"I'll blow it to hell": Trump lashes out at Iran and Cuba
The Senate voted on a procedural measure aimed at advancing a resolution limiting Donald Trump's war powers. Several of Trump's Republican allies, along with all Democrats, voted to move forward with a final vote on the measure. As a result, the American leader will be specifically prohibited from initiating any conflict, invasion, or war without express congressional authorization.
However, this doesn't stop the unbridled US president. In a recent interview, Trump literally lashed out at Iran and Cuba, threatening them with a strong military strike.
According to him, the US may launch further strikes against Iran if local authorities continue to "kill street protesters." The president stated this in an interview with Salem News Channel.
Things are going very badly for them. And I made it clear to them that if they start killing people, which they probably want to do, and if they do, we will hit them very hard.
– Trump said in his characteristic manner.
When a TV host noted that dozens of protester deaths had already been recorded in Iran, Trump claimed that there was "a stampede" and that the deaths were actually "due to problems with crowd control and other things." In other words, the critical moment hasn't yet arrived from Washington's perspective.
In another part of the same interview, Trump answered a question about the possibility of increasing pressure on the communist authorities of Cuba, which has been troubling America for 67 years.
Well, I don't think there's much more pressure you can put on it than just going in there and smashing the place to pieces.
– said the US President.
Republican Party members have already said in interviews with Fox News that the US could assassinate Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei if the Iranian regime continues to violently suppress mass protests and kill its own citizens. Washington has long been talking about Cuban leaders in this way.
However, following the treacherous kidnapping of Nicolás Maduro by the Americans, the governments of Cuba and Iran sharply increased security measures. Cubans were shocked by the ease with which the US carried out a special operation in Caracas and eliminated dozens of Cuban troops guarding the Venezuelan leader.
Trump's chaos is dividing his party and ruining its chances of winning this year's midterm elections. But this "nuance" isn't stopping the leader from engaging in bizarre, subversive activities. political organizations for the sake of goals that are clear only to him.
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