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Trump makes his boldest gamble with truce between Israel and Iran

Trump makes his boldest gamble with truce between Israel and Iran

India Today5 hours ago

Like the casino owner he once was, President Donald Trump has shown an appetite for risk during the first months of his administration.The US airstrike on Iran, however, may represent Trump's largest gamble yet. While the potential for political reward is high and largely dependent on whether Trump can maintain the fragile peace he is trying to forge between Iran and Israel, experts say, there is a downside risk of events spiralling out of Trump's control while a sceptical American public watches.advertisementFor now, Trump appears to have won his bet that he could limit US involvement and force the parties to a ceasefire. 'He wagered,' said Firas Maksad, managing director for the Middle East and North Africa practice at Eurasia Group. 'Things went his way.'
It remains to be seen whether the ceasefire will hold. Early Tuesday, Trump expressed frustration that Israel had launched an attack on Tehran hours after the president had declared a break in the hostilities.If the agreement doesn't stick - or if Iran ultimately retaliates militarily or economically - Trump risks fragmenting the America First coalition that helped power him back into office by rendering what his movement stands for increasingly nebulous and ill-defined.'If six months from now, Iran continues to be a problem, it will grind down the MAGA coalition,' said Chris Stirewalt, a political analyst with the conservative American Enterprise Institute.advertisementTrump, in a sense, has already diluted the MAGA brand, Stirewalt said, by doing what he swore on the campaign trail he wouldn't: involve the United States in another conflict in the Middle East.And Trump's messaging may already show the challenges that could be faced with winning approval from his base. Last Thursday, Trump said he would take as long as two weeks to determine whether the US would join the war on Israel's side, arguing the time was needed to lower the temperature.Instead, two days later, he approved the bomber run, not only likely catching the Iranians off guard but many Americans as well.His choice to hit Iran could also pose problems for whichever Republican tries to claim his mantle in the next presidential election. 'In 2028, the question of foreign intervention will be a dividing line. It will be a litmus test as people struggle to define what MAGA is,' Stirewalt said.The White House largely left it to Vice President JD Vance, one of the most isolationist members of the administration, to defend the Iranian strike on a Sunday news program. Vance is viewed as one inheritor of the MAGA movement after Trump leaves office, and would be forced to reconcile his support of the strike with his personal politics.BETTING BIGadvertisementIran has not been the only example of where Trump has bet big and the payoff remains elusive.His on-again-off-again use of tariffs has sparked uncertainty in markets and stoked inflation fears. His efforts to slash the government bureaucracy have lost momentum with the departure of Elon Musk from his circle of advisers. His hardline immigration push sparked protests across the country.But if Trump does succeed in his efforts to push Iran to abandon its nuclear weapon ambitions, it would make for a legacy-building achievement in a region that has bedeviled US presidents for decades and seen the nation pulled into wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.Trump campaigned on ending the "forever wars" -- which may be one reason why the American public appears to be jittery about his aggression toward Iran.A Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Monday, and conducted before the ceasefire was announced, showed that only 36% of those surveyed supported the strikes against Iran's nuclear program.Overall, Trump's approval rating fell to 41%, a new low for his second term. His foreign policy received even lower marks.Dave Hopkins, an expert on US politics at Boston College, said that with his seemingly sudden move to launch an attack, Trump neglected to make a case in advance to the American people that the strike was in US interests.advertisement'We have not seen discussion of Iran as a major enemy of the US or a threat to the US,' Hopkins said.The White House defended Trump's actions as vital and successful.'In just 48 hours, President Trump accomplished what his predecessors have only dreamed about – Iran's nuclear capabilities are obliterated following the flawless execution of Operation Midnight Hammer, a ceasefire has been brokered to conclude the '12-Day-War,' and the entire world is safer. Americans can sleep well at night knowing that our nation is secure because President Trump is in charge,' Anna Kelly, a White House spokeswoman, said.PROMISES, PROMISESTrump's boast that he had forced a ceasefire was part of a pattern, Hopkins said. As a candidate, Trump promised he could end the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, but has since discovered he cannot bend Moscow and Jerusalem to his will. In fact, in striking Iran, Trump followed Israel's lead, not vice versa.The strike fits with how Trump has approached his second term, with a willingness to govern in broad strokes and act boldly without widespread public backing. He does not need to worry about facing voters again and works with a largely compliant Republican-controlled Congress.advertisementAlong that line, the first months of Trump's tenure have seen him fire thousands of government workers, green-light immigration raids and deportations that have provoked protests and eroded blue-collar workforces, erect trade barriers on the flow of goods – and now, bomb a Middle Eastern nation.Political payback may not happen immediately, said Allison Stanger, a political scientist at Middlebury College, but could come in the form of continued civic unrest in America or Democratic gains in next year's midterm elections.'Trump's political risk isn't immediate escalation,' Stanger said. 'It's the slow burn of resentment he has built across multiple fronts, both foreign and domestic.'- EndsMust Watch

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Donald Trump is known for doing things differently. On Tuesday (June 24), he became the first US president to swear on 'live' TV when he used the F-word to express his frustration with Iran and Israel for violating the ceasefire just hours after it came into effect. However, American leaders have been caught using expletives in the past read more US President Donald Trump speaks with reporters before boarding Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House. It is during this interaction that he dropped the F-bomb. AP What does one do when one is frustrated? Usually, one swears or curses, using the F-word. But what if you are the president of the United States of America? Well, Donald Trump on Tuesday showed he's no different from us when he too used the swear word to express his frustration that Israel and Iran appeared to be violating the ceasefire that he just celebrated going into effect. But, despite the hoopla over Trump swearing on live camera, it is not unheard of. There have been many instances of the US commander-in-chief showcasing their inner potty mouth. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Trump's F-bomb heard around the world The world's media dedicated much of Tuesday (June 24) covering the ceasefire in the war between Israel and Iran and Donald Trump's role in brokering it. But before Trump could even celebrate the breakthrough, Israel and Iran appeared to have violated it. Just two-and-a-half hours after the ceasefire came into effect, Tel Aviv accused Tehran of launching missiles at the Jewish nation. Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said he had directed Israel's armed forces to 'respond forcefully' to what he called Iran's 'violation of the ceasefire'. And when asked to respond to the two warring nations' actions, Trump appeared agitated. 'There was one rocket that I guess was fired overboard after the time limit and now Israel is going out. These guys [have] got to calm down,' he said, speaking to reporters before heading to the Nato summit in The Hague. The US president added that he didn't like 'plenty of things' he saw. 'I didn't like the fact that Israel unloaded right after we made the deal,' he said, referring to the ceasefire he announced earlier. 'They didn't have to unload.' 'We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don't know what the f**k they're doing,' Trump added, dropping the f-bomb . President Trump on Israel and Iran: "We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don't know what the fuck they're doing." — CSPAN (@cspan) June 24, 2025 STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Presidential hot-mic moments Trump's use of a swear word on live cameras surprised many; American presidents have typically refrained from using it publicly, even when angry or frustrated. But it isn't the first time that an American president has been caught swearing. In 2018, Trump referred to Haiti and African nations as 's**thole countries', asking why the US would accept more immigrants from there rather than places like Norway. Unsurprisingly, his remarks spurred anger; Haiti's government said Trump's comments shows a 'racist view of the Haitian community', while El Salvador sent a formal letter of protest to the US saying the president had 'implicitly' accepted the use of 'harsh terms detrimental to the dignity of El Salvador and other countries'. In March 2010, then Vice President Joe Biden was caught out by an amplified microphone, telling his boss, Barack Obama, that passing the Affordable Care Act was a 'big f***ing deal'. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD And 12 years after that incident, Biden once again let it rip when he called Fox News reporter Peter Doocy a 'stupid son of a b**ch.' The incident when happened Doocy called out to Biden saying, 'Do you think inflation is a political liability going into the midterms?' 'No, it's a great asset,' Biden snarked. 'More inflation. What a stupid son of a b**ch.' Biden: What a stupid son of a bitch — Acyn (@Acyn) January 24, 2022 Later, Doocy said that President Biden called to apologise shortly after the briefing ended. And Biden's predecessor, Barack Obama, too had his own hot-mic moments. In 2009, he referred to rapper Kanye West as a 'jacka**' after the rapper interrupted Taylor Swift's acceptance speech at the MTV Video Music Awards. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD President Obama called Kanye West a 'Jackass' in 2009. As always, President Obama was right. — Jack Cocchiarella (@JDCocchiarella) December 2, 2022 Obama also referred to his 2012 presidential rival, Mitt Romney as a 'serial bullshi***r' in a Rolling Stone magazine. Republican presidential candidate George W Bush with his vice presidential candidate Dick Cheney. File image/Reuters And just like Biden and Obama, George W Bush also had a hot-mic moment. While campaigning to be president in 2000, Bush leaned over to his running mate, Dick Cheney, and commented on the presence of New York Times reporter Adam Clymer. He, unknowingly, called the journalist a 'major-league a**hole.' Bush later joked about the incident, referring to Clymer as a 'major-league ass…et' in a taped message played at a press corps dinner. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD But many believe that no other US president cursed and swore as much as Harry Truman. He once called General Douglas MacArthur a 'dumb son of a b**ch' and Richard Nixon a 'shifty-eyed god***ed liar.' In most of these cases, the US leader has apologised for abusing. But, Russell Riley, a presidential historian at the Miller Center at the University of Virginia, told NPR that it is highly unlikely that Trump would show any remorse for his use of the swear word. 'The question is whether you brazen it out or you apologise,' Riley said. 'And I'm sure in this case the president will just brazen it out.' With inputs from agencies

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