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OPINION

Precision Over Panic: Never Underestimate American Lethality

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

Americans woke up this morning to a reminder that our military isn’t merely watching the world’s villains – it is methodically, relentlessly preparing to annihilate them when the moment of decision comes.  From the Pentagon podium, Brigadier General Raisin Caine laid out the story of two quietly legendary Defense Threat Reduction Agency officers who, the very day Iran began carving the Fordow enrichment plant into a mountainside, accepted a life‑long mission: figure out how to bury it for good.  They “dreamt about it at night as they slept,” Caine said, “they thought about it driving back and forth to work”.  For fifteen years they kept the faith, speaking of it to no one, praying that when the call finally came the weapon in their heads would be steel in our arsenal.

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That weapon became the GBU‑57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator – a 30‑thousand‑pound bunker buster so specialized that only the B‑2 can haul it.  The Pentagon pushed so many PhDs into modeling and simulation for the program that, “quietly and in a secret way,” they became the biggest consumers of super‑computer hours in America.  Every test drop, every data run, every recalibrated fuse setting was devoted to a single purpose: destroy Fordow at “the time and place of our nation’s choosing.”  Think about that.  While cable‑news generals prattled about “containing” Iran, a pair of nameless engineers and a cadre of pilots, welders, coders, and munitions techs were perfecting a one‑shot coffin tailored to an enemy’s dream bunker.  That is not a “fly‑by‑day” hobby shop; it is the unforgiving, matchless lethality of the American military.

Caine’s briefing pulled back the curtain without giving away the recipe.  The Iranians, smelling trouble, poured fresh concrete caps over Fordow’s three main ventilation shafts.  Our planners knew “the specific dimensions of those concrete caps,” so Weapon One was programmed to rip them off like a manhole lid.  Weapons Two through Five followed the freshly exposed shaft at better than a thousand feet per second, cutting their own tunnel and detonating in the mission space.  A sixth “flex” round hovered in reserve, ready to replace any dud – a redundancy only the U.S. budget and brain‑trust can afford.  When the strike – Operation Midnight Hammer – came in June, the trailing pilot radioed that the blast “literally looked like daylight”.  Twelve shafts, twelve hits, no mercy.  The intelligence community – not the Air Force, Caine pointedly noted – confirmed every warhead went where it was told, functioned as designed, and left nothing to salvage but Tehran’s pride.

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Yet the most stirring moment was quieter.  After the dust settled, Caine sought out the two officers whose obsession had made it all possible.  One choked up: “My heart is so filled with pride… I am so honored to be a part of this”.  That confession, blurted in a back hallway far from lights and medals, tells you exactly why our republic prevails.  We empower ordinary Americans to become expert executioners of evil, then we let their work speak for itself.  Enemies who imagine they can hide behind rock and rhetoric should study this tableau: a free nation, unbound by empire yet willing to spend a decade and a fortune so that one phone call from the Commander‑in‑Chief ends in a sunrise blooming inside a mountain.

The political class will haggle over budgets tomorrow, but today’s lesson is simpler.  When President Trump warned, “We have weaponry nobody has ever heard of, and they are the most powerful weapons in the world,” skeptics scoffed.  They will scoff quieter now.  Fordow was once the ace in Iran’s nuclear deck; today it is a cautionary tale, a smoking diagram in a Pentagon briefing room.  Somewhere else, another pair of no‑name patriots is already pulling night shifts on the next impossible target, because that is what American power does.  It listens to tyrants boast about fortified redoubts – and then writes a 30‑thousand‑pound rebuttal in forged steel and righteous fury.  Let the mullahs, the mandarins, and the commissars hear General Caine’s calm verdict and tremble: the United States doesn’t just plan to win; it engineers your defeat, calibrates the fuse, and waits patiently for the order.  That order came for Fordow, and the mountain blinked in daylight.  The world’s greatest fighting force has spoken, and its enemies are on notice.  God bless those who make sure America’s hammer falls exactly where it must, exactly when we choose.

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