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However, the cost of this “success” was immediately apparent. U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) confirmed that the opening phases of the operation resulted in the deaths of three American service members, with five others sustaining serious injuries. Iran’s response was swift and chaotic, launching a barrage of drone and missile strikes at U.S. military installations across the Gulf. Bases in Bahrain, Qatar, and the outskirts of Dubai became front-line targets, marking the most direct and violent confrontation between Washington and Tehran in modern history. Reports from the region detail fires raging across several airbases, disrupted communications, and temporary shutdowns of key logistical hubs, creating a sense of vulnerability previously thought unlikely for U.S. forces in the area.
Carlson, who has long advocated for an “America First” foreign policy that prioritizes non-interventionism, revealed that he had personally met with Trump in the days leading up to the attack to urge restraint. For Carlson, the decision to strike Tehran was not an act of strength, but a betrayal of the movement’s promise to end “forever wars.” His condemnation marks a significant turning point; by using the word “evil,” he has moved the critique from a mere policy disagreement to a moral indictment of the President’s judgment. His statements have reverberated through social media, conservative talk shows, and local political gatherings, amplifying the internal friction within the movement to a national scale.
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