Iran Targeted—the Trump Administration and the Israeli Netanyahu Administration a Secretive Treacherous Planned Surprise Attack During Peace-Talks
June 16, 2025•662 words
“In politics and war, deception is often most lethal when peace appears most likely.” ~ William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
“Pearl Harbor not only destroyed ships and lives, it shattered the illusion that diplomacy could restrain imperial ambition.” ~ Ian Toll, Pacific Crucible: War at Sea in the Pacific
“To negotiate with one hand while arming the other is a timeless tactic of states that do not truly seek peace.” ~ Henry Kissinger, Diplomacy
“History shows that surprise attacks during negotiations are not anomalies, but calculated betrayals when one party sees advantage in war.” ~ Margaret MacMillan, The War That Ended Peace
“The most cynical form of strategy is to use peace talks as a cover for the first strike.” ~ Noam Chomsky, Hegemony or Survival
“Attack under the guise of peace is the weapon of empires not bound by rules, only by their own fears and ambitions.” ~ Chris Hedges, War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning
In a world increasingly defined by shifting alliances and secret agendas, diplomacy was once considered a final safeguard against war. Now, diplomacy cannot be trusted.
Israel’s surprise bombing attack on Iran, launched during ongoing nuclear non-proliferation talks, marks more than just a tactical military maneuver. It’s a calculated, premeditated act, a chilling change in international statecraft. This was about weaponizing the illusion of dialogue and diplomacy.
From the outside, Israel’s move might appear as a proactive strike designed to cripple Iran’s nuclear capabilities before they could mature. But behind the scenes, something far more sinister was unfolding. The United States, under the guise of diplomacy, appears to act as a covert enabler. While Iran engaged in negotiations in good faith, the Trump Administration, have quietly coordinated strategic efforts with Tel Aviv, baiting Tehran into vulnerability.
This surprise attack is a fundamental betrayal, not only of Iran but of every nation invested in the ideals of diplomacy and peace. To turn negotiation tables into ambush opportunities is to abandon the core principles of international diplomacy. It reframes diplomacy not as a path to peace, but as a conflict tactic, a deception maneuver disguised in the language of reconciliation. Nazi Germany was well known to do this backstabbing diplomacy, leading into World War II.
The military operation itself was brutally effective. Israel’s goal was clear, catch Iran off-guard, dismantle its command and control structures, neutralize its nuclear assets, and decapitate military leadership nodes before Tehran could even mount a defense. The doctrine is unmistakable, a modern execution of Sun Tzu’s timeless rule of conduct, win the war before the enemy knows it has begun.
Now, Iran’s trust in the United States is shattered. The fragile diplomatic dialogue has collapsed. What remains is a dangerous void, one where Tehran is likely to pivot more deeply toward Russia and China, forming a path for many other countries to build strong alliances with BRICS in response to perceived American Trump government treachery.
The world is watching a devastating escalation unfold in real time. Within three days, Israeli airstrikes reportedly halved Iran’s air defense capacity. Projections suggest that in two weeks, the country may be left almost entirely exposed, militarily, infrastructure, and tragically, civilians.
The sight of devastation and genocide of Gaza looms large as a possible blueprint. The prospect of Iranian cities flattened, infrastructure decimated, and civilians slaughtered by bombs, missiles, Ai killer drones, no longer feels theoretical, it feels such a tragedy, trauma, and horror is about to happen on the Persian people.
What happened was a backstabbing diplomatic failure. It was the weaponization of diplomacy itself, a secretive treacherous planned surprise attack during peace-talks. The consequences are not only regional but global. The erosion of diplomatic trust, once broken, may be impossible to repair. And as the rubble mounts, so too does the cost of a world where diplomacy is used not to prevent war, but to ignite it.
https://youtu.be/OwH780cEcEQ?si=i-EO\_OcmAPCMvyGk