Take Retirement Easy
  • Investing
  • Stock
  • Latest News
  • Editor’s Pick
Enter Your Information Below To Receive Free Trading Ideas, Latest News And Articles.

    Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!
    Popular Topics
    • Top GOP senator says Syria ceasefire welcome but actions must match words
    • 8 Mining Companies Make Top 10 on 2026 OTCQX Best 50 List
    • Post Trump meeting, Venezuelan opposition leader says country will hold ‘free and fair’ elections ‘eventually’
    • Graham says Russia sanctions bill ‘never going back on the shelf’ after Trump backs push
    • Supreme Court prepares for major test of presidential power in Trump efforts to fire Federal Reserve governor
    • About us
    • Contacts
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Email Whitelisting
    Take Retirement Easy
    • Investing
    • Stock
    • Latest News
    • Editor’s Pick
    • Latest News

    Iran strikes could signal limits of Beijing, Moscow’s power as US flexes strength

    • January 19, 2026

    President Donald Trump is weighing whether to pull the trigger and launch strikes against Iran — a move that could potentially expose the weaknesses of both Russia and China, according to experts. 

    While Russia and China have sought to make inroads in areas of Africa and Latin America — presenting themselves as partners for infrastructure and military equipment — neither Russia nor China intervened to defend their ally Venezuela when the U.S. took action Jan. 3 to topple dictator Nicolás Maduro’s regime. 

    Potential strikes in Iran, coupled with the strikes in Venezuela to overthrow Maduro, would drive home just how formidable the U.S. is and even near-peer adversaries like Beijing can’t compete, according to experts. 

    ‘Beijing would likely respond with familiar condemnations and calls for restraint, but the deeper takeaway would be uncomfortable: China’s partnerships offer little protection when the United States decides to act,’ Craig Singleton, a senior China fellow for the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said in a statement Wednesday. ‘Venezuela made that clear regionally; Iran would underscore it globally. Chinese officials will brand Washington reckless or rogue, but privately this episode would validate long-standing Chinese views about how power is actually exercised and that the U.S. is the only country willing and able to project force across multiple theaters on short notice.’

    ‘Two complex military operations in two regions just two weeks apart would reinforce a core assessment inside China’s system: America’s military might remains unmatched, and Washington is willing to use it when it judges the risks manageable,’ Singleton said. ‘That combination commands professional respect even as it sharpens Chinese unease.’ 

    Mark Cancian, a senior advisor with the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ defense and security department, voiced similar sentiments and said that countries like Iran and Venezuela who’ve cozied up to Russia and Beijing are likely realizing the pitfalls of those ties. 

    For example, Venezuela has had long-standing ties to Russia and has purchased Russian military equipment — yet Russia was not there to safeguard Caracas from U.S. strikes or prevent the U.S. from capturing Maduro, Cancian said. Another military strike in Iran would only expose Russia and China’s limitations further, Cancian said.

    ‘I think many countries are seeing that Russia and China can’t protect them, that those alliances have severe limitations,’ Cancian told Fox News Digital Friday. 

    ‘I think that a strike on Iran would make the same point,’ Cancian said. 

    According to Cancian, the reason Moscow and Beijing can’t defend their allies and partners is because neither maintains a global military like the U.S. does. 

    ‘The United States does maintain United bases all over the world,’ Cancian said. ‘It has a Navy that deploys all over the world. The Chinese don’t have that. The Russians don’t have that. So although they have powerful militaries, they don’t have the global capability to protect allies and partners.’

    Meanwhile, Trump is still weighing whether he’ll conduct strikes on Iran again. The president told reporters Jan. 11 on Air Force One that the administration was ‘looking at some very strong options,’ and Tuesday said that all meetings with the Iranian regime were scrapped until ‘the senseless killing of protesters STOPS.’ He said that those who’ve killed anti-regime demonstrators will face consequences. 

    On Wednesday, Trump told reporters that even though ‘killing in Iran is stopping,’ he wouldn’t rule out military action and that the U.S. would ‘watch and see’ what happens. Meanwhile, Trump said Friday that he had held off on strikes for now because Iran had canceled executions for more than 800 people.

    Protests broke out across Iran in December 2025 in response to economic hardships facing the country, as well as a referendum against Iran’s theocratic regime. 

    More than 2,000 people — including at least nine children — have died in the recent protests, the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency reported Tuesday. 

    Trump authorized several major military operations in recent months, on top of the strikes in Venezuela. For example, he also signed off on strikes in Nigeria and Syria in December targeting those affiliated with the Islamic State.

    This also wouldn’t be the first time Trump has conducted strikes against Iran — should he choose to go through with them. In June, he signed off on strikes targeting Iran’s nuclear sites Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 


    This post appeared first on FOX NEWS
    Related Topics
    • Featured

    Previous Article
    • Investing

    SAGA Metals Confirms Significant High-Grade Mineralization at Trapper North Releasing Additional Assays at Radar Critical Minerals Project in Labrador

    • January 19, 2026
    View Post
    Next Article
    • Latest News

    Iran state TV hacked to show exiled Crown Prince Pahlavi

    • January 19, 2026
    View Post
    Enter Your Information Below To Receive Trading Ideas and Latest News

      Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!
      Popular Topics
      • Top GOP senator says Syria ceasefire welcome but actions must match words
      • 8 Mining Companies Make Top 10 on 2026 OTCQX Best 50 List
      • Post Trump meeting, Venezuelan opposition leader says country will hold ‘free and fair’ elections ‘eventually’
      • About us
      • Contacts
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
      • Email Whitelisting

      Input your search keywords and press Enter.