America has answered the lawlessness of the last decade with unmistakable force, as U.S. strategic bombers — the B-1, B-2, and B-52 — have been put into action together in the strikes on Iran, a show of long-range power our adversaries clearly needed to see. For patriots who have watched our military hobbled by political correctness and budget games, this deployment is a sober reminder that American resolve still matters and that our Air Force can deliver decisive effects when given the mission and the tools.
CENTCOM and battlefield reports underscore that this campaign has not been a token exercise; the coalition has pounded well over a thousand targets in the opening days of Operation Epic Fury as the U.S. and partners squeeze Iran’s military infrastructure. This is not theater — it is hard, effective pressure aimed at degrading ballistic missile systems and command nodes that Tehran used to threaten our allies and our troops.
At the same time, Israel demonstrated lethal precision of its own by hitting more than 80 Iranian-linked targets in an audacious air operation, proving once again that the bond between our nations is a force multiplier against rogue regimes. Americans who value allies and strength should celebrate a partner that can and will act to defend itself and strike the sources of terror and nuclear ambition.
The B-2 missions alone show the global reach of American power, with stealth bombers launching marathon flights to reach hardened underground facilities and return — a capability only the United States maintains at this scale, and one that the Biden and congressional decadence in previous years tried to put at risk. Congress and the next administration must remember this moment: fund the bomber force, equip our crews, and keep the supply lines and tanker bridges that make missions like these possible.
This campaign has also seen the battlefield evolution America needs: new low-cost one-way attack drones and a shift from long standoff shots to surgical, overhead precision enabled by air superiority, showing that gritty innovation and American industrial might are still game-changers on the modern battlefield. Our enemies should learn the hard lesson that cheating on norms and backing proxy violence will meet relentless, adaptive American power.
Let’s be blunt: the real failure over the past years was political — weak leaders at home who coddled threats and starved the military. Today our troops and pilots are writing a different chapter, and conservative Americans must back them loudly — support a robust defense budget, demand accountability from leaders who would tie our hands, and stand with the brave men and women delivering justice to those who plotted against us.

