Politics
Trump’s Iran Strikes, Not a War, No Congressional Approval Needed
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth photo courtesy of the United States Air Force via screen grab
Liberals in the U.S., including Democratic lawmakers such as Sen. Tim Kaine, are calling President Trump’s strikes on Iran “an illegal war.” In opposition, Kaine is leading a War Powers resolution to halt the operation.
First, Senator Kaine is mistaken because there is no war with Iran. the United States has not declared war on Iran. The last formal U.S. declaration of war was against Romania, Bulgaria, and Hungary in 1942. Every military conflict since then, including Korea, Vietnam, the Gulf War, Iraq, and Afghanistan, was conducted under an Authorization for Use of Military Force or executive authority, not formal declarations of war.
The Trump administration’s actions against Venezuela in January 2026 and Iran in February have been justified primarily through Article II of the U.S. Constitution and existing counter-narcotics and counter-terrorism legal frameworks, rather than a formal declaration of war by Congress. The U.S. has not declared war on Iran, and neither has Iran declared war on the U.S. Consequently, it cannot be an illegal war.
The next argument Democrats are making is that President Trump did not obtain congressional approval for the strikes. However, under the War Powers Resolution, the president does not need congressional approval. Congress passed the War Powers Resolution in 1973, over President Nixon’s veto, to reassert its constitutional authority over military commitments.
Its key provisions require that the president notify Congress within 48 hours of committing forces to hostilities, that military action cease within 60 days unless Congress formally declares war or authorizes the action, and that Congress may pass a concurrent resolution to force withdrawal.
The 48-hour notification requirement has been satisfied. President Trump notified Congress within the required window.
Operations began February 28, 2026. The 60-day clock runs to approximately April 29, 2026. President Trump is currently on Day 4.
Under the 90-day total window, including the 30-day withdrawal period, the deadline would be approximately May 29, 2026.
A War Powers resolution may be introduced, but the president can veto it and continue the operation.
Every president since Truman has pushed back on congressional war-powers constraints, typically arguing that the commander-in-chief authority gives the president inherent power to use military force to protect national security. This is not new. Congress has failed to meaningfully constrain presidential war-making since 1973. Presidents have committed forces to Korea, Vietnam, Kosovo, Libya, Syria, Somalia, and dozens of other conflicts with minimal or no formal congressional authorization. Congress has repeatedly failed to enforce its own War Powers Resolution because members are reluctant to be seen as “against the troops” once operations begin, and the political cost of stopping a war in progress is high.
The executive branch has argued that provisions of the 1973 War Powers Resolution are themselves unconstitutional, a position many executive-branch lawyers have held. The provision most consistently challenged is the concurrent-resolution mechanism. The Supreme Court’s 1983 ruling in INS v. Chadha found that simple and concurrent resolutions approving or disapproving executive action are unconstitutional because they do not require presentation to the president.
A War Powers resolution to halt military action passes with a simple majority in both chambers. President Trump can veto it. Overriding that veto would require a two-thirds majority in both chambers, an extremely high bar given current Republican control of Congress.
Even if such a resolution were to pass, it would almost certainly be vetoed, and that veto would almost certainly be sustained. In practical terms, the resolution would be largely symbolic, a formal statement of congressional disapproval rather than a mechanism capable of stopping the operation.
Another argument critics raise is that, under an originalist reading of the Constitution, congressional approval is required for such use of force abroad. However, originalism is only one school of legal interpretation among several. It carries no more inherent authority than a living-constitutionalist reading or any other interpretive framework.
There is also strong precedent supporting the president’s interpretation of the Constitution, as every U.S. military action since 1942 has occurred without a formal declaration of war.
The final argument comes from abroad. Multiple international-law experts say the operations violate the U.N. Charter’s prohibition on the use of force against sovereign states.
The U.N. Charter is a treaty, and while the United States is a signatory, treaty obligations and their enforcement are politically and legally complex. No international body has enforcement authority over the United States that compels compliance. The U.N. Security Council, which could theoretically authorize or condemn military action, includes the U.S. as a permanent member with veto power, meaning the U.S. can block any resolution against itself.
International-law experts expressing opinions that something violates the U.N. Charter carry no legal weight in U.S. domestic law. They are academics and commentators, not judges, legislators, or treaty arbiters with binding authority over U.S. policy.
Successive U.S. administrations of both parties have conducted military operations that could be characterized as inconsistent with Article 2(4), including Grenada, Panama, Kosovo, Iraq, Libya, and Syria, and faced no binding legal consequences. The United States has never accepted that the U.N. Charter supersedes its constitutional authority to conduct foreign policy and military operations as the executive branch determines necessary.
U.S. Democrat lawmakers, international-law experts, and the U.N. are free to say what they wish about the strikes, but for those involved, the outcomes have been positive. Much of the Iranian diaspora and large segments of the population inside Iran are reportedly relieved that the ayatollah is gone. Saudi Arabia has expressed support for U.S. action, and terrorist groups such as Hamas, the Houthis, and Hezbollah are losing their primary patron. That loss of support could reduce their capacity to carry out terrorist attacks.
The post Trump’s Iran Strikes, Not a War, No Congressional Approval Needed appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Politics
Gulf State Allies Urge Swift De-Escalation as Energy Shock Ripples Across the Globe
Map of Gulf States via Wikimedia Commons
With global energy markets trembling as drone attacks ripple across the Gulf, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar are quietly working behind the scenes to prevent a prolonged military confrontation between America, Israel, and Iran.
According to a report from Bloomberg News, citing individuals familiar with internal discussions, both governments are lobbying allies to encourage President Donald Trump to seek a swift off-ramp that would keep US military operations limited in scope and duration.
The Gulf monarchies—not acting out of diplomatic idealism—are seeking to prevent further destabilization that could imperil their economies, infrastructure, and global energy markets already shaken by recent strikes.
Sources have indicated that Abu Dhabi and Doha are attempting to assemble a broader coalition of European and regional partners to advance a rapid diplomatic resolution. The objective, insiders say, is to contain escalation before it spirals into a prolonged crisis with global consequences.
The concern is not theoretical. A Qatari internal assessment shared with Bloomberg News warned that if critical shipping lanes remain disrupted beyond midweek, natural gas markets could react far more violently than they did earlier this week during the initial surge.
European gas prices have already soared more than 50% following a drone strike that targeted Qatar’s liquefied natural gas facilities. The attack forced Doha to halt production at what is widely recognized as the world’s largest LNG export terminal.
That shutdown sent shockwaves through European energy markets still struggling with the aftereffects of previous supply disruptions caused by the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war. The episode has bodly underscored how rapidly distant military actions can translate into direct economic consequences for Western consumers.
Privately, Gulf officials are scrambling to reinforce their own defenses. Both the UAE and Qatar are accelerating efforts to strengthen air defense systems, recognizing that drone warfare has become a defining feature of conflict in the 21st century.
According to people briefed on the matter, the UAE has requested assistance from allies to bolster medium-range air defense capabilities. Qatar, meanwhile, is seeking urgent support specifically tailored to counter drone threats, which regional officials now view as more immediate and persistent than traditional ballistic missiles.
An internal Qatari analysis reportedly concluded that existing Patriot interceptor missile stocks could be depleted within four days under current rates of use. That assessment highlights the intensity of recent aerial activity and the vulnerability of even well-funded Gulf states.
Officials at Qatar’s International Media Office and the UAE’s foreign ministry have not publicly commented on these developments. Nonetheless, diplomatic activity suggests growing unease among regional leaders.
UAE President Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani have held phone calls in recent days with European leaders, including British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron, and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. Those conversations reportedly focused on preventing escalation and stabilizing energy markets.
Since late February, when American and Israeli strikes against Iranian targets intensified, the conflict has widened rapidly. Nations that insist they are not parties to the fighting have nonetheless found their military bases, energy facilities, and civilian populations exposed to retaliation.
Airspace closures, maritime disruptions, and missile alerts have reminded global markets how fragile the energy arteries of the Gulf truly are. For Europe, heavily reliant on LNG imports, the stakes are particularly high.
The Strait of Hormuz remains a strategic chokepoint through which 20% of the world’s energy supply flows. Any sustained interference with shipping there will almost undoubtedly trigger cascading economic consequences that ripple far beyond the Middle East.
The unfolding crisis reinforces a lesson the world has repeatedly seen: global entanglements inevitably produce domestic consequences. When distant conflicts disrupt fuel and energy supplies, ordinary citizens in Europe and America pay the price.
For Gulf leaders, the calculus is pragmatic, with stability for them ensuring trade flows, investment, and internal security. Chaos, on the other hand, threatens all three.
Further complicating strategic planning is the rise of drone warfare. Cheap, difficult-to-intercept systems have changed the risk equation for energy-exporting states that once relied primarily on missile defense.
Even well-armed states are discovering that modern asymmetric threats can stretch defensive capacities. The reported four-day Patriot window illustrates the speed at which resources can be consumed in a high-intensity scenario.
While some voices across the political spectrum continue to argue for maximalist approaches, Gulf governments appear focused on de-escalation. For Europe in particular, the LNG shutdown serves as a stark warning that near-total dependence on fragile supply chains leaves it completely exposed to distant shocks and military moves entirely beyond its control.
The post Gulf State Allies Urge Swift De-Escalation as Energy Shock Ripples Across the Globe appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Politics
State Department Issues “DEPART NOW” Alert for Americans Across Middle East as War Spillover Hits US Interests
The US State Department has issued one of its broadest emergency advisories in years, urging American citizens to immediately leave more than a dozen Middle Eastern countries as the regional conflict intensifies and security risks multiply amid unchecked escalation.
The alert comes amid escalating retaliatory strikes by Iran targeting US and Israeli-linked assets across the Gulf.
In a sharply worded post on X, Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs Mora Namdar wrote that Washington D.C., “urges Americans to DEPART NOW from the countries below using available commercial transportation, due to serious safety risks.”
The language signaled that officials believe the threat environment has moved well beyond precautionary levels.
The advisory covers Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, the West Bank, Gaza, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, the United Arab Emirates, and Yemen. Americans needing assistance have been directed to call the State Department’s 24-hour hotline and enroll in the STEP program for real-time security updates.
The @SecRubio @StateDept urges Americans to DEPART NOW from the countries below using available commercial transportation, due to serious safety risks. Americans who need State Department assistance arranging to depart via commercial means, CALL US 24/7 at +1-202-501-4444 (from… pic.twitter.com/vdplAik2Sq
— Assistant Secretary Mora Namdar (@AsstSecStateCA) March 2, 2026
The sweeping list reflects how quickly a regional confrontation can spill across borders. What may have started off as targeted strikes between states appears to have rapidly entangled aviation hubs, energy infrastructure, and civilian transit corridors far from the initial flashpoints.
The warning follows Iranian retaliatory operations launched after joint US-Israeli strikes killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and several senior commanders. Tehran has since targeted American bases and strategic sites throughout the Gulf region.
Major aviation centers have not been spared. Dubai International Airport—widely regarded as the world’s busiest international hub—was reportedly hit during drone and missile activity, with damage and casualties reported near aviation facilities in Bahrain, Kuwait, and Iraq.
In response to the spreading violence, Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, and the UAE have implemented partial or full airspace closures. The result has been immediate and dramatic: more than 3,400 flights canceled across seven major Middle Eastern airports.
Hundreds of thousands of travelers have been affected, with social media footage showing crowded terminals and stranded passengers sleeping on airport floors. Dubai’s airport, which typically functions as a global crossroads, has reportedly resembled what one observer called a “massive waiting room.”
Transit passengers have been particularly vulnerable. Nearly half of those stranded in Dubai were connecting travelers, caught mid-journey as the regional aviation network unraveled.
The crisis has also affected non-Western carriers. Russian airlines, including Aeroflot, have canceled or rerouted flights to Tehran, Dubai, and Abu Dhabi, while Russia’s Association of Tour Operators (ATOR) estimates that roughly 8,000 Russian tourists are stranded after missing Middle Eastern connections.
For American citizens in the region, the practical problem is straightforward: commercial routes are narrowing by the hour. In some locations, such as Israel, commercial air travel was halted after the initial wave of strikes, creating severe bottlenecks for civilians attempting to depart.
This logistical reality explains the urgency behind the State Department’s language. “DEPART NOW” is an instruction issued before exit options disappear entirely.
Energy markets are watching closely as well. Gulf airspace overlaps with some of the world’s most critical shipping corridors, meaning instability can quickly translate into price spikes felt by consumers thousands of miles away. So far in Europe, energy prices have spiked 50%. In Britain, they’ve gone up even more.
The breadth of the State Department’s warning is striking, encompassing allies, adversaries, and countries that consider themselves bystanders, demonstrating how modern conflicts do not respect diplomatic categories.
The post State Department Issues “DEPART NOW” Alert for Americans Across Middle East as War Spillover Hits US Interests appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
Politics
Arizona Child Comes Back to Life After Being Declared Dead for Over Five Hours Following Drowning
Photo of pool generated by Grok
A child in Arizona who was declared dead for over five hours has come back to life.
During Super Bowl weekend, first responders were called to a Gilbert, Arizona, home for a drowning incident involving a child.
According to AZ Family, the child was rescued by first responders who immediately attempted to revive the child with life-saving measures.
Emergency officials proceeded to transport the child to a local hospital, where the child was later pronounced dead at 6:20 p.m.
However, over five hours later, the child began to show signs of life at 11:30 p.m. and was taken to another hospital to receive more treatment.
BREAKING: A child declared dead at a hospital after drowning on Super Bowl Sunday at a Gilbert home showed signs of life FIVE HOURS later. The child was airlifted to another Valley hospital & is now expected to survive.
Gilbert PD tells us the investigation is ongoing @azfamily
— Mac Colson (@MacColsonTV) March 3, 2026
Per 12 News:
An East Valley child who was declared dead after being found in a backyard pool in early February is expected to survive, according to the Gilbert Police Department.
Police and fire officials responded to a “drowning call” near East Chandler Heights and South Higley roads at 5:35 p.m. on Feb. 8, after a child was reportedly found in a backyard pool. Upon arrival, Gilbert officials provided life-saving measures before the child was taken to a local hospital, police said.
Additional life-saving measures were administered by medical staff at the hospital; however, the child was declared dead at 6:20 p.m.
Police said that, later that evening, just before 11:30 p.m., officials were notified that the child showed signs of life and was airlifted to another Valley hospital for further treatment.
This isn’t the first time a child in Arizona was declared dead following a drowning incident and later came back to life.
In February of 2016, a toddler was found by first responders in a pool after drowning in the water for over 5 minutes.
The toddler was rushed to the hospital, where doctors performed life-saving measures for over 90 minutes before declaring her dead.
However, a miracle occurred.
An hour later, the toddler coughed, and she has since fully recovered.
WATCH:
The post Arizona Child Comes Back to Life After Being Declared Dead for Over Five Hours Following Drowning appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.
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