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Trump Drops Surprise Iran Update – What’s Coming NEXT…b See more

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Because we’ve seen this movie before. We know exactly how it ends.

Iran strikes. America retaliates. Iran takes a beating. Iran calls for negotiations. America negotiates. Iran uses the breathing room to regroup, rearm, and start the whole cycle over again. It’s not a foreign policy. It’s a treadmill. And the Islamic Republic has been running it successfully against every American administration since 1979.

The evidence from the most recent agreement is already damning. Despite signing a memorandum of understanding promising to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, Iran immediately began restricting passage to IRGC-approved vessels on IRGC-designated routes. Despite agreeing to halt hostilities across all fronts, Hezbollah kept launching attacks into northern Israel. The follow-up talks in Switzerland collapsed when Iranian officials and their supposed mediators disrespected the American negotiating team and signaled openly that they believed they held the upper hand.

They were right — because we gave them the upper hand the moment we sat down at the table.

There’s an old saying that Iran has never won a war but has never lost a negotiation. That asymmetry exists for one reason: America keeps negotiating when it should keep fighting. We reach for the diplomatic off-ramp the moment Iran feels enough pain to ask for one — which means Iran has learned to absorb just enough pain to trigger American restraint, then rebuild and repeat.

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