Republican presidential candidate says would attempt and negotiate a new deal with Tehran should he be elected.
ed note–once again, ladies and Gentile-men, a laundry list of ‘must knows’ that every Gentile with a vested interest in his/her own future survival needs to understand about this.
It was this–Trump’s reluctance/refusal to sign on to WWIII/Armageddon–that earned him the wrath of Judea, Inc all the way back in 2016. As much as the turmoil of his first administration revolved around immigration, ‘racism’, ‘bigotry’, ‘isolationism’ and all the other stage props, it was always this–his refusal to go along with Israel’s plans for WWIII/Armageddon–which served as the focal point for Netanyahu and the Neocons in their drive to destroy him.
Now, this of course is a complete departure from the narrative that has been thrown out there for the last 8 years on the part of an entire chorus line of circus clowns claiming various degrees of expertcy on political matters that Trump was/is a ‘seekrit joo’, that he is in Netanyahu’s back pocket and is out to start the same WWIII/Armageddon that Israel demands take place, even though he has made preventing WWIII/Armageddon the cornerstone of his 1st presidency and–assuming he is not murdered–what he plans to do with his second.
For those looking for a lil’ scholarly background on this, we HIGHLY recommend the book written by Israeli journalist Barak Ravid entitled ‘Trump’s Peace’–
–in which he lays out what was really going on behind the scenes between Trump and Netanyahu, how the ‘bromance’ that many assumed to be in existence between the 2 was a complete sham, the fact that the 2 were at serious odds with each other and why it is that the 2020 election was handed to Joe Biden rather than Trump who–had he found himself back in the White House–would have resolved the Iranian situation and, more importantly–would have put the finishing touches on his ‘Deal of the Century’ that would have not only taken WWIII/Armageddon off the table, but as well, would have seen the creation of a Palestinian state.
Ynet
U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump said on Friday he was willing to negotiate a nuclear deal with Iran if elected. ‘I would do that,’ Trump said without elaborating on the potential deal’s details. ‘We have to make a deal, because the consequences are impossible. We have to make a deal.’
Trump’s statements, made in the context of his tight race against Democratic candidate Kamala Harris, are notable given the hostility he previously demonstrated toward Tehran — both as president and during his campaign.
Trump’s campaign claimed this week that U.S. intelligence informed him that Iran was planning an assassination attempt on his life. According to Politico, Trump’s comments were aimed at easing tensions with the Iranian regime.
Trump said that he would have been ready to reach an agreement with Iran within a week after the elections were he reelected in 2020. ‘I would’ve made a fair deal with Iran. I was gonna get along with Iran. The deal was simple: Iran can’t have a nuclear missile. It cannot have that nuclear capability,’ he said.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, who arrived for the annual UN General Assembly in New York alongside Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian, said that Tehran was ready to resume nuclear talks. He noted that Iran is prepared to restart negotiations ‘if the other parties are also ready,’ to do so.
The 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers collapsed after Trump decided to withdraw from the agreement and reinstate sanctions on Iran. Iran has since violated many of the agreement’s clauses.
In his speech at the UN this week, Iran’s president stressed that Tehran was willing to cooperate with major powers to save the agreement. Pezeshkian said in his address that the sanctions against the Islamic Republic are ‘inhumane’ and harm Iranian residents.
This article starts from a false assumption. As Reagan Nuclear Advisor Dr. Gordon Prather was writing more than 20 years ago, Iran has done nothing beyond what it is entitled to do as a signatory to the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty, and no evidence existed that, beyond a brief flirtation in the 1990s by Iranian scientists, not the Iranian government, they ever intended to develop a nuclear weapon.
The goal was to prevent Iran from enriching to 30% to create Technetium from which medical radio-nuclides are made. Canada, the world’s largest producer, was de-commissioning its reactors, leaving a huge economic opportunity for the US and Israel. Iran’s then new Nantanz would have easily filled the void left by Canada. All wars are economic wars.