GOP Donor Says Trump, Modi, Netanyahu In Close Connection On Middle East
WASHINGTON, DC– Republican donor Asha Jadeja Motwani, who attended a two-hour dinner with President Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago on the weekend alongside about 20 Republican donors, described the unfolding military action against Iran as a defining geopolitical moment that she believes will “change the destiny of the Middle East”.
“Yes, it is a historic time here in Mar-a-Lago. While we were here for something else, actually, war was declared. This is obviously going to change the destiny of the Middle East. This is not a small war,” Motwani said.
Motwani said the group also interacted with senior administration officials, including CIA Director John Ratcliffe. “The CIA had been following them (Iranian leadership) for a month,” she said, adding that “the CIA and the Mossad were already there in Iran tracking the Ayatollah.”
On the atmosphere at Mar-a-Lago, she said, “The mood is upbeat, but focused and very serious.” She acknowledged casualties in the early phase of operations. “We already have lost three people, and I think four have been injured,” she said, adding that “the administration understands the seriousness of this operation and the potential costs that we could incur.”
At the same time, she expressed confidence in the outcome. “The mood is serious, but it’s mission accomplished right now,” she said.
On the implications for India, Motwani said it was “not by accident” that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had been in Israel shortly before the strike. “My guess is that this was well orchestrated, and India and the US are in partnership to support Israel. This is how it’s going to be for the future,” she said.
She added: “Prime Minister Modi, President Trump and Netanyahu are in very close connection and alignment about where they’re headed. So, it’s a good thing for India.” However, she cautioned that “the Chabahar port might be affected, and India has invested in that”.
India has invested in Iran’s Chabahar port as part of its connectivity strategy to Afghanistan and Central Asia. (IANS)
Ajay Bhutoria
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As a Democrat committed to American security and democratic principles, I have consistently argued that the world would be significantly safer with the end of the Khamenei regime and the complete dismantling of Iran’s state-sponsored terrorism infrastructure—the true “head of the snake” fueling instability across the Middle East and beyond.
However, the path forward must adhere strictly to our constitutional framework. No president possesses the unilateral authority to initiate a regime-change military campaign of this magnitude without explicit congressional approval. This check and balance exists precisely to avert reckless escalations that could plunge our nation into prolonged, unauthorized wars.
We must recall critical history: The Obama administration negotiated a rigorous nuclear agreement that effectively constrained Iran’s nuclear ambitions. Its unilateral withdrawal under President Trump had profound and predictable consequences—elections carry weight, and abrupt policy reversals carry even greater risks.
The Iraq War remains a stark warning. It eroded public trust in our institutions, undermined America’s global credibility, inflicted immense human and financial costs, and left lasting damage to our national conscience and moral standing. Power exercised without meaningful accountability diminishes a democracy not just in resources, but in its very spirit.
We cannot afford to repeat the pattern of another open-ended “Forever War” launched without adequate planning or oversight. Further regional escalation would jeopardize global energy supplies, drive oil prices sharply higher, imperil U.S. service members and our allies throughout the Middle East, and threaten economic stability worldwide—all while bypassing essential constitutional safeguards.
Our objective should be a genuine, sustainable victory: one that decisively eliminates terrorist threats at their root without incurring these catastrophic side effects or violating our foundational laws.
I pray for the safety of our courageous men and women in uniform, for the innocent people of Iran—including families devastated by past tragedies—and for all those in the region who will endure the consequences of these events.
In a true democracy, responsibility does not rest solely with leaders; it belongs to every citizen. We must demand strategic clarity, full congressional involvement, and a comprehensive plan rather than unilateral actions that risk endless entanglement.
I stand ready to engage further on these issues as events unfold.
Ajay Bhutoria,
Fremont, CA
March 2, 2026