Nuking Iran Deal working.

So what has replaced the government in Iran? is it a Trumpian Republican one? What happened to all the religious leaders. did they flee to russia? Are they voting in a Democratic election next month? Wow, Trump took them down and replaced their government with one beholden to him. What a great coup that was.

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Trump has taken on our worlds two most dangerous regimes- and has not only taken the upper hand, but has/is bringing the two powers to the bargaining table.

Political elites like Obama et al, are proven the real feckless cunts, who, are made impotent morons standing mouth agape. President Trump is a master of economic and foreign parlay. Strategic moves that build on one another- classic Art of the Deal.

America hating lying liberals are crying for despots and tyrants today. :rofl2:

MAGA Baby!!
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Apparently YOU are a feckless cunt. Trump hasn't accomplished a thing yet.. He's all hot air.

:lolup:Thar she blows!!! Lying leftist moron triggered! Get your lifeboats out, the bullshits gonna get deep in here!! :rofl2: Next she'll be calling for civility and decency. :rofl2:

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MAGA Baby!!
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We toppled their duly democratically elected govt before to put in a tyrant of our own choosing, I'm sure we will again at some point; been the plan for some time now.

The mullahs are almost universally hated in Iran, ask anyone Iranian and they'll tell you.
 
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Huge protests have erupted in Iran in response to the soaring cost of living and plummeting value of the rial, following Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the nuclear deal

Around Tehran’s Grand Bazaar, thousands marched towards the gates of parliament. Some traders shut up shop for the day voluntarily while and state media said others were forced to by angry protesters.

Many clashed with the police, and the protests – some of the biggest seen in Iran in years – were eventually dispersed by security forces using tear gas.

State TV quoted Tehran’s deputy governor, Abdolazim Rezaie, as saying no arrests had been made.

Shops opened and business appeared to resume as normal on Tuesday.

On Monday night – once the protests had subsided – president Hassan Rouhani used a televised address to tell Iranians that the government would be able to withstand the sharp currency drop and the prospect of new US sanctions.

Even in the worst case, I promise that the basic needs of Iranians will be provided,” he said. “We have enough sugar, wheat, and cooking oil. We have enough foreign currency to inject into the market,” Mr Rouhani added, blaming the fall in the rial’s value on “foreign media propaganda”.

It is unlikely, however, that Iranians will be reassured by his promises.

In May, Mr Trump followed up on a campaign trail promise to withdraw from 2015’s Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, in which world powers obliged Iran to curb its nuclear programme in exchange for the lifting of crippling international sanctions.

Since America’s decision, the value of the Iranian rial has plummeted, driving up the cost of imports for many ordinary businesses and consumers.

It is also feared threatened new sanctions from Washington will cut into Iran’s hard currency earnings from oil exports.

Street demonstrations are common across Iran, but Monday’s impromptu protests were the biggest since 2012.

he popular discontent then eventually led to the election of a new, more moderate government and Iranian willingness to engage in the talks that led to the nuclear deal.

There were also anti-government protests across the country in December 2017 and January 2018, but they did not reach Tehran.

Before Mr Trump withdrew from the nuclear deal there were 65,000 rials to the dollar, on Iran’s unofficial currency exchange market, compared to around 90,000 on Monday.

ritics point out the Iranian authorities’ recent attempt to shore up the rial’s value by banning black market exchange rate has failed as panicking Iranians seek to move their savings into a more stable currency.

The industries and trade ministry also announced that the import of 13,000 products will be banned, and manufactured in Iran instead, to stave off the effect of fresh sanctions.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...-trump-sanctions-hassan-rouhani-a8417431.html
 
Huge protests have erupted in Iran in response to the soaring cost of living and plummeting value of the rial, following Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the nuclear deal

Around Tehran’s Grand Bazaar, thousands marched towards the gates of parliament. Some traders shut up shop for the day voluntarily while and state media said others were forced to by angry protesters.

Many clashed with the police, and the protests – some of the biggest seen in Iran in years – were eventually dispersed by security forces using tear gas.

State TV quoted Tehran’s deputy governor, Abdolazim Rezaie, as saying no arrests had been made.

Shops opened and business appeared to resume as normal on Tuesday.

On Monday night – once the protests had subsided – president Hassan Rouhani used a televised address to tell Iranians that the government would be able to withstand the sharp currency drop and the prospect of new US sanctions.

Even in the worst case, I promise that the basic needs of Iranians will be provided,” he said. “We have enough sugar, wheat, and cooking oil. We have enough foreign currency to inject into the market,” Mr Rouhani added, blaming the fall in the rial’s value on “foreign media propaganda”.

It is unlikely, however, that Iranians will be reassured by his promises.

In May, Mr Trump followed up on a campaign trail promise to withdraw from 2015’s Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, in which world powers obliged Iran to curb its nuclear programme in exchange for the lifting of crippling international sanctions.

Since America’s decision, the value of the Iranian rial has plummeted, driving up the cost of imports for many ordinary businesses and consumers.

It is also feared threatened new sanctions from Washington will cut into Iran’s hard currency earnings from oil exports.

Street demonstrations are common across Iran, but Monday’s impromptu protests were the biggest since 2012.

he popular discontent then eventually led to the election of a new, more moderate government and Iranian willingness to engage in the talks that led to the nuclear deal.

There were also anti-government protests across the country in December 2017 and January 2018, but they did not reach Tehran.

Before Mr Trump withdrew from the nuclear deal there were 65,000 rials to the dollar, on Iran’s unofficial currency exchange market, compared to around 90,000 on Monday.

ritics point out the Iranian authorities’ recent attempt to shore up the rial’s value by banning black market exchange rate has failed as panicking Iranians seek to move their savings into a more stable currency.

The industries and trade ministry also announced that the import of 13,000 products will be banned, and manufactured in Iran instead, to stave off the effect of fresh sanctions.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...-trump-sanctions-hassan-rouhani-a8417431.html


Rage persists over the plunging of the Iranian rial to 90,000 to the dollar — double the government rate of 42,000 rials to $1 — as people watch their savings dwindle and shopkeepers hold onto some goods, uncertain of their true value.

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Angry protesters in Iran’s capital held a third day of demonstrations on Tuesday over the country’s anemic economy as President Hassan Rouhani told the nation that it faces an “economic war” with the United States following America’s pullout from the nuclear deal.

continued

http://www.dispatch.com/zz/news/20180626/protests-in-iran-as-rouhani-says-us-wants-economic-war
 
What was El Alamein about then, I wonder? Germany clearly wanted Egypt, the Suez Canal and the Arabian Peninsula.

El Alamein wasn't fought in KSA ...

Plan Orient failed long before Pearl Harbor..

The Germans wouldn't have gotten anything. ARAMCO was prepared to destroy all the oil facilities in the space of 20 minutes.
 
El Alamein wasn't fought in KSA ...

Plan Orient failed long before Pearl Harbor..

The Germans wouldn't have gotten anything. ARAMCO was prepared to destroy all the oil facilities in the space of 20 minutes.

El Alamein was just a stepping stone to Egypt and beyond. The Nazis would have taken over Syria, Palestine, Iraq, Kuwait, Persia and the Arabian Peninsula. Apart from the Brits, who would have stopped them?
 
El Alamein was just a stepping stone to Egypt and beyond. The Nazis would have taken over Syria, Palestine, Iraq, Kuwait, Persia and the Arabian Peninsula. Apart from the Brits, who would have stopped them?

First they had to take Egypt.. Hitler wanted to control all the oil from the Caspian to the Persian Gulf.. You think the Arabs would stand for that?

That's why they ALL signed on with the Allies by 1939.

Abdul-Wahab was a son of a well-known Tunisian historian. He was 32 years old when the Germans occupied Tunisia.

He was an interlocutor between the Nazis and the population of the coastal town of Mahdia. When he overheard German officers planning to rape a local Jewish woman, Odette Boukhris, he hid the woman and her family, along with about two dozen more Jewish families, at his farm outside of town. The families stayed there for four months, until the occupation ended.
 
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