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In this episode of The Left Hook, host Mark Bland delivers a scathing critique of the ongoing U.S.-Iran war under President Trump, dubbed Operation Epic Fury. Launched in late February 2026 amid claims of imminent threats to U.S. interests and Israel's security, the conflict stems from Trump's "gut feeling" rather than concrete evidence, Bland argues. Despite initial U.S. bunker-buster strikes on nuclear sites and heavy airstrikes degrading Iran's missiles, navy, and infrastructure, no regime change has occurred after nearly two weeks. Iran continues retaliating with drones, missiles (including hypersonics hitting Tel Aviv), and attacks on ships in the Persian Gulf.
Bland highlights Iran's 50-year preparation for such a confrontation, contrasting it with America's high-cost inefficiency—spending millions on missiles to down cheap $50,000 drones—and the military-industrial complex's profiteering. Critically, Iran retains control of the Strait of Hormuz, effectively shutting it down (with recent attacks on multiple ships and U.S. strikes on 16 Iranian minelayers), spiking global oil prices and risking economic chaos worldwide, including skyrocketing costs for gas, food, and goods.
Domestically, Bland slams Trump supporters for emotion-driven ("feelings over facts") flip-flops—once anti-interventionist, now hawkish—while ignoring issues like Epstein files. He recounts a heated conversation revealing extreme rhetoric and warns the war distracts from unfulfilled promises like cheaper energy day one. Bland predicts prolonged attrition, potential escalation (with Russia/China aiding Iran), and midterms backlash, urging politics based on facts, not feelings.
By Mark Bland1.9
88 ratings
In this episode of The Left Hook, host Mark Bland delivers a scathing critique of the ongoing U.S.-Iran war under President Trump, dubbed Operation Epic Fury. Launched in late February 2026 amid claims of imminent threats to U.S. interests and Israel's security, the conflict stems from Trump's "gut feeling" rather than concrete evidence, Bland argues. Despite initial U.S. bunker-buster strikes on nuclear sites and heavy airstrikes degrading Iran's missiles, navy, and infrastructure, no regime change has occurred after nearly two weeks. Iran continues retaliating with drones, missiles (including hypersonics hitting Tel Aviv), and attacks on ships in the Persian Gulf.
Bland highlights Iran's 50-year preparation for such a confrontation, contrasting it with America's high-cost inefficiency—spending millions on missiles to down cheap $50,000 drones—and the military-industrial complex's profiteering. Critically, Iran retains control of the Strait of Hormuz, effectively shutting it down (with recent attacks on multiple ships and U.S. strikes on 16 Iranian minelayers), spiking global oil prices and risking economic chaos worldwide, including skyrocketing costs for gas, food, and goods.
Domestically, Bland slams Trump supporters for emotion-driven ("feelings over facts") flip-flops—once anti-interventionist, now hawkish—while ignoring issues like Epstein files. He recounts a heated conversation revealing extreme rhetoric and warns the war distracts from unfulfilled promises like cheaper energy day one. Bland predicts prolonged attrition, potential escalation (with Russia/China aiding Iran), and midterms backlash, urging politics based on facts, not feelings.