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Trump Eyes Peace Breakthrough with Iran Amid Left’s Outrage

President Trump says a peace framework with Iran is within reach, and the White House is touting a potential deal that would finally end months of costly conflict and instability in the Gulf. Hardworking Americans want their sons and daughters home, and if diplomacy can secure that while keeping Iran’s nuclear capacity in check, conservatives should judge results, not reflexive media panic. The reports of progress come after intense negotiations and public warnings from the administration about unacceptable Iranian behavior.

Those reports also show the tough bargaining that went on behind closed doors: U.S. negotiators reportedly discussed the conditional release of frozen Iranian assets and other phased incentives in exchange for Tehran surrendering enriched uranium and pausing its nuclear program. The $20 billion figure being floated has the left clutching pearls and the hawks sharpening knives, but any deal will be structured, conditional, and enforceable—or it won’t survive. Negotiation is not capitulation; it is leverage turned into peace, if wielded by a president who understands deals.

On Gutfeld!, Greg Gutfeld stood where every patriotic conservative stands: behind an America-first deal that extracts real concessions and restores deterrence, not a paper promise that makes us vulnerable. He bluntly told viewers that the choice for Iran is simple — accept a durable peace on terms that neuter their nuclear ambitions or face consequences that leave no doubt about American resolve. That tough talk matters in diplomacy; weakness invites worse threats and only emboldens our enemies.

Predictably, the left and much of the mainstream media are already framing any compromise as a “surrender” and treating the prospect of reduced bloodshed like a betrayal. Cable pundits and partisan columnists prefer perpetual outrage to American security, and their reflexive denunciations reveal their priorities: scoring political points, not protecting citizens. Conservatives should call out that hypocrisy loudly and refuse to let fearmongers dictate the narrative.

At the end of the day, patriotism means putting country first — even when the deal is ugly, imperfect, or politically risky. President Trump made a career out of making hard bargains, and if this agreement ends a war, dismantles dangerous uranium stockpiles, and keeps the Strait of Hormuz open, then it serves the American people. We should demand ironclad verification, tough enforcement, and congressional oversight, but we should also stand with our commander-in-chief when he uses strength to buy peace for the nation we love.

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