Wednesday, July 8, 2026

RT editor-in-chief warns Europe: ‘You’re playing with fire,’


‘You’re playing with fire,’ RT editor-in-chief warns Europe
RT


Europe is “playing with fire” as it assists Ukraine in strikes deep into Russia, RT editor-in-chief Margarita Simonyan has said, warning Kiev’s Western backers that Moscow may have no other choice other than to respond with force.

In a lengthy interview with Die Weltwoche's Roger Koeppel on Wednesday,Simonyan said, “it is not Ukraine that is bringing the war to Moscow” but rather Europe, as Kiev is incapable of conducting attacks without foreign aid and intelligence.

Simonyan warned that Moscow’s patience is running thin as drones, missiles, flight disruptions, and fuel shortages increasingly affect civilians in Russia.

“People are afraid to sleep at night… Where is the limit of this hardship, when the people will say, ‘Vladimir Vladimirovich [Putin], we have to respond! I don’t know, but I think it is very close. Very close. Right now, you are playing with fire.”

US launches 2nd night of strikes against Iran, as Israel said bracing for war to restart


US launches 2nd night of strikes against Iran, as Israel said bracing for war to restart


The United States launched fresh strikes on Iran late Wednesday and into early Thursday morning after striking Iranian targets a day earlier in response to attacks on commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, as the Israeli defense establishment was reportedly keeping a close eye on the rising tensions amid concerns the fighting could quickly escalate and draw Israel back in.

The US was also reportedly returning its refueling planes to the region, after they were removed during the ceasefire that began in early April. Some of the planes, whose presence is a potential signal of the war restarting, were previously parked at Ben Gurion Airport.

According to Channel 12 news, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz were holding a security consultation on Wednesday evening, a day after the US and Iran resumed attacks.

Tehran fired on ships in the Strait of Hormuz, prompting the US to hit Iranian targets overnight Tuesday-Wednesday and Iran to retaliate against US targets in the Gulf. Iranian state media reported that eight members of the Iranian navy and air force were killed in US attacks on southern parts of the country, in Bandar Abbas and Bushehr.

On Wednesday, following those strikes, lead mediator Pakistan urged restraint. But both the US and Iran used bellicose rhetoric, with Iran threatening to close the strait and US President Donald Trump first declaring that the memorandum of understanding between the countries was “over,” then sending mixed signals over whether, or how much, fighting would continue.

“I don’t think it’s going to start again. I think it’s going to go very quickly. They hit a couple of ships, and so we hit them much harder,” Trump said Wednesday during a press conference at the conclusion of a NATO summit in Ankara.

“Anything that happens is going to be over very quickly, and we’ll only make it safer — including for oil,” Trump stressed, adding that the US has managed to get significant amounts of oil out of the Strait of Hormuz since the MoU was reached last month.

“We’re not looking for long-term,” Trump said. He then said, paradoxically, “I’m not sure I want to make a deal. Let’s just finish the job.”

In Truth Social posts accompanying images he shared of US strikes in Iran, which he called “retribution for yesterday’s bombing of ships by Iran,” Trump warned, “If it happens again, it will get much worse!”


While the most recent exchange of fire has remained confined to the Gulf and has not spilled over into Israel, Jerusalem is preparing for multiple scenarios, given concerns that the situation could deteriorate rapidly, Channel 12 reported.

The IDF has reportedly raised its level of readiness across the board, maintaining both defensive and offensive preparations. The military was said to have operational plans ready, fighter jets armed and on standby, and target banks prepared based on updated intelligence.


President Trump Releases Footage of US Strikes Against Iran, Calls it “Retribution” (VIDEO)


BREAKING UPDATE: President Trump Releases Footage of US Strikes Against Iran, Calls it “Retribution” (VIDEO)


The US military on Wednesday began bombing Iran after President Trump declared the ceasefire is over.

President Trump told reporters on Wednesday, while meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, that the US is going to strike Iran again tonight after a wave of strikes on Tuesday. 

“We’re going to hit them hard tonight,” Trump said, later adding, “They deserve it.”

President Trump posted video of the strikes against Iran.

Per CENTCOM:

“At the direction of the Commander in Chief, U.S. Central Command forces have started conducting additional strikes against Iran to further degrade their ability to threaten freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz. 

The United States is holding Iran accountable for recent unjustified aggression against commercial shipping and civilian crews freely navigating a vital international waterway.”


“This is in retribution for yesterday’s bombing of ships by Iran. If it happens again, it will get much worse!” Trump said.

This comes after the US launched attacks in Iran in response to Iran targeting several ships in the Strait of Hormuz on Tuesday.

Earlier Tuesday, Tehran struck three ships, including a Qatari natural gas vessel.

CENTCOM said the US military hit more than 80 targets in the latest strikes.

President Trump earlier Tuesday revoked the Iran oil sanctions waiver after the Strait of Hormuz attacks.



More...


Preparations For Gog-Magog Continue


How Erdogan is turning Turkey into a regional superpower


The NATO leaders' summit in Ankara will give Recep Tayyip Erdogan a platform to showcase his security and diplomatic achievements, as well as his ambition to position Turkey as a regional and international power. From the defense industry to influence from Africa to the Caucasus: These are the Turkish president's goals.

The NATO summit taking place this week in Ankara marks a peak moment for Turkey in general and for its president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in particular. While many have criticized the coercive and aggressive foreign policy of the man who sought to restore the glory days of the Ottoman Empire, arguing that it was isolating Turkey and causing it economic harm, it now appears that the country is only consolidating its status as a regional power.

Anyone who has paid even slight attention to developments in the country over the past year can easily say that Turkey is in the midst of an unprecedented process of military buildup and armament, led by the Turkish military industry. In this sense, the NATO gathering in the Turkish capital provides an unprecedented opportunity for Turkish arms companies to increase sales.

"It is inconceivable to establish European security without Turkey," President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said, as he continuously pushed for Turkey's "inclusion" in all European defense and security structures, especially the European Union's €150 billion ($171 billion) SAFE program.

Turkey boasts the second-largest army in NATO after the United States, with 355,000 soldiers and another 378,000 reservists, while its defense industry has flourished markedly over the past decade. But Ankara wants to move beyond the role of supplier to that of a strategic partner capable of dictating policy.


Turkey's defense industry, ranked 11th in the world and accounting for 1.8% of the global arms market, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), saw exports rise by 48% in 2025, compared with 29% a year earlier, officials said.

"We are now achieving in one week what we used to achieve in one year," Erdogan said last month about Turkey's exports of drones, tanks, armored vehicles and warships, one of which was supplied to Romania and became the "first export of a military ship to a European Union and NATO member state." Turkey is also carving out a share of the lucrative market created by the war in Ukraine, supplying Kyiv with Bayraktar drones and building two advanced warships for the Ukrainian navy.

But Turkey does not aspire only to be an arms supplier. It also seeks to become a first-rate military power in the region and perhaps even in the world. Turkey's military spending reached $30 billion in 2025, exceeding the combined defense spending of its close neighbors and marking a significant shift in the regional balance of power, according to recently published data and regional assessments.

The total exceeds the estimated combined military budgets of Greece, Iraq, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Armenia, Georgia and other neighboring countries, which together amounted to about $24 billion to $25 billion. The gap points to a growing disparity in defense capabilities across the region, shaped by overlapping security challenges.


Vanishing Support For Israel: How Propaganda Rewrote Reality


Vanishing Support For Israel: How Propaganda Rewrote Reality
 PNW STAFF



There are few examples in modern history that better demonstrate the power of propaganda than the dramatic shift in American opinion toward Israel.

Less than two years ago, the civilized world watched in horror as Hamas terrorists stormed across Israel's border, massacring approximately 1,200 people, burning families alive, raping women, kidnapping children, and livestreaming their atrocities. The attack shocked the conscience of the world.

Yet today, millions of Americans--particularly younger Americans--have become convinced that Israel, not Hamas, is the villain. Poll after poll now shows support for Israel steadily declining across nearly every demographic, including among younger Republicans and even younger Evangelical Christians.

What happened?

The old saying remains true: Tell a lie often enough, and people will believe it.


The "Genocide" Narrative

Perhaps no accusation has spread faster than the claim that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.

The word itself carries enormous emotional power. It evokes images of the Holocaust, Rwanda, Cambodia, and systematic attempts to exterminate an entire people.

But does it fit Gaza?

The facts suggest otherwise.

If Israel were attempting genocide, it would arguably be the least effective genocide in military history.

The Palestinian population has not collapsed--it has grown dramatically over the past several decades. Even during the conflict, demographic projections continue to show long-term population growth rather than extermination.

More importantly, Israel's military campaign has produced one of the lowest civilian-to-combatant casualty ratios ever recorded in urban warfare according to numerous military analysts.

Former commanders and urban warfare experts--including John Spencer of the Modern War Institute at West Point--have argued that despite fighting in one of the most densely populated battlefields on Earth against an enemy deliberately embedded among civilians, Israel has achieved a civilian casualty ratio that compares favorably with recent conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, Mosul, and Raqqa.

Why?

Because Israel has repeatedly used methods almost unheard of in warfare:

* Advance evacuation warnings.
* Millions of leaflets.
* Text messages.
* Phone calls.
* "Roof knocking" warning munitions.
* Humanitarian corridors.
* Temporary pauses in fighting.

No military can eliminate civilian casualties when the opposing force intentionally hides inside schools, hospitals, mosques, apartment buildings, and refugee camps.

Hamas openly admits this strategy.

Who Is Counting The Dead?

Another uncomfortable reality rarely discussed is the source of the casualty figures dominating international headlines.

Nearly every major media outlet relies primarily upon statistics released by Gaza's Health Ministry.

That ministry is controlled by Hamas.

While many reports acknowledge this fact in passing, headlines often present the numbers as though they were independently verified.

Even more significant, Hamas' casualty reports generally do not distinguish between civilians and combatants.

A 17-year-old Hamas fighter carrying an RPG and a 6-year-old child are frequently counted within the same overall total.

That distinction matters enormously.

The ministry has also faced repeated credibility questions throughout the war.

Early in the conflict, Hamas claimed an Israeli airstrike killed roughly 500 people at Gaza's Al-Ahli Hospital. Within days, U.S., European, and independent intelligence assessments concluded the explosion was most likely caused by a failed Palestinian Islamic Jihad rocket and that the casualty count had been dramatically overstated.

Researchers have also identified anomalies in reported casualty lists, including duplicate identities, inconsistent demographic patterns, and statistical irregularities that raised questions about the reliability of some published data.

None of this means every reported death is false.

It does mean the numbers should be treated with caution--not accepted uncritically as unquestionable fact.


The Social Media War

For many younger Americans, TikTok has become more influential than history books.

Thirty-second emotional videos rarely explain Hamas' decades-long commitment to Israel's destruction, its charter calling for Israel's elimination, or its systematic use of human shields.

Algorithms reward outrage--not context.

Graphic images circulate instantly while military realities disappear behind emotionally charged slogans.

The result is a generation increasingly convinced that good and evil are reversed.