American flags are already being folded. Sirens still echo over Iranian cities.
And President Trump is vowing this is only the beginning.
Three U.S. troops are dead, hundreds of Iranians reportedly killed, and Washington calls it “righteous.”
Families on both sides are bracing for the next knock on the door, the next notificati… Continues…
The strikes on Iran tear open every old wound of the past half‑century: hostage crises, proxy wars, nuclear fears,
and the endless claim that this time, the bombs will somehow bring peace. In Washington, the language is familiar —
“righteous mission,” “ultimate sacrifice,” “exhaustive diplomacy” — but on the ground the reality is the same:
bodies, rubble, and a grief that doesn’t care which flag flies overhead.
For the families of the three Americans killed, Trump’s promise of “vengeance” is a cold comfort, especially as he warns
there will likely be more deaths to come. In Iran, funerals for hundreds unfold under a sky still haunted by the roar of foreign jets. Supporters
call it necessary strength; critics see a reckless leap into another generational war. History will judge the strategy.
Ordinary people will live — or die — with the cost.