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Trump's Letter to Iran Sets Two-Month Deadline for Nuclear Deal


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Posted
1 hour ago, 300sd said:

I happen to believe Iran when they say death to America and Death to Israel. If they have nuclear weapons then they can act on those threats. You think that's ok? Oh and it's ok for Houthi's to obstruct shipping in the Red Sea. Most can read between the lines of your pathetic post.

Yes.

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Posted
3 minutes ago, Chomper Higgot said:

In his first term of office (as President) Trump withdrew the U.S. from the treaty with Iran that Obama had negotiated.

 

He absolutely was President when he did so.

 

 

 

   Follow the discussion .

Read the post that I replied to 

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Posted

A post making false claims about Putin instructing Trump to withdraw from the Iran Nuclear treaty to destabilize NATO has been removed. @cjinchiangrai 

 

"Topics or posts deemed to be scaremongering, deliberately misleading or which deliberately distort information will be removed. In factual areas such as news forums and current affairs topics member content that is claimed or portrayed as a fact should be supported by a link to a relevant reputable source."

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Posted

I have noticed that when a country does get nuclear weapons like Israel, North Korea and Pakistan for instance, America stops arguing that they should not have them.

If Iran does get nuclear missiles, their first target is likely to be Israel. Could Israel to get thrown under the bus by its closest partner?

Posted

From AXIOS  :   "  Former U.S. President Donald Trump has reportedly set a two-month deadline for Iran ...........

 

 

Why Former ?   

Had this piece been written before Jan 20, 2025   and recycled to March 2025  ???

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Posted
45 minutes ago, sscc said:

From AXIOS  :   "  Former U.S. President Donald Trump has reportedly set a two-month deadline for Iran ...........

 

 

Why Former ?   

Had this piece been written before Jan 20, 2025   and recycled to March 2025  ???

 

   Seems to just be a mistake 

Posted
1 hour ago, FlorC said:

Iran has 2 months to get the mines and underwater drones ready to close the Strait of Hormuz.

Let's see what that will do to the world economy.

 

The countries that will be effected are: Middle Eastern, Germany, France, the UK, China, and India. Least effected: the US, Canada, Russia, Mexico, and Brazil. This all according to Grok. Thailand Grok says would fit in thusly: 

 

"Thailand would fall under the category of "Singapore and Southeast Asian Nations," which I (Grok) listed as number 6. To clarify its specific position relative to the other countries mentioned, I’d place Thailand roughly in the middle to lower tier of the most affected countries—likely around 7th or 8th in terms of severity—depending on how you weigh the impacts on larger economies like China or India.

Why Thailand Fits Here

Trade Dependence: Thailand relies on the Suez Canal for exporting goods like electronics, automobiles, and rubber to Europe, as well as importing oil and gas from the Middle East. While not as massive a trading hub as Singapore, it’s still a significant player in Southeast Asia.

Impact: A blockade would increase shipping times and costs (rerouting around the Cape of Good Hope), disrupt its export-driven economy, and raise energy prices. However, its economy is smaller and less globally integrated than China’s or India’s, so the absolute scale of disruption would be less severe.

Comparison: Thailand would be less affected than Egypt (direct revenue loss), Europe (massive import reliance), or China (export volume), but more impacted than the Americas or Russia, which have minimal dependence on the canal.

So, if I (Grok) were to rank the countries explicitly from my previous list, Thailand would slot in like this:

Egypt

European Countries (e.g., Germany, UK, France, Italy)

China

India

Middle Eastern Oil Exporters (e.g., Saudi Arabia, UAE)

Singapore

Thailand

Japan and South Korea

This ranking considers economic reliance on the canal, trade volume, and vulnerability to energy disruptions. Thailand’s position reflects its role as a regional exporter and energy importer, but it’s not as critically tied to the canal as the top-tier countries."

 

So sort of good news for those of us living here and in Southeast Asia. 

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Posted
11 minutes ago, John Drake said:

 

The countries that will be effected are: Middle Eastern, Germany, France, the UK, China, and India. Least effected: the US, Canada, Russia, Mexico, and Brazil. This all according to Grok. Thailand Grok says would fit in thusly: 

 

"Thailand would fall under the category of "Singapore and Southeast Asian Nations," which I (Grok) listed as number 6. To clarify its specific position relative to the other countries mentioned, I’d place Thailand roughly in the middle to lower tier of the most affected countries—likely around 7th or 8th in terms of severity—depending on how you weigh the impacts on larger economies like China or India.

Why Thailand Fits Here

Trade Dependence: Thailand relies on the Suez Canal for exporting goods like electronics, automobiles, and rubber to Europe, as well as importing oil and gas from the Middle East. While not as massive a trading hub as Singapore, it’s still a significant player in Southeast Asia.

Impact: A blockade would increase shipping times and costs (rerouting around the Cape of Good Hope), disrupt its export-driven economy, and raise energy prices. However, its economy is smaller and less globally integrated than China’s or India’s, so the absolute scale of disruption would be less severe.

Comparison: Thailand would be less affected than Egypt (direct revenue loss), Europe (massive import reliance), or China (export volume), but more impacted than the Americas or Russia, which have minimal dependence on the canal.

So, if I (Grok) were to rank the countries explicitly from my previous list, Thailand would slot in like this:

Egypt

European Countries (e.g., Germany, UK, France, Italy)

China

India

Middle Eastern Oil Exporters (e.g., Saudi Arabia, UAE)

Singapore

Thailand

Japan and South Korea

This ranking considers economic reliance on the canal, trade volume, and vulnerability to energy disruptions. Thailand’s position reflects its role as a regional exporter and energy importer, but it’s not as critically tied to the canal as the top-tier countries."

 

So sort of good news for those of us living here and in Southeast Asia. 

 

 

Strait of Hormuz is energy . Oil prices will effect nearly all countries . (not Russia !)

 

I think you mean Gulf of Aden to the Suez canal . Yes hopefully the Houthis can block that too if they attack Iran.

Now they just target ships to Israel. (and Trump's navy)

 

Posted
1 minute ago, FlorC said:

 

 

Strait of Hormuz is energy . Oil prices will effect nearly all countries . (not Russia !)

 

I think you mean Gulf of Aden to the Suez canal . Yes hopefully the Houthis can block that too if they attack Iran.

Now they just target ships to Israel. (and Trump's navy)

 

 

All countries in North America and a good number in South America are self sufficient in energy. So oil prices are not perfectly fungible, especially in a geopolitical crisis. Egypt of course loses all the fees it gets for using its canal. But I'd think the Europeans would be absolutely devastated. They're already paying emergency energy prices. And it will not be good for China and India either. China in particular is vulnerable to energy cut offs and export blockades. And perhaps the US would go ahead and push that scenario in the event of a war with Iran--because I'm sure China is going to howl. Better to strike China now rather than wait for China to strike Taiwan and the US later might be the reasoning (not mine, I hasten to add).

Posted

^ For energy China can rely on Russia ,  Venezuela.

Some may be sort of self sufficient but they will feel a much higher oil price.

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