Trump to Ayatollah: US 'ready' to strike Iran's nuclear sites again

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 updated on June 26, 2025

President Donald Trump just dropped a bombshell, vowing to hammer Iran’s nuclear program again if it dares rebuild, as the Washington Free Beacon reports. He declared readiness to authorize more strikes, signaling zero tolerance for Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. The message is clear: America’s back, and it’s not playing games.

Trump’s announcement follows U.S. airstrikes, which obliterated key Iranian nuclear facilities, including the Fordow mountain bunker. The strikes left Fordow’s tunnels and infrastructure buried under millions of tons of rock, rendering it a near-impossible rebuild. This was a surgical gut-punch to Iran’s nuclear dreams.

The president boasted the damage was catastrophic, claiming, “It’s gone for years.” He described Fordow as collapsed, with no way to access the wreckage due to the sheer volume of debris. Meanwhile, Iran’s been caught peddling lies about the extent of the destruction, trying to save face.

Strikes cripple Iranian ambitions

Israeli intelligence exposed Tehran’s disinformation campaign, revealing that officials spread false reports about the state of Fordow, Natanz, and Esfahan. These lies may have muddied early U.S. assessments, which briefly underestimated the strikes’ impact. Iran’s propaganda machine is working overtime, but the truth is breaking through.

A report from the Institute for Science and International Security on June 17, 2025, confirmed the U.S. and Israeli strikes “effectively destroyed” Iran’s centrifuge enrichment program. This aligns with Israeli assessments of “major, long-term damage,” with enriched uranium now trapped underground. Tehran’s nuclear clock just got reset -- hard.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio backed Trump’s narrative, calling the strikes a “complete and total obliteration.” He argued Iran’s now too crippled to negotiate from strength, a stark contrast to the days of appeasement. Rubio’s words cut through the fog of diplomatic nonsense.

Media missteps draw Trump's ire

Not everyone’s on board with the victory lap, though. CNN and the New York Times cited a preliminary Defense Intelligence Agency assessment, claiming Iran’s centrifuges were “intact” and the program only delayed by months. Trump wasn’t having it, blasting these outlets as “scum” for downplaying the military’s success.

The DIA’s assessment, based on satellite imagery and signal intelligence, was low-confidence -- a detail CNN conveniently skipped at first. Trump accused these media giants of trying to tarnish an “unbelievable victory.” The press’s rush to skepticism smells like agenda-driven reporting, not truth-seeking.

Trump didn’t hold back, saying, “CNN is scum. MSDNC is scum. The New York Times is scum.” He argued they’re demeaning the generals who executed a flawless operation, all for clicks and ratings. The media’s obsession with narratives over facts is why their credibility is in the gutter.

Global experts confirm devastation

Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, weighed in, stating Tehran’s nuclear program was “set back significantly.” He described a “night and day” difference, with Iran’s capabilities kneecapped post-strikes. Even the globalists can’t deny the operation’s impact.

Grossi’s assessment aligns with the Institute’s report and Israeli intelligence, painting a picture of a nuclear program in ruins. Iran’s centrifuges, once the backbone of its enrichment, are either destroyed or inaccessible. Tehran’s nuclear swagger is now a distant memory.

Rubio, speaking at a NATO meeting in The Hague, doubled down, saying, “They are way behind today compared to where they were just seven days ago.” He credited Trump’s decisive action for the setback. The contrast with past administrations’ dithering couldn’t be starker.

Trump’s resolve shakes Tehran

Trump’s readiness to strike again -- “Sure,” he said -- sends a chilling message to Iran’s ayatollahs. He’s not bluffing, and the collapsed Fordow bunker proves it. Tehran’s leaders must be sweating, knowing their nuclear gamble just cost them dearly.

The strikes’ success exposes the folly of Iran’s defiance and the media’s handwringing. While progressive outlets clutch pearls over “escalation,” Trump’s shown that strength, not sanctions, keeps rogue regimes in check. Iran’s nuclear threat isn’t gone, but it’s on life support.

This operation marks a return to American resolve, unshackled by woke diplomacy or media spin. Trump’s critics will nitpick, but the results speak louder than their headlines. Iran’s nuclear program is down, and America’s standing is up -- deal with it.

About Alex Tanzer

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