1).
„Before invading all of Ukraine in 2022, {dictator} Pootin demanded the withdrawal of @NATO forces from member states that were once part of the Kremlin’s sphere of influence.
2).
Such a move would have left countries such as Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland more vulnerable to a Russian attack. Nato itself would also have been weakened, perhaps fatally. Unsurprisingly, the military alliance rejected Pootin’s ultimatum.
3).
Four years on, @POTUS @realDonaldTrump has given Pootin hope that his demands might, at least partially, be met. Furious that @NATO members in Europe will not assist the US attack on Iran, Trump said on Wed. that he was »absolutely« considering withdrawing from the alliance.
4).
[...]
– »The threat of Nato’s break-up, easing sanctions on Russia, a massive energy crisis in Europe, halting aid for Ukraine and blocking the [EU] loan for Kyiv by @PM_ViktorOrban — it all looks like Pootin’s dream plan« – @donaldtusk [...] said on Thurs.
5).
The collapse of @NATO would be a massive personal victory for Pootin, who has characterised the alliance as a threat to Russia’s very existence. He cited Nato’s expansion in eastern Europe as one of the reasons for the invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
6).
American withdrawal would probably encourage nuclear threats from Russia, which has shown no qualms about using apocalyptic rhetoric to try to terrify Ukraine’s allies into dropping their support for Kyiv.
7).
Britain and France are the nuclear-armed countries in Nato besides America, but their combined stockpile of warheads is about nine times less than Russia’s. The loss of the US arsenal would make Russia the sole nuclear superpower in Europe.
[...]
8).
Although @realDonaldTrump would be unlikely to receive approval from Congress to leave the alliance, there is nothing to stop him from pulling American troops out of Europe and closing US bases. This would arguably benefit Pootin just as much as formal withdrawal.
9).
– »Who believes now that the US will come to the assistance of Nato countries?« – Olga Skabeyeva, a Russian state television presenter, said on Thurs. – »No one«.”
@michaeldweiss 1).
– „»To the Iranians, the Strait of Hormuz now matters more than the nuclear program. The nuclear program was symbolic, but didn’t provide them with any deterrence«
@michaeldweiss 2).
– said Vali Nasr [1] [2] [3], a professor at Johns Hopkins University and former senior @StateDept official who has been involved in informal discussions with Iranian representatives. – »Now, the only reason why they are surviving this war is because of the strait.
@michaeldweiss @StateDept 3).
The Iranian thinking is that, at the end, the strait must remain under their control because it is their only deterrence and only source of revenue«.”
2).
He was frustrated she didn’t do more to contain fallout from the department’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein investigative files and incensed that she had not successfully prosecuted a number of his political enemies.
3).
Trump has floated Environmental Protection Agency Administrator @epaleezeldin as attorney general to other advisers but hasn’t decided on anyone, according to White House officials.”
@LeelaJGray @michaeldweiss @RepLuna 1).
„ @POTUS @realDonaldTrump [...] made increased fossil fuel production a central focus of his second term. The Republican wants to open new areas of the Gulf off the Fla. coast to drilling, and has proposed sweeping rollbacks of environmental regulations disliked by industry.
@LeelaJGray @michaeldweiss @RepLuna @POTUS @realDonaldTrump 2).
@SecWar @PeteHegseth told committee members Tues. that Iran’s chokehold on traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, underscored the national security imperative of robust domestic oil production.
@LeelaJGray @michaeldweiss @RepLuna @POTUS @realDonaldTrump @SecWar @PeteHegseth 3).
He said litigation from environmental groups »threatened to halt« Gulf oil production.
2).
The answer here may have to do with expectations. And on this front, the mere survival of Iran’s regime and its ability to hurt the global economy and enrich U.S. adversaries suggest the Islamic Republic is emerging with a better hand.
3).
Survival and disruption were always Tehran’s strategic goals in the event of a war. @realDonaldTrump's visible frustration makes it clear that he’s being denied the quick operation he wished for.”
2).
Until recently, the brash persona and policies—both domestic and foreign—that seemed to conflict with GOP norms set the president apart from his party predecessors.
3).
But with prevalent economic unease, a costly conflict in the Middle East and approval ratings now in the 30s, the contours of his second term appear to be resembling a presidency from which he once cast himself as a departure: that of George W. Bush.
@truepatrio @PressSec 1).
„ @POTUS @realDonaldTrump joked about firing his @WhiteHouse Press Secretary @karolineleavitt on Tuesday [March 31, 2026] because of her total failure to get him any good publicity.
@truepatrio @PressSec @POTUS @realDonaldTrump @WhiteHouse @karolineleavitt 2).
– »I got 93 percent bad publicity« – Trump told reporters. – »Some people say 97, but between 93 and 97. A person that gets 97 percent—maybe Karoline’s doing a poor job, I don’t know«...
@truepatrio @PressSec @POTUS @realDonaldTrump @WhiteHouse @karolineleavitt 3).
– »You’re doing a terrible job« – he joked.
– »Should we keep her? I think we’ll keep her« – he added, before continuing to condemn the negative attention he receives from the press – »fake press, all fake«.