Carney is a coward. As are all these enlightened Liberals, especially the women. Shows how easy peasy life has become in the Western World. Meanwhile THIS Canadian fully supports ALL Persians in Iran and the full on strike against Sharia Law and the killing of the murderous Khameini and his henchman. Bless Israel and the US for having the chutzpah to correct the evil in the world.
Carney's see-saw behaviour dispenses with any reason the US would have for bothering to consult with him or keep him in the loop. But it won't harm him with the Liberal majority in Canada because they will blame whatever happens on Trump, no matter what.
As for the women who vote Liberal, no, by and large, they don't tend to care about the women in Iran. Or men in women's sports, or double mastectomies for confused minor girls, for that matter.
If they are not told to care about something, they don't. They are, as they will tell you, independent Canadian women.
Carney and strength-not a chance. He has no scruples, integrity or loyalty to anyone but himself. The horrific killing of their own people by an evil cult has been going on for 47 years and the Iranians have suffered enough, especially the women. This Canadian supports the actions taken by USA and Israel. May they succeed. And may Canadians wake up to reality about our failing country.
For decades we have been hearing that Iran was developing a nuclear bomb. The reason for the Israeli-American attack on Iran was a ruse and should not have happened. United States is not empowered to police the world to its will and Israel needs to settle down and stop their aggression. This Operation Epic Fury is reminiscent of Operation Desert Storm. Lives lost based on false pretences.
Carney initially supported the attack and killing of Khamenei, because he wanted to smoozz with Trump. That was not showing strength, merely misreading the public view. Now he is aware of the public backlash and reversing his initial statement.
I am not in favour of war, but I am also not in favour of the terror that the Iranian regime has carried out over the past 20 years. They need to be stopped.
Isreal: Major Wars/Full-Scale Invasions Involving Attacks on Other Countries' Territory
Reliable sources (e.g., Britannica, Wikipedia compilations of wars involving Israel) commonly list the following major interstate-level conflicts where Israel conducted significant offensive military operations into other countries' territories:
1956 Suez Crisis — Israel invaded Egypt's Sinai Peninsula (in coordination with Britain and France).
1967 Six-Day War — Israel launched preemptive strikes and ground offensives into Egypt, Jordan, and Syria.
1978 Operation Litani — Israel invaded southern Lebanon.
1982 Lebanon War (First Lebanon War/Operation Peace for Galilee) — Israel invaded Lebanon (reaching Beirut).
2006 Lebanon War (Second Lebanon War) — Israel conducted major airstrikes and a ground incursion into Lebanon.
2023–present Israel-Hamas War — Israel invaded the Gaza Strip (often treated separately from sovereign states, but involving large-scale operations).
2024 Israeli operations/invasion into Lebanon (against Hezbollah).
2024–present operations into Syria (including ground incursions in some reports).
This gives roughly 7–9 major cases of invasions or large-scale cross-border offensives into sovereign neighboring states (primarily Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan in 1967), depending on how Gaza is classified. The 1973 Yom Kippur War and 1948 Arab-Israeli War are typically not counted here, as they began with attacks on Israel.
Broader Operations and Airstrikes
Israel has conducted hundreds to thousands of smaller-scale cross-border actions, especially airstrikes, over the decades:
Frequent airstrikes in Lebanon (1970s–present, including against PLO/Hezbollah targets).
Strikes in Syria (especially post-2011 civil war, targeting Iranian/Hezbollah assets; hundreds reported).
The 1981 Operation Opera (raid on Iraq's Osirak nuclear reactor).
Strikes in Yemen (against Houthi targets in recent years).
Strikes in Iran (limited/direct in some reports, escalating in 2025–2026 contexts).
Operations in other locations (e.g., 1976 Entebbe raid in Uganda, though rescue-focused).
Since October 2023 alone, sources like ACLED data (cited in outlets such as Al Jazeera) report Israel responsible for tens of thousands of recorded attacks/incidents (airstrikes, shelling, etc.) across 5+ jurisdictions (Palestinian territories, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, Iran), with numbers in the 17,000–35,000+ range over 20 months in some analyses. These are not all "attacks on countries" in the conventional sense but include many discrete military actions.
Countries Involved
Israel has conducted military operations (wars, invasions, airstrikes, raids) in the territory of at least the following since 1948: Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen, Iran, and (in broader counts) others like Uganda (Entebbe). In recent years (especially 2023–2026), operations have spanned Palestinian territories, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and Iran.
America after WW2
The United States has conducted hundreds of military operations abroad since the end of World War II in 1945. There is no single, universally agreed-upon "exact number" because counts vary based on definitions:
What qualifies as a "military operation" (e.g., full-scale invasions, limited airstrikes/drone campaigns, peacekeeping deployments, covert support with special forces, naval blockades, or evacuations)?
Whether to include ongoing or repeated actions in the same country as one or multiple.
Reliable sources provide these key estimates (as of early 2026):
The Congressional Research Service (CRS) — a nonpartisan U.S. government office — documents hundreds of instances of U.S. armed forces used abroad in situations of military conflict or potential conflict from 1798 onward. Updates show at least 251 such instances from 1991 to 2022 alone, with the total since 1798 around 469 (implying roughly 200–250+ post-1945 when including Cold War-era actions). The CRS list excludes covert CIA-only operations, routine basing, mutual security pacts, or non-conflict deployments.
The Military Intervention Project (MIP) at Tufts University's Fletcher School tracks nearly 400 U.S. military interventions from 1776 to recent years, with more than 200 since 1945 and over 114 in the post-Cold War era (after 1989). Just since 2000, it counts 72 interventions.
Other compilations (e.g., academic lists, Wikipedia timelines drawing from CRS and historical records) describe U.S. involvement in military actions across 80+ countries since WWII, with some broader tallies reaching nearly 96 countries invaded or intervened in (including proxy support or airstrikes).
Major Categories and Examples of Post-WWII U.S. Military Operations
Post-1945 operations fall into eras, often tied to Cold War containment, post-Cold War humanitarian/security missions, or the "War on Terror."
Korean War (1950–1953): Large-scale UN-authorized conflict against North Korea/China; ~1.8 million U.S. troops rotated in.
Vietnam War and Southeast Asia (1950s–1975): Escalating involvement, including bombing campaigns in Cambodia/Laos; peak U.S. troop levels ~543,000.
Cold War Interventions (1940s–1980s): Regime changes/support (e.g., Iran 1953 coup, Guatemala 1954, Dominican Republic 1965 invasion, Grenada 1983 invasion), Lebanon 1958/1982–84 peacekeeping/multinational force, numerous smaller actions in Latin America/Africa/Asia.
Gulf War (1990–1991): Operation Desert Storm to expel Iraq from Kuwait; massive coalition with ~500,000+ U.S. troops.
Post-Cold War/Balkans (1990s): Somalia (1992–93), Bosnia (1995 air campaign), Kosovo (1999 NATO bombing).
War on Terror Era (2001–present):
Afghanistan (2001–2021): Invasion to oust Taliban/Al-Qaeda; longest U.S. war.
Iraq (2003–2011 main phase, plus 2014–present against ISIS): Invasion and occupation.
Drone/airstrike campaigns in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Syria, Libya (2011 NATO intervention), and others.
Ongoing counter-ISIS/terrorism ops (e.g., Operation Inherent Resolve in Iraq/Syria).
Recent/Current (2020s): Strikes in Yemen (Houthi targets), Syria/Iraq (anti-ISIS/Hezbollah-linked), limited actions in Venezuela (2026 strikes/intervention reports), Iran (2025–present escalations including nuclear site bombings), and support in Ukraine/Israel conflicts (indirect via aid/weapons).
KEY TAKEAWAYS
SCALE: The U.S. has engaged in far more overseas military actions post-WWII than any other nation, with a sharp increase post-1991 (e.g., 4x more interventions in some 25-year periods compared to the late Cold War).
Countries Involved: At least 20–30 direct combat/bombing targets since 1945 (e.g., Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, Yemen, Somalia), plus dozens more via support, coups, or limited ops (totaling 80–96 in broader counts).
Tell me what business it is of ours what Iran does. The U.S. has had hundreds of soldiers killed by getting involved in business that’s none of their business. Look at history , no one has come to attack the US or Canada, but we just can’t mind our business. It’s enough we take all these refugees, support them, that’s all we owe them, not the blood of our sons. Want to save our sons, mind our business. The U.S. butts in everyone’s business and all that’s gotten them are dead men, broken men, failed marriages, and a veteran service that doesn’t look after them. At least the U.S. doesn’t offer to kill them if they have PTSD. Love to see what welcome we would give Sudan, Russia,if they came in told us who we should have as a leader, mind you they couldn’t pick worse than our own voters did. What’s it there business no more than our business who runs the country. All these wars have accomplished is thousands of dead men in their prime, walking wounded, PTSD, drug addicts, for what so the U.S. can start trouble in a country, then swoop in and fight and die, then run away leave that country broken and the people they left lives worse, for what so some rich old man can make millions from selling weapons.people are tired of dying, and spare me the democracy. Like the democracy we had during Covid. Should another country have come in and saved us? Carney better be careful, last two leaders Trump made a deal with he’s killed
Carney is a coward. As are all these enlightened Liberals, especially the women. Shows how easy peasy life has become in the Western World. Meanwhile THIS Canadian fully supports ALL Persians in Iran and the full on strike against Sharia Law and the killing of the murderous Khameini and his henchman. Bless Israel and the US for having the chutzpah to correct the evil in the world.
Carney is a clown.
Carney's see-saw behaviour dispenses with any reason the US would have for bothering to consult with him or keep him in the loop. But it won't harm him with the Liberal majority in Canada because they will blame whatever happens on Trump, no matter what.
As for the women who vote Liberal, no, by and large, they don't tend to care about the women in Iran. Or men in women's sports, or double mastectomies for confused minor girls, for that matter.
If they are not told to care about something, they don't. They are, as they will tell you, independent Canadian women.
ahhh....the new world order......who is writing Carnage's speeches..??? He has as much punch as yesterday's orange soda.....
Carney and strength-not a chance. He has no scruples, integrity or loyalty to anyone but himself. The horrific killing of their own people by an evil cult has been going on for 47 years and the Iranians have suffered enough, especially the women. This Canadian supports the actions taken by USA and Israel. May they succeed. And may Canadians wake up to reality about our failing country.
He’s a weasel!
if the indigenous take over land titles in Vancouver or across Canada.... I hope that they will pay back taxes....
He is a windvane…
For decades we have been hearing that Iran was developing a nuclear bomb. The reason for the Israeli-American attack on Iran was a ruse and should not have happened. United States is not empowered to police the world to its will and Israel needs to settle down and stop their aggression. This Operation Epic Fury is reminiscent of Operation Desert Storm. Lives lost based on false pretences.
Carney initially supported the attack and killing of Khamenei, because he wanted to smoozz with Trump. That was not showing strength, merely misreading the public view. Now he is aware of the public backlash and reversing his initial statement.
Sorry, but I disagree.
I am not in favour of war, but I am also not in favour of the terror that the Iranian regime has carried out over the past 20 years. They need to be stopped.
Your thoughts on the terror Israel and America carries out?
Both are the world leading Terrorist Counties.
America loves endless war, death and destruction.
Heck, there political system is built on it.
Each congressional district has some sort of arms/military tie to jobs.
No congressman can say no to war.
You’ve drunk the kool aid. Not to mention having convenient amnesia when it comes to world history.
Do tell.
Isreal: Major Wars/Full-Scale Invasions Involving Attacks on Other Countries' Territory
Reliable sources (e.g., Britannica, Wikipedia compilations of wars involving Israel) commonly list the following major interstate-level conflicts where Israel conducted significant offensive military operations into other countries' territories:
1956 Suez Crisis — Israel invaded Egypt's Sinai Peninsula (in coordination with Britain and France).
1967 Six-Day War — Israel launched preemptive strikes and ground offensives into Egypt, Jordan, and Syria.
1978 Operation Litani — Israel invaded southern Lebanon.
1982 Lebanon War (First Lebanon War/Operation Peace for Galilee) — Israel invaded Lebanon (reaching Beirut).
2006 Lebanon War (Second Lebanon War) — Israel conducted major airstrikes and a ground incursion into Lebanon.
2023–present Israel-Hamas War — Israel invaded the Gaza Strip (often treated separately from sovereign states, but involving large-scale operations).
2024 Israeli operations/invasion into Lebanon (against Hezbollah).
2024–present operations into Syria (including ground incursions in some reports).
This gives roughly 7–9 major cases of invasions or large-scale cross-border offensives into sovereign neighboring states (primarily Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan in 1967), depending on how Gaza is classified. The 1973 Yom Kippur War and 1948 Arab-Israeli War are typically not counted here, as they began with attacks on Israel.
Broader Operations and Airstrikes
Israel has conducted hundreds to thousands of smaller-scale cross-border actions, especially airstrikes, over the decades:
Frequent airstrikes in Lebanon (1970s–present, including against PLO/Hezbollah targets).
Strikes in Syria (especially post-2011 civil war, targeting Iranian/Hezbollah assets; hundreds reported).
The 1981 Operation Opera (raid on Iraq's Osirak nuclear reactor).
Strikes in Yemen (against Houthi targets in recent years).
Strikes in Iran (limited/direct in some reports, escalating in 2025–2026 contexts).
Operations in other locations (e.g., 1976 Entebbe raid in Uganda, though rescue-focused).
Since October 2023 alone, sources like ACLED data (cited in outlets such as Al Jazeera) report Israel responsible for tens of thousands of recorded attacks/incidents (airstrikes, shelling, etc.) across 5+ jurisdictions (Palestinian territories, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, Iran), with numbers in the 17,000–35,000+ range over 20 months in some analyses. These are not all "attacks on countries" in the conventional sense but include many discrete military actions.
Countries Involved
Israel has conducted military operations (wars, invasions, airstrikes, raids) in the territory of at least the following since 1948: Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen, Iran, and (in broader counts) others like Uganda (Entebbe). In recent years (especially 2023–2026), operations have spanned Palestinian territories, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and Iran.
America after WW2
The United States has conducted hundreds of military operations abroad since the end of World War II in 1945. There is no single, universally agreed-upon "exact number" because counts vary based on definitions:
What qualifies as a "military operation" (e.g., full-scale invasions, limited airstrikes/drone campaigns, peacekeeping deployments, covert support with special forces, naval blockades, or evacuations)?
Whether to include ongoing or repeated actions in the same country as one or multiple.
Reliable sources provide these key estimates (as of early 2026):
The Congressional Research Service (CRS) — a nonpartisan U.S. government office — documents hundreds of instances of U.S. armed forces used abroad in situations of military conflict or potential conflict from 1798 onward. Updates show at least 251 such instances from 1991 to 2022 alone, with the total since 1798 around 469 (implying roughly 200–250+ post-1945 when including Cold War-era actions). The CRS list excludes covert CIA-only operations, routine basing, mutual security pacts, or non-conflict deployments.
The Military Intervention Project (MIP) at Tufts University's Fletcher School tracks nearly 400 U.S. military interventions from 1776 to recent years, with more than 200 since 1945 and over 114 in the post-Cold War era (after 1989). Just since 2000, it counts 72 interventions.
Other compilations (e.g., academic lists, Wikipedia timelines drawing from CRS and historical records) describe U.S. involvement in military actions across 80+ countries since WWII, with some broader tallies reaching nearly 96 countries invaded or intervened in (including proxy support or airstrikes).
Major Categories and Examples of Post-WWII U.S. Military Operations
Post-1945 operations fall into eras, often tied to Cold War containment, post-Cold War humanitarian/security missions, or the "War on Terror."
Korean War (1950–1953): Large-scale UN-authorized conflict against North Korea/China; ~1.8 million U.S. troops rotated in.
Vietnam War and Southeast Asia (1950s–1975): Escalating involvement, including bombing campaigns in Cambodia/Laos; peak U.S. troop levels ~543,000.
Cold War Interventions (1940s–1980s): Regime changes/support (e.g., Iran 1953 coup, Guatemala 1954, Dominican Republic 1965 invasion, Grenada 1983 invasion), Lebanon 1958/1982–84 peacekeeping/multinational force, numerous smaller actions in Latin America/Africa/Asia.
Gulf War (1990–1991): Operation Desert Storm to expel Iraq from Kuwait; massive coalition with ~500,000+ U.S. troops.
Post-Cold War/Balkans (1990s): Somalia (1992–93), Bosnia (1995 air campaign), Kosovo (1999 NATO bombing).
War on Terror Era (2001–present):
Afghanistan (2001–2021): Invasion to oust Taliban/Al-Qaeda; longest U.S. war.
Iraq (2003–2011 main phase, plus 2014–present against ISIS): Invasion and occupation.
Drone/airstrike campaigns in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Syria, Libya (2011 NATO intervention), and others.
Ongoing counter-ISIS/terrorism ops (e.g., Operation Inherent Resolve in Iraq/Syria).
Recent/Current (2020s): Strikes in Yemen (Houthi targets), Syria/Iraq (anti-ISIS/Hezbollah-linked), limited actions in Venezuela (2026 strikes/intervention reports), Iran (2025–present escalations including nuclear site bombings), and support in Ukraine/Israel conflicts (indirect via aid/weapons).
KEY TAKEAWAYS
SCALE: The U.S. has engaged in far more overseas military actions post-WWII than any other nation, with a sharp increase post-1991 (e.g., 4x more interventions in some 25-year periods compared to the late Cold War).
Countries Involved: At least 20–30 direct combat/bombing targets since 1945 (e.g., Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, Yemen, Somalia), plus dozens more via support, coups, or limited ops (totaling 80–96 in broader counts).
This is our Province and Carney can give away not one square inch of it 🙋♀️🇨🇦
Tell me what business it is of ours what Iran does. The U.S. has had hundreds of soldiers killed by getting involved in business that’s none of their business. Look at history , no one has come to attack the US or Canada, but we just can’t mind our business. It’s enough we take all these refugees, support them, that’s all we owe them, not the blood of our sons. Want to save our sons, mind our business. The U.S. butts in everyone’s business and all that’s gotten them are dead men, broken men, failed marriages, and a veteran service that doesn’t look after them. At least the U.S. doesn’t offer to kill them if they have PTSD. Love to see what welcome we would give Sudan, Russia,if they came in told us who we should have as a leader, mind you they couldn’t pick worse than our own voters did. What’s it there business no more than our business who runs the country. All these wars have accomplished is thousands of dead men in their prime, walking wounded, PTSD, drug addicts, for what so the U.S. can start trouble in a country, then swoop in and fight and die, then run away leave that country broken and the people they left lives worse, for what so some rich old man can make millions from selling weapons.people are tired of dying, and spare me the democracy. Like the democracy we had during Covid. Should another country have come in and saved us? Carney better be careful, last two leaders Trump made a deal with he’s killed