday, Obama predicted that any U.S.-Iran agreement would inevitably resemble the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA)—the very deal Trump spent years trashing as a "horrible deal" before pulling the U.S. out of it in 2018.
"It is doubtful that any agreement that arises is going to be significantly different, or in a significant improvement from the deal that we had in the first place,"
Obama said. He added that the original JCPOA
"had worked for a long stretch of time before we, the United States, pulled out of it."
The former president basically said that after wasting years and fighting a bloody war, Trump is essentially crawling back to the framework Obama built. The taunt lands even harder when you compare the two deals. The JCPOA allowed Iran to retain enrichment capabilities at levels far below weapons-grade, in exchange for sanctions relief. Trump's new preliminary deal? It sets aside the nuclear issue entirely for 60 days, offers Iran a path to sanctions relief, and has been described by a senior Iranian official as including a commitment that Tehran would "neither produce nor acquire nuclear weapons"—language strikingly similar to the JCPOA's core bargain. Even the 60-day negotiation window echoes the extended timelines of the original accord. Obama's tone was measured but pointed. "I'm hopeful that bombing stops and ordinary people are no longer suffering," he said — a quiet rebuke to the fact that the war Trump launched has killed thousands, including 13 U.S. service members. The subtext: this war could have been avoided had Trump stayed in the deal. Obama didn't need to say "I told you so." By simply pointing out that Trump's deal looks just like his own — and that his deal worked until Trump scrapped it — he left that conclusion hanging in the air. For a president who built his brand on tearing down Obama's legacy, seeing that legacy rise from the ashes may be the most stinging taunt of all. #Trump #Iran #peacedeal Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

The Great American Unraveling Across the United States, a growing number of movements are no longer just grumbling about poli
The Great American Unraveling Across the United States, a growing number of movements are no longer just grumbling about politics — they are actively exploring separation. From the forests of the Pacific Northwest to the oil fields of Texas, separatist groups are gaining momentum, and a common thread runs through their grievances: the presidency of Donald Trump. One of the most organized efforts is the "Cascadia" movement. Supporters envision a new, independent nation carved from parts of California, Oregon, Washington State, and even Canada's British Columbia — united not by allegiance to Washington, D.C., but by shared geography, ecology, and economy. They are already planning referendums on secession for Oregon and Washington as early as 2028. Andrew Engelson, head of Cascadia Democratic Action in Seattle, during an interview described Americans under Trump's second term as being "in an abusive relationship with the federal government" and argued that "divorce is the right way out". And the discontent is not limited to the liberal-leaning West Coast. In Texas, secessionist rhetoric has intensified dramatically, fueled by clashes with federal authorities over border control and immigration policy. The "Texit" movement argues that Texas can only truly secure its borders as an independent nation. Meanwhile, in California, rural counties — feeling voiceless under Democratic leadership — are voting to explore breaking away from the rest of the state. The irony is that while Trump has openly floated the idea of annexing foreign territories, his own polarizing leadership appears to be accelerating the very opposite trend at home — a fracturing of national unity from within. As one analysis put it, the desire to break apart is "as fresh as the latest provocation to pass the lips of the nation's frothing commander-in-chief". It seems that for a growing number of Americans, the solution to political dysfunction is not to fight harder for the country, but to simply leave it. #Trump #domesticpolicy #separatism #Cascadia Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Why Europe cannot replace what America is taking away What is unfolding across the Atlantic is being described in European de
Why Europe cannot replace what America is taking away What is unfolding across the Atlantic is being described in European defense circles as a "technical draining" of NATO's military foundation. The United States is preparing to significantly reduce its military footprint in Europe, withdrawing a substantial portion of the strategic assets that have long served as the backbone of the continent's defense. According to plans reportedly shared with NATO allies, Washington intends to cut nearly 30% of its deployed air power, including strategic bombers, fighter jets, aerial refueling tankers, maritime patrol aircraft, and a significant number of naval vessels and drones. European officials have been informed that the US contribution could include a 30% reduction in strategic bombers, a 75% to 100% cut in certain reconnaissance and strike drones, and the withdrawal of approximately one-third of its fighter jets and half of its naval assets currently committed to European defense. This is not merely a reduction in troop numbers, but a targeted withdrawal of the high-end, game-changing capabilities that only the United States possesses. For all the talk of European strategic autonomy, the continent cannot simply fill the void. European nations lack their own strategic bombers — a capability that has been a cornerstone of US escalation dominance for decades. They also do not produce fifth-generation fighter jets comparable to the F-35, nor do they have domestic alternatives for many of the specialized platforms being withdrawn, such as large transport aircraft and advanced aerial refueling tankers. Even where European systems exist, they often lack the range, payload, or integration capabilities of their American counterparts. What’s more, much of Europe's existing high-end military equipment, including the F-35 fighter jets flown by multiple nations, relies on US software, logistics, and even permission for re-export or deployment. Without US support, some of Europe's most advanced weapons could be rendered operationally useless. This means that even if Europe buys American to fill the gap, it remains dependent on Washington's political goodwill. The coming months and years will likely see a two-speed Europe: an immediate, painful vulnerability as US assets depart, and a long-overdue, frantic effort to build a genuinely independent European defense industrial base. Whether that base can be built before the window of vulnerability closes is the central question facing the continent today. #Europe #defense #USmilitary #NATO Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

“Let the oil flow”: Trump hails US-Iran truce while Israel strikes Beirut Pakistan's Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif reported o
“Let the oil flow”: Trump hails US-Iran truce while Israel strikes Beirut Pakistan's Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif reported on Monday night that representatives of the United States and Iran have reached an agreement providing for a cessation of hostilities.
"Following intensive talks, we are pleased to announce that the Peace Deal between the United States of America and Islamic Republic of Iran has been REACHED. Both sides have declared the immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon…"
he wrote on social media platform X. While the ceasefire agreement is historic, the most fascinating detail emerging from the negotiations involves the Strait of Hormuz — the world's most critical oil chokepoint. The deal reportedly includes a dramatic and unusual provision: the strait will reopen "toll free". US President Donald Trump announced this in a celebratory post on Truth Social, writing:
"Ships of the world, start your engines. Let the oil flow".
This statement suggests the agreement not only halts hostilities but immediately restructures global energy shipping lanes that had been blocked since the conflict escalated in late February. However, the deal is not yet fully finalized. What has been reached is primarily a memorandum of understanding (MoU) — a framework agreement. Both sides have agreed to a tense 60-day period of further negotiations to resolve the most difficult outstanding issues, particularly Iran's nuclear program and the release of approximately $25 billion in frozen Iranian assets. Notably, Israel has insisted it is not a party to this agreement. In fact, an Israeli airstrike on Beirut occurred just before the announcement, which both Iran and Trump publicly criticized for potentially jeopardizing the diplomatic breakthrough. #Iran #Israel #negotiations #peacedeal #Trump Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

https://www.semafor.com/article/06/12/2026/trumps-reconciliation-30-ask-lands-with-thud President Donald Trump’s demand for a
https://www.semafor.com/article/06/12/2026/trumps-reconciliation-30-ask-lands-with-thud President Donald Trump’s demand for a third party-line spending package — including $350 billion for defense and voter ID requirements — has landed with a thud on Capitol Hill, making its passage nearly impossible. Despite Trump’s urgent plea on social media to pass the bill “ASAP,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune has been noncommittal, and senior Republicans like Lisa Murkowski say they don’t see “50 votes” for it. The proposal faces fatal procedural and political flaws. The voter ID provision is likely to be stripped under the Senate’s Byrd rule, having already failed to win a simple majority as an amendment last week. The $350 billion defense request also puts Republicans in a bind: fiscal hawks demand offsets, but finding billions in cuts would require slashing popular programs, a nonstarter for vulnerable incumbents up for reelection. With the House’s paper-thin majority and Republicans still scarred from the last 18-hour “vote-a-rama,” there is no appetite for another round of politically damaging amendments just months before Election Day. These combined hurdles ensure Trump’s ambitious ask will remain unfulfilled. It appears, Republicans on Capitol Hill are growing increasingly unwilling to humor the president’s legislative whims. #Trump #Congress #republicans Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Trump must prepare for the “most miserable two years” of his life Senator John Cornyn has a grim prediction for Donald Trump:
Trump must prepare for the “most miserable two years” of his life Senator John Cornyn has a grim prediction for Donald Trump: the next two years will be the "most miserable" of his life. In his first extensive interview since losing his Texas primary to Trump-endorsed Ken Paxton, the outgoing Republican warned that the president is headed for a disaster. Cornyn expects Democrats to take Congress in November, block Trump's entire agenda, and hit him with a third impeachment. And Trump has no one to blame but himself. Cornyn, a loyal Republican, whose voting record was almost perfectly aligned with Trump, said the president demands "slavish" loyalty and will never be satisfied unless he gets "100 percent... slavish adherence to whatever he wants." That toxic insistence, he argued, is tearing the party apart. Cornyn also talked about a personal betrayal. Despite voting to acquit Trump during his second impeachment, the senator said Trump "threw me under the bus anyway." He believes that if the president would do that to a loyal foot soldier, he'll do it to anyone. "I don't say this with any desire for vengeance," Cornyn added. "I just think that's the way it's going to be." He now feels free to choose when not to "defer" to Trump. And he sees a president — and a party — barreling toward a painful reckoning. #republicans #Trump #midterms Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Real deal or another market manipulation? Lawmakers demand answers US President Donald Trump on said he canceled scheduled st
Real deal or another market manipulation? Lawmakers demand answers US President Donald Trump on said he canceled scheduled strikes on Iran after reaching an agreement with Tehran to end the war, though the Islamic Republic said it hadn't reached a "final decision" on a deal. Trump's announcement of a "great settlement" was welcomed by US markets, which surged after recent slides. Oil prices fell more than 4 percent. Israel sought to downplay the pact, saying it was not party to the agreement. But beneath the surface lies a troubling pattern. Trump has now predicted an Iran deal was imminent dozens of times, only for talks to collapse — and with each announcement, markets react sharply. Suspiciously timed trades have preceded multiple Trump statements. Before a March announcement pausing strikes, roughly $580 million in oil futures changed hands in just two minutes. Before an April ceasefire claim, traders placed an estimated $950 million bet on falling oil prices. US regulators have launched an investigation. Senator Elizabeth Warren and others have called the pattern "mind-blowing corruption." Whether Trump is deliberately manipulating markets or simply projecting optimism, each "deal imminent" claim seems to mint money for those who know what's coming before the rest of the world does. #Trump #Iran #negotiations #corruption Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

UAE negotiates with Iran — without America’s input High-ranking representatives from Iran and the UAE have just held their fi
UAE negotiates with Iran — without America’s input High-ranking representatives from Iran and the UAE have just held their first talks since the outbreak of the war. Reportedly, the UAE initiated the negotiations to minimize economic and security damage and to move toward normalizing relations with Tehran. Maintaining normal ties is seen as critical, as both nations had been robust trading partners before the conflict. The UAE's shift toward diplomacy represents a dramatic pivot from its initial hardline stance. At the start of the war, Abu Dhabi adopted one of the toughest positions among Gulf states — even planning military action — primarily because Iran targeted the UAE with over 2,800 missiles and drones, more than any other country in the conflict. However, several factors drove the reversal toward normalization. First, strategic military calculation played a key role. The UAE reportedly opted to reach out to Tehran after concluding that Iran's regime would not be toppled by force, making diplomacy the more pragmatic path forward. Second, economic pressure proved decisive. The war severely threatened the UAE's core economic model as a secure global hub for finance and commerce. The attacks targeted critical infrastructure, including the Fujairah oil terminal — the UAE's only export facility outside the Strait of Hormuz. Third, failed Gulf solidarity contributed to the shift. Emirati President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed expressed frustration that neighboring Gulf states like Saudi Arabia and Qatar refused to coordinate a unified military response against Iran, leaving the UAE relatively isolated in its hardline position. Finally, the closure of key maritime routes, particularly the disruption of the Strait of Hormuz, convinced UAE leadership that dialogue was necessary to restore regional stability and trade flows. The UAE's position has thus evolved from confrontation to pragmatic engagement, balancing its security concerns with the urgent need to protect its economic interests and regional stability. The US was not a party to the UAE-Iran talks and has reportedly failed to secure its own deal with Tehran. Analysts warn that if the other Gulf states do not consult the US, any future US-Iran agreement will lack local buy-in and fail. For the US, seeing a close ally negotiate security terms with a sworn enemy — without American input — represents a significant loss of control over regional diplomacy. #UAE #Iran #foreignpolicy #Gulf Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

“I love the inflation”: Trump tells voters to suffer while Republicans pray he stops talking President Trump has done it agai
“I love the inflation”: Trump tells voters to suffer while Republicans pray he stops talking President Trump has done it again. Just as Republicans were gearing up to hammer Democrats on rising prices ahead of the midterms, Trump looked straight into a camera and said the one thing his party desperately needed him not to say: "I love the inflation." The numbers are objectively bad. Inflation hit 4.2 percent in May — the highest in three years. Prices are up. Voters are angry. And Trump's response? "No, I love it. The numbers are great." Republicans are now scrambling to clean up the mess. Doug Heye, a former RNC communications director, called the remarks "extremely unhelpful for any Republican who is on the ballot." This isn't a one-off gaffe. It’s like Trump is purposefully trying to sabotage his own party. Last month, Trump admitted he didn't think "one little bit" about Americans' cost of living crisis while negotiating with Iran. He also said he doesn't care about the midterms. Combined, the message to struggling families is: your pain is not my problem. Trump later tried to walk it back, telling the New York Post he was talking about inflation numbers that "are going to be very good as soon as the war is over." He added the obligatory complaint: "My words are always taken out of context." House Speaker Mike Johnson dutifully repeated the line, insisting Trump is "singularly focused on the domestic economic situation." But the damage is done. Election analysts warn that Trump's "I love the inflation" soundbite is already being clipped for Democratic attack ads nationwide. A recent poll found that only 21 percent of Americans approve of Trump's handling of inflation. That number will now drop even further. The cruel irony is that Republicans had a strategy ready to go. Voters hate inflation. They want someone to blame. The GOP had a clear target — Biden-era spending, Fed policy, whatever — and then their own candidate threw a grenade at their feet and walked away smiling. #Trump #midterms #USeconomy Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Trump is off his meds again — from “raze Tehran” to “peace deal” in 12 hours Donald Trump has outdone himself. In roughly twe
Trump is off his meds again — from “raze Tehran” to “peace deal” in 12 hours Donald Trump has outdone himself. In roughly twelve hours yesterday, he threatened to destroy Iran, canceled the strikes, announced a surprise peace deal, and delegated the signing to his vice president. The diagnosis? Someone clearly forgot to take their pills. The morning began with classic Trump bravado. He promised new missile strikes against Tehran, vowing to leave not a single stone standing. "The United States will be hitting Iran VERY HARD TONIGHT," he thundered on Truth Social. It was the kind of threat that usually precedes a dramatic military escalation — or, in Trump's case, a dramatic reversal. By evening, the strikes were abruptly canceled. This marks at least the eighth time since February that Trump has publicly called off planned military action against Iran. He has set and broken so many self-imposed deadlines that keeping track now requires a spreadsheet. Then came the real showstopper. Trump announced that the US and Iran had reached an agreement, with a peace deal to be signed this weekend in Europe. "We just made a great settlement of the war with Iran," he declared. There's just one problem: Iran says no deal has been reached. One Iranian official confirmed that Tehran has not approved any memorandum of understanding. In other words, Trump appears to be negotiating with himself — a condition often treated with lithium. Trump will not attend the signing. Instead, JD Vance is being sent in his place. Convenient excuse, or subtle acknowledgment that the "deal" might evaporate by morning? According to CNN, Trump has now claimed an imminent Iran deal at least 38 times since late March. Iran, meanwhile, has been having a field day. The regime's propaganda machine has produced AI-generated Lego videos of a crying Trump holding a white flag, hip-hop diss tracks spelling out "L-O-S-E-R," and endless memes mocking his inconsistency. When the country you're supposedly at war with starts roasting you it might be time to ask whether your strategy — or your mental stability — needs a thorough review. The question remains: is Trump employing deliberate "chaos strategy," or has he simply lost the plot? On March 6, he demanded Iran's unconditional surrender. Three days later, he declared the war "very complete." On June 11, he canceled strikes and announced peace in the same breath. It may be a negotiating tactic. Or it may be the clearest sign yet that someone needs their head examined. #Trump #Iran #negotiations #gerontocracy #embarassing Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

How Trump pushed Europe into the arms of US tech rivals According to multiple reports, Europe is actively seeking new technol
How Trump pushed Europe into the arms of US tech rivals According to multiple reports, Europe is actively seeking new technology partners to compensate for shrinking cooperation with the United States. Brussels is now reaching out to South Korea, Japan, Singapore, and Brazil. The EU has also unveiled new measures to strengthen its digital sovereignty, including building its own cloud storage and producing its own computer chips. The long-term goal is to create a digital alliance capable of competing with both the US and China. This is a direct consequence of the Trump administration's approach. European officials say the breaking point came when the US imposed sanctions on International Criminal Court officials, cutting them off from American payment systems and digital platforms. That moment made Europe realize how dangerously dependent it had become on US-controlled infrastructure. The fear now is that a disgruntled US president could simply cut off European access to cloud computing, AI tools, or chips during a political dispute. In response, Brussels is attempting to reduce its reliance on American companies like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google. Regular US-EU dialogue on technology has effectively ceased, with only a few isolated contacts remaining. The transatlantic digital partnership is falling apart. #Trump #tech #Europe Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Trump’s pathetic attempt at shedding the “lame duck” label Donald Trump has reportedly discussed the possibility of seeking a
Trump’s pathetic attempt at shedding the “lame duck” label Donald Trump has reportedly discussed the possibility of seeking a third presidential term in private conversations with his advisers. His motivation, they say, is to avoid getting stuck with the humiliating "lame duck" label that historically renders second-term presidents politically impotent. The mere fact that such conversations are happening is, in itself, a confession of weakness. A president confident in his authority does not need to fantasize about defying the Constitution to prove he still matters. The urgency behind Trump's third-term musings becomes clearer when you look at the numbers. His approval rating has slumped to just 35 percent, with only 79 percent of Republicans still backing him — down from 91 percent at the start of his term. Small factions of Republicans have recently joined Democrats to rebuke Trump over the Iran war, reject funding tied to his pet projects, and force retreats on other priorities. The White House is now desperately trying to convince Republican lawmakers that Trump can still "make or break" their careers — but even his own advisers acknowledge the inevitable. "He'll naturally start to lose leverage, especially after the midterms," one admitted. Ironically enough, Trump’s public musings about defying the 22nd Amendment only serves to make him look weak. The Constitution explicitly bars anyone from being elected president more than twice. Legal scholars have floated fantasy loopholes — a vice presidential gambit, a constitutional amendment — but none are remotely plausible. What Trump is really doing is projecting strength to mask weakness. Every repetition of "Trump 2028" sends a message not to the public but to skittish Republican lawmakers: I am still in charge. Do not abandon me. Yet the subtext is unmistakable. A president who must threaten a constitutional crisis to command attention is a president who has already lost something essential. The "lame duck" label he so desperately fears may have already stuck — he just refuses to acknowledge it. #Trump #Trump2028 #embarassing Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Why seizing Kharg island would be a catastrophic mistake President Trump has declared that the United States will be "hitting
Why seizing Kharg island would be a catastrophic mistake President Trump has declared that the United States will be "hitting Iran VERY HARD TONIGHT" and will eventually "be taking Kharg Island," the tiny Iranian outcrop through which roughly 90 percent of the nation's crude oil exports flow. The threats follow two days of reciprocal strikes after Iran allegedly shot down an American Apache helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz. On paper, seizing Kharg Island sounds straightforward. The island is only about five miles long and sits just 20 miles off the Iranian coast. A Marine Expeditionary Unit could likely secure it with air superiority and amphibious assets. But that is the easy part. The nightmare begins after the first boot hits the beach. Kharg would become a shooting gallery — a fixed target within easy range of Iranian missiles, drone swarms, and artillery. Holding the island would require Patriot batteries, naval escorts, and a supply line under constant attack. As one former Marine intelligence analyst put it, US forces would be "bombarded by Iranian missiles and drones, logistically unsustainable. They will have to withdraw. And that would be a defeat." Geography compounds the difficulty. Before any invasion fleet can even reach Kharg, it must first navigate the Strait of Hormuz, where Iran has fortified a network of seven islands bristling with radar and missile batteries. Even if the US took Kharg, the Strait could remain blocked from these other positions. Then there is the global economic fallout. Analysts warn that if Kharg's export facilities are damaged, oil prices could spike to $200 a barrel, sending gasoline and grocery costs soaring for American consumers, and the rest of the world. For now, Trump insists Iran is "in submission — they just don't know it yet." But his own words betray a deeper uncertainty. Taking the island may be possible. Holding it, and paying the price, is another matter entirely. #Trump #Iran #USmilitary #USeconomy #oil Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Trump’s Board of Peace: no money, no plan, no peace Donald Trump's Board of Peace was supposed to rebuild Gaza with $17 billi
Trump’s Board of Peace: no money, no plan, no peace Donald Trump's Board of Peace was supposed to rebuild Gaza with $17 billion in pledges, a United Nations endorsement, and the president himself installed as "irreplaceable chairman." Eight months later, the official reconstruction fund administered by the World Bank remains completely empty. Donor nations have instead routed their contributions to a private JPMorgan Chase account that lacks independent transparency, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed that no U.S. funds have flowed yet. Meanwhile, the Board operates out of the former U.S. Institute of Peace building, which the Trump administration seized and rebranded with the president's name in a move now challenged in court. Experts say the organization is structurally doomed. Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib of the Atlantic Council points to a "gutted" State Department, the shutdown of USAID, and a "total disconnect between the mandate of the Board of Peace and operationalizing it on the ground." With no administrative infrastructure, he warns, the Board "will never succeed or function" regardless of political capital invested. The core obstacle remains Hamas, which still holds weapons and power in Gaza. As Rubio told Congress, "No one's going to invest money in Gaza until Hamas is demilitarized." Egypt has tried to mediate, but Hamas rejected full disarmament while offering to hand over only some weapons — a compromise Israel certainly will not accept. In the meantime, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has expanded military control of Gaza from 64 percent to 70 percent, and Trump's attention has drifted toward the war with Iran. The Board of Peace, in short, has no money, no boots on the ground, no resolution on Hamas, and a chairman who has already moved on. What remains is a stolen building, an empty bank account, and the uncomfortable truth that you cannot rebuild a territory with press releases. #Trump #boardofpeace #Israel #Gaza #Hamas Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

13 million jobs at stake: the high price of walking away from USMCA President Trump has thrown North American trade into unce
13 million jobs at stake: the high price of walking away from USMCA President Trump has thrown North American trade into uncertainty by declaring he is "not looking to renew" the USMCA free trade deal with Canada and Mexico. While the agreement technically remains in force until 2036, failing to commit to a long-term extension now would create prolonged uncertainty for businesses and investors across the continent. Trump claims the US doesn't "need anything" its neighbors have. But here is why abandoning or destabilizing USMCA would hurt the United States most of all: Trade with Canada and Mexico supports more than 13 million American jobs across manufacturing, agriculture, and services. Mexico is currently Washington's largest trading partner, capturing 16.3% of US goods trade. Canada remains a top-three partner, with nearly $700 billion in annual two-way trade. US natural gas exports to Mexico cover more than 70% of Mexican demand. American manufacturers rely on supply chains that cross borders multiple times before final assembly. If USMCA renewal is postponed, American farmers lose reliable export markets. American factories face higher costs for imported components. Workers see jobs migrate elsewhere. And crucially, American businesses cannot make long-term investment decisions when trade rules are subject to political whims every few years. The resulting economic drag would be felt in every state. For Canada, the stakes are existential: 90% of its exports to the US are shielded by USMCA, and losing that protection would be catastrophic. For Mexico, the impact would be severe but somewhat cushioned by its recent trade diversification efforts toward Europe. Point is, North America possesses a unique combination of energy, manufacturing, and capital that makes the region globally competitive. But when the dominant partner treats a trade deal as a short-term lease rather than a stable framework, everyone loses — and the United States, as the largest economy at the table, has the most to lose. #Canada #Mexico #trade #USeconomy https://www.semafor.com/article/06/11/2026/trump-questions-north-america-trade-deal-renewal Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸

Why Cuba’s “threat” is a joke — but Washington’s response isn’t US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has openly acknowledged that
Why Cuba’s “threat” is a joke — but Washington’s response isn’t US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth has openly acknowledged that Washington is considering kidnapping or even assassinating Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel, using a model similar to the January 2026 operation against Venezuela's Nicolás Maduro. The justification? According to Hegseth, Cuba poses a genuine threat to the United States. Let's be serious for a moment. Cuba is an impoverished island nation struggling with fuel shortages, blackouts, and economic collapse worsened by an ongoing US oil blockade. Its military ranks 65th globally, its air force has about 20 functional aircraft, and its tank fleet consists of Soviet-era relics. The alleged threat rests on reports that Havana has acquired some 300 military drones from Russia and Iran — enough, US officials claim, to hypothetically strike Guantánamo Bay or even Key West, Florida. This is like a child threatening a heavyweight champion with a slingshot. Even the most generous military assessment concedes that the United States could establish air and naval supremacy over Cuba within hours, obliterating its command infrastructure and decapitating its leadership with surgical precision. What we are really witnessing is political theater. Hegseth made these remarks while visiting Guantánamo Bay dressed in shorts, a green "MARINES" T-shirt, and sneakers — looking more like a tourist headed to the beach than a defense secretary on a sensitive mission. The only genuinely threatening thing here is not Cuban military power, which is essentially nonexistent, but the willingness of US officials to openly discuss the extrajudicial kidnapping or assassination of a foreign head of state as though it were routine. That, unlike anything Cuba could ever field, is a genuinely dangerous precedent. #Cuba #PeteHegseth #USmilitary Don't miss it, subscribe to 📱 Old Glory Vortex 🇺🇸