117 resultsfor “Trump's stance on war with Iran”
Trump said on Monday the [ceasefire was hanging by a thread](https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/may/11/donald-trump-ceasefire-with-iran-on-life-support-reject-peace-proposals) due to Iran’s failure to make the concessions he is seeking over its nuclear programme. In the earlier fighting that
Iran war, some Polymarket users bet millions on when it would start and then won. "It's insane this is legal," US Senator Chris Murphy wrote on social media at the time. The legality
war on Iran](/tag/israel-iran-conflict/) with Israel, and helping to finance Israel’s renewed [pulverisation](/features/2026/6/9/hundred-days-of-israels-latest-war-on-lebanon) and occupation of south Lebanon. And while World Cup cohost Canada likes to portray itself as simply the innocent northern
Trump administration dismantled USAID in 2025, while Somalia’s domestic revenue-to-GDP ratio remains in the low single digits. Concerns over the viability and affordability of the state have led many to look towards
Trump and is campaigning for the 7 May Scottish parliament election on a platform of maximising domestic fossil fuel production. "Shutting down North Sea oil and gas is the biggest act of self-harm," says
Trump’s first term – hesitated to launch a full-scale war on Iran, Netanyahu finally succeeded by selling Washington an “illusion”, Sheikh Hamad argued. “He convinced the US administration that the war would be short
Trump, which Abascal admires. By contrast, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, whose government recently opened a path for at least 500,000 undocumented migrants and asylum seekers to regularise their status, had every reason
war disrupted that framework. Millions of Americans were exposed daily to images of flattened neighbourhoods, destroyed hospitals, starving civilians and mass casualties circulating on social media. Whatever one’s views on Hamas or Israeli security
war in Iran. So what is happening? In Berlin, where Peter Matuschek, the head of the polling thinktank Forsa, follows the fortunes of the German chancellor, it can sometimes feel that Europe has fallen foul
Trump administration — was political, not strategic. Israel later had to apologise for the strike, but the fact remained that its new capability had been exposed. Israel did not employ a conventional bombing model. Instead
Trump administration concluded with Iran this week is shaping up to be exactly that species of triumph – the kind that requires applauding quickly, before anyone understands the implications. Start with what is genuinely credible, because
Trump, who has openly attacked him in public, famously called the Ukrainian leader “the greatest salesman on Earth”. A much more sympathetic voice, New York Times columnist David French, has recently portrayed Zelenskyy
stances Turning Point USA took, and Aten said it helped her articulate how she felt about certain issues to others, especially those she disagreed with. "I've had conversations that were
Trump may pressure him into meeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. If this summit takes place, it would be the first in history. But a symbolic meeting would not be enough to resolve the conflict
stance on Israel. Campaigners have pointed to the threat posed to Labour by [the Green surge](https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/may/10/surge-support-greens-reform-across-england-five-key-takeaways) in the local elections, the likely departure of Keir Starmer from No 10, and new polling
Iran last March captured that ambiguity perfectly. She declared that she “neither condemns nor condones” the conflict, a sentence that managed to confuse many while clarifying nothing. So when Italy announced earlier this month that
war [have been cancelled](https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/19/us-iran-talks-in-switzerland-cancelled), Switzerland’s foreign ministry has announced. 2. ***Brexit*** | Michel Barnier has said Britain [could regain its special terms](https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/jun/18/uk-could-keep-special-pre-brexit-terms-if-it-rejoined-eu-michel-barnier-says) if it rejoined the EU and claimed