Donald Trump: Iran and Israel 'don't know what the fuc'k they're doing'
He's the one who doesn't know what the fuc'k he's doing, as he's the one who gave Netanyahu the greenlight to attack Iran.
Re: Donald Trump: Iran and Israel 'don't know what the fuc'k they're doing'
Iran’s Strategic Miscalculations in Its Confrontation with Israel: A Hard Lesson in Misreading History
Abdiwahab Sheikh Abdisamad: @AbdiwahabSheik7
Iran’s first mistake was trusting the IAEA. Unlike Israel which never joined, Iran accepted inspections. But history shows: Saddam complied and was overthrown. Gaddafi gave up his program and was killed. North Korea rejected oversight and survived.
Instead of learning from that, Iran kept cooperating with the IAEA believing it would bring security. It only brought vulnerability. Tehran misread the historical signals.
Second miscalculation: overreliance on proxies.
Hezbollah, Ansarallah, and Iraqi Shia militias became the face of Iran’s regional policy. But that era is ending.
The proxy shield is no longer enough. New technology drones, AI targeting, cyberwarfare has changed the game. Iran must now prepare for direct confrontation with Israel.
Third error: For 40 years, Iran prepared for a direct war with the U.S. Israel was treated as a secondary concern. That was a grave misalignment. The immediate threat now comes from Tel Aviv, not Washington any more .
Fourth mistake: Tehran trusted Trump too much. They believed his promises, ending the Ukraine war on day one, a Gaza deal, no new wars. But none materialized. His rhetoric was not reality.
Trump’s unpredictability, not his diplomacy, defined his presidency. Tehran miscalculated his personality and overestimated his restraint.
In short, Iran’s strategic vision was built on outdated assumptions, misplaced trust, and misread history. The battlefield has evolved but Tehran was slow to adapt.
Now, Iran faces a new phase: a possible direct confrontation with Israel in an age of high-tech warfare. The old rules no longer apply. And Iran must rethink everything from scratch.
Abdiwahab Sheikh Abdisamad: @AbdiwahabSheik7
Iran’s first mistake was trusting the IAEA. Unlike Israel which never joined, Iran accepted inspections. But history shows: Saddam complied and was overthrown. Gaddafi gave up his program and was killed. North Korea rejected oversight and survived.
Instead of learning from that, Iran kept cooperating with the IAEA believing it would bring security. It only brought vulnerability. Tehran misread the historical signals.
Second miscalculation: overreliance on proxies.
Hezbollah, Ansarallah, and Iraqi Shia militias became the face of Iran’s regional policy. But that era is ending.
The proxy shield is no longer enough. New technology drones, AI targeting, cyberwarfare has changed the game. Iran must now prepare for direct confrontation with Israel.
Third error: For 40 years, Iran prepared for a direct war with the U.S. Israel was treated as a secondary concern. That was a grave misalignment. The immediate threat now comes from Tel Aviv, not Washington any more .
Fourth mistake: Tehran trusted Trump too much. They believed his promises, ending the Ukraine war on day one, a Gaza deal, no new wars. But none materialized. His rhetoric was not reality.
Trump’s unpredictability, not his diplomacy, defined his presidency. Tehran miscalculated his personality and overestimated his restraint.
In short, Iran’s strategic vision was built on outdated assumptions, misplaced trust, and misread history. The battlefield has evolved but Tehran was slow to adapt.
Now, Iran faces a new phase: a possible direct confrontation with Israel in an age of high-tech warfare. The old rules no longer apply. And Iran must rethink everything from scratch.
Re: Donald Trump: Iran and Israel 'don't know what the fuc'k they're doing'
Zmeselo wrote: ↑24 Jun 2025, 12:47Iran’s Strategic Miscalculations in Its Confrontation with Israel: A Hard Lesson in Misreading History
Abdiwahab Sheikh Abdisamad: @AbdiwahabSheik7
Iran’s first mistake was trusting the IAEA. Unlike Israel which never joined, Iran accepted inspections. But history shows: Saddam complied and was overthrown. Gaddafi gave up his program and was killed. North Korea rejected oversight and survived.
Instead of learning from that, Iran kept cooperating with the IAEA believing it would bring security. It only brought vulnerability. Tehran misread the historical signals.
Second miscalculation: overreliance on proxies.
Hezbollah, Ansarallah, and Iraqi Shia militias became the face of Iran’s regional policy. But that era is ending.
The proxy shield is no longer enough. New technology drones, AI targeting, cyberwarfare has changed the game. Iran must now prepare for direct confrontation with Israel.
Third error: For 40 years, Iran prepared for a direct war with the U.S. Israel was treated as a secondary concern. That was a grave misalignment. The immediate threat now comes from Tel Aviv, not Washington any more .
Fourth mistake: Tehran trusted Trump too much. They believed his promises, ending the Ukraine war on day one, a Gaza deal, no new wars. But none materialized. His rhetoric was not reality.
Trump’s unpredictability, not his diplomacy, defined his presidency. Tehran miscalculated his personality and overestimated his restraint.
In short, Iran’s strategic vision was built on outdated assumptions, misplaced trust, and misread history. The battlefield has evolved but Tehran was slow to adapt.
Now, Iran faces a new phase: a possible direct confrontation with Israel in an age of high-tech warfare. The old rules no longer apply. And Iran must rethink everything from scratch.
Re: Donald Trump: Iran and Israel 'don't know what the fuc'k they're doing'
Actually trump doesnt want a war he doesnt want his term to be tained by war , he is a man of peace . He did his part he doesnt want this to be a full blown regional war yes bibi tricked him . And he has to support Israel but America first remember
Dr Zackovich
Dr Zackovich