







We Are The Mighty profiles retired Sgt. Maj. Mike Vining through the smaller personal details behind a much larger military résumé: Vietnam EOD work, Delta Force, Operation Eagle Claw, and later life outside uniform. The article uses the “sardines he never ate” story to humanize someone usually presented as a meme or legend.
Vining served as an explosive ordnance disposal specialist in Vietnam, where he recalled multiple near-death moments, including being left behind at an abandoned Special Forces camp and helping destroy the massive “Rock Island East” enemy weapons cache in Cambodia.
The profile also connects Vining to Delta Force’s early history. A related We Are The Mighty piece says he joined Delta in 1978 as an EOD specialist under Col. Charlie Beckwith, making him one of the unit’s original members.
The article’s strategic value is not just biography. It shows how specialized technical skills, especially EOD, became central to elite special operations as missions grew more complex and politically sensitive.
Vining’s post-service life, including mountaineering, historical writing, veteran community work, and distance from his internet fame, adds a useful contrast to modern military celebrity culture. The profile suggests that some of the most consequential operators may be least interested in mythmaking.
Do stories like Vining’s help preserve serious military history, or do meme-driven portrayals risk flattening complex service into legend?
The DNC released what it called the full, unredacted 2024 election autopsy after months of criticism over keeping it private. Axios reports the report was first released by CNN and came after growing pressure on DNC chair Ken Martin.
The release may create new problems for party leadership. Axios reports the report contains errors, lacks a conclusion, and includes a disclaimer saying the DNC was not given the underlying sourcing, interviews, or supporting data for many claims.
Martin apologized and said he was releasing the report “unedited and unabridged” for transparency, while acknowledging it did not meet his standards. That shifts the issue from just 2024 strategy to whether the DNC can manage accountability without looking disorganized.
The delay itself became a trust problem. WSJ and Axios report the DNC reversed course after activists, elected officials, and internal critics pushed for transparency, arguing that withholding the report weakened confidence in party leadership.
Strategically, the autopsy fight shows Democrats are still divided over whether to prioritize unity for the 2026 midterms or publicly litigate what went wrong in 2024. Suppressing a flawed report avoided short-term embarrassment, but releasing it now may make the party look both defensive and unprepared.
Is releasing a messy autopsy better than hiding it, or does the quality of the report create a deeper credibility problem for Democratic leadership?
House Budget Chairman Jodey Arrington says the U.S. national debt has crossed $39 trillion, calling it evidence that normal congressional budgeting has failed. Treasury’s “Debt to the Penny” dataset is the official daily source for total public debt outstanding, including debt held by the public and intragovernmental holdings.
Arrington is using the debt milestone to renew support for an Article V constitutional convention focused on fiscal restraint. That is an argument for structural constraint, not just a criticism of one administration or one party.
The underlying fiscal pressure is not only the size of the debt, but the cost of financing it. Recent reporting has highlighted rising Treasury yields, which increase federal borrowing costs and make large deficits harder to absorb without higher taxes, spending cuts, inflation, or more debt issuance.
The Article V route is politically powerful but legally uncertain. The National Constitution Center notes that major questions remain about how a second national convention would be organized, whether states could limit its scope, and what role Congress would play in regulating its procedures.
Strategically, the debt milestone gives fiscal conservatives a clear rallying point, but a constitutional convention could shift the debate from budget numbers to institutional risk. The tradeoff is between forcing long-term discipline and opening a rarely used constitutional process with uncertain guardrails.
Is an Article V convention a necessary response to federal debt growth, or too risky a tool for solving a fiscal problem Congress has avoided?
United24 reports that Ukrainian military intelligence released an intercepted call claiming Russian troops suffered mass alcohol poisoning on the Orikhiv axis in Zaporizhzhia. The claim comes from Ukraine’s HUR and has not been independently verified.
The incident reportedly involved Russia’s 166th Separate Motorized Rifle Regiment, part of the 19th Motorized Rifle Division and 58th Army. Ukrainian outlets citing HUR say the unit is operating on the Zaporizhzhia front.
An intercepted conversation allegedly described 8 to 10 dead soldiers whose bodies were left at positions for five to six days without evacuation. That detail, if accurate, points not only to indiscipline but also to weak casualty recovery and poor command and control.
The strategic value of the story is psychological as much as tactical. Ukraine has an incentive to publicize non-combat Russian losses because it reinforces a narrative of low morale, poor discipline, and expendable manpower inside Russian units.
The caution is that battlefield intercepts are information-war material. Even if the poisoning occurred, the scale, cause, and unit-level impact remain difficult to verify without independent confirmation or Russian-side evidence.
Is this mainly a propaganda win for Ukraine, or does it point to deeper discipline and sustainment problems inside Russian frontline units
The Jerusalem Post, citing Axios, reports that Trump and Netanyahu had a tense call over a proposed framework to end the U.S.-Iran war and begin a month-long negotiation period. The proposal reportedly covers Iran’s nuclear program and reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
The friction appears to be strategic: Trump is trying to keep a diplomatic path open, while Netanyahu is reportedly worried that a ceasefire could freeze the conflict before Israel’s objectives against Iran are met. Axios reported that one U.S. source said Netanyahu was highly agitated after the call.
The mediation channel matters. The proposal was reportedly drafted by Qatar and Pakistan, with cooperation from Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Egypt, which suggests regional states are trying to prevent another escalation cycle that could further disrupt energy flows and Gulf security.
Trump is using pressure and diplomacy at the same time. Reuters reported that he described talks with Iran as being in their “final stages,” while warning that the U.S. could resume attacks if no deal is reached.
Strategically, the risk is alliance misalignment. If Washington prioritizes a deal to reopen Hormuz and reduce energy pressure, while Israel prioritizes continued pressure on Iran’s military and nuclear infrastructure, Tehran may try to exploit the gap between the two allies.
Is this a real diplomatic opening, or does visible U.S.-Israel disagreement make a durable Iran deal harder to enforce?
Discussion:
USA Today reports that Trump joked he could “run for prime minister in Israel” while praising Netanyahu and claiming the Israeli leader would “do whatever I want him to do” on Iran. The remark came after reports of a tense Trump-Netanyahu call over a new Iran peace proposal.
The serious issue behind the quote is U.S.-Israel alignment. Axios reported that Netanyahu was alarmed by a proposed framework that would pause hostilities and open a month-long negotiation window on Iran’s nuclear program and the Strait of Hormuz.
Trump is trying to project control over both diplomacy and Israel’s military posture. He said negotiations with Iran are in their “final stages,” while also warning that attacks could resume if talks fail.
The regional incentive is economic as much as military. Reuters reported oil prices fell about 6% after Trump’s comments on negotiations, suggesting markets are highly sensitive to whether the U.S.-Iran conflict moves toward a deal or renewed strikes.
Strategically, Trump’s comments may reassure domestic audiences that he controls escalation, but they could also create friction with Israel if Netanyahu believes Washington is prioritizing energy stability and a diplomatic off-ramp over Israel’s preferred Iran strategy.
Is Trump’s public confidence useful alliance management, or does it expose a real gap between U.S. and Israeli objectives on Iran?
The Senate voted 50 to 47 to advance a war-powers resolution that would require Trump to either get congressional authorization for the Iran war or withdraw U.S. forces. This was a procedural vote, not final passage.
Four Republicans joined most Democrats: Bill Cassidy, Rand Paul, Susan Collins, and Lisa Murkowski. John Fetterman was the only Democrat to oppose the measure, while three Republicans missed the vote.
Cassidy’s switch matters politically because he had just lost a Louisiana primary after Trump backed his opponent. He said the White House and Pentagon had left Congress “in the dark” on Operation Epic Fury, framing his vote as an oversight issue rather than opposition to stopping Iran’s nuclear program.
The legal dispute centers on the War Powers Resolution. Reuters reports the vote came after the 60-day deadline passed for Trump to either seek authorization, end the conflict, or justify a limited withdrawal extension. The White House argues a ceasefire ended “hostilities,” while critics point to continued blockades, strikes, and Iranian actions.
Strategically, the vote is unlikely to end the war by itself because the measure still faces House passage and a likely Trump veto. Its larger effect may be political: forcing lawmakers to publicly choose between deference to the president and reasserting Congress’s constitutional role over war.
Is this a meaningful check on presidential war powers, or mostly a symbolic pressure campaign unless more Republicans break with Trump?
CNN Newsource reports that Trump is facing rising pressure over gas prices, with analysts warning the national average could reach $5 per gallon in the coming weeks. The report ties the pressure to stalled U.S.-Iran talks and disruption around the Strait of Hormuz.
The fuel-price backdrop is already politically painful. EIA data showed regular gasoline at $4.50 per gallon for the week ending May 11, while AAA listed the national average at $4.533 on May 19.
Oil markets are reacting to diplomacy in real time. Reuters reported that crude prices fell after Trump said he paused a planned strike on Iran for negotiations, but Brent still traded around $111 per barrel, which suggests the market is pricing in continued supply risk.
The White House has limited tools for quick relief. Reuters reports officials have considered a federal gas-tax suspension, while a separate Reuters report says the U.S. drew a record 9.9 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, cutting stockpiles to about 374 million barrels.
Strategically, the administration is caught between two incentives: maintaining pressure on Iran and reducing visible costs for U.S. consumers. If Hormuz remains constrained, gas prices may become a domestic political constraint on foreign policy, not just an economic side effect.
Does rising gas pain make a diplomatic deal more likely, or does it increase pressure for a harder U.S. response to reopen energy flows?
CNBC reports that central banks and other foreign official institutions sold U.S. Treasuries in March, with Treasury data showing $14.9 billion in net sales of long-term U.S. securities by foreign official institutions. Treasury also reported a broader net official outflow of $11.4 billion for the month.
China’s reported Treasury holdings fell to $652.3 billion in March, down from $693.3 billion in February. Reuters says that is China’s lowest level since September 2008.
Japan also reduced its holdings, falling from $1.239 trillion in February to $1.192 trillion in March, though it remains the largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasuries. The decline suggests this is not only a China story, but part of a broader reserve-manager adjustment.
The headline should be read carefully: foreign residents still made net purchases of long-term U.S. securities overall, driven by private investors. In other words, official holders were selling, but private foreign capital was still flowing into U.S. assets.
Strategically, the risk is not an immediate “dumping” of U.S. debt, but a gradual shift in who finances U.S. borrowing. If central banks demand less Treasury exposure while deficits remain large, the U.S. may rely more on private investors who are more price-sensitive and may demand higher yields.
Is this a warning sign for U.S. fiscal credibility, or just normal reserve diversification being absorbed by private markets?
Discussion:
For ordinary people, prices often rise quickly during crises but rarely seem to fully come back down afterward. Are tariffs and supply shocks becoming permanent structural price increases for consumers rather than temporary disruptions?