Trump Claims Iran Agreement Is An Unconditional Surrender And Declares There Are No Limits To His Power
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Just when you thought the global geopolitical landscape couldn’t get any more theatrical, the White House has served up another absolute gem. The United States and Iran have officially signed a 14-point memorandum of understanding (MOU) to halt their months-long conflict and finally get the blocked Strait of Hormuz back in business.
But if you thought a bilateral document packed with mutual conditions and phased checkpoints meant a standard compromise, you clearly haven’t been paying attention to the art of the deal.
14 Points? Sounds Like Total Victory To Me
In a recent interview with The Axios Show, President Donald Trump was asked if the fresh treaty actually represented the “unconditional surrender” he demanded from Tehran earlier in the conflict. Despite the document being a mutual checklist of rules, including structured nuclear constraints and maritime security frameworks, Trump didn’t miss a beat.
“Well, it really probably is unconditional surrender,” Trump confidently claimed during the interview.
When the interviewer pushed back, asking if the dramatic military conflict showed any clear boundaries or limits to what a commander-in-chief can actually do, Trump leaned entirely into full boss mode.
“There are no limits,” Trump declared bluntly. “I haven’t learned that lesson yet. I know there are, but there are no limits. We defeated them totally militarily.”
Dropping Bombs vs. Paying Eight Bucks A Gallon For Gas
While critics on both sides of the political aisle are squinting hard at the fine print to see who blinked first, the reality is that keeping the Strait of Hormuz choked off was sending global energy markets into an absolute meltdown.
Trump admitted there was a very real, very green reason to wrap things up instead of keeping the war machine rolling. “The only way I can get tougher is if I go in there for another two or three weeks and continue to bomb the hell out of ’em,” Trump explained. But doing that would mean the strait stays locked down, warning it could cause a worldwide economic depression. And let’s face it, nobody’s stock portfolio needs that right now.
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