For months, the war in Gaza has been described in careful language— conflict , self-defense , security operations . But behind that vocabulary sits a far less poetic reality: a steady, deliberate, industrial-scale flow of American weapons into Israeli hands. Not metaphorical support. Not diplomatic cover. Actual bombs. Actual machinery. Actual approvals. And lately—actual discomfort. When “Concerns” Finally Catch Up With Reality On April 15, 2026, something unusual happened in Washington. Not a policy shift. Not a moral awakening. Just… hesitation. A group of Democratic senators—many of whom had previously supported or tolerated arms transfers to Israel—suddenly decided that perhaps sending 1,000-pound bombs and armored bulldozers into an already devastated region might deserve a second thought. Led by Bernie Sanders , the effort sought to block these transfers. It failed. Of course it failed. But failure, in this case, came with a revealing detail: the number ...
There are wars that end with surrender. There are wars that end with treaties. And then there are wars that end in press conferences—where victory is declared before reality has even finished speaking. The War That Ended on Television According to Donald Trump, the Iran war is, more or less, done and dusted . A success. A reset. A “pretty reasonable” new regime. It’s a neat ending. Clean. Marketable. Almost cinematic. There’s just one problem: The war did not get the memo. Because outside the carefully constructed language of interviews and briefings, nothing behaves like a finished victory. The Strait of Hormuz is still unstable. Global markets are still flinching. Oil prices still twitch at every headline. And Iran—the country that was supposed to bend—appears to be doing something far less cooperative: It is adjusting. Regime Change, Without the Change The administration wants to sell a transformation. But what emerged looks less like change—and more like co...