Iran Is Out of Its Mind With These Absurd Demands
Iran’s so-called leaders have lost the plot. They’re standing knee-deep in the ashes of their own failed regime, and somehow they think they’re in a position to make demands. Their latest “rules” for ceasefire talks are beyond laughable—they’re downright delusional.
According to Iranian power brokers, the U.S. should shut down every single base in the Gulf, cough up bags of cash for supposed reparations, and let Iran play traffic cop in the Strait of Hormuz so they can squeeze money from ships like some two-bit mafia. They also want the world to guarantee peace rests solely in their hands, with no chance for Israel to defend itself against Tehran’s Hezbollah puppets. Oh, and just for good measure, they want every shred of sanctions wiped clean and a green light to keep building missiles.
Let’s get one thing straight: this is not strength. This is the final, pathetic squawk of a regime that’s been battered, isolated, and exposed by President Trump’s iron-fisted foreign policy. For years, weak-willed liberals babied Iran, handing them pallets of cash and begging for empty promises. Did that bring peace? Hardly. It just made Iran cockier.
Now, after having their terror generals sent packing and their military crumbling fast, Iran is scribbling out a wishlist—like the world owes them anything. Anyone with common sense knows you don’t bargain with terrorists. The notion that America should bow down and reward Iran’s extortion tactics is embarrassing. Only the most naïve globalists in D.C. and Brussels would dream of playing along with this charade.
President Trump is rewriting the rules. Instead of catering to anti-American regimes, he’s putting them in their place. The old strategy of weakness and groveling is over. Let liberals wring their hands and worry about speeches at the U.N.—true leadership means standing up to bullies and laughing them off the stage.
Isn’t it amazing how quickly bullies start begging when someone finally stands up to them? Iran should be counting its blessings, not counting up demands.
Source: Townhall
Leave a Reply