President Trump just gave us a timeline, and it’s exactly what you’d expect from someone who promised to get things done without the endless nation-building exercises that defined the past two decades. Two to three weeks, he says, and the Iran operation wraps up. Mission accomplished, troops coming home, threat neutralized.

The president was clear on Tuesday about what drove this action. “I had one goal: They will have no nuclear weapon. And that goal has been attained,” he stated plainly. No meandering speeches about democracy promotion or regime change fantasies that keep us stuck in foreign quagmires for twenty years. Just a straightforward objective that matters to American security. Iran won’t have nuclear weapons. Period.

What’s striking here is the clarity of purpose. We went in with a defined mission, and now we’re finishing the job and leaving. That’s how military operations should work in a constitutional republic that values limited government. You identify the threat to national security, you eliminate it, and you don’t stick around building schools and refereeing centuries-old tribal conflicts. The contrast with previous administrations couldn’t be sharper.

Trump added that within two weeks, maybe a couple days longer, the operation concludes. He also left the door open for diplomacy, noting that a deal could happen before then. That’s the art of negotiation right there. You maintain strength, keep your options open, and let the other side know you’re serious about your red lines. It’s not complicated when you stop overthinking it.

The broader context matters here. For years we watched the Iran nuclear deal that the Obama administration championed become a masterclass in wishful thinking. We sent pallets of cash to a regime that chants “Death to America” and hoped they’d suddenly become responsible actors on the world stage. That approach treated American taxpayers like an ATM for terrorists while doing nothing to actually stop Iran’s nuclear ambitions or its destabilizing activities across the Middle East.

A strong national defense doesn’t mean perpetual war. It means defending vital American interests decisively and then getting out. The neoconservative establishment never learned this lesson, which is why we spent trillions in Iraq and Afghanistan with little to show for it except exhausted troops and a weary public. Conservatives who actually believe in limited government understand that military power exists to protect Americans, not to remake the world in our image.

There’s something refreshing about a president who talks in weeks instead of decades. Who sets a goal, achieves it, and moves on. The foreign policy blob in Washington hates this approach because it threatens their relevance. They need complexity and nuance and endless meetings to justify their existence. But most Americans just want their government to handle threats without turning every conflict into an eternal commitment.

The question now is whether Iran takes the off-ramp Trump’s offering. A deal could still happen, which would be the smart play for Tehran. They’ve lost their nuclear capability, and continuing to resist only brings more pain. But if they want to keep fighting, that’s their choice. Either way, we’re not staying indefinitely to hold their hand through whatever comes next.

This is what putting America first actually looks like in practice.

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