The Pentagon’s so-called “dynamic” bombing campaign against Iran has escalated into an all-out aerial pressure campaign, with heavier bomber deployments and sustained strikes aimed at Iran’s missile and military infrastructure. Conservative commentators like Jesse Watters are warning viewers that the biggest blows may yet be delivered as the United States leverages airpower to dismantle the regime’s ability to threaten American forces and our allies. This is exactly the kind of decisive, unapologetic use of force our enemies respect and our citizens expect when the homeland and our partners are at risk.
Our military is applying overwhelming precision and capacity to the fight — striking deep facilities and industrial nodes that allowed Iran to project chaos across the region. That kind of pressure is necessary because half-measures only invite more aggression; the job now is to remove Iran’s ability to menace shipping lanes, Israel, and American troops abroad. Patriots should stand with commanders who are using the tools Congress and American taxpayers provided to finish what months of weakness left unfinished.
The tempo of the campaign has been staggering, with analysis showing thousands of munitions expended in a matter of days and a surge in logistics to keep strike operations sustainable. Critics on the left try to turn this reality into hysteria about costs or “endless war,” but there is a crucial distinction between endless conflict and a finite, focused campaign to degrade an enemy’s war machine. If this administration is committed to victory, then expenditure and effort are the price of security — not the capitulation the other side would choose.
Senior defense officials have made clear that we are entering what they call the most decisive hours of this conflict, a moment that demands unity at home and clarity of purpose abroad. Now is not the time for the weak-kneed, pearl-clutching elites or the cable-news chorus that begs for negotiations from a position of vulnerability; it’s the time to double down on dismantling Iran’s capacity to hurt Americans or our friends. The American people can smell resolve, and resolve wins wars.
Allied and coalition operations — and the evidence of deep strikes inside Iran — show that this campaign is not symbolic; it is tailored to collapse the regime’s operational centers and its ability to rebuild. Those who accuse the administration of brinksmanship should explain what alternative would have prevented Iran’s proxies and missile networks from becoming an even greater menace to global commerce and Western security. Real leadership means finishing the fight decisively so young Americans do not have to come back for round two.
For everyday Americans watching Jesse Watters and other patriots call out the stakes, the choice is clear: support the men and women carrying the mission or let the softness of liberal policy invite another generation of threats. The media scolds and the coastal elites will wail about costs and “diplomacy,” but history rewards nations that wield strength cleanly and swiftly. If our leaders keep their nerve and equip our forces, we can end this chapter on terms that protect American lives, liberty, and the peace that comes from demonstrated strength.
