Vice President JD Vance just wrapped up the latest round of high-stakes talks in Switzerland—and unlike the failures and endless apologizing we got under past administrations, the results actually tilt in America’s favor for once. The left may be sneering and nitpicking on cable news, but the facts are plain. The nuclear watchdogs are back in the game. The critical shipping lanes remain wide open. And, for the first time in a long time, Iran is on the clock.
Let’s be honest. Whenever the U.S. wiggles its toes overseas, the professional pessimists and globalist elite wring their hands. They say any firm line with Iran will only stoke the flames. Wrong. All it took was American backbone—real negotiation, not apologies and “flexibility”—to get real results. While Iran’s team tried their usual whining routine, Vance didn’t budge. He stuck to the deal already hammered out in last week’s memorandum and pushed for accountability.
Now, the International Atomic Energy Agency is right where it needs to be: doing its job, monitoring the regime. That’s a massive shift from the Obama era, when Iran got sweet talk and suitcases full of cash. This isn’t a blank check—there’s a 60-day countdown on. Iran can’t just string everyone along like they did with the last crew of liberal negotiators. They’re finally being forced to face the music, and the world’s watching.
The Strait of Hormuz? Still flowing and still open for business. That should have every American, and every global ally, breathing a huge sigh of relief. Instead of weak-kneed deals that let the Iranians squeeze world markets, we have firmness and clarity. That doesn’t just help America—it humbles the anti-American axis. Funny how when you stop caring about globalist approval, you get results.
The left might be fuming, but Americans get it. Strong, no-nonsense negotiation works. Imagine what could have been accomplished years ago, if our leaders put country over ideology and American workers ahead of international flattery. Maybe the real question is: Why did it take this long for someone in Washington to grow a spine?
Source: Redstate
Leave a Reply