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US strikes Iran third straight night and the costly endgame

Washington’s military arm just made something painfully clear: this is no bluff. U.S. Central Command says American forces carried out a third straight night of air strikes on Iran, aiming at Tehran’s military, drone and missile capabilities — and the message is meant to be unmistakable.

What CENTCOM says — and what that actually looks like

The military statement is spare and surgical-sounding: strikes against systems that provide Iran with drone, missile and battlefield firepower. CENTCOM frames this as degrading Iran’s ability to attack U.S. forces and partners in the region, and officials insist the missions are precise.

Precision is fine, but so is honesty about risk. Any time you hit hardened military sites, you invite retaliation. That can mean Iranian missiles, proxy squads in Iraq and Syria, or sudden attacks on commercial shipping — exactly the kind of messy, costly escalation Americans were promised they’d never be dragged into again.

Everyday consequences — not just a headline

This isn’t theater for cable news. When missiles fly and ports get nervous, insurance premiums for tankers go up, shipping reroutes, and the price at the pump follows. Ordinary families feel the ripple: higher grocery bills, longer haul times for imports, and small businesses squeezed by rising energy and transport costs.

There’s also a human cost closer to home. Thousands of service members and their families — fathers, mothers, kids — are the ones whose nights get longer and whose letters home get shorter. We can talk strategy in marble halls, but somebody is on the other end of that risk chart living it.

Blunt questions for the people in charge

Fine. You want to deter Iran. You want to protect American troops and allies. But what’s the endgame? Strikes without a clear political exit plan turn into a long shadow war that Washington pays for with blood and money. Conservative readers should ask for clarity: what are we trying to achieve, and how do we know we’ll stop once we get there?

There’s also a moral question. We demand bravery from our troops; we deserve courage and candor from our leaders. If confronting Tehran is necessary, then say so plainly — and tell the country what success looks like. If not, bring the troops home and stop extending these costly, ambiguous commitments.

We can support a strong defense and still insist on sensible strategy. So here’s the hard truth: striking Iran may feel decisive tonight, but will it make America safer tomorrow — or just make the bills for that “safety” even higher for working families?

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