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Sunday, May 3, 2026

Bessent says US 'suffocating' Iran with blockade, financial pressure

 

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Sunday that the Trump administration’s Economic Fury campaign was tightening financial and naval pressure on Iran, targeting money flows to the IRGC and offshore assets.

“I can tell you that we are suffocating the regime, and they are not able to pay their soldiers,” Bessent said on Fox News.

“This is a real economic blockade, and it is in all parts of government, all hands on deck,” he added.

Bessent said the US Navy blockade meant “no ships are getting through.”

“We have upped the pressure on anyone trying to remit money into Iran to help the IRGC,” he said.

Bessent accused the IRGC of stealing from the Iranian people and said the US had tracked down offshore assets.

“We are going to preserve those assets for the Iranian people,” he said.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202604294038

Iran sends US three-stage plan to end war - Al Jazeera

 

Iran’s latest peace proposal submitted to the United States via Pakistan aims to turn the ceasefire into an end to the war within 30 days through a three-stage plan, Al Jazeera reported, citing sources.

The proposal includes a nonaggression pledge, including from Israel, to prevent a return to war and end fighting across the Middle East, the report said.

In the first phase, the Strait of Hormuz would gradually reopen and the US blockade on Iranian ports would be lifted, while Tehran would take charge of dealing with sea mines, according to Al Jazeera.

The second phase would allow Iran to resume enrichment after a time limit at 3.6% under a “zero-storage principle,” while rejecting the dismantling of nuclear infrastructure or destruction of Iranian facilities.

The plan also calls for the United States and Israel to refrain from attacking Iran and its allies in exchange for Iran refraining from launching strikes, and includes the gradual release of frozen funds as part of sanctions relief.

In the third phase, Tehran proposed strategic dialogue with Arab neighbors and a regional security system covering the Middle East, the report said.

https://www.iranintl.com/en/liveblog/202604294038

US Is Oil Supplier of Last Resort as Hormuz Disruptions Worsen

 


The tankers have been arriving from all over the world in unprecedented numbers. After loading up in Alaska and along the US Gulf Coast, they head back out to sea — to Japan, Thailand and even as far as Australia.

All told, over the past nine weeks, more than 250 million barrels of crude from oil wells and storage tanks across the US have been shipped overseas. That’s made the country, once again, the No. 1 exporter of crude, overtaking Saudi Arabia, and turned it into a lifeline for global consumers as the near closure of the Strait of Hormuz throttles Middle Eastern supplies.

DC attorney Pirro: WH shooter is far from insane

 The United States Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro (pictured) told CNN on Sunday that the White House shooting suspect Cole Allen is "far from insane," accusing him of a premeditated murder attempt.

"He's far from insane... this is a man who has not had a psychotic break," she told the network, adding that "this was a premeditated, violent act, calculated to take down the president, and anyone who was in the line of fire."

"It was a very dangerous situation ... this thing could have been so much worse," Pirro concluded, thanking the law enforcement for their quick reaction.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/DC-attorney-Pirro:-WH-shooter-is-far-from-insane/66205140

Swalwell says his 'friends' in Congress -- Raskin, Schiff, Jeffries -- were as bad as he was

by Monica Showalter 

After Rep. Eric Swalwell's political self-immolation as a sex harasser, I had hoped that he'd go hide under some rock and not be seen nor heard from any more.

Wishful thinking.

The New York Times reported that he's still harrassing the interns

 

But it seems more significant that with no one wanting to know him anymore, he's decided to take a few of his former "friends" down with him:

Shouldn't this be investigated? Shouldn't Sen. Adam Schiff be in the witness chair in congressional hearings telling us which women he harassed, and any records of payouts to sex-harassment victims with non-disclosure agreements be revealed? Shouldn't Raskin? Shouldn't Jeffries? 

And Swalwell should be invited back to Congress by congressional leaders with a red carpet to tell all he knows.

Notice that the named culprits are all, like Swalwell, considered attack dogs for the Democrats, meaning, their leadership tolerates their sex harassment so long as they bark on cue. Maybe we could hear a little about that, too.

Here they are, in their 'friend' days, speaking their pieties:

Because the one thing we know about all four of them, and Arizona Sen. Ruben Gallegos, too, is that none of them are reasonable people in any way, but chaos agents, accused monsters in the office to the girls, and monsters outside the office, raving lunacies against President Trump, and doing tremendous damage to the republic.

Air it out. And throw them out.

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2026/05/eric_swalwell_says_his_friends_in_congress_raskin_schiff_jeffries_were_as_bad_as_he_was.html

Have We Broken Iran’s Will Yet?

 by Kenneth R. Timmerman

War is all about breaking the enemy’s will to fight.  Clearly, we haven’t yet done that in Iran.

The regime continues to thump its chest in public, threatening its neighbors, threatening us, and claiming to have won the war.  That is not the behavior of an enemy on its knees.

The regime’s latest peace “proposal” is no more than a rehash of the irredentist talking points it has been trotting out regularly for decades.  The Iranians claim sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz.  They assert their “right” to enrich uranium (and to exclude it from the negotiations).  They refuse limits on their ballistic missiles and drones and are not prepared to abandon arming proxies such as Hamas and Hezb’allah.

That’s no peace proposal.  It’s a defiant declaration of war.

But even dictators reach a breaking point, when they throw in the towel, commit suicide, or sue for peace.

Iran’s revolutionary leadership is no exception.  In June 1988, Ayatollah Khomeini “drank the chalice of poison” and ended the eight-year war with Iraq.  Why?  Many commentators believe that it was because the United States sank one third of their navy in a single day that April (Operation Praying Mantis).

That certainly played a role.  But the determining factor was Saddam’s ruthless use of chemical weapons.

It began with the devastating chemical weapons attack on the Iraqi Kurdish city of Halabja on March 17–18, 1988, to punish the city for having temporarily fallen into Iranian hands.  The Iranians sent a Revolutionary Guards video crew to film the aftermath, and those images lived on to haunt not just the Iraqi Kurdish survivors, but Iranian television viewers and regime leaders.

It continued with the final assault on Fao later that spring, when Lieutenant General Maher Rashid loaded the 200 tanks of an entire armored division onto West German transporters and shifted them from al Amarah, where the Iranians were expecting an attack, to the Fao Peninsula, some 170 miles to the south, all in a single night.

I was reporting regularly on the war at the time and will never forget the harrowing eyewitness accounts of terrified Iranian troops who fled from the lurid clouds of poison gas the Iraqis dispersed on the battlefield.  They were literally frightened out of their wits.  And Iranian television played those interviews abundantly — no doubt to buttress the political decision the ayatollah was about to announce that he was ending the war.

Don’t get me wrong.  I am not suggesting that the United States should use chemical weapons, or nuclear weapons, or any other weapon of mass destruction in Iran.  But I do think we need to strike terror in the hearts of Iran’s rulers, and that starts by striking terror in the hearts of IRGC troops.

We must make them understand that there is no way they can survive the continuation of the war.  Right now, they are pinching themselves.  Hey, Trump, that’s the best you can do?  

The president was briefed by CENTCOM commander Admiral Bradley Cooper at the White House on Thursday on his military options.  As we learned during the takedown of Maduro in Venezuela in January, the U.S. has developed weapons whose existence has not yet been revealed.  Then, it was what the president calls the “discombobulator.”  Who knows what else they might have in store?

Donald Trump has weaponized uncertainty, blowing hot and cold on negotiations, praising the “new” regime” for presenting “new” proposals, all while our military deploys new capabilities in the region.

Will the blockade continue, or will we return to war?  It will depend on the Iranian regime.  Do these people actually want to make a deal, which means meeting Trump’s terms?

I think they have no intention of actually negotiating but are just buying time.  Meanwhile, they are running out of oil storage capacity and have stopped making payroll to the troops, the bassijis, the schoolteachers and oil workers.

I do not expect the regime to implode from within.  Not yet, at least.  It will continue to fight — and fight its own people — until we make them stop.

We must break the regime’s will.  And we are nowhere near that point yet.

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/05/have_we_broken_iran_s_will_yet.html

DoJ Is Coming For Companies That Mislabel Products’ Countries Of Origin

 It is no secret that the United States spent the past few generations deviating from the path of self-sufficiency, with American corporate purchasing departments—as well as individual consumers—becoming ever more comfortable with buying cheap foreign goods instead of the domestic products that employ their neighbors.

The pendulum had to swing back eventually, and the fact that Trump understands this was a major driver in his becoming president. His follow-through came when he implemented protectionist tariffs to try to speed up a return to domestic purchasing primacy, or at least a rebalancing of the foreign supply pool, in an effort to buy less from our main global enemy, the People’s Republic of China.

But while it is true that President Trump increased numerous tariffs, the foundation for his efforts was already in place in U.S. law. We have long had requirements that manufacturers honestly report the origin of imported goods. Additionally, for well over a century, we’ve had several country-specific tariffs and other regulatory inducements and penalties for various products from various countries.

Plywood imports are an excellent example.

We produce about 8 to 10 million cubic meters of plywood in the United States each year, depending on harvests, demand, and other factors. Depending on the year-to-year strength of new home construction, remodeling, furniture, and related industries, we have an annual market for 12 to 15 million cubic meters of plywood. This means we’ll likely always import some plywood.

Plywood is a great industry for America, serving as a base for many other industries. It’s a terrific source of employment, investment, and community building.

The wood comes from renewable forests that the industry can develop and maintain. The layers of resin that bond the multiple layers of wood together are a variety of natural and synthetic options, produced by the chemical industry from petroleum, natural gas, and various other agricultural sources. And the manufacturing process, from milling wood into veneer to assembling and compressing the components, is often a source of local employment and profit in the critical rural areas forgotten by our modern, big-city culture. In many ways, plywood is a positive societal force.

Much the same could be said of many other industries. As economist Leonard Read demonstrated in his marvelous essay, “I, Pencil,” the wonderful diversity of materials, regions, talents, and other contributions to even the most basic elements of our economy is fundamental to our civilization.

But plywood, particularly, is front and center this week because of a Department of Justice (DoJ) ruling against Boise Cascade. It found that this major plywood distributor participated in a deceptive plot to import at least $30 million worth of Chinese plywood between 2019 and 2021, all of it intentionally mislabeled as Malaysian.These goods were made in China but were illegally transshipped through Malaysia to hide their true origin and evade the punitive tariffs and countervailing duties on Chinese goods.

Boise Cascade is being fined about $6.4 million for this violation and must commit to a painful compliance plan, under which the DoJ, the U.S. Bureau of Customs and Border Protection (CBP), and other agencies will monitor its purchasing programs for the foreseeable future to prevent a repeat.

Boise Cascade purchased these products—across multiple shipments and years—from an intermediary named Horizon Plywood. During the relevant times, the government maintains Boise Cascade either knew (or should have known) that the plywood was illegally sourced and marked, as U.S. law requires that importers know the sources of the materials they buy from middlemen, especially politically and environmentally sensitive products like wood (cf. The Lacey Act).

This case should be a wake-up call to all American importers as they engage in their own supply chain rebalancing.

In part, this issue contributes to the broader effort to make the United States more self-sufficient, but it’s also about more than that; it’s about reducing our country’s specific dependence on Mainland China. Every dollar we spend on Chinese goods rewards China’s moves toward global dominance.

The American business community knows (or at least, should know, since it’s nothing new) that importing and exporting privileges exist only within a framework of regulations written and enforced with an eye to national security and foreign policy, as well as the apparently narrower arena of “trade policy.” It’s not just a matter of increasing exports and decreasing imports; it’s also about strengthening our allies, increasing our industry-specific self-sufficiency, denying enemies like Beijing the harmless-looking yet dangerous footholds they seek, and standing up for the rule of law around the world.

Regarding this last one, in particular, one might assume that international trade is straightforward, but crime is rampant.

Every U.S. importer must follow the requirements of the Customs Modernization Act of 1993, summarized in the concepts of “Informed Compliance” and “Responsible Care”—which essentially requires each importer to understand and obey federal regulations, without cover to pass the buck to Customs brokers or suppliers.

Each importer must share with Customs the total dutiable value of the goods he imports, honestly declare the country of origin, and calculate and pay the correct tariffs, taxes, and fees for each order, with a record retention system that will demonstrate compliance in the event of future audits. Getting such issues wrong can start with charges of negligence and quickly escalate to convictions for fraud, as in Boise Cascade’s situation.

Boise Cascade knew its vendor, Horizon Plywood, wasn’t making the product in the United States. If they had a legal obligation to find out where Horizon was really making or acquiring it. With proper due diligence, Boise Cascade would have discovered that this was a Chinese product merely being rerouted through a Malaysian port, not Malaysian wood being manufactured into plywood in Malaysia as was claimed.

At first glance, this looks like duty avoidance. The import tariffs on Malaysian products were lower than the import tariffs on Chinese products. But it’s really more than that.

America’s country of origin regulations—which Customs and the Federal Trade Commission primary manages—also exist to benefit the American consumer. The shopper buying furniture, cabinets, or other building supplies has a right to choose what country receives his money. If a seller lies about a product’s origin, he may as well be lying about a clothing designer, violating a patent, or abusing a UL or BBB claim, all issues that matter to the consumer. The government’s role is to defend the integrity of such claims and punish violators.

The Boise Cascade penalty is significant and appropriately draws the reader’s attention, but it should serve as a warning beacon to all importers conducting searches for new suppliers, as they generally decouple from Mainland China.

Is corporate America just ordering its purchasing departments to “cut costs, reduce tariff payments, whatever it takes,” or is it properly empowering its purchasing departments to do the necessary research, that is, to check new vendors for honesty, to verify that America’s bans on slave labor are honored, and to ensure that international trade is truly fair?

Most of all, America’s business community should be joining our government in the fight for truly fair trade—opposing such Chinese practices as deceptive valuation, currency manipulation, intellectual property theft, and classification fraud.

Every company’s re-shoring program needs a focus on these matters, both to keep American purchasing efforts honest and to keep the American business community united in support of American policy, for the mutual benefit of the free world.

Image created using AI.

John F. Di Leo is a Chicagoland-based international transportation manager, trade compliance trainer, consultant, and public speaker. Read his book on the surprisingly numerous varieties of vote fraud (The Tales of Little Pavel), his biting political satires on the Biden-Harris years (Evening Soup with Basement Joe, Volumes III, and III), and his collection of essays on public policy in the 2020s, Current Events and the Issues of Our Age, all available in eBook or paperback, exclusively on Amazon.

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2026/05/the_doj_is_coming_for_companies_that_mislabel_products_countries_of_origin.html