Iran, Trump
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Trump promised to stop wars. His grip on his base is being questioned now that he’s started one.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump, whose fierce denunciation of military adventurism abroad fueled his unlikely rise to the top of the Republican Party, risks becoming ensnared by that very type of conflict.
Saturday Night Live ‘s Donald Trump told his “America First” supporters why they shouldn’t feel like he conned them with his deadly strikes on Iran with the goal of regime change: because not even he knows what he’s going to be doing next.
President Trump’s extraordinary attack on Iran, which took out the country’s supreme leader, has echoes of U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East that history shows hasn’t always been a success. It also goes against Trump’s long-storied criticism of his predecessors intervening abroad and the “forever wars” that resulted — something that has jostled
President Donald Trump has taken the United States into war with Iran despite decades of self-professed aversion to foreign entanglements, particularly in the Middle East.
Despite worldwide backlash, the US president continues to embrace an aggressive foreign policy agenda. Maira Butt reports on the countries Trump has targeted in his first 12 months back in
Greg Sindelar serves as Interim President and CEO at the America First Policy Institute. When presidents stand before a joint session of Congress, they like to declare that “The state of our union is strong.
"Our nation is back, bigger, better, richer and stronger than ever before," Trump began his speech. "This is the ‘Golden Age’ of America." Trump boasted that his administration has improved the economy, lowered inflation, secured the border and restored global respect for the nation.