US Vice President JD Vance He has created a lot of controversy after justifying America’s military aggression in Iran. He said the Middle Eastern country has the capability to develop a nuclear suicide jacket. It appears that most netizens have completely rejected the hypothesis of a Republican Party member. In fact, some people on social media called his suggestion absurd.
JD Vance talks about nuclear suicide vest
During a recent Cabinet meeting, Vance praised the military strikes carried out by Donald Trump’s administration in Iran. He also expressed the need for America’s active intervention on this issue. In this context, he highlighted the possibility of Iran using a ‘nuclear suicide jacket’.
“You talk about people who go into a crowded supermarket and wear a vest, and they blow up the vest, and some people die, and that’s a terrible tragedy,” according to a clip shared by the vice president. spencer hakimian On X (formerly Twitter). “What happens when what’s on the vest can kill not just a few people, but many, many tens of thousands of people?”
He supported Trump’s approach to the Iranian conflict, saying, “This is the most important American national security objective that exists for any administration at any time, is you don’t want the worst people in the world to have nuclear weapons. That’s why the President is doing it.”
Despite J.D. Vance’s obvious concern about nuclear suicide vests, the public does not seem to be as enthusiastic about the matter. One user on X criticized the politician, calling him a “self-confessed liar”. Another mocked Vance’s idea by sharing an AI-generated photo of what a nuclear suicide vest might look like. The same user wrote in the caption, “I wonder what such a vest would look like. Grok proposed it for 5000 kilotons.”
A third He added, “I spoke to them and they were actually planning to hide nuclear bombs in their beards and use them in car parks.” A fourth user mocked the plausibility of Vance’s assumption, asking, “Doesn’t he know that satellites can detect these radioisotopes from the uranium in suicide vests?”
Originally reported by Apoorva Rastogi Mandatory.