-
America 24 posted an update
DAY 23 OF TRUMPS IRAN WAR FOR ISRAEL COST USA = $12.1 BILLION PER DAY ON AVERAGE
TRUMPS ‘1 DAY’ BOMBINGS ARE NOW AT 23 DAYS OF CARPET BOMBING IRAN INTO SUBMISSION ON THEIR GAS, WATER AND OIL INFRASTRUCUTRE. IRAN REGIME CHANGE HAS FAILED, YET U.S. CARPET BOMBINGS CONTINUE FOR ISRAEL. TRUMP’S DELUSIONAL THREATS CONTINUE. THE LIES CHANGE EVERYDAY. REASONS FOR BOMBING IRAN CHANGED 15 DIFFERENT TIMES NOW.
DAY 23 OF TRUMPS IRAN WAR FOR ISREAL HAS COST AMERICAN TAX PAYERS = $12.1 BILLION PER DAY ON AVERAGE. Day 23 = $280+ Billion for American Tax payers.
The ongoing US-Israel war against Iran, which began on February 28, 2026 (referred to as Day 1), has reached Day 23 by mid-March 2026. President Trump initially declared military victory early on (within days of the start), claiming Iran’s navy, air force, and defenses were destroyed, but the conflict persists with no clear end. The US and Israel have conducted thousands of strikes targeting Iranian nuclear sites, missiles, leadership (including killing Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei), and infrastructure, while Iran has retaliated with missile attacks on Israel and the region, including hits near nuclear-related sites. A key development is Iran’s effective (soft) closure of the Strait of Hormuz, disrupting global oil flows and causing higher energy prices and economic strain, with Trump threatening further escalation like obliterating Iranian power plants unless the strait reopens.
Critics, including some former officials like Tulsi Gabbard, Joe Kent (who resigned citing no imminent threat), and John Brennan, have questioned the war’s justification, noting pre-war assessments that Iran posed no nuclear threat and had no active weapons program. Reports confirm at least one US F-35 fighter jet was damaged by suspected Iranian fire and made an emergency landing, highlighting vulnerabilities despite US air superiority claims. The conflict has led to mixed US signals—Trump speaks of “winding down” operations while deploying more troops/Marines and seeking additional funding—amid rising costs, supply issues, and debates over outdated US weapons versus cheaper Iranian missiles/drones. Public support remains low in the US compared to higher backing in Israel.