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Mike Waltz Is Gone After National Security Leak Shocker Will Trump Finally Purge The Swamp

Mike Waltz is out. Finally. After bungling national security with rookie mistakes and reckless leaks, the Trump administration is cleaning house at the National Security Council. Waltz, once heralded for his hawkish stance on Iran, has been shown wanting — his careless slip-up involving an encrypted chat exposed sensitive discussions to a hostile press. This isn’t just a minor blunder; it’s a clear failure of judgment that jeopardizes American interests. The White House had no choice but to act, and the removal of Waltz and his deputy Alex Wong signals a much-needed shift away from weak, amateurish leadership.

Let’s be honest. What kind of national security adviser lets a reporter infiltrate a secure communications channel? Only the kind wrapped up in political theater and globalist backroom deals. Waltz’s fate could have been sealed sooner if not for President Trump’s initial reluctance to appear pressured by media attacks. That hesitance speaks volumes about the swamp still lurking even in this administration. But better late than never. The era of soft-handed, careless national security leadership is coming to an end.

Waltz represented the hawkish camp, suspicious of Iran and opposed to the endless dance of bad-faith diplomacy we’ve seen under both Democrats and the so-called cautious pragmatists. But the administration’s plans to replace him with Steve Witkoff, a figure associated with fresh diplomatic efforts involving Iran, Russia, and Hamas, raise red flags. Under the guise of “negotiations,” the White House risks sliding back into the same appeasement fantasies that have repeatedly compromised American strength. The truth is, diplomacy isn’t a game for dealing with Tehran or its murderous proxies—it’s a weakness inviting aggression. 

 

Meanwhile, voices like Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth push for exploring diplomatic options, seemingly ignoring Iran’s long track record of duplicity and hostility. The globalist playbook is clear: offer concessions disguised as dialogue, then watch our enemies grow bolder. If the Biden administration taught us anything, it’s that trusting these regimes will only end in disaster. And yet, here we go again, possibly with a new cast of characters ready to sell out American security for a shiny deal.

It’s no wonder Waltz was gone. America needs real toughness, not fumbling diplomats who leak secrets or trade national security for political convenience. The White House needs to pick fighters, not appeasers. Waltz’s ouster is a step in the right direction—but only if it leads to a broader overhaul of the weak-willed, clueless national security elite trying to steer this country into the abyss. Will Trump’s team finally learn that true strength demands vigilance, discretion, and an unflinching stance against America’s enemies? Or will the next “reorganization” just be another episode of the swamp’s endless game?

Written by Staff Reports

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