President Donald Trump issued a baffling statement after the World Baseball Classic (WBC) semifinal game on Monday night. Venezuela and Italy faced off in the WBCPresident Donald Trump issued a baffling statement after the World Baseball Classic (WBC) semifinal game on Monday night. Venezuela and Italy faced off in the WBC

'A new level of unhinged' Trump baffles with World Baseball Classic take

2026/03/17 11:41
5 min di lettura
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President Donald Trump issued a baffling statement after the World Baseball Classic (WBC) semifinal game on Monday night.

Venezuela and Italy faced off in the WBC semifinal, with Venezuela besting the Italians 4-2. After the game, Trump took to Truth Social to express his pleasure with the outcome.

"Wow! Venezuela defeated Italy tonight, 4-2, in the WBC (Baseball!) Semifinal. They are looking really great. Good things are happening to Venezuela lately!" Trump posted. "I wonder what this magic is all about? STATEHOOD, #51, ANYONE?"

Trump's comments came at a time when his administration is facing increased scrutiny for its foreign policy. Earlier this year, the Trump administration arrested Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro on gun charges and brought him to New York to face trial.

The Trump administration has also bombed multiple alleged drug boats in the Caribbean, killing more than 130 people, without providing evidence that the boats were connected to the drug trade.

Political analysts and observers shared their reactions on social media.

"Delusional," political commentator Intare Batinya posted on X. "Venezuela is a sovereign nation, not a potential 51st state. Stick to golf and leave the geopolitical magic to the experts. Annexing a country over a baseball game is a new level of unhinged."

"This guy is so obsessed with making it about him that he might show up to Miami tomorrow with Maduro in chains," writer Matt Burnell posted on X.

The U.S. and Venezuela will play in the WBC final on Tuesday.

President Donald Trump spent his weekend at Mar-a-Lago, calling world leaders and seeking assistance in reopening the Strait of Hormuz as shipping traffic halted due to his Iran war.

With U.S. oil prices spiking, Trump contacted British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, requesting warship deployment to reopen the critical oil route after earlier rejecting UK assistance offers.

Trump also reached out to Chinese leadership.

MSNOW's Jonathan Lemire reported that observers perceive Trump has painted himself into a corner with no escape, forcing him into a humiliating position. Retired Lieutenant General Mark Hertling characterized Trump's appeals as reflecting the administration's damage to international relationships, stating the president's pleading with allies and adversaries, like China, reflects efforts to push them away rather than build trust.

Hertling predicted dire circumstances ahead, while Lemire noted observers detected desperation in Trump's weekend posts, indicating the president recognizes the conflict's severity.

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President Donald Trump's recent call to charge media outlets with "treason" for covering the war in Iran negatively took a strange new turn on Monday night.

Over the weekend, Trump posted on Truth Social that media outlets that covered a story about Iran striking the USS Abraham Air Craft Carrier should be charged with "treason" for disseminating false information. Analysts were shocked by the threat initially, but new details that emerged on Monday night cast Trump's statement in an entirely new light.

CNN Senior Reporter Daniel Dale posted on X that he asked the White House for examples of the news coverage Trump referred to in the post. In response, Dale said he received three examples, and none of them were from American news outlets.

"The White House got back to me with three examples of media outlets that quoted Iran’s claim that it struck the USS Lincoln…but none of the outlets is American. One is Israeli, one Saudi, one Turkish," Dale posted on X.

Dale added that none of the stories included the AI videos Trump referred to in the post.

"The president had strongly suggested he was talking about US media when he said outlets that spread the Lincoln story should be charged with 'TREASON,'" Dale wrote.

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President Donald Trump's call for reinforcements to open the Strait of Hormuz just created the "worst of all possible worlds," according to one analyst.

On Monday, Trump made several contradictory statements about whether the U.S. needs other countries to help it open the Strait of Hormuz, which accounts of 20% of all global energy trade. The Iranian regime has effectively closed the Strait to the U.S. and Israeli ships in retaliation for the two countries' conducting a coordinated bombing campaign in Iran that began in late February.

Van Jones, a former Obama administration advisor, argued on CNN's "NewsNight" with Abby Phillip that the Trump administration's inability to deal with this problem in advance has created the "worst of all possible worlds."

"My only point is it's this kind of ready-fire-aim stuff," Jones said about the administration's strategy in Iran. "There could have been a situation where you had the economic pressure, then the protests, then the military strikes, and you might actually have regime change. Now, we have the worst of all possible worlds, and it's not clear how to get out of it."

Analysts have noted that Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is its "strongest card" against Trump, meaning the country is unlikely to bend easily on the issue. That puts Trump in an awkward position in a war that he has struggled to justify at home.

A recent Washington Post poll found that 65% of Americans don't believe Trump has adequately explained the goals of the U.S. in deciding to bomb Iran.

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