The real estate mogul's biography contains plenty of skepticism about his words and actions. The man, who is so fickle in his policies and decisions, is hardly credible after his involvement in the preemptive Israeli strike on Iran, which occurred early Friday morning, June 13.
Overnight, Trump changed his position, as if he were changing his tie. His spokesperson's claim yesterday that he had postponed his decision to participate in the war for two weeks contradicts his threat days earlier to destroy Tehran if it did not submit and surrender unconditionally.
No one denies America's overwhelming power, capable of causing mass destruction. Its weapons were tested in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, in response to the Japanese kamikaze attack on the American fleet at Pearl Harbor on the morning of December 7, 1941, and the sinking of a destroyer carrying four thousand Marines. This prompted US President Harry Truman to take the decision to retaliate, the effects of which are still evident today.
If Tehran makes any concessions at the negotiating table today, it will be asked to do more, beyond enrichment to undermining the missile capabilities that caused an earthquake in Israel on their seventh day yesterday.
Tehran's concession would mean suicide, and faced with this dilemma, its options are narrowing to the point of suffocation. Today's meeting in Geneva is nothing more than a final warning, laden with warnings of dire consequences, and a means of clearing Europe's conscience before delivering the final blow to the nuclear project, which Trump has repeatedly declared he will not allow Tehran to possess.





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Final warning!