It should be emphasized that President Trump’s administration has overtly distanced itself from Israel’s attacks, and has explicitly opposed Netanyahu’s aggressive outlook, maintaining that while talks are ongoing no attack should occur. It is hard not to see parallels with this attack and Ukraine’s Operation Spiderweb which targeted Russia’s nuclear bombers, as both attacks disrupted ongoing peace and treaty negotiations. The consequences of each could be far reaching, including a broader nuclear war.
Israel is now attempting to say U.S. negotiations were just cover for Israel to plan the attack. This is a blatant lie and an attempt to deploy the neocons “break away ally” scenario and drag the U.S. into war. The White House outright denies this outrageous claim, which is merely an Israeli and globalist cynical ploy for gullible observers.
President Trump continues to insist that negotiations have been sincere, and there is no reason not to believe him. Negotiations and an agreement are still possible, but will require calm heads and major powers to align their interests towards a new system of peace and national sovereignty. Any factional divisions such as the BRICS vs the West, or east vs west, or any other system of divide and conquer, are totally incompetent.
Over the first five months of his second term, President Trump has presented an entirely new agenda for the entire middle east region premised on massive economic development, and has insisted on U.S. interests in the region, not Israeli. Examples of clear disagreement with Israel include ending the attacks on the Houthis in return solely for U.S. security; ending sanctions on Syria; his first major overseas trip to Gulf nations; and creating bilateral negotiations with Hamas and Iran.
The obvious but overlooked threat of this attack is that Iran now ends the negotiations with the United States, which is likely why Israel attacked on Friday morning, before the Sunday discussions could occur. This cynically-timed attack will then have successfully preempted the critical sixth round of talks in Oman this weekend. Why the critical sixth round? Because these discussions would be the first to take place since the Trump-Putin call last week, when Iran was specifically discussed and Putin personally offered to participate in the discussions.
However disrupted these negotiations now are, the role of an increasing partnership between the U.S. and Russia is absolutely key to avoiding a global war, and to creating a new global security system.
Who Wants War?
There are provocateurs in Iran, Israel, and the United States which all have deep ties to British Imperial Great Game fanatics who think their road to glory runs through central Asia.
This includes the neocons’ obsession with war in Iran, which became a key part of the post-9/11 neoliberal regime-change agenda that decapitated Iraq, Syria, and Libya at great loss of life and cultural destruction. Today Senators like Lindsey Graham lead the charge for preemptive strikes on Iran. These are the same neocons who are obsessed with war with Russia.
Prime Minister of Israel Bibi Netanyahu, a protege of the leading American globalist and the man that gave us Dick Cheney, George Schultz, is in desperate search for another war. Israel’s entire politics, like most developed nations, has been eviscerated by globalization, and Bibi depends on an unstable political coalition in the wake of the October 7th attacks.
In Iran, there are suspected factions of the Ayatollah-camp still supported by British globalist interests, after the British supported their 1979 revolution against the Shah. British Intelligence supported Khomeini’s mentor, Ayatollah Kashani during the 1953 coup against Mosaddegh. The role of the British in the 1979 coup was extensive. Shah Pahlavi, the last Shah, even accused the British of direct support for the Ayatollahs in his memoirs in 1980, Answer to History, where he says:
“The BBC became the voice of the revolution, broadcasting Khomeini’s speeches while ignoring the voices of moderation. This was no accident—it was a deliberate act by the British to undermine my government.”
Even Mossad’s penetration into Iran could be through British-connected networks.
The British are desperate to disrupt President Trump’s renewal of the American agenda, an agenda based on national sovereignty, peace, and industrial development. The British outlook is the archaic structure of divide and conquer, and today that means British-aligned globalist forces must disrupt President Trump’s critical diplomatic endeavors that seek to resolve long standing conflicts:
- A settlement of the Russia-Ukraine War
- A nuclear deal with Iran
- A peace agreement and development program in Gaza
What No One Is Telling You!
President Trump’s agenda to create a new global system of sovereign nations has two key prongs. The first is peace and new strategic agreements with critical nations, like Russia and Iran. The second is a new global trading system based on industrial production and economic sovereignty. The basis of any new economic system is peace and long term stability, which is why the U.S.-Russia negotiations are a potential revolutionary shift in world history.
Creating this new system will intrinsically require stone-cold courage, as it involves high-stakes diplomacy to address and resolve the world’s most entrenched and dangerous conflicts. Hence, the increasing danger of escalation amidst the greatest potential for peace in our lifetime. Despite the Israeli attacks, this remains true, solely due to the power of the American President and the commitment to peace of President Trump and President Putin.
Russia does not want Iran to have a nuclear weapon, nor does the United States. Russia is essentially the guarantor of the Iranian civilian nuclear program, and the U.S. has been the guarantor of Israel’s security. Without the U.S. military, it is unlikely that Israel is able to destroy Iran’s nuclear program, and there are questions if any aerial attack can eliminate Iran’s fortified research and nuclear facilities deep underground.
The negotiations this weekend in Muscat, Oman would have been the first negotiations between the U.S. and Iran since Presidents Trump and Putin held their fourth phone call. That phone call was premised on the recent Ukrainian attacks on Russia’s long range bombers, which is part of Russia’s nuclear triad and strategic defense. Subsequent discussions between these two Presidents following the Israeli escalation will be critical, and can uniquely provide the world a sense of leadership and stability.
On June 4th, after their fourth phone call, President Trump truthed out the following:
“...I stated to President Putin that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon and, on this, I believe that we were in agreement. President Putin suggested that he will participate in the discussions with Iran and that he could, perhaps, be helpful in getting this brought to a rapid conclusion. It is my opinion that Iran has been slowwalking their decision on this very important matter, and we will need a definitive answer in a short period of time!”
The significance of this kind of collaboration between the two Presidents cannot be overstated.
Russia has critical ties with Iran, but even more importantly, Russia has built the only commercial nuclear plant operating in Iran, the Bushehr-1, and is currently building two additional commercial reactors on the Bushehr site, with six additional reactors planned, all of which will be critical to the Iranian economy.
Russia has also been in total control of the Iranian commercial fuel cycle since Bushehr-1 came online in 2011. They process the fuel, and recycle the spent fuel in Russia. It is reported by Saudi-funded media that as recently as June 4th of this year, Iran requested to use their own domestically processed fuel at the Bushehr plant, and Russia refused.
Iran’s reliance on Russia for nuclear technology means that Russia plays a fundamental and intrinsic role in the U.S.-Iran negotiations.
For Iran, a choice must be made between the regimes’ religious and ideological purity and the long term economic success of the Iranian people and nation. Presidents Trump and Putin are offering Iran long-term economic development and regional security.
The most important factor for Iran is to find a way to work with President Trump, as he seeks to end the obsession of war with Iran, Russia, and anyone else. President Trump’s aim is clear, and despite significant domestic opposition from institutions in D.C., he has the overwhelming support of the American people behind him.
With his potential partnership with Putin, President Trump intends to overthrow the British Great Game chessboard, end their century of forever wars, and seeks direct collaboration with Russia, Iran’s key strategic partner, to create a new security architecture that secures a new era of peace.
If Iran can see this potential, then it is time for them, and all nations, to put aside the geopolitical divisions of the past and have the courage to seek peace. Now more than ever.