Tag: trump

  • Trump sends Kim Jong Un happy birthday wishes

    Trump sends Kim Jong Un happy birthday wishes

    U.S. President Donald Trump sent a happy birthday message to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, South Korea’s National Security Advisor Chung Eui-Yong said on Friday.

    Chung, who met Trump in Washington this week, told reporters that he was given a message to pass to North Korea and it was delivered on Thursday.

    Upon arrival at the Incheon airport, Chung said, “the day we met was Kim Jong Un’s birthday and President Trump remembered this and asked me to deliver the message”.

    Kim Jong Un who succeeded his father in 2011, was 36 years old on 8 January.

  • Iran places $80m ‘bounty’ on Trump’s head, eyes White House as target

    Iran is mobilising its citizens to donate a dollar each to raise $80million to be used as bounty for Donald Trump’s head.

    An NBC News reporter, quoted an unidentified organizer for the funeral procession for Gen Qassem Soleimani, as calling on all Iranians to donate $1 each ‘in order to gather an $80million bounty on President Trump’s head’.

    He spoke during a funeral procession for General Qassem Soliemani in Mashad.

    ‘We can attack the White House itself, we can respond to them on the American soil. We have the power, and God willing we will respond in an appropriate time,’ the organiser said, according to the Iranian Labour News Agency.

    Earlier on Sunday, Iranian MP Abolfazl Abutorabi threatened to launch an attack on American soil in response to the president’s warning that any strike on American interests in the region will bring massive retaliation.

    ‘When someone declares war do you want to respond to the bullets with flowers? They will shoot you in the head,’ he added.

    Abutorabi’s threat was made during an open session of parliament in Tehran, Iran, on Sunday, and just days after Iranian military commander Qassem Soleimani, the architect of Tehran’s overseas clandestine and military operations as head of the Revolutionary Guards’ Quds Force, was killed on Friday in a US drone strike on his convoy at Baghdad airport.

    Following massive funeral marches in Iraq, Soleimani’s body was flown to the city of Ahvaz in southwest Iran on Sunday.

    Video from the scene shows a casket wrapped in an Iranian flag being unloaded from a plane as a military band plays and the crowd angrily chanted ‘Death to America’.–

  • Soleimani: We’ll target 6,236 US sites, Iran fires back at Trump

    Soleimani: We’ll target 6,236 US sites, Iran fires back at Trump

    The sabre-rattling is on between Tehran and Washington as a senior Iranian lawmaker responded to President Donald Trump’s threat to attack 52 Iranian targets.

    Chairman of the Iranian parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission Mojtaba Zonnouri said Iran will attack as many US targets as the number of the verses of the Holy Quran if it comes under assault by the US, Fars News reported.

    “If they want to hit 52 sites of ours, we will hit a number of US targets that will be as many as the number of the verses (6,236) of the Holy Quran, and we will target 124,000 of them that stands equal to the number of 124,000 prophets,” Zonnouri said on Sunday.

    He said that from the closest US base in Bahrain to its farthest base in the Indian Ocean are within the range of Iranian missiles.

    “If they attack our cultural centres, we will hit their bases and warships,” Zonnouri said.

    His remarks came after US President Donald Trump on Saturday warned Iran that if it retaliates for the assassination of IRGC Qods Force Commander Lieutenant General Qassem Soleimani, it will face US attacks on 52 targets, a number he said was symbolic.

    “Let this serve as a WARNING that if Iran strikes any Americans, or American assets, we have………targeted 52 Iranian sites (representing the 52 American hostages taken by Iran many years ago), some at a very high level & important to Iran & the Iranian culture, and those targets, and Iran itself, WILL BE HIT VERY FAST AND VERY HARD,” he said. “The USA wants no more threats!”

    In response, Iranian Army Commander Major General Seyed Abdolrahim Mousavi said that Trump does not have the courage to attack Iran.

    “The US will not dare to take any actions against our country,” the Iranian Army commander said.

  • It is time to wipe out Iran – Fani-Kayode

    Former Aviation Minister and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain, Femi Fani-Kayode, has congratulated US President, Donald Trump for ordering the assassination of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani in Baghdad.

    Trump had said he ordered the assassination because Soleimani was “plotting imminent and sinister attacks” against Americans in the region.

    The White House also said Soleiman (the leader of the Quds Force, a covert section of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) was the mastermind behind attacks on Americans during the past two decades — including two recent attacks.

    Reacting to the development, Fani Kayode, who congratulated Trump, said it’s time to wipe out Iran.

    According to Fani-Kayode, wiping out Iran will end terrorism in the world, adding that the Iranians hate America, Isreal, and Christians.

    Fani-Kayode said on Sunday: “It is time to finish the mess called Iran and to put an end to terrorism in the world. They hate America, Israel and Christians and they constantly indulge in terror. They are committed to wiping out Isreal and our Christian faith. I say again, God bless President Donald Trump.”

    However, the comment from Fani-Kayode has drawn diverse reactions on Twitter.

    One commentator wrote: “Spot on! Al-Shabaab of Somalia claims to be Sunni led terrorist group, but to my surprise, they are fighting to avenge the death of Solimeini. This drags me to conclude, Iran is the chief sponsor of global terrorism.”

    Another replied: “But will the killings of Iranians by the supposed world police stop other Arab Muslims from hating on America, Israel and Christians for the blood they have also shed in the name of evangelical crusade and unsolicited compulsory democracy enthronement in regions.”

    A commentator with the name Geeman also wrote: “You’re not correct on this one. The US supports white helmets in Syria, a group fighting against government forces. Is this not also terrorism? Everyone has an interest and that’s what the US is clearly showing. They don’t care about the Iranians and what happens afterward.”

    “You said it all Mr Femi,” Benson opined.

  • How Trump made the decision to kill Soleimani

    How Trump made the decision to kill Soleimani

    When President Donald Trump’s national security team went to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida on Monday, they weren’t expecting him to approve an operation to kill General Qassem Soleimani.

    Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Defence Secretary Mark Esper, and General Mark Milley, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, had gone to Palm Beach, Florida, to brief Trump on airstrikes the Pentagon had just carried out in Iraq and Syria against Iranian-sponsored Shiite militia groups.

    One briefing slide shown to Trump listed several follow-up steps the U.S. could take, among them targeting Soleimani, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ elite Quds Force, according to a senior U.S. official familiar with the discussions who was not authorised to talk about the meeting on the record.

    Unexpectedly, Trump chose that option, the official said, adding that the president’s decision was spurred on in part by Iran hawks among his advisers.

    That meant the Pentagon suddenly faced the daunting task of carrying out Trump’s orders.

    The first hint that further U.S. action was possible came only minutes after the end of the meeting with Trump.

    “In our discussion today with the president, we discussed with him other options that are available.

    “And I would note also that we will take additional actions as necessary,” Esper told reporters.

    Soleimani wasn’t mentioned publicly as a possible target.

    But behind the scenes, Trump’s decision set off a furious effort by the Pentagon, CIA and others to locate the Iranian general and put in place military assets to kill him.

    U.S. intelligence agencies, which had been tracking Soleimani for years, knew he was on an extended Middle East trip that had taken him to Lebanon and Syria.

    They learned that he would be flying from Damascus to Baghdad within days.

    He seemed unusually unconcerned about covering his tracks, officials noted.

    He was traveling from Syria to Baghdad on a flight that was not secret, Iranian officials said on Friday, ostensibly for meetings with Iraqi officials.

    But U.S. officials claimed on Friday that Soleimani’s trip had a more nefarious purpose: He was in the final stages of planning major attacks against U.S. facilities in several Middle East countries, they said.

    “He was personally going to a few locations for final planning authority for what we assessed to be something big,” said the officials, who briefed reporters under ground rules that didn’t allow them to be identified.

    The specific targets were unclear and officials declined to describe the evidence that backed up their assessment.

    He had already been linked to a Dec. 27 rocket attack that killed an American military contractor near Kirkuk, Iraq.

    In the days before Soleimani arrived in Baghdad, U.S. officials blamed him for orchestrating violent protests at the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad.

    A senior State Department official said new intelligence indicated Soleimani was plotting attacks on American diplomats, military personnel and facilities that house Americans in Lebanon, Syria, and Iraq.

    “There was consensus in the president’s national security Cabinet that the risk of doing nothing was unacceptable given the intelligence and given the effectiveness that Soleimani presents,” the official said.

    When Soleimani arrived in Baghdad on Thursday, a U.S. drone and other military aircraft were circling near Baghdad International Airport.

    Solaimani and several members of a pro-Iranian military got into two vehicles and were riding on the airport road toward downtown Baghdad when missiles fired from the drone struck.

    Both vehicles were engulfed in flames.

    According to Iraqi officials, rescuers identified Soleimani’s body among the casualties by the blood-red ring he always wore that was still attached to his ash-covered left hand.

  • We killed Soleimani to stop a war — Trump‬

    We killed Soleimani to stop a war — Trump‬

    President Donald Trump on Friday said the United States killed top Iranian military commander Qasem Soleimani to stop a war.

    Addressing newsmen in Florida, Trump alleged that Soleimani was “plotting imminent and sinister attacks on American diplomats and military personnel, but we caught him in the act and terminated him”.

    Blaming Soleimani for the death of hundreds of American civilians and servicemen, the president said he should have been killed long ago to save many lives.

    “For years, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and its ruthless Quds Force, under Soleimani’s leadership, has targeted, injured, and murdered hundreds of American civilians and servicemen.

    “The recent attacks on U.S. targets in Iraq, including rocket strikes that killed an American and injured four American servicemen very badly, as well as a violent assault on our embassy in Baghdad, were carried out at the direction of Soleimani.

    “Soleimani made the death of innocent people his sick passion, contributing to terrorist plots as far away as New Delhi and London”, Trump said.

    He said the late military general had been carrying out acts of terror to destabilise the Middle East for the last 20 years.

    “Just recently, Soleimani led the brutal repression of protestors in Iran, where more than a thousand innocent civilians were tortured and killed by their own government.

    “We took action last night to stop a war. We did not take action to start a war.

    “I have deep respect for the Iranian people. They are a remarkable people, with an incredible heritage and unlimited potential,” he said.

    Trump noted that although the U.S. was not seeking a regime change in Iran, the “Iranian regime’s aggression in the region, including the use of proxy fighters to destabilise its neighbors, must end, and it must end now”.

    News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that there is tension in the Gulf over the killing, with Iran vowing “severe revenge” on those responsible.

    Iran’s National Security Council has also vowed to effect “harsh vengeance” on the U.S. for the killing, the BBC reports.

    “The U.S. regime will be responsible for the consequences of this criminal adventurism.

    “This was the biggest US strategic blunder in the West Asia region, and America will not easily escape its consequences,” BBC quoted the council as saying in a statement.

    The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad has urged American citizens to “depart Iraq immediately” following the airstrike.

    U.S. officials said thousands of additional troops would be deployed to the Middle East as a precaution.

    World leaders, including UN Secretary General António Guterres, have called for restraint by all parties to prevent another war in the region.

  • Putin blasts Trump for assassinating Iranian general

    Putin blasts Trump for assassinating Iranian general

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has scolded US President Donald Trump for aggravating the situation in the Middle East following the assassination of Iranian general Qassem Soleimani.

    Trump ordered the killing of Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the deputy commander of Iran-backed militias in Iraq via drone strike on Friday at Baghdad International Airport.

    ‘This action can seriously aggravate the situation in the region,’ the Kremlin quoted Putin as saying during a telephone call with French President Emmanuel Macron.

    His comments came after China and Russia joined European countries and nations across the world in urging ‘restraint’.

    Iran branded the strike an act of ‘international terrorism’ and the country’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei vowed ‘harsh revenge’.

    Moscow warned Soleimani’s death would boost tensions across the Middle East and China urged restraint from all sides, ‘especially the United States’.

    Britain, France and Germany called for ‘stability’ and ‘calm’ in the region, but did not vilify the assassination.

  • Trump’s impeachment and the probabilities  – Carl Umegboro

    Trump’s impeachment and the probabilities – Carl Umegboro

    By Carl Umegboro

    PRESIDENT of the United States of America, Donald Trump is no doubt in the midst of the storm having been impeached by the House of Representatives. Trump was accused of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress which tantamount to gross misconducts. However, the Senate is yet to make its verdict. Making the matter worse, the latest opinion poll reportedly conducted in the United States revealed that majority favoured Trump’s impeachment.

    Peradventure the Senate; upper chamber of the United States Congress pursuant to Article 1, Section 3 (6) and (7) of the US Constitution affirmed the verdict, Trump’s political career is ruined. And if a vote for his removal eventually scaled through, Trump will pack his luggage to join the league of fired presidents in the world. This is no good time for embattled Trump at all. The ‘impeachment’ tag on his neck already is not a positive scorecard let alone removal from office.

    In the US history, Andrew Johnson on February 24, 1868 was impeached by House of Representatives for violating the Tenure of Office Act but not removed from office by the Senate. Bill Clinton was similarly impeached by the lower Congress on December 19, 1998 over perjury and obstruction of justice but pardoned by the Senate. Clinton’s antecedents and comportments compellingly appeased Senate’s ‘red card’.

    Believably, Clinton’s maturity and charisma distinctively worked in his favour after his indictment, possibly his understanding that sovereignty belongs to the people. In the heat of his saga, Clinton evoked emotions and actually wept for his debaucheries before the Congress unlike Trump’s bossy displays and counter-attacks. In a democracy, the legislature and judiciary call the shots.

    Other impeachment attempts in the United States include John Tyler on January 10, 1843 who encountered an impeachment motion but a resolution failed to scale through. James Buchanan on June 16, 1860 faced his own heat, but the committee found nothing substantial to warrant his impeachment.

    However, it is worthy of note that impeachment under the US legal system is merely a formal indictment and not absolute removal from office as it applies in other countries including Nigeria where impeachment connotes dismissal from office.

    Furthermore, Richard Nixon in his own case on August 9, 1974 resigned before formal vote, whilst George W. Bush on June 11, 2008 also survived as though a resolution was referred to a committee but no further action taken. These records significantly attest that democracy is at work in the United States and above all, sovereignty indeed belongs to the people.

    Back to Trump’s saga, apart from party influence, Trump’s chances are quite slim. His move to reverse Same-sex marriage in the United States which his predecessor, Barack Obama signed into law amidst controversy believably boosted his legitimacy after his controversial win against Democrat’s candidate, Hilary Clinton, former US-Secretary of State. In fact, the attempts to achieve it through an Executive bill was perceived as a blunder which made political analysts reduce it to a mere propaganda.

    Arguably, President Trump’s leadership style may be said to be shambolic vis-à-vis the position of United States in the world space. Most of Trump’s speeches lack diplomacy, and unedifying which leave much to be desired from an occupant of US White House. For instance, Trump had some time ago contemptuously docketed African continent as shitholes.

    In another occasion, Trump referred his Nigerian counterpart, President Muhammadu Buhari as ‘lifeless’ on account of health challenges at that time. And many others. His delight in segregation is apparent and monumental. Unlike him, Clinton during his historic visit to Nigeria in 2000 passionately demanded to have a taste of rural life with downtrodden class which led to his presence at Ushafa Village on August 27, 2000 where he remarkably, cheerfully shook the hands of hundreds of poor villagers who were desperate to touch him. That’s exemplary leadership.

    In fact, the manner Trump unstintingly speaks may subject one to ponder if the White House truly have media aides attached to the President. Arguably, Trump lacks experience for administrative governance. I must add, the manner Trump disparages or belittles non-Americans is irksome. Without doubt, America is advanced than many countries but decorum is requisite.

    Another spiteful feature of Trump’s leadership is double-standard or divide-and-rule. Trump’s administration had in recent times spared a bigwig with presidential ambition allegedly linked to Halliburton case involving then Louisiana Representative, William J. Jefferson. Not long, it indicted another citizen of the same country, Allen Onyema; chairman of Air Peace over similar crimes and called for his extradition for prosecution. This is quite unlike United States where equality before the law has long been entrenched.

    No doubt, as an entrepreneur, Trump had fortunately recorded success in private businesses. Incidentally, ability to control private enterprises differs from that of public service which follows outlined procedures and strict guide by the constitution. Thus, managing private businesses differs from public administration where sundry intrigues and diplomacy must play out. Usually, private sector is characterized by monocracy with bosses operating domineeringly and highhandedly.

    This, therefore is a message for magnates that every now and then jump the queue to vie for the topmost office without any administrative or managerial experiences other than business profile alongside stout bank accounts. Trump in particular has a lot of works to do in this regard, and must necessarily learn from his errors as well as predecessors. Leadership positions may be procured or fortuitously acquired but attributes of leadership may not, as they come by intensive trainings.

    To summarize, America must expeditiously, conscientiously reposition its governance for prominence in the global sphere as developing countries look up to it for positive and progressive directions. By its long period of democracy; roughly three centuries, certain standards are necessarily indispensable. Nonetheless, as then US President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed into law in 1956, the watchword aptly remains, “In God we trust”.

    Umegboro is a public affairs analyst and Associate, Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (United Kingdom). 08023184542 – SMS only. Https:carlumegboro.com

  • How Trump averted another looming US government shutdown

    How Trump averted another looming US government shutdown

    U.S. President Donald Trump signed a $1.4 trillion budget package for the fiscal year 2020 into law on Friday to avert a government shutdown.

    White House spokesman Judd Deere told journalists traveling with the president on Air Force One that Trump signed the package on the flight from Washington to Florida.

    He had been expected to sign the bill into law after the government’s spending plans were hammered out by Congress this week, and his signature was needed before midnight to avert a shutdown.

    Earlier, Trump had announced in a Friday tweet his approval of a $738 billion defense spending bill for FY 2020.

    The Senate approved the partisan spending bill, which will fund a U.S. Space Force and paid parental leave, on Wednesday with an 86-8 vote.

    “I will be signing our 738 Billion Dollar Defense Spending Bill today. It will include 12 weeks Paid Parental Leave, gives our troops a raise, importantly creates the SPACE FORCE, SOUTHERN BORDER WALL FUNDING, repeals ‘Cadillac Tax’ on Health Plans, raises smoking age to 21! BIG!” the president tweeted.

    Legislators deliberated over different versions of the bill for nearly three months before agreeing to a final version days before Congress leaves for the holidays.

    The bill, which is part of a $1.4 trillion government-wide spending package, includes funding for 12 weeks of paid parental leave cheered by both Democrats and Republicans as one of first daughter Ivanka Trump’s most significant objectives since she took on her role as senior adviser to the president in 2017.

  • U.S. President Trump says he wants immediate impeachment trial in Senate

    U.S. President Trump says he wants immediate impeachment trial in Senate

    U.S. President Donald Trump said that he wanted the Senate to launch the impeachment trial immediately.

    Trump made this known on his Twitter page late on Thursday.

    “So after the Democrats gave me no Due Process in the House, no lawyers, no witnesses, no nothing, they now want to tell the Senate how to run their trial.

    “Actually, they have zero proof of anything, they will never even show up.

    “They want out. I want an immediate trial!” Trump wrote.

    On Wednesday, Trump became the third president in U.S. history to be impeached when the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives voted to find him guilty of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.