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Sunday, March 15, 2026

‘War leader’ Trump fixates on trivial matters as Iran death toll mounts

 

‘War leader’ Trump fixates on trivial matters as Iran death toll mounts

“As the US-Israel war with Iran escalates, former President Trump’s behavior has been increasingly erratic and concerning. While the Pentagon announced the death of a seventh US service member, Trump spent the day golfing and posting on social media about unrelated topics. His actions, including downplaying rising gas prices and using aggressive language towards Iran, raise questions about his priorities and state of mind during this critical time.

Experts query ‘mix-up of priorities’ as president plays golf, posts old pictures and repeats details of Bill Maher feud

Two Iranian women embrace amid destroyed apartments in Tehran following military strikes.
Two Iranian women outside the ruins of their apartment in Tehran after a US strike last week.Photograph: NurPhoto/Getty Images

More than two weeks into the US-Israel war on Iran, and the conflict appears at risk of spiraling out of control.

Back home, Donald Trump’s behavior also appears chaotic. A foreign conflict typically brings somber reflection from leaders: in Trump’s case, it has brought a stream of behavior that has defied norms and raised eyebrows over his state of mind.

Take last Sunday, for example: the Pentagon solemnly announced that a seventh US service member had been killed in the Iran conflict. Trump spent the day playing golf in Florida, where he appeared to be wearing the same baseball cap he wore during a dignified transfer ritual of dead military members on Saturday.

That same day, Trump spoke at a “Shield of the Americas” summit, alongside a group of Latin American leaders. He told heads of countries, including El Salvador and Honduras, that Marco Rubio, his secretary of state, has “a language advantage over me”, because Rubio speaks Spanish.

Trump, the oldest person to be elected president, said he was able to function without speaking Spanish, however.

“Just give me a good interpreter. Interpreter, very important,” the president said.

“And I know if somebody’s good. I may not speak the language, but I know – I had an interpreter recently that wasn’t good, talking to a very strong person from a different part of the world, and I could tell, even though I – even though I don’t speak the language, I could tell the interpreter was not good.”

He added: “The interpreter is – I talk about it all the time – interpreters are really important. When you don’t speak the language and they don’t speak the language, it’s, you’re, people have no idea. People have no idea how valuable – and I’m on them all the time – people have no idea how valuable a good interpreter is. But over the last year, the world has witnessed the supreme power of the United States. We’re the most powerful military country in the world.”

Trump’s odd weekend came after he had posted eight separate times on Friday about how he had fallen out with Bill Maher, the American TV host and comedian. Maher has no connection to the war in Iran.

In truth, Trump’s conduct had been strange before that. On 3 March, the Pentagon named four of the US military killed in the war. Trump did not mention the troops on his Truth Social account, but the president did post: a photograph of himself, wearing wayfarer sunglasses, which had the text “the most badass president of all time”; an image bragging about how many people watched his State of the Union address; and a decades-old video of him and Melania announcing their engagement on The Ellen DeGeneres Show.

“I think it reflects a mix-up of the priorities of the president,” Emmitt Riley III, associate professor of politics at the University of the South and the president of the National Conference of Black Political Scientists, said of Trump’s recent behavior.

“The president has always exemplified these rash behaviors, but I think he sometimes uses that strategically. But the other element of this is the president is older, and all of the critiques that he leveled against Joe Biden’s age appear to be impacting him now: we’re seeing him falling asleep in cabinet meetings, we’re seeing him be temperamental.”

Along with the distraction, there has been an element of Trump burying his head in the sand. He has repeatedly touted the importance of low gas prices, which could be problematic politically, given average prices have gone up by about 20% since the war began.

Yet Trump’s response has been: it doesn’t matter.

He wrote on Thursday: “The United States is the largest Oil Producer in the World, by far, so when oil prices go up, we make a lot of money. BUT, of far greater interest and importance to me, as President, is stoping [sic] an evil Empire, Iran, from having Nuclear Weapons, and destroying the Middle East and, indeed, the World. I won’t ever let that happen!”

It was a stance that seemed to ignore the concerns Americans have over rising oil and gas prices and potential inflation.

Riley said: “This is a representational dilemma of: how do we expect a person who is a billionaire to actually be concerned about the wellbeing of people who are not of wealth, who are not of that particular economic class? And I think Trump’s behavior shows either he’s a narcissist, or he just simply doesn’t care.”

White House assistant press secretary Olivia Wales told the Guardian: “President Trump and all Americans grieve for our fallen heroes who made the ultimate sacrifice for our nation. They represent the very best of our country – and we will never forget their service and sacrifice. They gave their lives for a courageous mission that President Trump will continue in order to eliminate the threats posed by the sinister Iranian regime and make our nation and world stronger, safer and more free than ever before.”

As the war has stretched on, with no Iranian surrender in sight, Trump’s remarks have become increasingly aggressive, the president using language more familiar to a barroom brawl than diplomatic relations.

At 12.33am on Friday, Trump wrote a lengthy post on Truth Social, complaining about the New York Times’s reporting on the war. In it he referred to Iranian leadership as “deranged scumbags”, adding: “They’ve been killing innocent people all over the world for 47 years, and now I, as the 47th President of the United States of America, am killing them. What a great honor it is to do so! Thank you for your attention to this matter. President DONALD J. TRUMP”

It is hard to see families of killed or wounded troops finding much comfort in Trump’s posts. At 5.44pm on Thursday, US Central Command said it had lost a refueling aircraft over western Iraq; it later emerged all six crew members had died.

Trump, who famously avoided the Vietnam war draft because of bone spurs in an unidentified foot, did not comment on the downing of the US plane. However, at 8.57pm he giddily posted a black and white photo of a younger version of himself dressed in military clothing. “At Military Academy with my parents, Fred and Mary!”

According to biographers, Fred Trump sent the future president to the New York Military Academy, an expensive private school about 60 miles of New York, after he discovered Donald had accrued a cache of knives.“

Dark money group offers influencers $1,500 for posts attacking Dem candidate

 

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Why Atlanta Airport Is Secretly Delta's Private Property - YouTube

 

Strickland Corners Hegseth In Brutal Hearing: “Will You Erase Black & Minority Army Heroes?

 

The reviews are in. It's not looking good, America.

 

The reviews are in. It's not looking good, America.

“A POLITICO/Public First poll reveals a growing mismatch between American and international perceptions of the U.S., with allies giving the U.S. low ratings on protecting democracy and dependability. This sentiment is echoed by some of President Trump’s own supporters, highlighting a concerning disconnect.

Allies are giving the U.S. one-star and two-star ratings on its efforts to protect democracy and dependability in a crisis.




This article is part of an ongoing project from POLITICO and Public First, an independent polling company headquartered in London, to measure public opinion across a broad range of policy areas.

You can find new surveys and analysis each month at politico.com/poll.

Have questions or comments? Ideas for future surveys? Email us at poll@politico.com.

Those who backed former Vice President Kamala Harris, however, offer negative assessments far closer to America’s allies. The results paint a lopsided picture, with Americans — driven by the president’s own supporters — increasingly on an island in how they view the country.

It’s not just The POLITICO Poll that reveals this growing mismatch. Leaders across Europe and Canada are increasingly voicing their concern about Trump’s efforts to upend longtime alliances.

The poll was conducted Feb. 6 to Feb. 9 in the United States, Canada and the three largest economies in Europe: France, Germany and the United Kingdom. We’ve turned the results from several key questions into ratings, comparing answers across countries.

Here’s America, reviewed:“

“The US protects democracy”

U.S. 4.9/10 

About half of Americans, 49 percent, said the U.S. protects democracy, including three in four who backed Trump in 2024. On the contrary, just 35 percent of voters who backed Harris agreed. 

Other reviews 
U.K. 3.4/10 
CANADA 2.5/10 
FRANCE 2.1/10 
Question: “Thinking about the US, do you agree or disagree with the following? The US protects democracy.” 

The U.S. has long seen itself as a defender of democracy — both at home and abroad. But that reputation may be fraying amid growing unease among longtime allies about whether the U.S. still protects the democratic principles it once championed.

When U.S. forces captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro earlier this year, Trump pointed to Maduro’s disputed election as part of the rationale for the operation, even as some allies and international experts questioned the legality of Washington’s intervention.

“The US is mostly a force for stability in the world”

U.S. 3.6/10 

A 36 percent plurality of Americans said the U.S. is mostly a force for stability — more than double the share of adults in the other countries who said the same. 

Other reviews 
U.K. 1.8/10 
CANADA 1.4/10 
GERMANY 1.3/10 
Question: “Which of the following comes closest to your view on the US’s role in the world?” Options: The US is “mostly a force for stability in the world”, “sometimes a force for stability, sometimes a threat,” “mostly a threat to global stability,” “not very important to global stability either way,” or “don’t know.” 

The surveyed nations have been among the hardest hit by Trump’s sweeping trade agenda, resulting in strained economic and diplomatic relationships. The steep levies — and Trump’s repeated broadsides against U.S. allies — have left them doubting Washington’s reliability as both a partner and a stabilizing force.

It’s not just that allies no longer see the United States as a force for stability. Sizable shares, including a 43 percent plurality in Canada, say the country is mostly a threat to global stability.

At the Munich Security Conference last month, a number of global leaders openly questioned the United States’ standing in the international order.

“The US can be depended upon in a crisis”

U.S. 5.7/10 

A 57 percent majority of Americans said the U.S. can be depended on in a crisis, more than double the share of adults in Canada, Germany and France who agree. 

Other reviews 
U.K. 3.8/10 
FRANCE 2.7/10 
GERMANY 2.5/10 
Question: “How would you rate The US on the following scales? Can be depended upon in a crisis | Can not be depended upon in a crisis” with the option to choose two levels of agreement on either side or a middle point between the two. The ratings displayed are a sum of the agreement of the levels on either side. 

The most common view among the close allies surveyed, in fact, was that the U.S. cannot be depended on in a crisis. That’s the opinion of a 57 percent majority in Canada, 51 percent majority in Germany, and pluralities in France (47 percent) and the U.K. (42 percent).

Their concerns come as the Trump administration has clashed with allies over defense spending, trade and the scope of collective security agreements. Trump has repeatedly cast doubt over America’s commitments in Europe, fueling questions about whether Washington can be relied upon.

“Has the most advanced technology”

U.S. 5.3/10 

Most Americans — 53 percent — said their country has the most advanced technology in comparison to the European Union and China. But top NATO allies disagree. 

Other reviews 
CANADA 3.7/10 
FRANCE 3.6/10 
GERMANY 3/10 
Question: “Comparing China, the EU, and The US, if you had to choose, which would you say…: Has the most advanced technology” with the option to choose China, the EU or the U.S. 

Trump sees the U.S. in close competition with China on technological advancements, repeatedly touting America as the global leader in artificial intelligence and chip production.

But a majority of respondents in the other countries said China, not the United States or the European Union, has the most advanced technology: 54 percent in Canada, 55 percent in Germany, 53 percent in the U.K. and 50 percent in France.

That perception gap could have real-world consequences. If longtime allies view Beijing as the technological leader, it could complicate Trump’s ability to rally partners around policies to try to curb China’s growth.

About the survey

The POLITICO Poll was conducted by Public First from Feb. 6 to 9, surveying 10,289 adults online, with at least 2,000 respondents each from the U.S., Canada, U.K., France and Germany. Results for each country were weighted to be representative on dimensions including age, gender and geography. The overall margin of sampling error is ±2 percentage points for each country. Smaller subgroups have higher margins of error.