Monday, May 11, 2026

Robert Jeffress Turns the Bible Into a Permission Slip for Trump’s War

 

Pastor Robert Jeffress did not merely defend Donald Trump. He did something far more revealing. He tried to baptize Trump’s military aggression with Scripture, then had the audacity to suggest Trump understands the Bible’s teachings better than the Pope.

That is not courage. That is not theology. That is political obedience dressed up as faith.

Jeffress, the senior pastor of First Baptist Dallas and one of Trump’s most loyal evangelical defenders, appeared on Fox News and argued that Pope Leo XIV was “sincerely wrong” about Iran while Trump supposedly had the better biblical understanding of the role of government. He cited Romans 13, the passage often invoked to describe civil authority, as justification for state power against evildoers. 

The problem is not that Jeffress has a view of government. The problem is that he presents that view as if it gives a president near-sacred clearance to launch war, escalate conflict, and demand moral applause from Christians.

That is where the prosecution begins.

Jeffress is asking believers to accept a stunning proposition: that Donald Trump, a political figure whose public life has been defined by vengeance, self-praise, legal scandal, and contempt for humility, somehow has a clearer grasp of biblical government than the head of the Catholic Church. This is not serious Christian teaching. It is partisan flattery so extreme that it borders on spiritual malpractice.

He is not simply saying Trump made a difficult military decision. He is elevating Trump as a superior biblical interpreter while dismissing the Pope as naïve or mistaken.

That is not faithfulness to Scripture. That is court-chaplain politics.

Romans 13 has been abused for centuries by people looking to sanctify raw power. Jeffress now reaches for it again, not to call government to justice, restraint, humility, or accountability, but to shield Trump from moral scrutiny. He turns a biblical passage about civil authority into a blank check for militarism.

And that is the central indictment: Jeffress is not defending Christianity from politics. He is helping politics colonize Christianity.

The teachings of Jesus do not begin with bombing campaigns. They do not begin with chest-thumping strongman language. They do not begin with flattering rulers and sneering at peacemakers. The Sermon on the Mount says, “Blessed are the peacemakers.” Jesus warns against hypocrisy, pride, cruelty, and public religious performance. Yet Jeffress stands before a national audience and effectively tells Christians that Trump’s war posture is not only defensible, but biblically superior to the Pope’s caution.

That is a staggering inversion of Christian witness.

Jeffress called the Pope a good man, then undercut him. That is the old political trick: offer a polite compliment before delivering the knife. He gave the appearance of respect while telling millions of viewers that the spiritual leader of the Catholic Church misunderstands Scripture compared with Donald Trump.

The message to MAGA Christianity was unmistakable: when church teaching conflicts with Trump, choose Trump.

That is not discipleship. That is idolatry.

This is the deeper danger of Jeffress’ statement. He is not merely offering political commentary. He is training Christians to see Trump’s instincts as spiritually authoritative. He is teaching them to treat military escalation as biblical courage and religious caution as weakness. He is converting the pulpit into a campaign annex and the Bible into a partisan weapon.

A pastor’s first loyalty should be to truth, not to a president. His duty is to challenge power, not perfume it. His calling is to preach repentance, mercy, justice, humility, and peace  not to flatter a political strongman with claims that he out-Bibles the Pope.

Robert Jeffress had a choice. He could have urged caution. He could have demanded evidence. He could have reminded the country that war is a grave moral act, not a campaign slogan. He could have said that Christians should pray for wisdom, restraint, and peace.

Instead, he chose Trump.

And in doing so, Jeffress exposed the rot at the center of political Christianity in America: Scripture is honored only when it serves the movement, Jesus is quoted only when convenient, and moral standards vanish the moment a favored politician needs protection.

The verdict is clear.

Robert Jeffress did not defend biblical truth. He defended Trumpism with a Bible verse in his hand. And that is exactly how faith gets hijacked  not by atheists, not by outsiders, but by religious insiders who know the language of Christianity well enough to weaponize it.

Cenk Uygur Is Asking the Question Washington Does Not Want Asked



Young Turks founder Cenk Uygur has thrown a political grenade into one of the most protected subjects in American foreign policy: whether the United States has allowed Israeli interests to override American sovereignty for decades.

Uygur’s claim is blunt. He says Robert Maxwell, the British media baron and father of Ghislaine Maxwell, stole American nuclear secrets and transferred them to Israel, and that the United States never made a serious effort to arrest or prosecute him for it. His larger point is even more explosive: if a foreign-connected operative could allegedly help move American intelligence or nuclear-related secrets to Israel without facing meaningful consequences, then how long has Washington been operating under a double standard?

That question cannot simply be dismissed as a conspiracy theory. The historical record around Maxwell is filled with intelligence allegations, lawsuits, FBI interest and investigative reporting that has never been fully resolved in the public mind. Declassified FBI-related material involving Maxwell and PROMIS shows that federal authorities had interest in Maxwell-linked software activity in the 1980s. Investigative reporting and books by Seymour Hersh and others also alleged Maxwell had ties to Israeli intelligence and was involved in the broader PROMIS software scandal.

That does not mean every allegation against Maxwell has been proven in court. It does mean Uygur is pointing to a real historical trail, not inventing the subject out of thin air.

Maxwell denied Hersh’s allegations while he was alive, even suing over claims that linked him and one of his employees to Israeli intelligence. But his death in 1991, the murky history of PROMIS, the accusations involving Israeli intelligence figures and the broader silence from official Washington have kept the issue alive for more than three decades. For critics of U.S.-Israel policy, the Maxwell story has become a symbol of something larger: the belief that Israel receives a level of protection in American politics that no other foreign government could expect.

That is why Uygur’s statement is landing so hard in 2026.

The United States is now involved in a widening conflict with Iran, and critics say the Trump administration has effectively allowed Israel to dictate the direction of American military policy. The State Department’s legal justification for Operation Epic Fury has already drawn scrutiny after reports said the administration described the U.S. role as being tied to Israel’s request.

The political atmosphere around that war has only intensified the argument. Tucker Carlson recently accused President Trump of being more like a hostage than a sovereign decision-maker in the Iran war, arguing that Trump was constrained by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Netanyahu’s advocates in the United States. Carlson further argued that Israel worked to block a negotiated settlement and keep the war going until Iran was destroyed and chaotic.

That is the same basic charge Uygur is making, only in sharper language.

His point is not just about Robert Maxwell. It is about a pattern.

It is about American officials refusing to acknowledge Israel’s nuclear arsenal while demanding war over Iran’s nuclear program. It is about Congress continuing to approve military aid, weapons support and diplomatic cover for Israel even as more Americans question whether the relationship serves U.S. interests. It is about AIPAC openly describing its mission as strengthening the U.S.-Israel partnership and helping elect Democrats and Republicans who support that alliance.

The money is not imaginary either. Reports based on federal campaign finance data have shown AIPAC and its related political network sending millions of dollars into congressional campaigns. That spending has become a major flashpoint inside the Democratic Party and among critics who argue that U.S. Middle East policy is being distorted by donor pressure, political fear and organized lobbying power.

That is why Uygur’s “how long have we been occupied?” line is more than a slogan. It is a challenge to the entire architecture of U.S. foreign policy.

The word “occupied” is deliberately provocative. It does not mean Israeli soldiers are patrolling Washington. It means Uygur believes American decision-making has been captured by a foreign-policy lobby, a donor network and a political culture that treats Israel’s interests as untouchable even when they conflict with America’s own.

And this is where Uygur is correct to force the issue.

If any other foreign country were accused of receiving stolen American nuclear secrets, manipulating American intelligence technology, steering U.S. wars, influencing congressional campaigns at massive scale and benefiting from bipartisan fear of political retaliation, Washington would call it a national security crisis.

But when the country in question is Israel, the subject becomes radioactive. Politicians suddenly choose their words carefully. Journalists soften the framing. Intelligence history gets buried in allegations. Congressional money gets described as support. Military escalation gets packaged as partnership.

That double standard is exactly what Uygur is attacking.

The Maxwell allegations deserve further investigation. The PROMIS scandal deserves renewed scrutiny. The U.S.-Israel relationship deserves an honest public accounting. And the American people deserve to know whether their government is making decisions for the United States, or whether Washington has become so politically conditioned that it can no longer separate American interests from Israeli demands.

Cenk Uygur may have said it in the most explosive way possible.

But the uncomfortable truth is this: he is asking the question that should have been asked a long time ago.

Friday, May 8, 2026

“Operation Fauxios?” Allegations Swirl After Perfectly Timed Oil Trade Nets Estimated $125 Million




New allegations of possible market manipulation and insider trading are exploding across financial and political circles after a massive oil trade placed shortly before a major geopolitical news report reportedly generated an estimated nine figure profit within hours.

At the center of the controversy is Barak Ravid, a senior reporter for Axios, whose May 6 report claiming the United States and Iran were nearing a “14 point deal” to de escalate their conflict triggered a dramatic collapse in crude oil prices.

According to market observers and analysts circulating trading data online, approximately $920 million in crude oil short positions were allegedly opened roughly 70 minutes before the Axios story was published. Once the report hit the wire, oil prices reportedly plunged more than 12 percent, creating what some estimate was a profit of roughly $125 million for the anonymous trader or trading group involved.

The timing has fueled a storm of accusations online, particularly among critics of the Trump administration and foreign policy observers who argue the sequence of events appears too precise to be coincidence.

Some analysts claim the May 6 trade was not an isolated event, but part of a broader pattern stretching back through March and April 2026. During that period, several unusually large market positions, reportedly ranging between $500 million and $950 million, were allegedly placed shortly before major geopolitical developments, ceasefire rumors, or de escalation announcements involving the Trump administration and Iran.

Critics allege that politically connected individuals may have had advance knowledge of sensitive diplomatic developments before they became public, allowing massive bets to be placed in oil and commodity markets ahead of time.

Iranian political analyst Mohammad Marandi publicly suggested the timing of the trades and media reports could indicate deliberate coordination designed to manipulate markets. Online commentators have mockingly referred to the allegations as “Operation Fauxios,” a play on the Axios brand name.

No public evidence has yet emerged directly tying the trades to Donald Trump, members of his administration, or journalists involved in the reporting. Still, the scale of the trades and the precision of the timing have intensified calls for federal scrutiny.

Neither Barak Ravid nor Axios has been accused by U.S. authorities of wrongdoing. Both have strongly denied any involvement in insider trading, market coordination, or efforts to manipulate oil prices.

Ravid’s background has also become part of the online debate. Before entering journalism, he served in Unit 8200, the Israeli Defense Forces elite signals intelligence and cyber warfare division, a detail critics have amplified while attempting to connect geopolitical reporting with intelligence operations. Supporters, however, argue such claims veer into conspiracy theory territory absent hard evidence.

Financial crimes experts note that proving insider trading tied to geopolitical news would require investigators to establish that traders possessed material nonpublic information and knowingly acted on it before public dissemination. That would likely require subpoenaed communications records, trading account tracing, and coordination between regulators such as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

Large commodity trades ahead of major news events are not unheard of on NYSE linked energy markets and global futures exchanges. However, analysts say the sheer size and repeated timing of the positions have drawn unusual attention from traders already on edge over extreme volatility tied to Middle East tensions.

The controversy comes as oil markets remain highly reactive to every development involving the Strait of Hormuz, Iran, and U.S. military positioning in the region. Even unconfirmed reports of diplomatic breakthroughs or military escalation have caused violent swings across commodities, equities, and currency markets in recent weeks.

As of now, no criminal charges, regulatory findings, or formal investigations have been publicly announced regarding the May 6 trades. But the allegations have added yet another layer of distrust to already volatile geopolitical and financial conditions, with critics demanding transparency about who placed the trades, how they obtained their information, and whether political insiders profited from global instability.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

The Quiet Expansion of Surveillance: Why Americans Should Be Concerned About Flock Safety’s New Audio Technology

 



A growing number of cities across the United States are quietly expanding the reach of surveillance technology, and civil liberties advocates warn the public may not fully understand what is being installed above their streets.

Flock Safety, the company already known for its widespread automated license plate reader systems used by police departments nationwide, is now deploying new “Raven” devices equipped with microphones capable of detecting sounds such as gunshots, breaking glass, screaming, and what the company describes as “human distress.”

Supporters argue the technology could help first responders react faster during emergencies. Critics see something far more troubling: the normalization of always-on surveillance infrastructure embedded directly into American neighborhoods.

The debate is rapidly intensifying as more municipalities adopt the systems while residents, privacy watchdogs, and legal experts question where the line between public safety and mass surveillance should be drawn.

Cameras Were Only the Beginning

For years, Flock Safety cameras have spread across suburban neighborhoods, business districts, apartment complexes, and city streets. The systems automatically scan and catalog vehicle license plates, generating searchable databases that law enforcement agencies can access.

Now, the addition of audio-monitoring technology represents a major escalation.

According to reports from groups including the Electronic Frontier Foundation, these new Raven systems are often mounted on the same poles as existing camera infrastructure, effectively transforming ordinary street corners into sophisticated surveillance hubs.

Flock insists the microphones are not designed for continuous conversation recording. Instead, the company says the devices analyze sounds for indicators of emergencies or violent incidents and only preserve audio snippets tied to detected events.

But privacy advocates argue that once microphones are placed in public spaces, the technological and legal barriers preventing broader audio collection can erode quickly.

That concern is not theoretical.

Americans have already watched smartphones, smart TVs, voice assistants, doorbell cameras, and vehicle telemetry systems evolve from conveniences into vast networks of data collection. Critics fear public surveillance systems are now following the same trajectory.

“Human Distress” Is an Alarmingly Broad Category

Gunshot detection systems have existed for years, though even those technologies have faced criticism over false positives and questionable effectiveness.

What alarms civil liberties groups is the vague language surrounding “human distress.”

What exactly qualifies as distress?

A scream during an argument?
A loud protest?
Someone yelling after a car accident?
A heated domestic dispute?
A mentally ill individual having a breakdown in public?

The broader and more subjective the category becomes, the greater the risk of over-policing and intrusive monitoring.

Privacy experts warn that undefined standards can create situations where law enforcement is repeatedly dispatched into neighborhoods based on ambiguous audio interpretations generated by algorithms.

Critics also fear the systems could disproportionately affect heavily monitored urban communities already subjected to aggressive policing practices.

The Slippery Slope of Public Audio Monitoring

One of the central concerns raised by surveillance watchdogs is mission creep — the gradual expansion of a technology beyond its original stated purpose.

History suggests that surveillance systems rarely remain limited forever.

License plate readers originally marketed as tools to locate stolen vehicles are now frequently used for broad criminal investigations, vehicle tracking, and database sharing between agencies nationwide.

Facial recognition systems introduced for security purposes expanded into crowd scanning and identity tracking.

Privacy advocates worry public audio monitoring may evolve the same way.

Today, officials may promise the systems only detect emergency sounds. Tomorrow, software upgrades could theoretically enable keyword recognition, voice identification, crowd analysis, or behavioral monitoring.

Even if current city leaders have no intention of abusing the systems, critics argue future administrations may not exercise the same restraint.

Data Storage Questions Remain Murky

Another major concern involves what happens to the data after it is captured.

How long are clips stored?
Who can access them?
Can federal agencies obtain the recordings?
Could they be used in unrelated criminal investigations?
Are private contractors involved in storage or analysis?
Can the systems be hacked?

Many residents do not even realize these devices exist in their communities, let alone understand the policies governing them.

Transparency has become one of the biggest flashpoints in the debate.

Several cities across the country have reportedly faced resident backlash after citizens discovered surveillance expansions only after contracts had already been approved.

Some municipalities have since reconsidered, delayed, or restricted deployments amid mounting criticism from civil liberties groups and concerned residents.

Public Safety vs. Privacy

Supporters of the systems argue opponents are ignoring real-world benefits.

Police departments say faster detection of gunfire or violent incidents can save lives. Emergency responders may reach victims more quickly. Investigators may gain valuable evidence in dangerous situations.

Those are legitimate public safety arguments.

But critics counter that constitutional freedoms are often surrendered gradually — one “reasonable” step at a time.

The larger question may not be whether the technology can help in some cases.

The question is whether Americans are comfortable living in cities increasingly blanketed with interconnected systems capable of tracking vehicles, monitoring movement, and now listening for human behavior.

For many privacy advocates, the concern is no longer hypothetical.

They believe the infrastructure for a far more intrusive surveillance society is already being built — quietly, pole by pole, camera by camera, microphone by microphone.

Monday, May 4, 2026

U.S. Escort Plans in Strait of Hormuz Raise Escalation Fears Amid Conflicting Claims



WASHINGTON: Rising tensions in the Persian Gulf have renewed concerns over a potential military escalation after former President Donald Trump said May 3 that he ordered U.S. forces to escort commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most critical النفط transit routes.

Within hours of Trump’s statement, Iranian officials claimed their forces fired two missiles at a U.S. military vessel attempting to cross the strait. U.S. officials denied that any American ship had been struck, deepening uncertainty around events in the narrow waterway that handles roughly a fifth of global oil shipments.

The conflicting accounts come amid a broader standoff between Washington and Tehran, with both sides signaling resolve while avoiding confirmation of direct confrontation.

Strategic chokepoint

The Strait of Hormuz, bordered in part by Iran’s southern coastline, spans roughly 35 to 80 kilometers at its narrowest navigable points. Military analysts have long warned that the geography heavily favors Iran in the event of a conflict, with coastal terrain offering positions for missile systems, drones and fast-attack vessels.

Iran has invested for decades in what defense experts describe as “asymmetric warfare” capabilities in the region, including anti-ship missiles, naval mines, unmanned systems and small submarines designed to overwhelm larger naval forces in confined waters.

Risks of escort operations

The prospect of U.S. naval escorts through the strait has drawn scrutiny from defense observers, who say such missions would carry significant operational risks, particularly under current tensions.

U.S. Navy destroyers, including Arleigh Burke-class ships, are equipped with advanced missile defense systems. However, analysts note that their effectiveness depends heavily on detection time and engagement distance. In a confined environment like the Strait of Hormuz, where threats could be launched from relatively short range, response windows could be reduced to seconds.

That compressed timeline could complicate interception efforts against incoming missiles, drones or swarm attacks from small boats.

“There is very little margin for error in that environment,” said one defense analyst familiar with naval operations in the region. “You’re dealing with layered threats from multiple domains at close range.”

Lessons from recent conflicts

Concerns are also informed by recent U.S. naval operations in the Red Sea, where American ships have faced sustained attacks from Houthi forces in Yemen. While the scale of that threat is considered smaller than what could emerge in the Strait of Hormuz, sailors have described those engagements as intense and taxing.

One U.S. Navy sailor involved in those operations said crews often had only moments to react to incoming threats, underscoring the strain placed on personnel and systems during sustained high-alert conditions.

Political and military calculations

Trump’s directive, if implemented, would mark a significant escalation in U.S. involvement in securing commercial shipping in the region. It also raises questions about how such operations would be perceived internationally, particularly if clashes occur.

Some analysts suggest the U.S. may seek to deter Iranian interference with shipping without initiating direct conflict. Others warn that even limited engagements could quickly spiral, given the proximity of forces and the high stakes involved.

Iran has repeatedly threatened to disrupt traffic through the strait in response to Western pressure, while U.S. officials have long maintained that freedom of navigation in the waterway is a core national interest.

Uncertain path forward

As of now, it remains unclear whether U.S. naval escorts have begun or when they might be fully implemented. Pentagon officials have not provided detailed operational updates, and both sides continue to issue statements that at times contradict one another.

What is clear, analysts say, is that any attempt to force open or secure the strait under hostile conditions would carry substantial risk.

“The Strait of Hormuz is one of the most dangerous places in the world for naval operations during a crisis,” said another defense expert. “Even a small miscalculation could have major consequences.”

With global energy markets sensitive to disruptions in the region, the situation remains fluid, and the potential for escalation continues to draw close international attention.

Breyers Isn’t Always Ice Cream Anymore: How the ‘Granddaddy’ Brand Melted Into Frozen Dairy Dessert

 



For generations, Breyers has been synonymous with classic American ice cream — simple ingredients, rich flavor, and a reputation built on doing things the old-fashioned way. Founded in 1866 by William A. Breyer in Philadelphia, the company earned its place as one of the “granddaddies” of ice cream by emphasizing purity: milk, cream, sugar, and flavorings you could actually recognize.

But if you’ve picked up a carton in recent years, you may have noticed something that doesn’t quite match that legacy. Some tubs no longer say “ice cream.” Instead, they’re labeled “frozen dairy dessert.” That shift isn’t marketing fluff — it reflects a real change in what’s inside the container.

The Legal Line Between Ice Cream and Something Else

In the United States, the term “ice cream” isn’t just descriptive — it’s regulated. The Food and Drug Administration requires that any product labeled as ice cream contain at least 10% milk fat. It also limits how much air and certain additives can be used.

If a product falls short of those standards, it cannot legally be called ice cream. That’s where “frozen dairy dessert” comes in — a broader category that allows for lower milk fat and more flexibility in formulation.

What Changed Inside the Carton

Over the past two decades, particularly under the ownership of Unilever, many Breyers products have shifted away from the original formula that made the brand famous.

The newer formulations often:

  • Contain less milk fat, dropping below the 10% threshold

  • Use more air (overrun), making the product lighter and less dense

  • Include stabilizers and gums to maintain texture and shelf life

  • Rely on cost-saving ingredients instead of traditional dairy richness

The result is a product that can still look and taste similar at first glance, but technically — and often experientially — isn’t the same as traditional ice cream.

Why the Change Happened

The shift wasn’t random. It reflects broader trends in the food industry:

  • Cost control: Dairy fat is expensive, and reducing it lowers production costs

  • Shelf stability: Additives help products last longer and maintain consistency

  • Mass production demands: Large-scale manufacturing favors uniformity over tradition

For a global company like Unilever, these factors matter. But they also come with trade-offs, especially for a brand built on simplicity and quality.

Not All Breyers Is the Same

Importantly, Breyers hasn’t completely abandoned its roots. Some of its more traditional or “natural” lines — particularly classic flavors like vanilla — may still carry the “ice cream” label.

That means two very different products can sit side-by-side in the same freezer case:

  • One labeled “ice cream” with higher milk fat and simpler ingredients

  • Another labeled “frozen dairy dessert” with a more processed formulation

The only way to tell is to read the front of the package carefully.

A Brand at a Crossroads

Breyers remains a household name, and for many, it still carries a sense of nostalgia. But the shift from “ice cream” to “frozen dairy dessert” highlights a broader reality: even legacy brands evolve — sometimes in ways that quietly redefine what they stand for.

For consumers, it comes down to awareness. The name on the carton may be the same, but what’s inside can be very different from the ice cream that built Breyers’ reputation more than a century ago.

🚨BREAKING: Reported Missile Strike Near Strait of Hormuz Sends Oil Prices Surging

 


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May 4, 2026 — Strait of Hormuz

A reported missile strike by Iranian forces on a U.S. Navy vessel near Jask Island has sharply escalated tensions in one of the world’s most critical shipping corridors, raising fears of a broader regional conflict and triggering a surge in global oil prices.

Conflicting Early Reports

According to early claims circulated by Iranian state-affiliated outlets, two missiles were fired at a U.S. military ship operating near the entrance to the Strait of Hormuz. Iranian sources allege the vessel ignored warnings before being targeted.

As of Monday, U.S. officials had not publicly confirmed that a strike successfully hit a naval vessel, and details surrounding potential damage or casualties remain unclear. Independent verification of the incident is still developing.

Strategic Flashpoint

The reported attack comes amid heightened tensions following the launch of “Project Freedom,” a U.S.-led naval initiative designed to escort commercial shipping and maintain open sea lanes through the Strait of Hormuz.

The narrow waterway is one of the most strategically vital oil transit routes in the world, with roughly 20 percent of global oil supply passing through it daily. Any disruption in the region has immediate consequences for global energy markets.

Oil Markets React

Energy markets responded swiftly to the news. Oil prices surged past $110 per barrel in early trading, reflecting investor concerns over potential supply disruptions and the risk of sustained conflict in the Persian Gulf.

Shipping activity in the region has already shown signs of strain in recent weeks, with some commercial vessels rerouting or delaying transit amid rising security risks.

Escalation Risks Grow

The incident follows weeks of increasing military and economic pressure between the United States and Iran, including reported maritime confrontations, threats to shipping lanes, and broader regional instability tied to ongoing conflicts in the Middle East.

Analysts warn that a direct strike on U.S. forces—if confirmed—would mark a significant escalation, potentially prompting retaliatory action and further destabilizing global markets.

What Comes Next

International observers are closely monitoring developments, with calls for restraint growing louder as governments assess the situation. Any confirmation of damage to U.S. assets or casualties could rapidly shift the geopolitical landscape.

For now, uncertainty dominates both military and financial outlooks, as the world watches one of its most critical chokepoints edge closer to open conflict.