Trump extended the last cow-day to attack Iran by Saturday, two weeks was twisted

Inside reports claimed that although the aircraft, Operation Midnight Hammer began to proceed at midnight on Friday, President Donald Trump gave the final Go-forward until Saturday. On Friday evening, he hosted OpenAII Chief Executive Sam Altman at an event – and claimed that all three nuclear plants were destroyed in Forge, Natanz and Isfahan, exactly 24 hours before I started a controversial attack on Iran.
Trump maintained the ability to shut down the strike ‘until the last minute’
Vice President JD Vance said that Trump retained the top call from the “last minute” strike, but he chose to go ahead. Administration officials, CNN said, went to a big length to hide their plan. The announcement that he would take two weeks to decide whether to join Israel in attacking Iran was a diversion strategy, the internal sources said. By the end of the week, American officials believed that Iran was not ready to negotiate. “This is a scheme that had been prepared for months and weeks so that we could be ready,” Hegseth said with the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan Kane, so that we could prepare when we called the United States presidents. ” “It took a large part of accuracy. It consisted of the highest of misunderstanding and operational safety.”
‘Only Bunker Buster Bomb Atomic plants can destroy ‘
In its back-to-back high-level meetings in the position chamber, Trump asked his colleagues to ensure that bunker Buster bombs were guaranteed to destroy nuclear plants. Since the bunker-bunches were never deployed before, the authorities were not sure whether they could completely destroy the plants. The Pentagon claimed that the initial assessment showed three nuclear sites in Iran “extremely serious damage and destruction”, although he said it would take time to determine the final impact. Vice President JD Vance said that the US is not in war with Iran. “I think the President is very clear that we are not interested in long struggles in the Middle East,” Vance said ABC News “this week” in an interview aired on Sunday.“But you have a question about achieving peace? And we believe that the way you achieve peace is through strength,” Vance said, addressing a question about Trump supporters who are uncomfortable with the intervention. Vance said, “The President, more than anyone, is concerned about long military conflicts. This is not what we are including ourselves,” Vance said.