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When the white smoke rose above the Sistine Chapel on May 8, 2026 and Robert Prevost emerged as Pope Leo XIV, the world expected continuity, ritual, and the careful cadence of Vatican diplomacy. Instead, the world received a pontiff who stepped directly into one of the most combustible geopolitical infernos of the modern age. As missiles streak across the Middle East, as Iran rattles the saber of regional war, and as Western civilization stands at the precipice of another epoch defining conflict, Pope Leo has become an increasingly controversial figure in the moral and political struggle surrounding Iran, Israel, and the future of Christendom itself.

The Vatican has long portrayed itself as the custodian of conscience amidst the barbarity of war. Yet in recent months Pope Leo XIV has inserted himself into the Iran crisis with rhetoric that has sent shockwaves through Washington, Jerusalem, and among millions of conservative Catholics across the world. While President Donald Trump has pursued a doctrine of overwhelming strength against the Iranian regime, Pope Leo has repeatedly emphasized ceasefires, negotiations, restraint, and what he calls the moral catastrophe of escalation.  

This ideological collision between temporal power and spiritual authority has erupted into one of the most extraordinary confrontations between an American president and a sitting pope in modern history.

President Trump, who has always viewed the Iranian regime as a malignant revolutionary empire masquerading as a nation state, has made clear that the world cannot permit Tehran to obtain nuclear capability. His position is not merely political. It is civilizational. The Islamic Republic of Iran has spent decades funding terrorism, destabilizing governments, financing proxy militias, threatening Christians throughout the Middle East, and chanting for the destruction of both Israel and America. The ayatollahs are not misunderstood diplomats in flowing robes. They are ideological fanatics presiding over a theocratic fortress built upon repression, bloodshed, and anti Western hatred.

Pope Leo, however, has increasingly framed the conflict through the language of humanitarian catastrophe and spiritual suffering. In March he publicly pleaded for a ceasefire and declared that “violence can never lead to justice.” He warned that the Middle East was descending into “an irreparable abyss” and called for renewed dialogue with Tehran and other actors in the region.  

Those statements ignited immediate backlash from supporters of President Trump, who viewed the Vatican’s rhetoric as dangerously detached from geopolitical reality. The President himself reportedly exploded after Leo condemned what he called the “delusion of omnipotence” fueling the war against Iran.  

Trump responded with the blunt force vocabulary that has defined his political career. According to multiple reports, the President accused Pope Leo of being “weak on crime” and “terrible for foreign policy,” while rejecting any insinuation that confronting Iran represented reckless militarism.  

The clash escalated even further after Trump accused the pontiff of effectively enabling Iran’s nuclear ambitions, a claim the Vatican angrily denied. Pope Leo publicly reaffirmed that the Catholic Church opposes nuclear weapons entirely and insisted that dialogue is preferable to war.  

Yet many conservatives across Europe and the United States are asking an uncomfortable question. What exactly does diplomacy with Tehran accomplish after decades of deception, proxy warfare, hostage taking, and terrorism?

History teaches painful lessons about regimes animated by ideological absolutism. Neville Chamberlain believed signatures and smiles could restrain Hitler. Countless Western leaders convinced themselves that tyrannies could be managed through process, concession, and accommodation. The twentieth century became a graveyard for those illusions. Strength preserved freedom. Weakness invited catastrophe. That reality hangs over the Iran crisis like a thundercloud.

Iran is not Switzerland with minarets. It is a violent revolutionary state governed by clerics who have spent generations constructing a regional network of militancy stretching from Lebanon to Yemen. The regime survives through fear, surveillance, executions, censorship, and the manipulation of religious fervor. Even inside Iran itself, the regime has repeatedly shut down communications, crushed dissent, and brutalized protesters desperate for liberty.  

President Trump understands that reality instinctively. He views deterrence not as cruelty but as necessity. The Trump Doctrine has always operated on one central premise. Peace comes through unmistakable strength. Civilization survives when its enemies know there are consequences for aggression.

Pope Leo views the matter differently. His critics argue that his language too often resembles the abstract moralism of European elites who enjoy the luxury of geographic distance from the regimes they condemn only softly. His defenders counter that the mission of the papacy is not military strategy but the preservation of human dignity amid chaos.

But therein lies the deeper conflict. The Vatican speaks the language of universal mercy. Donald Trump speaks the language of strategic realism. One believes peace can emerge through dialogue. The other believes evil advances when strength hesitates. Neither side lacks conviction. Neither side lacks influence.

This confrontation has now spilled openly into international diplomacy. Secretary of State Marco Rubio traveled to the Vatican in an effort to repair relations between Washington and the Holy See after weeks of increasingly bitter exchanges. Vatican officials described the meetings as cordial but noticeably restrained, an extraordinary departure from the carefully polished language that usually governs Vatican diplomacy. Yet beneath the diplomatic choreography lies a deeper truth.

The world is entering an era where moral authority and political authority are colliding with increasing ferocity. The old post Cold War assumptions have collapsed. The age of polite globalism is dying. Nations are rearming. Religious identity is resurging. Civilizations are hardening into rival blocs. And somewhere in the center of this geopolitical earthquake stands an American pope confronting an American president over the future of war and peace.

For faithful Catholics, the moment is agonizing. Millions revere the papacy while simultaneously believing the Iranian regime represents one of the greatest threats to global security in the modern era. They hear Pope Leo’s calls for peace and admire the spiritual sincerity behind them. But they also understand that tyrannies are not dismantled through sentimentality.

History is rarely kind to civilizations that lose the will to defend themselves. The tragedy of this moment is that both Pope Leo and President Trump believe they are acting in defense of humanity itself. One fears the apocalypse of endless war. The other fears the apocalypse of unchecked evil. 

The stakes could not be higher because if Iran ever succeeds in obtaining nuclear weapons, the world will not remember diplomatic communiqués, Vatican appeals, or carefully crafted statements from international summits. It will remember whether the West possessed the courage to stop a revolutionary regime before the balance of civilization itself tipped into darkness.  

Part 1 made the geopolitical argument for Trump’s pardon of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez.

Part 2 examined the case the Biden Department of Justice put on.

Part 3 examined how the prosecutors lied to get the trial in front of a biased judge and an uninformed jury.

Part 4 showed how the prosecutors coached cooperators to lie about ledgers and radar that did not exist.

This is Part 5.

The Biden Department of Justice built its case against Juan Orlando Hernández on one idea: that Honduras became a narco-state while he was president.

Prosecutors said he used political influence, security forces, intelligence structures, and the authority of the presidency to protect the movement of cocaine through Honduras.

For eight years, during Hernández’s two terms as Honduras’s president, the U.S. State Department, the Department of Defense, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the U.S. Army War College had said the opposite.

The U.S. had praised him for fighting drug trafficking.

The Biden DOJ argued the eight years of praise had been the cover. That Hernández had pretended to fight drugs so he could traffic them.

The U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Damian Williams, and his prosecutors chose four convicted drug dealers in U.S. custody to testify that Hernández was the Honduran drug trafficker in chief.

All four were cooperators. All four were facing life in federal prison. Each was eligible for a § 5K1.1 cooperation letter from the prosecutors — the document that, when filed, allows a federal judge to sentence below the otherwise mandatory minimum.

Each would get back his life, or some part of his life, for testifying that Hernández — the formerly praised president — was a secret drug trafficker.

Each gave the prosecutors what the prosecutors needed.

Alexander Ardón. Former mayor of El Paraíso, Copán. Pleaded guilty to 56 murders and the trafficking of 250 tons of cocaine. Faced life plus 30 years. Served less than six years in U.S. federal custody before being released back to Honduras.

Devis Leonel Rivera Maradiaga. Former leader of Los Cachiros. Pleaded guilty to 78 murders. Faced life plus 30 years. Has been a cooperating witness in five major SDNY prosecutions over eleven years. His final sentence has not been imposed. His current custody status is not in the public record.

Luis Pérez. The pseudonym of Alexander Monroy-Murillo, a Colombian. Worked for Sinaloa Cartel leaders Joaquín “El Chapo”Guzmán and Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada. Trafficked 200,000 kilograms of cocaine from Colombia through Honduras over seven years, starting in 2008. Sentenced to 135 months. Served 6 years and 3 months — after the Department of Justice filed a motion to reduce his sentence in exchange for his cooperation.

Fabio Lobo. The son of Porfirio Pepe Lobo, Hernández’s predecessor as president of Honduras (2010 to 2014). Sentenced in September 2017 by Judge Lorna Schofield to 24 years. Four months after Judge P. Kevin Castel sentenced Hernández to 45 years, Castel granted Fabio Lobo a sentence reduction. Lobo was released after serving seven years of his 24-year sentence.

The prosecution’s case rested on the testimony of four cooperators who, between them, had been responsible for 134 murders and the trafficking of more than 700 tons of cocaine. Based on the public record, the amount of time those four cooperators have collectively served in U.S. federal prison for those crimes is approximately 19 years.

The man they testified against was sentenced to 45 years on the strength of their testimony alone.

There was nothing else.

No recording of any of the alleged meetings. No photograph. No financial record. No bank trace of the millions of dollars that allegedly changed hands. No surveillance footage. No phone records between Hernández and any of the four cooperators. No text messages. No emails. No corroborating witness — not a single person outside the four cooperators was willing to confirm any of the events they described.

The Drug Enforcement Administration had wiretaps on El Chapo Guzmán’s communications throughout 2013, when Ardón says El Chapo personally delivered $1 million to Hernández. The wiretaps captured every other significant transaction in El Chapo’s life that year. They did not capture the Hernández meeting.

Rivera Maradiaga recorded hundreds of conversations as a DEA informant from 2013 forward. He did not record a single conversation with Hernández.

Pérez claimed he gave $2.4 million to Hernández’s campaign in 2013 through intermediaries, including an unnamed official at the Port of Cortés. The official was never identified, never arrested, never charged, never produced as a witness.

Lobo’s account of cash bribes paid to Hilda Hernández was contradicted by Rivera Maradiaga’s account of the same alleged payments. The two cooperators told different stories about the same transactions. Hilda Hernández was dead and could not confirm or deny either version.

That was the case. Four men. Four stories. No corroboration. Each was hoping for the prosecutors’ § 5K1.1 letter as their only hope of getting out of prison. Each had every reason to say what the prosecutors needed.

That was the case.

Unravel the story, and the smell is the same. A story coached by the prosecutors. They wanted their man — Hernández.

Who ordered them from above in the Biden administration is hard to know.

What we do know is that the testimony was uncorroborated, that the cooperators had every reason to give the prosecutors what they wanted, and that they each got what they wanted in exchange. The federal term for that pattern, when it is proven, is subornation of perjury.

Hernández’s innocence was irrelevant.

By Frank Parlato for Art Voice – https://artvoice.com/2026/05/12/part-5-the-framing-of-honduran-president-juan-orlando-hernandez-four-witnesses-four-stories-no-corroboration-forty-five-years/

Dr. Anthony Fauci has survived the five-year deadline for possible criminal charges over his 2021 testimony denying that his agency funded risky gain-of-function research in Wuhan, China. But there still remains a chance to make sure the American Mengele does not escape justice.

Fauci told a Senate Committee in May 2021 that the National Institutes of Health did not fund gain-of-function research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. Later evidence proved that statement false, even as Fauci worked to dismiss the lab-leak theory in an attempt to save his own behind. Dr. Fauci has received multiple referrals to the Justice Department and those efforts are expected to continue.

The Justice Department is reportedly still examining other possible avenues, including contested testimony from later years, alleged use of personal email for government business, and broader pandemic-era misconduct. Fauci’s former senior adviser, David Morens, was recently indicted on conspiracy and records-related charges connected to concealing COVID origins, increasing pressure for accountability.

Complicating matters is Joe Biden’s last-minute pardon of Fauci in January 2025, which President Trump has called invalid because it was signed by autopen. It is hard to imagine a blanket pardon that was essentially written to make Dr.

Fauci and others completely above the law holding up in court. While much is talked about election fraudsters and Russia-gate conspirators being locked up, we cannot lose sight of the monsters who destroyed our lives during the COVID lockdowns. They wrecked lives, silenced dissent, and knowingly misled the public. Dr. Fauci cannot be allowed to make a mockery of justice after the crimes against humanity he committed.

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WHO IS ROGER STONE?

Roger Stone is a seasoned political operative, speaker, pundit, and New York Times Bestselling Author featured in the Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone.

Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—all of these Presidents relied on Roger Stone to secure their seat in the Oval Office. In a 45-year career in American politics, Stone has worked on over 700 campaigns for public office.

“Roger’s a good guy. He is a patriot and believes in a strong nation, and a lot of other things I believes in.”

– President Donald J. Trump
Stone’s bestselling books include The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJThe Bush Crime FamilyThe Clintons’ War on WomenThe Making of The President—How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution, and Stone’s Rules with a forward by Tucker Carlson.
For the last 15 years, Roger Stone has published his International Best & Worst Dressed List. Stone is considered an authority on political and corporate strategy, branding, marketing, messaging, and advertising.
Stone is the host of The StoneZONE on Rumble and is also the host of The Roger Stone Show on WABC Radio.

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