The New Barbarian At The Gates Of Hell: Trump’s Iran Rhetoric And War Draw Global Outrage
· Free Press Journal

That barbarian Donald Trump’s war has removed the final veneer of American moral exceptionalism (not that there was a surfeit in the first place), revealing a grotesque Commander-in-Chief who is zero statesman and a dangerously bifurcated case study in schizophrenia.
Trump’s concern for the Iranian people is a performance of the most tedious "forked tongue". With one hand, he offers the damp embrace of a "rescuer"; with the other, he promises a mediaeval destruction that betrays a profound indifference to the 85 million souls he claims to be ushering into the light.
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Rhetoric and destruction
The mask did not so much slip as shatter on Sunday, April 5. After months spent posturing as the patron saint of Iranian "patriots", Trump took to his digital megaphone to issue an ultimatum of staggering coarseness.
"Open the F…..n' Strait, you crazy b…..ds, or you'll be living in Hell," he barked — a sentiment he punctuated with a sarcastic "Praise be to Allah." This is not the diction of a liberator; it is the yelp of a bully with a detonator.
If Trump truly harboured any affection for the welfare of Iranians, his "Operation Epic Fury" would not be defined by the blackened ruins of the Shajareh Tayyebeh Girls’ School, where a hundred children were abruptly deleted by an American missile. No one "rescues" a population by systematically targeting 90,000 homes and the Gandhi Hospital, or bombing universities.
Grim arithmetic of war
Indeed, the grim arithmetic of the last 37 days suggests an unsavoury irony: in the short time since he and Benjamin Netanyahu began their bombardment on February 28, the combined weight of their munitions has likely claimed more Iranian lives than the very regime crackdown Trump cited as his moral invitation.
By designating Tuesday as "Power Plant Day and Bridge Day", the President is announcing an intent to commit what astute international observers call "war crimes". To save a civilisation by plunging its surgeons into darkness and its infants into starvation is a psychological disconnect that borders on the pathological.
Global scepticism and criticism
The world is not fooled. From the tea-shops of Tehran to the corridors of so-called power around the world, there is a resounding lack of belief in Trump. He claims to have "sent guns to the protesters" only to complain that the Kurds ran off with them — a plot point from a particularly bad and idiotic adventure novel.
Trump’s duality is not a sophisticated "Madman Theory"; it is the erratic flailing of a man who lacks the temperament, or indeed, a rudimentary understanding of the nuclear age or West Asia’s complexities.
He does not wish to save Iran; he wishes to break it because it is reciprocating his kindness. In doing so, he has left the world to watch in horror as the "leader of the free world" adopts the vocabulary and ways of a schoolyard bully who belongs in a juvenile delinquent’s home.