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OPINION

Completely Obliterated

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
AP Photo/Vahid Salemi

At approximately 3:17 a.m. Tehran time, the gates of hell opened—not metaphorically, but with the full weight and precision of American military might. According to sources familiar with the mission planning, President Trump ordered the deployment of six GBU-57 “bunker buster” bombs on Iran’s deeply-buried Furdow nuclear facility. And in doing so, he didn’t just decapitate the snake; he incinerated the lair it slithered from.

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This was no fluke, no accident, and certainly no spur-of-the-moment fit of fury. It was planned, methodical, and cloaked in classic Trump misdirection. Early that morning, a decoy fleet of B-2 Spirits was seen heading west—drawing the attention of Iran’s already twitchy radar. But as they strained their necks watching one direction, another set of stealth bombers glided in from the east, silent as midnight sin. It was over by the time Iran’s air defenses knew what was happening.

No boots on the ground. No regime change operations. No long, drawn-out campaign to “win hearts and minds.” Just one cold, clear, concise message: if you insist on playing nuclear chicken with civilization, the United States still knows how to end the game.

I told you he’d only need two. He dropped six. And now there is no Furdow nuclear facility. It is completely obliterated—along with decades of illicit enrichment, terror financing, and bluster disguised as strength.

Cue the howling from the Left.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez didn’t disappoint. Within hours, she was at a microphone calling for Trump’s impeachment—for what, exactly? Saving the world? Preventing nuclear war? Standing by our Israeli allies and leading the free world again?

But it won’t matter. In the hours following the strike, a CBS/YouGov flash poll showed that 74.4% of Americans supported the decision. Yes, you read that right. Nearly three in four Americans, across party lines, backed Trump’s call to flatten Iran’s most secure nuclear site.

Not that he did it because of public approval.

Donald Trump doesn’t lead by polling—he leads by principle. He acts based on what is right, not what will trend on Twitter or appease The Squad. He did this because it had to be done. The Ayatollahs have been dragging this charade out for 46 years, always betting that America didn’t have the stomach for a decisive blow.

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Well, guess what? We just delivered it.

This moment will go down in global history—mark it down. Bigger than the Berlin Wall falling. Bigger than the Abbottabad raid. For the first time in decades, the world's leading state sponsor of terror has felt real consequences. Not a sternly worded UN letter. Not “crippling sanctions” they learned to skirt. No, this was the U.S. military reminding the world that when the right Commander-in-Chief is at the helm, we don't ask for permission—we deliver results.

The Biden doctrine, such as it was, always sought consensus, multilateral buy-ins, and diplomacy by delay. And all it did was give Iran time—time to dig deeper, time to lie, and time to enrich uranium while John Kerry and Antony Blinken held candlelight vigils in Vienna.

Trump didn’t light a candle. He lit the sky.

The Ayatollahs would be wise not to retaliate. But if the last 46 years are any indication, wisdom is not exactly their strong suit. Every attempt to poke the American bear has ended poorly for the pokers—but never more decisively than this.

So now, the ball is in Tehran’s court. They can hurl threats, issue blustery statements, and chant their usual “Death to America.” But with their most secure facility now a crater, they’d be well advised to consider silence.

The critics, as always, will cry foul. The EU will hem and haw. The New York Times will find a way to blame climate change. But the people who matter—the Israeli families no longer living in fear of an Iranian bomb, the Gulf states quietly cheering from their palaces, and Americans who remember what strength looks like—they know.

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They know that peace is not preserved by appeasement. It is secured by deterrence. And deterrence only works when it’s real. Tangible. Explosive, even.

This was that kind of deterrence. And it reminded the world of something they’d started to forget: America leads best when we don’t apologize for doing what is necessary.

Mr. Trump didn’t start a war. He ended a standoff. He didn’t seek chaos. He prevented a catastrophe. And he didn’t do it for headlines or hashtags. He did it because someone finally had to.

Completely obliterated.

That’s the new status of Iran’s nuclear dream.

And thank God for the man who made the nightmare end.

Kevin McCullough is a nationally syndicated radio host and columnist at Townhall.com. Follow him on all social platforms @ThatKEVINShow.

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