Wednesday, March 04, 2026

BUT WILL HE DEFEAT HIS DEMOCRATIC OPPONENT IN NOVEMBER? ... THAT IS IF HE'S NOT CONVICTED IN THE MEANTIME

Father accused of murdering his 14-year-old daughter's rapist WINS primary race to become county sheriff

 

By Alexa Cimino 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 4, 2026

 

 

AARON SPENCER FULL_frame_58038.jpeg
Aaron Spencer is now the top Republican pick for his county's sheriff position - despite being on trial for murder
 

A father accused of killing the man who allegedly raped and abducted his teenage daughter has won the Republican primary for county sheriff in Arkansas - despite him still awaiting trial for murder.

Aaron Spencer, 37, secured 53.5 percent of the vote in Tuesday’s Republican primary for Lonoke County sheriff, defeating longtime incumbent John Staley, who received 26.5 percent, according to the Arkansas Secretary of State. A third candidate, David Bufford, received nearly 20 percent.

The result puts Spencer in the unusual position of potentially becoming the top law enforcement officer in the same county that charged him with murder.

But his criminal case remains unresolved.

Spencer has been accused of fatally shooting Michael Fosler, 67, in October 2024 after discovering the man with his teenage daughter. 

Fosler had been out on $50,000 bail while facing 43 criminal charges involving the girl, including internet stalking of a child, sexual assault, sexual indecency with a child and possession of child pornography.

Spencer has admitted to shooting Fosler but pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder.

The case began shortly after midnight on October 8, 2024, when Spencer and his wife, Heather Spencer, 38, discovered their daughter missing from her bedroom at the family’s farm in Cabot, Arkansas.

 

Aaron Spencer, 37, pictured with his wife, Heather, secured 53.5 percent of the vote in Tuesday¿s Republican primary for Lonoke County sheriff while still awaiting trial for murder

Aaron Spencer, 37, pictured with his wife, Heather, secured 53.5 percent of the vote in Tuesday’s Republican primary for Lonoke County sheriff while still awaiting trial for murder

Michael Fosler (pictured) was charged and booked with rape and internet stalking of a child on July 11, 2024 but was released quickly on a $50,000 bond and then kidnapped Spencer's daughter

Michael Fosler (pictured) was charged and booked with rape and internet stalking of a child on July 11, 2024 but was released quickly on a $50,000 bond and then kidnapped Spencer's daughter

 

The parents called 911 but soon began searching the area themselves after realizing their daughter may have been with Fosler - a man police say had previously groomed and raped the girl and was the boyfriend of a family friend. 

Fosler had been arrested months earlier in July 2024 on charges including rape and internet stalking of a child but was later released on bond despite a no-contact order barring him from contacting the teenager.

Heather said she had feared the worst.

ISRAEL IS NOT JUST TAGGING ALONG WITH THE US

Israeli special forces are carrying out 'extraordinary missions that can spark one's imagination' says Air Force chief - amid reports of helicopter drops in Iraq

 

By Gethin Hicks 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 4, 2026

 

 

Israeli Military Launches 10th Wave of Strikes on Tehran

Israeli special forces are carrying out 'extraordinary missions' in their fight against Iran, the country's Air Force chief said on Wednesday (Pictured: Aftermath of an airstrike in Tehran, the Iranian capital)

 

Israeli special forces are carrying out 'extraordinary missions that can spark one's imagination' in the conflict with Iran, the country's Air Force chief says. 

Major General Tomer Bar of the Israeli army hailed his troops in a statement released as the war in the Middle East entered its fifth day on Wednesday. 

He said 'hundreds of targets' have been struck by missiles - and appeared to suggest that Israeli troops may have been deployed on the ground in Iran.

It came amid reports that between four and seven US-Israeli helicopters conducted an airdrop in the Najaf desert, Iraq, today.

The purpose of the drop remains unclear, though it has been speculated that the helicopters could have been supplying equipment to anti-Iran regimes.

An Iraqi convoy sent to investigate was hit by airstrikes, killing one soldier and leaving two wounded, according to Independent Arabia. 

Major General Bar's statement this evening read: 'On this Shabbat morning, over 200 Israeli Air Force aircraft are attacking targets in Iran.

'This is not a drill. This is a real operation to defend the State of Israel. We have been fighting for about 100 hours alongside ground and naval forces. We have already struck hundreds of targets of the Iranian regime and its proxies. 

 

Major General Tomer Bar said 'hundreds of targets of the Iranian regime' have been struck by missiles - and also appeared to suggest that Israeli troops have been deployed on the ground in Iran

Major General Tomer Bar said 'hundreds of targets of the Iranian regime' have been struck by missiles - and also appeared to suggest that Israeli troops have been deployed on the ground in Iran

The country's capital city has been battered by airstrikes since the conflict broke out on Saturday

The country's capital city has been battered by airstrikes since the conflict broke out on Saturday

 

'Iranian aggression against Israel has crossed a red line. We are precisely striking the Iranian nuclear program, missile production facilities, and other strategic sites. We will continue with full determination to protect Israel's citizens.'  

Iran's capital city Tehran has been battered by missiles sent by the US and Israel since the conflict broke out on Saturday when the country's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed. 

A funeral ceremony for the late leader scheduled to begin this evening was cancelled as airstrikes on the city continued. 

A member of the Iranian Assembly of Experts said on Wednesday that they are 'close' to choosing a successor to Khamenei, whose reign lasted four decades. 

Reports yesterday claimed that the former Supreme Leader's son, Mojtaba Khamenei, is in line to succeed him.

Mojtaba, 56, Ali Khamenei's second eldest, has strong links to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), who are thought to be putting pressure on the Assembly of Experts to make an appointment.

Elsewhere, US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth announced that an enemy warship was sunk by American torpedoes off the coast of Sri Lanka. 

At least 80 sailors are confirmed to have died and a further 78 wounded in the Indian Ocean after an 'explosion' hit a 180-crew Iranian frigate IRIS Dena. 

Video footage released by the US showed the moment that a torpedo struck the vessel, causing a huge explosion that sent water soaring high into the air.

 

A funeral ceremony for Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was cancelled on Wednesday (Pictured: A banner of the leader in Tehran)

A funeral ceremony for Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was cancelled on Wednesday (Pictured: A banner of the leader in Tehran)

Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is reportedly in line to become the country's new Supreme Leader

Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, is reportedly in line to become the country's new Supreme Leader

 

In later images, the bow of the stricken warship was seen pointing skywards, with more than half the boat already having disappeared underneath the waves.

The War Secretary said it was the 'first sinking of an enemy ship by a torpedo since World War Two'.

However, he overlooked the British sinking of the Argentinian cruiser Belgrano by submarine HMS Conqueror on May 2, 1982, during the Falklands War.

Hegseth said at a press conference: 'In the Indian Ocean - an American submarine sunk an Iranian warship, that thought it was safe in international waters.' 

'Instead, it was sunk by a torpedo - quiet death.

'The first sinking of an enemy ship by a torpedo since World War Two. Like in that war - back when we were still the War Department - we are fighting to win.' 

In addition to striking Tehran on the fifth day of the conflict, Israel hit the Iranian-backed Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon, while Iran fired on Bahrain, Kuwait and Israel. As the conflict spiraled, Turkey said Nato defenses intercepted a ballistic missile launched from Iran before it entered Turkey's airspace.

The war has killed more than 1,000 people in Iran and dozens in Lebanon, according to officials. It has subsequently disrupted the supply of the world's oil and gas, snarled international shipping, and stranded hundreds of thousands of travelers in the Middle East.

Israel said it hit buildings associated with Iran's Basij, the all-volunteer force of the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard that conducted a bloody crackdown on protesters in January that killed thousands and saw tens of thousands detained in the country.

The Israeli military also said it hit buildings associated with Iran's internal security command, which also has suppressed demonstrations in the past. It also pounded towns near Beirut.

Israel and the US have said they want to see the Iranian public overthrow the country's theocracy, and strikes against counterprotest forces are likely part of that effort.

Iranian state television showed the ruins of buildings in the centre of Tehran, with interviewees saying the attacks damaged their homes. Strikes have also been reported in the holy Shiite seminary city of Qom, targeting a building associated with a clerical panel set to pick Iran's next supreme leader. Iranian media said it was empty at the time. 

State TV has begun calling the conflict the 'Ramadan war', a reference to the holy Muslim fasting month currently taking place. But that term also suggested leaders are trying to prepare the public for a protracted conflict.

Admiral Brad Cooper, the top US military commander in the Middle East, echoed that sentiment, saying: 'We've just begun.'

Cooper said American forces have damaged Iran's air defenses and taken out ballistic missiles, launchers and drones. Israeli military spokesman Brigadier General Effie Defrin said such damage has led to a decline in launches from Iran.

Still, explosions echoed in the skies over Jerusalem on Wednesday. Israel's military said Iran launched missiles toward the country, and Hezbollah sent rockets.

Iran has also struck around the region, and air sirens sounded on Wednesday across Bahrain, home to the US Navy's 5th Fleet.

At least 1,045 people have been killed in Iran, the country's Foundation of Martyrs and Veterans Affairs said on Wednesday. A further 50 have died in Lebanon, according to its health ministry.

Eleven people have been killed in Israel, as have six US troops.

Elsewhere today Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard issued its most-intense threat yet, saying the strikes against it would 'cost of the complete destruction of the region's military and economic infrastructure'.

A container ship was attacked on Wednesday afternoon while passing through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf through which about a fifth of the world's oil is shipped. The ship was hit by an unknown projectile, the UK's Maritime Trade Operations said.

With concerns of Iranian attacks on traffic through the strait, oil prices soared. Global stock markets have also been hammered over worries that the spike in oil prices may grind down the world economy and sap corporate profits.

HERE'S HOPING THAT NEAR-APE GREEN WILL BE DEFEATED IN THE RUNOFF

Cane-waving Trump tormentor Al Green forced into runoff by 37-year-old who wants to impeach Kristi Noem

 

By Nikki Schwab 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 4, 2026

 

 

Representative Al Green, who came armed to President Donald Trump's State of the Union address last week armed with a sign that read 'Black people aren't apes!' has lost his Democratic primary, which pitted him against another Democratic incumbent

Representative Al Green, who came to President Donald Trump's State of the Union address last week armed with a sign that read 'Black people aren't apes!' was forced into a runoff Tuesday night

 

One of President Donald Trump's chief congressional tormenters was forced into a runoff Tuesday night. 

Representative Al Green, 79, was pitted against Representative Christian Menefee, 37, after Texas Republicans redistricted the state, targeting five House seats held by Democrats.

A race call was slow to come in, with the Associated Press announcing the runoff result at 11:19 a.m. Wednesday.  

Green recently made waves again by bringing a sign that read 'Black people aren't apes,' to Trump's State of the Union address last week, referring to an unfortunate video post from the President that the White House blamed on a 'boomer' editor.

The stunt got him tossed from the speech from the Sergeant at Arms. 

A year before Green was expelled for heckling from the House chamber during Trump's joint address before Congress, the stand-in for the State of the Union when a President's newly sworn-in. 

The congressman was censured for his outbursts. 

Green has filed articles of impeachment against Trump six times.


Green heckled Trump during his address to Congress.

Rep. Al Greene, D-Texas, waving his cane, disrupts President Trump's address to a joint session of Congress at the Capitol in Washington on March 4, 2025.

Representative Al Green lost the primary race to represent Texas' 18th Congressional District to Representative Christian Menefee, the newest member of the House Democratic caucus who won a special election in January and was sworn-in on February 2 (pictured)

Representative Al Green was forced into a runoff in the primary race to represent Texas' 18th Congressional District to Representative Christian Menefee, the newest member of the House Democratic caucus who won a special election in January and was sworn-in on February 2 (pictured)

 

His impeachment effort against Trump started back in 2017 and he most recently tried again in December, pointing to how the President said on Truth Social that some Democratic lawmakers should be executed for pushing troops to not follow illegal orders.

It's a shocking result for Green, who generally faired well in his Houston-area district. 

In 2024, he ran unopposed in the Democratic primary. 

He first won election to the House in 2004. 

Menefee is the most recent addition to the House Democratic caucus, winning a special election in late January to replace the late Republican Representative Sylvester Turner. 

The new congressman previously served as county attorney for Harris County, Texas.

He was sworn-in on February 2. 

Weeks later Menefee was back on the ballot in a race to represent the newly combined 18th Congressional District. 

If Menefee ultimately beats Green that doesn't mean the district's voters have rejected an impeachment-happy lawmaker. 

During his first four weeks in Congress, Menefee has already called for an impeachment - of Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. 

WHAT A SHAME ... DAN CRENSHAW DESERVED TO BE REELECTED

Trump spurned war hero Dan Crenshaw is ousted in bitter taste of MAGA revenge

 

By Virginia Churchill 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 4, 2026

 

 

Representative Dan Crenshaw attends a news conference with Republicans on January 4, 2023, on Capitol Hill in Washington

Representative Dan Crenshaw raised eyebrows last year when he was apparently caught on a hot mic threatening to kill former Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

 

Texas Congressman Dan Crenshaw was ousted in a primary by a state legislator  following bruising clashes with MAGA Republicans during his time on Capitol Hill.

Crenshaw, a fourth-term congressman representing Texas' Houston-area Second Congressional District and former Navy Seal, was defeated Tuesday by State Representative Steve Toth, according to the Associated Press. 

The stunning defeat is also a victory for Texas Senator Ted Cruz, who last week came out against his congressional colleague and endorsed Toth.

Toth, an ordained pastor and businessman who owns two pool maintenance companies, has come after Crenshaw for not being sufficiently conservative, as well as being too focused on international affairs.

President Donald Trump endorsed every House Republican running for re-election in the first primaries of 2026 — except Crenshaw. Governor Greg Abbott also declined to endorse the incumbent.

Trump also did not endorse Crenshaw in 2024, when the congressman did not object to certifying President Donald Trump's defeat in the 2020 election.

Crenshaw also raised eyebrows last year when he was apparently caught on a hot mic threatening to kill former Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

Back in February of 2025, he noted that he had not met Carlson in person, but then said, 'If I ever meet him, I'll f***ing kill him.' He then apparently went on to call Carlson 'the worst person.'

 

Texas State Representative Steve Toth speaks in Spring, Texas, on Monday, January 10, 2022

Texas State Representative Steve Toth has come after Crenshaw for not being sufficiently conservative, as well as being too focused on international affairs.

Back in February of 2025, Crenshaw noted that he had not met Carlson (pictured) in person, but then said, 'If I ever meet him, I'll f***ing kill him'

Back in February of 2025, Crenshaw noted that he had not met Carlson (pictured) in person, but then said, 'If I ever meet him, I'll f***ing kill him'

 

The remarks came after a fiery interview in which Crenshaw criticized Carlson's opposition to American aid to Ukraine, saying he 'doesn't know what he's talking about,' according to a Politico report. 

Carlson hosted Toth on his podcast in October and praised him as a candidate who could 'restore the party to sanity,' by defeating Crenshaw, 'an unbalanced warmonger.'

Crenshaw, who serves on the House Intelligence Committee, also apparently nearly caused an international incident last year, allegedly making inappropriate remarks to  a female Mexican official during an August meeting, according to Punchbowl News.

The congressman's conduct reportedly alarmed officials at the CIA's Mexico City station enough that they sent a cable to the agency's headquarters in Langley, Virginia, reporting what they viewed as unprofessional conduct tied to drinking, as well as a lack of decorum in front of Mexican officials.

The remarks toasted by Crenshaw allegedly made a woman in the meeting uncomfortable, per sources who spoke with Punchbowl.

Crenshaw was visiting America's southern neighbor as head of the House Intelligence Committee's cartel task force.

That is a role he no longer holds.

While Crenshaw voted reliably with Republican leadership, his acceptance of Joe Biden's 2020 victory, his denunciations of right-wing 'grifters,' and his public spats with big-named conservative figures placed him in the crosshairs. 

HERE'S HOPING TRUMP ENDORSES THE RIGHT CANDIDATE - SEN. JOHN CORNYN

Trump poised to order scandal-plagued Republican to QUIT dramatic Texas Senate race

 

By Nikki Schwab 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 4, 2026

 

 

President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social that he would be endorsing a Republican in the Texas Senate race in order for the runoff race to conclude sooner

President Donald Trump announced on Truth Social that he would be endorsing a Republican in the Texas Senate race in order for the runoff race to conclude sooner

 

President Donald Trump teased Wednesday that he would make an endorsement in the Texas Republican Senate race 'soon,' after incumbent Senator John Cornyn and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton qualified for a runoff. 

The Atlantic reported Wednesday that Trump's advisers expect him to choose Cornyn, who already holds the seat, and slightly outperformed the MAGA favorite Paxton in Tuesday's vote totals.

In a Truth Social post, Trump said that the Republican Senate primary cannot 'be allowed to go on any longer.' 

'IT MUST STOP NOW!' he ordered. 'We have an easy to beat, Radical Left Opponent, and we have to TOTALLY FOCUS on putting him away, quickly and decisively!'

The Democrats wrapped up their race overnight with state Representative James Talarico beating Representative Jasmine Crockett. 

Talarico, a 'Christian progressive' who has caught the eye of Joe Rogan, polled better than Crockett against both Republicans.

Now he'll be the Democratic nominee. 

'Both John and Ken ran great races, but not good enough,' Trump said. 'Now, this one, must be PERFECT!''

 

President Donald Trump's advisers told the Atlantic that they expect the President to back incumbent Senator John Cornyn, who slightly outperformed MAGA favorite, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Tuesday night
 
 
'I will be making my Endorsement soon, and will be asking the candidate that I don’t Endorse to immediately DROP OUT OF THE RACE!' the President announced. 'Is that fair? We must win in November!!!' 

NETANYAHU IS THE WINSTON CHURCHILL OF OUR TIMES

Netanyahu’s long road to confronting Iran

For decades, Israel's leader has maintained that survival demands strength. After Oct. 7, that doctrine became a policy to reshape the region. 

 

By Fiamma Nirenstein
 
JNS
Mar 3, 2026
 
 

Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks with U.S. President Donald Trump, Feb. 28, 2026. Photo by Avi Ohayon/GPO.
Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks with U.S. President Donald Trump, Feb. 28, 2026. 
 

Two qualities of leadership define Benjamin Netanyahu at this pivotal moment.

The first is the ability to pursue an objective that appears impossible—relentlessly, patiently, for years—until circumstances align and it can finally be achieved. History remembers Winston Churchill for precisely this: breaking the paralysis of fear before Nazi aggression and dragging a reluctant world toward victory. Netanyahu’s struggle against Iran’s nuclear ambitions belongs to that same category of long, solitary battles waged against skepticism at home and resistance abroad.

The second is the moral stamina to withstand a tidal wave of internal and international condemnation—accusations of warmongering, opportunism, even genocide—without retreating from what one believes to be a historic necessity. “Bibi” has become, in global headlines, a nickname almost automatically paired with scorn. Yet repetition has dulled the insult. What remains is the record.

The story of Israel’s coordinated strike against Iran did not begin this year. It began publicly in 2015, when Netanyahu addressed the U.S. Congress in open disagreement with then-President Barack Obama.

He warned that the nuclear agreement under negotiation would not prevent Iran from obtaining the bomb but would instead clear its path. He described the metastasizing ideology of the Iranian regime and its declared commitment to destroying Israel, confronting America and undermining the West.

At the United Nations, he stated plainly: “The days when the Jewish people remained passive in the face of genocidal enemies are over.” After Oct. 7, 2023, that conviction hardened into policy. “Never again” was no longer a memorial phrase; it became a strategic doctrine.

To understand Netanyahu’s persistence is to understand his formation. His father, Benzion Netanyahu, one of the foremost historians of antisemitism, taught him the catastrophic price of ignoring warning signs. His brother Yoni fell at Entebbe in 1976. Netanyahu himself served in Sayeret Matkal and carries the scars of those battles. For him, Jewish vulnerability is not theoretical. It is an inherited memory.

His 2015 speech to the United Nations laid the groundwork for what became the Abraham Accords. Moderate Sunni states began to recognize Israel as a strategic partner against Iranian expansionism.

Meanwhile, Tehran tightened its alliance with Vladimir Putin’s Russia, deepened ties with China and North Korea, expanded its ballistic missile arsenal and armed proxies led by Hamas and Hezbollah—while continuing to chant “Death to Israel” and “Death to America.”

Oct. 7 crystallized the urgency. The Hamas massacre forced Israel to confront not only its immediate attackers but what Netanyahu long described as the head of the octopus—Iran.

International pressure mounted. The Biden administration, the United Nations and European leaders urged restraint, opposed Israeli operations in Rafah and along the Philadelphi Corridor and sought to limit the scope of military action. Netanyahu nonetheless insisted on dismantling Hamas, returning the hostages and, crucially, making the courageous decision to confront Hezbollah once and for all—entering Lebanon to dismantle a threat that had loomed over Israel’s north for nearly two decades.

This marked a new line in Israeli doctrine. After Oct. 7, survival could not rest on containment. It required preemption. It required, as Netanyahu framed it, refusing any existential threat to the Jewish people—not rhetorically, but militarily. To save the Jewish state, Israel would have to become lions.

Now, after what officials described as a 12-day war last June and revelations that Iran possessed hundreds of kilograms of highly enriched uranium—enough, according to U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff, for multiple nuclear devices—the confrontation has entered a decisive phase. Iranian strikes extended beyond Israel to Gulf states and even European-linked assets, reshaping regional calculations.

The choice before Israel is not between mere transformation and escalation. It is between a war of necessity for survival and a transformative strategic breakthrough that could open the way to a different Middle East—and perhaps a different global alignment.

Netanyahu has long wagered that strength is the precondition of peace. Excellence, not accommodation, is his horizon. Ten years after his warning to Congress, Israel is no longer alone in its assessment of the Iranian threat.

Beyond close coordination with U.S. President Donald Trump, a widening circle of nations now recognizes that partnership with a regime rooted in ideological aggression is untenable.

History rarely offers clean alternatives. Yet this moment carries more promise than many admit. If the Iranian axis collapses, the region may move beyond the perpetual shadow of jihadist coercion. The Abraham Accords could expand. Strategic cooperation—from the Gulf to Europe and beyond—could solidify into something durable.

Netanyahu’s vision has come at a high price—military, diplomatic and personal. But the horizon he pursues is not endless war. It is a Middle East in which Jewish survival is no longer negotiated but secured.

The alternative was continued vulnerability. The wager now is that by choosing strength, Israel has not only defended itself but opened the door to a new regional order.

TRUMP IS MAKING AMERICA GREAT AGAIN BY ORCHESTRATING EXTRAORDINARY U.S. MILITARY POWER IN CLOSE COORDINATION WITH WHAT THE PENTAGON HAS CALLED AMERICA'S 'MODEL ALLY'

A battle to make America great again

Yet a motley crew on the left and right are not happy about the idea that national decline is a choice the president firmly rejects. 

 

By Clifford D. May 

 

JNS

Mar 4, 2026

 

 

U.S. sailors prepare to stage ordnance on the flight deck of Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) in support of “Operation Epic Fury,” Feb. 28, 2026. Credit: U.S. Navy.
U.S. sailors prepare to stage ordnance on the flight deck of aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72) in support of “Operation Epic Fury,” Feb. 28, 2026.
 

On Feb. 28, U.S. President Donald Trump made one of the best—and, at eight minutes, briefest—speeches of his career.

The objective of the combined U.S.-Israeli operation, he explained, “is to defend the American people by eliminating imminent threats from the Iranian regime. … Its menacing activities directly endanger the United States, our troops, our bases overseas, and our allies throughout the world.”

He added: “For 47 years, the Iranian regime has chanted ‘Death to America!’ and waged an unending campaign of bloodshed and mass murder, targeting the United States, our troops and the innocent people in many, many countries.”

If that’s not “America First,” what would be?

It also should be obvious that Trump is making America great again by orchestrating extraordinary U.S. military power in close coordination with what the Pentagon has called America’s “model ally,” and doing so with such unprecedented precision that ordinary Iranians have literally been dancing in the streets, confident that the bombs were only targeting their oppressors.

Yet a motley crew on the left and right isn’t happy about the idea that national decline is a choice the president firmly rejects.

The ladies of Code Pink were apoplectic, their usual disposition. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) called the strike on Iran “premeditated.” Would he rather it had been impulsive and spontaneous?

Socialist Democrat Zohran Mamdani, mayor of New York City, and Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), apparently reading from the same talking points memo, denounced Trump’s intervention as “an illegal war of aggression.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin, taking a brief break from droning Ukrainian kindergartens, called the elimination of Ali Khamenei, the world’s leading terrorist master, a “cynical” assassination in violation of “all norms of human morality and international law.”

Political commentator Candace Owens posted on X: “I STAND AGAINST ISRAEL,” echoing the party line of Hamas, Hezbollah and the Muslim Brotherhood.

Former Fox News host and current podcaster Tucker Carlson called the intervention “absolutely disgusting and evil.”

It’s reckless anthropomorphizing to speculate about what “history” will say. But future historians will have to acknowledge that Trump made arduous efforts to mitigate the menace from Tehran diplomatically.

He couldn’t succeed because the Islamic Revolution of 1979 was not, as its leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, said, “about the price of watermelons.” It was about jihad against the West: Islam über alles.

Even after the 12-day war against the regime last June, the mullahs were determined to reconstitute the country’s nuclear-weapons program and build missiles capable of delivering them to the “Great Satan.”

So, what’s next? Trump told the Iranian people: “When we are finished, take over your government. … This is the moment for action.”

In other words: Regime change is your job. We’re helping you now, and we’ll help you later, but we can’t do the job for you.

An easy job, it will not be. The regime does not want to be changed. The surviving members of the Islamic elite are not, so far at least, laying down their weapons at home or abroad.

They’ve been launching missiles and drones at Israel, where at least 12 people have been killed, and at eight other Middle Eastern neighbors, not one of which was participating in the military operation. According to U.S. Central Command, six American service members were killed in an Iranian drone attack against Kuwait.

On Sunday, Ali Larijani, the head of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, said that Israelis and Americans would soon face a “force they have never experienced before.”

The commanders of what the Pentagon has dubbed “Operation Epic Fury” and the Israelis call “Operation Roaring Lion” must take such threats seriously. Military operations are inherently risky.

If, however, over the weeks ahead, the Americans and Israelis can succeed in crippling the theocrats’ military capabilities, that will constitute a historic victory.

Additional achievements are possible. For several years, the scholars at my think tank have been arguing that a second Cold War against the United States and its allies is being waged by an “Axis of Aggressors.”

Four regimes belong to this unholy alliance: Beijing and Moscow, since 2022 in a “no-limits” partnership, along with Tehran and Pyongyang, where—due to failed diplomacy by previous American presidents—a third-generation anti-American dictator is in possession of a nuclear arsenal.

If the Islamic Republic of Iran’s war-making machinery can be demolished, how great an impact will that have on the Axis of Aggressors?

Consider what happened when the United States took on the original Axis, the one between Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, announced by Benito Mussolini in 1936, and joined by Japan four years later.

On July 10, 1943, the Allies launched an amphibious invasion of Sicily. Within two months, Italy had surrendered—a major psychological blow to Berlin, demonstrating that the Axis was breakable.

Hitler responded with “Operation Axis,” diverting to Italy troops and resources that he badly needed on other fronts. The Allied invasion of Normandy began on June 6, 1944. Germany’s unconditional surrender was formalized less than a year later.

Could the collapse or even just the enfeeblement of the Tehran regime have a similar impact on the Axis of Aggressors? As you know, history doesn’t repeat, but it often rhymes.

Final point: Iran’s rulers have long been the primary destabilizing force in the Middle East, funding and arming the Houthis, Hamas, Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Shia militias in Iraq.

Without Tehran’s backing, these groups will struggle. That will give the Lebanese, Iraqis, Yemenis—maybe even the Palestinians, who knows?—a once-in-a-lifetime chance to become free and independent, rather than vassals of a blood-soaked Islamic empire.

If only that is achieved, wouldn’t Trump deserve the Nobel Peace Prize?

I think so. I doubt Bernie, Candace, Tucker and the distressed damsels of Code Pink will agree.

 

Originally published in “The Washington Times.”

AN INTERESTING BIT OF HISTORY

By Bob Walsh

 

The confirmation by Pete Hegseth of the US submarine attack on the Iranian frigate IRIS Dena marks the first time a US submarine has sunk a warship with a torpedo in combat since World War II. (Picture source: US DoW and Iranian MoD)

US submarine attack on the Iranian frigate IRIS Dena 

 

Within the last day or so a U S Navy submarine sank an Iranian military vessel with a torpedo in the Indian Ocean.  It happened near Sri Lanka.  This is the first time in 80 years that a U S Submarine has sunk an enemy ship with a torpedo.  As a student of military history I find this really interesting.

With any sort of luck the Iranian navy will soon exist only at the bottom of the ocean or hiding out in neutral ports.
 
EDITOR'S NOTE: No luck needed. Iran's warships are sitting ducks. 

THE PERILS OF BELIEVING YOUR OWN BULLSHIT

By Bob Walsh

 

Jasmine Crockett and James Talarico 

Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, left, pictured alongside James Talarico, right.

 

Jasmine Crockett, the well-known, ignorant, loud and foul-mouthed Black representative from Texas decided she was destined for greater things, those things being a U. S. Senate seat and a greater ability to effectively attack Donald Trump.

Yesterday she lost to James Talarico, a White male, by a total of about 7%.  Not a landslide, but not a squeaker either.

Too bad, so sad.  
 
EDITOR'S NOTE: If that crook Paxton is the Republican nominee in November, I'm going to hold my nose and vote for Talarico. 

RUSTY HICKS IS A RACIST BASTARD

By Bob Walsh

 

Rusty Hicks speaking at the California Democratic convention.CA Democratic Party Chair Rusty Hicks
 

Rusty Hicks is the head of the Democrat Party in the formerly great state of California.  According to Tony Thurman, who is the Superintendent of Public Instruction, running for Governor and a Black man, Hicks is a racist.

Mr. Hicks just wrote an open letter to all of the people running for Governor on the Democrat ticket in CA in which he strongly suggested that the people at the bottom of the pack drop out now to avoid having two Republicans win the primary and being the only names on the November ballot for Governor.  There are only two Democrats right now who are not polling in single digits.  One is Eric Swalwell who is mostly famous for playing hide the salami with a ChiCom spy and Katie Porter, who is also in the running to be Miss Psycho-Bitch of 2025.  Both are White.  Therefore Hicks is a racist because he wants all those People of Color in the also-ran spots to bail out.

Makes sense to me in a twisted, warped, Democrat-Socialist logic sort of way.  

Tuesday, March 03, 2026

LITTLE MARCO CLAIMS HE WAS THE VICTIM OF A BAD VIDEO CLIPPING JOB ..... WATCH OUT FOR SHIT DROPPING FROM THE FLYING PIGS

Marco Rubio makes astounding U-turn after Trump claims he 'might've' forced Israel to strike Iran

 

By Jon Michael Raasch 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 3, 2026

 

 

Secretary of State Marco Rubio claimed he was the victim of a bad video clipping job, and that he did not say on Monday that Israel's planned strikes on Iran forced the US to strike the country preemptively

Secretary of State Marco Rubio claimed he was the victim of a bad video clipping job, and that he did not say on Monday that Israel's planned strikes on Iran forced the US to strike the country preemptively

 

Secretary of State Marco Rubio claimed the media misunderstood his comments indicating that the 'imminent threat' prompting the US to strike Iran was a pre-planned strike by Israel

Rubio, speaking to reporters on Capitol Hill before a closed-door Senate briefing on Iran Tuesday, said he was the victim of a bad clipping job and that he never indicated that Israel forced the US to strike Iran preemptively. 

'I told you this had to happen anyway,' Rubio said. 'The President made a decision, and the decision he made was that Iran was not going to be allowed to hide behind its ballistic missile program, that Iran was not going to be allowed to hide behind its ability to conduct these attacks.'

'That's what I said yesterday, and you guys need to play it. If you're going to play these statements, you need to play the whole statement, not flip it to reach a narrative that you want to,' he added.

The response was a U-turn from his comments to reporters on Capitol Hill the day before, when he indicated that impending Israeli strikes on Iran would result in a counterattack on US soldiers - an expectation that worried Trump and top officials.

On Monday, Rubio said, 'We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action. We knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces,' Rubio said. 

'And we knew that if we didn't preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties.'

President Donald Trump strongly denied that Israel pushed the US into war with Iran on Tuesday, saying that he actually might've pressured the Israelis into action, a likely impetus for Rubio's head-spinning reversal. 

 

'We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action. We knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces,' Rubio said on Monday. 'And we knew that if we didn't preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties'

'We knew that there was going to be an Israeli action. We knew that that would precipitate an attack against American forces,' Rubio said on Monday. 'And we knew that if we didn't preemptively go after them before they launched those attacks, we would suffer higher casualties'

Part of the administration's consideration to attack Iran was the possibility of US soldiers getting targeted in Iran's counterattacks should the country come under attack, Rubio said Monday

Part of the administration's consideration to attack Iran was the possibility of US soldiers getting targeted in Iran's counterattacks should the country come under attack, Rubio said Monday

 

'No, I might have forced their hand,' he stated.

Rubio's admission on Monday enraged both Democrats and Republicans.  

'Secretary Rubio says the quiet part out loud: this is an unnecessary war of choice,' Democratic Congresswoman Sarah Jacobs reacted. 'Israel forced our hand – there was no imminent threat to the United States. And instead of talking Israel out of going to war, President Trump went along with it and put U.S. lives at risk.'

Former Republican Congresswoman and ex-Trump ally Marjorie Taylor Greene told conservative pundit Megyn Kelly that the US strikes on Iran were not MAGA.

'"Make America Great Again" was supposed to be America first, not Israel first, not any foreign country first, not any foreign people first, but the American people first,' Greene said. 

White House officials posted repeatedly about Rubio's Monday remarks on Tuesday, combatting claims that the US was pressured into attacking because of Israel's planned strikes. 

'No, Marco Rubio Didn’t Claim That Israel Dragged Trump into War with Iran,' White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote Tuesday morning. 

The four-day conflict has seen thousands of US and Israeli strikes within Iran. On the offensive's first day, the US-Israel coalition killed Iran's longtime leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and around 40 top military and political officials. 

 

Smoke rises from central Tehran following reported US and Israeli strikes on Tuesday

Smoke rises from central Tehran following reported US and Israeli strikes on Tuesday

 

In response to the US-Israeli attack, Iran has since launched myriad ballistic missiles and drones at American bases in the region. Iran has also targeted its closest neighbors. 

On Tuesday, a CIA outpost in the US embassy in Saudi Arabia was hit by an Iranian strike. It is unclear if any CIA agents or personnel were wounded in the attack.

The Qatari Ministry of Defense has confirmed that the country was targeted by two ballistic missiles launched by Iran on Tuesday. One of the drones struck the Al-Udeid Air Base, which hosts US forces, and the other was intercepted.

Israel, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates and Oman have also been struck by Iran in recent days. 

IRAN CONTINUES TO STRIKE BACK

Iran strikes CIA base in Saudi Arabia in huge symbolic victory as spy agency arms Islamic militants to spark uprising

 

By Phillip Nieto and Adam Pogrund 

 

Daily Mail

Mar 3, 2026

 

 

The US embassy headquarters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia is photographed Tuesday after it was hit by suspected Iranian drone strikes. The Washington Post reported that the CIA station located at the embassy was blown up

The US embassy headquarters in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia is photographed Tuesday after it was hit by suspected Iranian drone strikes. The Washington Post reported that the CIA station located at the embassy was blown up

 

Iran has blown up a CIA station at the US Embassy in Saudi Arabia as the agency works to arm militants for an uprising against the Islamic regime.

A suspected Iranian drone struck the CIA station in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia's capital, on Monday, just two days after the spy agency pinpointed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's location in the strike that killed him.

An internal State Department alert revealed that Tehran's attack 'collapsed' part of the station's roof and 'contaminated' the compound with smoke, according to the Washington Post.

The station also sustained 'structural damage' while personnel were advised to 'shelter in place.' 

The US and Saudi governments confirmed that two drones hit the US embassy complex, but did not disclose that the CIA station was impacted, the Post said.

There was no indication that CIA personnel were wounded.

It came as Iran continued to furiously attack Israel, the US and its allies in Middle East in retaliation for strikes which killed Khamenei.

The US Consulate in Dubai was rocked by a drone strike on Tuesday as a huge explosion lit up the sky.

 

President Donald Trump ordered the launch of 'Operation Epic Fury' starting on Saturday, which has now led to the death of six American troops

President Donald Trump ordered the launch of 'Operation Epic Fury' starting on Saturday, which has now led to the death of six American troops

 

A primitive Shahed drone evaded high-tech defences over the United Arab Emirates and struck a car park adjacent to the consulate, which had been evacuated in advance. 

Two Iranian ballistic missiles also struck Al-Udeid Air Base, the largest US military installation in the Middle East. No casualties were reported.

The effectiveness of the Iranian response to US-Israel bombardment, which began on Saturday with the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has caught the White House off guard. 

Mr Trump has admitted in interviews that the US was not expecting Tehran to lash out against its Gulf neighbours who are not participating in the campaign but who house US bases.   

The CIA has long been viewed by the Islamic regime as its arch-enemy, in part because of the agency's history of covert efforts aimed at undermining its leadership.

The American spy agency and the United Kingdom's MI6 set in motion the 1953 Iranian coup d'état, which led to the overthrow of Iran's democratically elected leader. 

Tehran's attack also comes as the spy agency works to arm Kurdish militants inside the country in an effort to foment an uprising following the ayatollah's death. 

The Daily Mail has contacted the CIA for comment. 

Top White House officials have been in active discussions with Kurdish leaders in Iraq about providing them with military support to strike the regime. 

Iranian Kurdish militants have thousands of soldiers along the Iraq-Iran border with major support in Northern Iraq's Kurdistan region. 

 

Smoke rises from an Israeli strike in Beirut on Tuesday

Smoke rises from an Israeli strike in Beirut on Tuesday

Smoke plumes billow following Israeli bombardment on Beirut's southern suburbs

Smoke plumes billow following Israeli bombardment on Beirut's southern suburbs

Iran's capital of Tehran has been ravaged by US-Israeli airstrikes since Saturday

Iran's capital of Tehran has been ravaged by US-Israeli airstrikes since Saturday

Iran retaliated to the US and Israeli strikes with a barrage of missiles at neighboring nations - some of which broke through air defense systems (seen in Dubai)

Iran retaliated to the US and Israeli strikes with a barrage of missiles at neighboring nations - some of which broke through air defense systems (seen in Dubai) 

Trump¿s war has now spiraled across the Middle East, with Israeli cities and several Gulf allies coming under Iranian drone and missile attacks

Trump's war has now spiraled across the Middle East, with Israeli cities and several Gulf allies coming under Iranian drone and missile attacks

 

An on-ground rebellion could begin in the coming days.

Since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003, this semi-autonomous region has served as a haven for local Kurdish groups that pose a military threat to Iran's regime. 

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has targeted these groups with dozens of drone strikes since the start of the war on Saturday.

President Donald Trump on Tuesday reportedly spoke with the president of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan, one of the major Kurdish opposition groups targeted by Tehran's military. 

The Sunni Muslim group has engaged in guerrilla warfare against the Iranian military and the IRGC. 

'Operation Epic Fury' wiped out much of Iran's top leadership over the weekend as part of a joint US–Israeli military campaign aimed at crippling the regime after Trump's diplomatic talks collapsed last week. 

Despite the death of the ayatollah, the Islamic government appears to remain in control of the country. The CIA's reported efforts to arm Kurdish militants could pose one of the most existential threats to the regime.

Meanwhile, Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was reportedly appointed Iran's new Supreme Leader on Tuesday evening. 

Mojtaba, 56, Ali Khamenei's second oldest son, has strong links to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), and was chosen by Iran's Assembly of Experts 'under pressure from the Revolutionary Guards', according to Iranian opposition outlet Iran International. 

Mojtaba is not a high-ranking cleric, has never held office and does not have an official role in the regime.

But he served in the Iranian armed forces during the Iran-Iraq war and is believed to wield considerable influence behind the scenes. He has been touted as a possible successor to his father for years.

However, he was not included in a list of three senior clerics Ali Khamenei reportedly identified last year.

 

Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has reportedly been appointed Iran's new Supreme Leader

Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has reportedly been appointed Iran's new Supreme Leader

Capt. Cody A. Khork, 35, of Winter Haven, Fla.

Sgt. 1st Class Noah L. Tietjens, 42, of Bellevue, Neb.

Sgt. 1st Class Nicole M. Amor, 39, of White Bear Lake, Minn.

Spc. Declan J. Coady, 20, West Des Moines, Iow 

The Pentagon has identified four soldiers (above) killed in a drone strike in Kuwait 

 

And his father is said to have indicated opposition to his candidacy because it would resemble the hereditary rule enacted by the US-backed Shah monarchy before it was overthrown in the Iranian Revolution in 1979.

Father-to-son succession is also viewed negatively in the Shiite Muslim clerical establishment in Iran.

But much of Iran's top brass has been decimated in the latest conflict and Mojtaba has close ties with the powerful IRGC and the Basij volunteer paramilitary force.  

Trump's war has now spiralled across the Middle East, with Israeli cities and several Gulf allies coming under Iranian drone and missile attacks.

The US has responded with a wave of airstrikes aimed at crippling Iran's military bases and remaining leadership. 

American embassies in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the UAE have been struck by drones. The State Department has ordered the departure of non-emergency personnel in response. 

A total of six American troops are dead following the launch of 'Operation Epic Fury, ' while nearly two dozen remain hospitalized from injuries. 

The Pentagon released the names of four of the six service members, saying they died in a drone strike in Kuwait. 

They were Capt Cody Khork, 35, Sgt Noah Tietjens, 42, Sgt Nicole Amor, 39, and Sgt Declan Coady, 20. 

All four were killed when a drone hit a command center in Port Shuaiba, Kuwait on Sunday - just one day after the US and Israel launched its military campaign against Iran, which has launched retaliatory strikes. 

Israel also launched a fresh 'broad wave of strikes' against Iran on Tuesday evening.

After five days of conflict, the US and Israel have struck 1,700 targets inside the country, including missile sites, government buildings, the Iranian state broadcaster, air-defence systems, radar stations and nuclear facilities.

Hospitals, schools and residential buildings were also hit in what was described by those on the ground as ‘an apocalypse’. In its daily update on Tuesday, the humanitarian Iranian Red Crescent Society reported 787 dead across 153 cities.   

The IDF also continued to trade blows with Hezbollah. 

Iranian-backed Hezbollah, who began firing missiles at Israel in response to the ayatollah's death, targeted Haifa's navy base.

Israel hit back and loud explosions were heard across Beirut. 

 

The US Consulate building in Dubai was up in flames after reportedly being struck by an Iranian drone

The US Consulate building in Dubai was up in flames after reportedly being struck by an Iranian drone

Videos posted to social media on Tuesday evening showed a huge plume of smoke rising from the building, which local authorities revealed was hit by a missile

Videos posted to social media on Tuesday evening showed a huge plume of smoke rising from the building, which local authorities revealed was hit by a missile

Smoke and flames rise from vehicles after shrapnel from an Iranian missile strike fell on a parking lot, in Ramat Gan, Israel

Smoke and flames rise from vehicles after shrapnel from an Iranian missile strike fell on a parking lot, in Ramat Gan, Israel

 

It also launched a major ground offensive into southern Lebanon, from where it is understood Iranian-backed terrorists launched a Shahed drone that struck RAF Akrotiri on Cyprus.

Israel said it had deployed troops ‘deeper into southern Lebanon’, beyond positions it occupied at the time of the 2024 ceasefire between its government and Iranian-backed Hezbollah forces.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had authorised the army to advance in order to ‘prevent the possibility of direct fire on Israeli communities’. Last night, the Israeli military said Hezbollah had made ‘a grave mistake’ joining attacks against Israel by its sponsor Iran.

Israel insisted its invasion of Lebanon was strictly for defensive purposes. On Tuesday night, the country was not expected to mount a full invasion of its neighbour, as it did for two months in 2024.

Residents in Israel were warned of ‘cluster bombs’ being sent in their direction by Iran.

After Iranian attacks on US assets and diplomatic buildings within Saudi Arabia, there were reports that the Kingdom is considering joining the US-Israeli offensive.

The US Embassy in Lebanon announced it was closing until further notice. 

Iran also attacked a port in Oman where the UK has a Joint Logistics Support Base and the Fujairah oil terminal in the UAE.

The US consulate in Erbil, northern Iraq was targeted. The US is planning an emergency evacuation of thousands of its citizens from the Middle East, having previously stated it would be for those individuals to ensure their own security. 

The economic effects are already being felt with share prices plunging and oil prices rising.

The Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping route which is used to transport around 20 per cent of the world's oil, was forced shut by Iran, who threatened to 'set fire' to passing ships. 

But Trump said the US would provide a military escort to ships 'if necessary... as soon as possible'.

He added: 'No matter what, the United States will ensure the free flow of energy to the world.

 

The US President issued his fresh blast at Sir Keir Starmer while sitting in front of a Churchill bust in the Oval Office

The US President issued his fresh blast at Sir Keir Starmer while sitting in front of a Churchill bust in the Oval Office

 

On Tuesday, Trump also warned those who make up Iran’s depleted leadership that it was ‘too late to talk’.

And US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said: ‘I’m not going to give away the details of our tactical efforts, but the hardest hits are yet to come.

‘The next phase will be even more punishing on Iran than it is right now.’

He later added: ‘Iran is run by lunatics, religious fanatic lunatics.

‘They have an ambition to have nuclear weapons, and they intend to develop those nuclear weapons behind a programme of missiles and drones and terrorism so that the world will not be able to touch them for fear of those things. This is the weakest they’ve ever been. Now is the time to go after them. The President made the decision to go after them.’

Trump also lashed out at British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, saying 'This is not Winston Churchill we are dealing with.'

In comments that  plunged the so-called 'special relationship' into an unprecedented crisis, Mr Trump declared that he was 'not happy' with Sir Keir and accused him of being 'very, very uncooperative'. 

Speaking in the White House, the US President hit out again at Sir Keir's initial decision to block the US using British bases to launch attacks on Tehran.

He also declared the US would cut all ties with Spain after it banned the US from using its shared airbases to launch attacks.