by Farley Weiss March 11, 2026
The only front of the war not being won by Israel and the United States is the public-relations battle.
Some of the best arguments are not
being made in a cogent, succinct manner. The launching of the war against Iran
was done because the regime led by mullahs was producing missiles at an
astronomical clip of 100 a month and headed toward several hundred a month. And
that would mean Israel would suffer massive casualties if and when Iran was to
once again launch those missiles.
At the same time, Iran still had 460
kilograms of enriched uranium—enough for 11 nuclear bombs. It was reportedly
planning to finish manufacturing the bombs in a new facility further
underground so U.S. bombers couldn’t reach it. While Iran’s defenses were
weakened last summer in Israel’s 12-day war, the country had maintained weapons
for future use. And it made clear at the negotiating table that it had no plans
on negotiating away its nuclear or ballistic-missile programs.
It appears that the world has
forgotten the night of April 13-14, 2024, when Iran directly attacked Israel
with more than 300 drones, cruise missiles and ballistic missiles. It did this
after financing and supporting the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in southern
Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and the Oct. 8, 2024 attacks by Hezbollah in northern
Israel.
After Israel acquiesced to the Biden
administration pressure to respond tepidly to the barrage, an emboldened Iran
launched a second attack on Israel on civilian targets of about 200 missiles on
Oct. 1, 2024. Backed financially and militarily by Tehran, the Hamas and
Hezbollah attacks were efforts to further their repeated goal to destroy
Israel.
During negotiations with Iran, which
were led by U.S. special envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff and the
president’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, Iranian negotiators told the U.S.
representatives that Iran had 460 kilograms of uranium enriched at 60%, which
is a small step of one week to 10 days to 90% enrichment, which makes it usable
for a nuclear weapon. Its goal was to be able to make nuclear bombs, and
with their ballistic-missile arsenal, make it too cost-prohibitive for any
country to stop them militarily. They also made it clear to Witkoff and
Kushner what the United States did not destroy in “Operation Midnight Hammer”
last June. In short, they were not going to give up their nuclear-enriched fuel
and their pathway to a weapon via talks.
The consistent policy of every U.S.
president was that Iran—as the largest sponsor of terrorism in the world—was
not going to be allowed to have a nuclear weapon. But leader after leader
hedged. Former President Barack Obama wrongly predicted that with the money
Iran would receive from sanctions relief after making the nuclear deal he
negotiated in 2015, Iran would use it for its people, and not fund terror and
ballistic missiles.
In his first term, U.S. President
Donald Trump understood the disaster of that deal, which would have ended
nuclear enrichment restrictions by 2030. He withdrew from it in 2018 and
started a “maximum pressure” campaign on Iran. As a result, Iran’s currency
reserves plummeted.
The Biden administration eased
sanctions on Iran, despite Iran’s continuation of its enrichment of uranium,
and the financing of Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis. He went back to the
negotiating table, wasting valuable time in talks while Iran went to work on
nukes. Then came Oct. 7.
In his second term, Trump tried to
reinstate a “maximum pressure” campaign of sanctions against Iran and even
joined Israel’s 12-day war last summer. On June 21, 2025, the U.S. bombed three
of Iran’s nuclear sites, though it was obvious that Iran was not deterred in
its pursuit of a nuclear weapon. The mass rallies undertaken by its
citizens earlier this year led the government to massacre between 30,000 and
40,000 of its own people, wounding some 200,000 others.
Trump understood that there was no
possibility of a negotiated solution that would prevent Iran from obtaining
nuclear bombs. Iran had twice attempted to assassinate him. Understanding the
military situation and with the domestic uprising in Iran, the president
understood that the time was now. He realized that the only way to bring
peace was to end the main party creating war. Iran was not only exporting
terrorism but also supplying Russia with killer drones for use against Ukraine,
emboldening Russia to maintain its war.
Trump acted in a way few leaders
would. He saw vulnerability and took action to keep Iran from obtaining weapons
that could destroy any country. He ordered the military operation, along with
Israel, and the result is a greatly weakened Tehran. It is not nearly the
threat it was less than two weeks ago. The world is safer and better off as a result.
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