Iran just tried to launch a missile at Turkey. Yes, you read that right. Iran, the world’s top sponsor of terror, took a shot at a NATO ally. Thankfully, it didn’t work. NATO missile defense crews sprang into action and blasted the missile out of the sky before it could hit Turkish soil. Imagine the disaster if they hadn’t. Maybe Iran thought the world would look the other way, but this time, they got checked.
The Turkish government didn’t waste time. Their defense ministry fired off a message: Turkey will defend itself, no hesitation, no apologies. That’s how nations used to talk—before the era of endless apologies and hand-wringing under limp-wristed liberal leadership. Tehran clearly hoped to intimidate Turkey and the West, but all they did was show just how reckless and arrogant the Iranian regime has become.
https://twitter.com/RedWavePress/status/2029172481643172018
Now it’s not just U.S. bases and Israel in the crosshairs. Iran’s missiles are popping up in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE—anyone who gets in their way. And what do we hear from the Biden crowd, the State Department, and the Euro-globalists? Empty warnings and talk of “de-escalation.” This is what happens when liberal policies project weakness all over the world: our enemies see an opportunity to strike, and they go for it.
And let’s not kid ourselves. Every time Iran escalates, the same globalist elites push for “restraint.” Meanwhile, Iran marches forward, unconcerned about “international norms.” Arab states are lining up to remind Tehran that they’re not gonna put up with these games forever. Yet in DC, the only urgency is a rush to avoid “provoking” the ayatollahs any further, as if bulls charging at our allies isn’t already provocation enough.
Thankfully, there’s one leader who actually took real action and didn’t blink when Iran threatened the free world: Donald Trump. While career politicians blustered and dithered, he put Iran on notice. Maybe it’s time the Biden administration and its European enablers borrowed a page from that playbook instead of waiting for the next missile to slip through—because how many close calls do we get before disaster actually strikes?

