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As the US-Iran War Hits 100 Days, Trump Claims He Is 'Doing The World A Service'

US Iran War Highlights: Trump Calls Iran "Crazy", Says He Is "Doing The World A Service"

By Features DeskPublished 8 June 2026· 2 min read

With the Strait of Hormuz locked in a deadly standoff, diplomatic backchannels are scrambling to prevent a regional explosion.

The Strait of Hormuz—the global economy’s most critical artery—has turned into a shooting gallery. As the conflict drags into its 100th day, the latest us iran war highlights reveal an alarming escalation: US forces have shot down two more Iranian drones, following a strike on four others and coastal radar sites just hours prior. For the global energy market and countries like India, which depend heavily on stable transit through these waters, the situation is increasingly fragile.

Donald Trump calls Iran a "crazy" country, a sentiment he reiterated during a recent interview where he insisted he is doing the world a service by maintaining a hardline stance. The former president remains adamant that no sanctions will be lifted and no frozen assets released until a peace deal is secured. While he has floated aggressive ideas—including charging a toll for ships passing through the strait—his rhetoric has shifted between threats of "blowing up" the opposition and acknowledging that some of Iran's proposed 10-point ceasefire conditions might be "workable."

The Diplomatic Scramble

Behind the scenes, the desperation for a de-escalation is palpable. Pakistan has stepped into the fray, with Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi flying to Tehran to carry a message for Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei. Naqvi’s high-stakes visit, following his earlier meeting with his Iranian counterpart, Eskandar Momeni, in Bishkek, underscores the fear that this regional skirmish is spiraling beyond control.

The tactical reality on the ground is grim. CENTCOM reports that Iran has launched at least seven ballistic missiles toward Bahrain and Kuwait, turning what was once a series of indirect threats into active, cross-border exchanges. The lack of a clear exit strategy is testing the limits of international mediation, as the world watches whether these back-channel efforts from regional players can actually cool the temperature.

Why It Matters

The scale of this conflict extends far beyond a war of words between Washington and Tehran. The Strait of Hormuz is a chokepoint for global oil and gas shipments; any sustained closure or further military interference threatens to send energy prices soaring, hitting the Indian economy—which is already navigating currency volatility—hard.

What we are seeing is a fundamental breakdown of the status quo. By rejecting the diplomatic framework of previous administrations and tying the conflict to a "no new wars" campaign while simultaneously engaging in direct military skirmishes, the US approach remains a paradox. For observers, the pattern is clear: this is no longer a localized dispute. It is a high-stakes test of whether 21st-century diplomacy can hold when the parties involved are locked in a cycle of immediate, kinetic retaliation.

By Features Desk
Culture, Tech & Life

Features Desk at PoliticalPedia covers culture, tech & life for an Indian audience in English and Hindi.