Monday, March 16, 2026

Why Trump Took On Iran: No One Wants Another War, But Biden Proved Appeasement Doesn't Work, Operation Epic Fury’s Goals: Neutralizing the Military Infrastructure of a Deadly Regime

Why Trump Took on Iran:
No one wants another war, but Biden proved appeasement doesn't work.
Few Americans want another war. We’re tired of wars. Especially wars in the Middle East. Unfortunately the Islamic terrorists who have been killing us for 50 years aren’t tired.
No one was more tired of war, and just plain tired, than Joe Biden. After 9/11, Biden proposed, “this would be a good time to send, no strings attached, a check for $200 million to Iran.”
In 2002, he addressed the American Iranian Council whose founder had run for the presidency of Iran. Later that year, Biden was raising big money from Iran supporters and urging that Iran be allowed to join the WTO. In 2007, Biden warned that if Bush bombed Iran, he would impeach him. A year later, he told Israelis that they would have to accept Iran’s nuclear program.
A spokesman for an Iranian student democracy group warned that Biden’s campaigns “have been financed by Islamic charities of the Iranian regime based in California.” “Biden’s political games have made him Tehran’s favorite senator,” a Washington Post op-ed noted.
By the 2020 election, Iran was openly intervening to help Biden win. And an Iran Lobby figure was secretly one of Biden’s top campaign bundlers. Once in office, Biden bent over backward to appease Iran, pleading with it for another nuclear deal and even allowing Islamic terrorists from Iran’s IRGC terror corps to enter the United States. Figures linked to Iran occupied top national security positions in the Biden administration. No one could have been better for Iran.
Did that keep Iran from attacking American soldiers?
On January 28, 2024, Iran-backed militias bombed an American military outpost killing 3 soldiers and wounding another 47. Appeasing Islamic terrorists didn’t work. It never does.
Then, despite Iran’s best efforts to help Kamala Harris win the election, its nemesis, President Donald J. Trump, returned to office.
Iran had tried to kill Trump. It tried to rig the election against him. And it failed.
But still, President Trump made every possible effort to negotiate with Iran. He sent in Steven Witkoff, the biggest appeaser in the administration, only to have the Iranians declare that they were going to go nuclear and that the United States couldn’t do anything to stop it.
“Both the Iranian negotiators said to us, directly, with, you know, no shame, that they controlled 460 kilograms of 60%, and they’re aware that that could make 11 nuclear bombs, and that was the beginning of their negotiating stance,” Witkoff told FOX News.
“Our response to the US nonsense is clear: they cannot do a damn thing in this matter,” Ayatollah Ali Khamenei had bragged in 2025. --->READ MORE HERE
Operation Epic Fury’s Goals:
Neutralizing the military infrastructure of a deadly regime.
On March 2, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine held a joint press conference at the Pentagon. They both said achieving the administration’s operational military goals would determine the conflict’s duration.
“To be clear … this is not a single overnight operation,” Caine said. “The military objectives that CENTCOM (Central Command) and the Joint Force have been tasked with will take some time to achieve, and in some cases will be difficult and gritty work.”
The Joint Force is Pentagonese for all U.S. military forces and resources — from submarines to infantry sergeants to spy satellites.
Here’s Caine’s bottom line in short form: results matter. Verified combat results that demonstrate Operation Epic Fury has achieved U.S. military and political objectives will determine the length of war, not a calendar with an arbitrary deadline.
Caine also said starting Epic Fury “marked the culmination of months, and in some cases, years of deliberate planning and refinement” against specific targets.
Hegseth, speaking before Caine gave his operational updates, addressed the strategic objectives. Hegseth said a key U.S. strategic objective is to “prevent Iran from (having) the ability to project power outside of its borders.”
In other words, the U.S. intends to eliminate the Iranian regime’s ability to threaten and terrorize everyone outside Iran’s national borders.
Hegseth listed some of the operational objectives that will achieve the strategic objective: “Destroy Iranian offensive missiles, destroy Iranian missile production, destroy their navy and other security infrastructure, and they will never have nuclear weapons. … We’re hitting them surgically, overwhelmingly and unapologetically.” --->READ MORE HERE
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