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Trump Just SLAMMED the War Machine

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“I want to see no nuclear weapon in Iran and we’re well on our way to making sure that happens,” Trump said just one day earlier on June 16.

He’s made it unmistakably clear that this isn’t negotiable. There is no room for compromise when it comes to the safety of the United States and its allies.

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“They can’t have a nuclear weapon. Very simple. They can’t have a nuclear weapon. We’re not going to allow that,” Trump stated firmly on June 11.

Here’s the key difference between Trump and the typical warmongers in Congress: Trump doesn’t want war—he wants strength through deterrence. Unlike career politicians like Senator Lindsey Graham, who seem to believe every crisis requires bombs and boots on the ground, Trump is showing there’s a better path.

“I want them to succeed. I want them to end up being a great country, frankly, but they can’t have a nuclear weapon,” Trump explained on May 15.

This isn’t about toppling governments or invading foreign soil. Trump is offering Iran a clear alternative: drop the nukes and choose prosperity. The decision is theirs.

“We want it to be a great country. Let it be a tremendously successful, rich country … but they can’t have a nuclear weapon,” Trump said on May 6.

This policy turns the page on decades of failed D.C. foreign adventures. It rejects regime change fantasies in favor of a sober, results-driven strategy—one that defends U.S. interests without reckless bloodshed.

The usual suspects in the swamp are already laying the groundwork for conflict. From Iraq to Libya, they’ve pushed America into one disaster after another—and they haven’t learned a thing.

The same voices now want to topple the Iranian regime, a move that could easily spiral into a multi-trillion-dollar war and endless U.S. casualties. But Trump isn’t buying it.

“I want to make a deal with Iran, I want to do something if it’s possible, but for that to happen, it must stop sponsoring terror, halt its bloody proxy wars, and permanently and verifiably cease its pursuit of nuclear weapons,” Trump said on May 14.

That’s not appeasement—it’s diplomacy backed by strength. And unlike previous administrations, Trump knows peace doesn’t come through weakness or wishful thinking.

Trump’s warnings aren’t hypothetical—they’re grounded in the grim reality of what a nuclear-armed Iran could do to the region. Especially to Israel, America’s closest ally in the Middle East.

“They can’t have a nuclear weapon. We just can’t let them have a nuclear weapon. I’ll say this. If they do have a nuclear weapon, Israel is gone. It’ll be gone,” Trump declared during his campaign.

That’s not alarmism—it’s realism. The threat is real, and Trump isn’t afraid to say what others won’t.

“Nuclear weapons are the greatest single threat to our country, but to the entire world,” Trump warned.

While others posture and flip-flop, Trump’s approach is consistent and grounded in national security—not globalist dreams of reshaping the world.

The ball is in Iran’s court. Trump has laid out a clear deal: step away from the nuclear cliff, and a future of economic growth and diplomatic engagement awaits.

“Iran can have a much brighter future — but we’ll never allow America and its allies to be threatened with terrorism or a nuclear attack. The choice is theirs to make,” Trump stated on May 13.

That’s leadership rooted in American strength—not reckless interventionism. Unlike past presidents who fumbled the Middle East with costly wars and regime overthrows, Trump is offering a future based on peace and deterrence—not destruction.

“I want Iran to be really successful, really great, really fantastic — the only thing they can’t have is a nuclear weapon,” Trump said on May 4.

Washington’s permanent war class hates this approach. Why? Because it cuts off the flow of endless war dollars and exposes the failure of their foreign policy doctrine.

The American people are done sacrificing lives and treasure for causes that don’t protect our nation. With Trump, we’re witnessing a return to the doctrine of peace through strength—a strategy that kept us safe in the Cold War and can do so again.

Trump has made it abundantly clear: Iran has a choice. Prosperity or provocation. Peace or war. But if they choose the path of nuclear weapons, they won’t be met with appeasement—they’ll be met with consequences.

And as long as Trump’s in charge, the warmongers in Washington will have to find someone else to carry their torch.

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