The world woke up to a nightmare.
In one post, Donald Trump claimed the U.S. had bombed three Iranian nuclear sites, including Fordo—and global leaders scrambled into crisis mode. Allies whispered of “containment.” Enemies spoke of “revenge.” Markets shook, diplomats begged for calm, and war planners dusted off old maps, wondering if this was the mome
In Tehran, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi’s warning that Iran “reserves all options” landed like a thunderclap. His words signaled not just anger, but a legal and moral framing: Iran, he insisted, would act under the UN Charter’s self‑defense provisions, painting the strike as a criminal assault on sovereignty. Inside the UN, frantic consultations began as ambassadors weighed whether this was a one‑off escalation or the opening act of a regional war.
Across Western capitals, leaders walked a tightrope—publicly urging restraint while privately gaming out missile exchanges, cyberattacks, and oil chokepoints shutting overnight. Israel hailed a historic victory; Europe feared a historic mistake. Between Trump’s triumphalist tone and Iran’s vow of “everlasting consequences,” the space for de‑escalation narrowed by the hour, leaving the world suspended between deterrence and disaster, praying that rhetoric would not become irreversi