The world woke up to a nightmare. In a few explosive sentences, Donald Trump claimed the U.S. had bombed three nuclear sites in Iran, including the deeply buried Fordo facility. Within hours, foreign ministers, generals, and diplomats were speaking in the language of red lines, “historic moments,” and “all options” on the ta… Continues…
Trump’s declaration of a “very successful attack” on Iranian nuclear sites instantly split the globe into camps of celebration, calculation, and quiet dread. Close allies of Washington and Israel framed the strike as a long-awaited show of strength, a decisive blow against a regime they accuse of playing with nuclear fire. In Jerusalem, the message was unmistakable: this was not just about Iran’s centrifuges, but about reshaping the balance of power across the Middle East.
Tehran, however, answered in the language of wounded sovereignty and looming payback. Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned that Iran “reserves all options,” invoking the UN Charter’s self‑defense provisions as a legal shield for whatever comes next. In European capitals and at the UN, the tone was different: fear of miscalculation, of spiraling reprisals, of a region already on edge sliding into open war. Between triumphalism and threats, one truth emerged—no one controls what happens after the first bombs fall.