CELEBRITY
🚨 Explosive Criticism Emerges Over Handling of Americans Abroad
A retired U.S. general appeared on CNN and directly criticized the current situation. When asked about Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s statement that U.S. strikes in Iran “won’t escalate,” Maj. Gen. Randy Manner (Ret.) expressed grave concern.
Instead of providing reassurance, Manner voiced alarm. He explained that the mission’s goals were changing quickly. What began as an effort to prevent nuclear weapons development has now shifted to regime change—and new objectives continue to be added.
“It feels like someone Googled it before the briefing,” Manner remarked, describing a strategy that’s accumulating goals indiscriminately. This is hardly a sign of strong leadership.
The underlying issue is clear: when military objectives change frequently and expand instead of narrowing, that’s how conflicts turn into long-lasting quagmires. What begins as “this won’t be Iraq” could soon escalate into something far more troubling.
What should deeply alarm every American is this: While the UK is organizing evacuations for its citizens, Americans in the region feel “abandoned,” as Manner put it. With the State Department’s budget slashed by nearly 50% over the past year, embassy staff are reportedly operating in “survival mode.”
To reiterate: with reduced budgets, overworked personnel, and Americans in a potential conflict zone with limited support or direction, the mission continues to change.
This is not strength; it’s chaos pretending to be confidence.
Manner pointed out that 99% of Americans in the region are not combat-trained—they are ordinary citizens, families, and workers who expected their government to have a clear plan. Instead, they are witnessing shifting objectives, rising rhetoric, and delayed evacuation efforts compared to allied nations.
Trump’s supporters may want you to believe this is decisive leadership, but when a retired general openly calls the strategy “disconcerting” and improvised, it’s not just political spin—it’s a warning.
Americans would be wise to listen before “this won’t be Iraq” becomes the next infamous phrase.
