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McCormick Demands Action: No More Weakness on Iran

Congressman Rich McCormick spoke plainly on National Report: enough with half measures — go in hard and make Iran come to the table. His warning that indecision only prolongs conflict and puts American lives and resolve at risk is the kind of clarity Washington desperately needs right now. McCormick pointed to decisive naval action in the Gulf as proof that firmness works when coupled with competence.

Patriots should welcome his embrace of strength over appeasement, because the history of American foreign policy is littered with the wreckage of timidity. McCormick rightly praised U.S. forces for precise, professional operations that disable threats without needless escalation, and those actions sent a message that talk without teeth invites more aggression. The seizure and disabling of an Iranian-flagged vessel in the Gulf of Oman underscores that words must be backed by action if we expect Tehran to negotiate in good faith.

Experts on the ground are sounding the alarm too: the IAEA has publicly warned that Tehran’s refusal to allow inspectors back into key sites cannot continue indefinitely. Director General Rafael Grossi told reporters in Davos that without access to Natanz, Fordow and Isfahan the agency cannot verify where hundreds of kilograms of highly enriched uranium are located. Any deal built on blind trust would be a betrayal of American security and our allies in the region.

Make no mistake: Iran’s strategic stall tactics — from denying inspectors to demanding preconditions and dragging its feet at the negotiating table — are not the actions of a partner for peace but of a regime trying to reshape facts on the ground. The IAEA and independent trackers report that inspector access was effectively terminated on February 28, 2026, leaving a dangerous verification gap and a stockpile that experts estimate could be used as leverage or weaponized if allowed. We cannot accept a bargain that rewards bad behavior or leaves the world guessing about Tehran’s true intentions.

That means America must pair tough diplomacy with unambiguous strength: sustain economic pressure, choke off avenues for procurement, and be prepared to strike selectively if Iran tries to cheat. McCormick’s call for decisive action reflects the common-sense view of millions of Americans who do not want future generations to inherit a world where hostile regimes get nuclear capability because we were too timid to stop them. Leaders who promise safety through slogans but abandon substance are the real danger to the Republic.

Congress and the White House must stop the bipartisan habit of hedging our bets and instead lay down clear, enforceable red lines — no enrichment, no secret stockpiles, no a la carte inspections. If Iran truly wants peace, it will accept verifiable terms; if it continues to stall, then strength must be the language we use. The choice is simple for patriotic Americans: stand for a foreign policy that protects our children, backs our troops, and forces rogue regimes to bargain honestly, or accept a world made more dangerous by our own indecision.

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