MAGA Melts Down at Fox Host After He Attacks Trump Envoy
Fox News host Mark Levin fired a shot at President Donald Trump's Middle Eastern envoy—and instantly met MAGA's ire online.
Levin, radio host of The Mark Levin Show, accused Trump envoy Steve Witkoff of talking like a 'fifth column isolationist' after Witkoff said that '[the] neocon element believes that war is the only way to solve things.'
'Nobody believes war is the only way,' Levin said in a tweet. 'We wait with great interest to see the deal you're negotiating with the warmonger Iranian terrorist regime.'
'Rather than sloganeering against patriotic Americans who love our country,' Levin said on Friday that Witkoff should use his 'name-calling for the terrorist regime that has murdered Americans, tried to assassinate our president, chants death to America, and has lied its way toward a nuclear bomb.'
The remarks set the MAGA minions on the attack.
''Fifth column.' This Fox host groundlessly calls Trump's chosen envoy a traitor to the United States. Perhaps the White House will stop granting Levin interviews or access to POTUS,' The American Conservative Executive Director Curt Mills tweeted.
Pro-Trump author Lee Smith tweeted that Levin should 'give it a rest with the 'neocon' garbage,' adding, 'The person who's threatening to bomb Iran if they don't give up the nuke peacefully is the President.'
Other commentators asserted that Levin was being a hypocrite.
'Levin in 2014, verbatim: 'I don't like neocons, I'm not a neocon,'' tweeted Red Eagle Politics. 'So does Levin hate himself, or is he just using ethnicity as a crutch to defend a bad ideology?'
Levin alleged in a subsequent X post that 'neocon is a pejorative for Jews'—prompting further criticism.
'Regime critic' Josiah Lippincott ripped Levin with, 'Neocon is a 'prerogative' for retard, actually.'

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Washington Post
17 minutes ago
- Washington Post
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Trump has long taken an aggressive approach toward Iran, although he also campaigned on ending global conflicts and as recently as last week continued to seek a new agreement to restrict its nuclear program. Trump's current posture could rebound in unpredictable ways. If he succeeds in wresting concessions from Iranian leaders to dismantle their nuclear program or destroys it by military force without provoking major retaliation, he could be hailed as a president whose unpredictable approach to foreign policy yields results. Mishandling the situation could pull Washington into a major war, with dangerous and unpredictable consequences for U.S. citizens. And it could also lead to a nuclear-armed Iran, if strikes fail and the government resolves to develop the nuclear weapon that it has long declared it does not seek. 'We now have complete and total control of the skies over Iran. 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U.S. officials have said the center can be effectively attacked only with massive, 'bunker-busting' bombs, including the GBU-57, a 15-ton round known as the 'massive ordnance penetrator,' or MOP. The 20-foot-long bomb is carried by the B-2 Spirit, the bat-wing-shaped stealth bomber. The fleet is based at Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri and previously has been deployed for global bombing runs in which they rely on aerial refueling to fly to and from targets without stopping. Should the Pentagon use other kinds of bombs to attack Iran, it could rely on an array of other aircraft, including fighter jets already in the region and B-52s. The Pentagon temporarily relocated some of these aircraft recently to Diego Garcia, an island with a joint U.S.-British military base in the Indian Ocean. Trump's claim of control over Iran's skies may be an indication that U.S. officials have assessed that most of Iran's air defense have been destroyed by Israel in recent days. 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Susannah George in Doha, Qatar, Ellen Francis in Brussels, Kate Brady in Berlin, Yeganeh Torbati, Joshua Yang, Lior Soroka in Tel Aviv, Abbie Cheeseman and Mohamad El Chamaa in Beirut, Annabelle Timsit in London, Evan Hill in New York, Gerry Shih in Jerusalem, Cat Zakrzewski in Calgary, Alberta, and Abigail Hauslohner, Matt Viser, Natalie Allison and Nilo Tabrizy in Washington contributed to this report.


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The Hill
18 minutes ago
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