On Feb. 1, 2026, State Department principal deputy spokesman Tommy Pigott told Trey Gowdy on Fox’s Sunday Night in America that President Trump’s posture toward Iran is driven squarely by the national interest, not by showy virtue-signaling or talking points from the coastal media elites. Pigott’s straight‑forward framing is the kind of clarity Americans deserve when lives and strategic interests are on the line, and it should put to rest the notion that strength equals recklessness.
That clarity lines up with the President’s public message: Iran can never be allowed to acquire a nuclear weapon, and U.S. negotiators have described recent exchanges as constructive while making clear the red lines will not be crossed. Mr. Trump has insisted diplomacy is worth pursuing when it advances America’s security, not when it props up Tehran’s tyrants.
At the same time, this Administration has shown it will back words with muscle when necessary, holding off on strikes while deploying formidable naval assets toward the Persian Gulf to deter further aggression. American strength — visible, credible, and ready — is precisely what keeps small wars from becoming regional conflagrations and protects our allies and global commerce.
Washington has also used targeted sanctions to punish the Iranian regime for its brutal crackdown on pro‑freedom protesters, making clear that tyranny will not enjoy impunity while our citizens and values are at stake. This kind of calibrated pressure is both moral and strategic; it signals to Tehran that support for oppression carries costs and that the United States stands with the brave Iranians calling for liberty.
Pigott has been explicit that some negotiations are best handled quietly and firmly, because it is not in America’s national interest to air sensitive bargaining chips for the cameras. That blend of pressure, prudent secrecy, and readiness to act is exactly how a responsible government protects American lives and preserves leverage — not the endless public appeasement the left prefers.
Patriots should applaud a policy that puts national security first, not partisan optics, and demand Congress and the press stop playing defense for Tehran. If we want peace, we must be prepared to defend it; if we want diplomacy, it must be backed by resolve. Stand with our leaders when they choose American strength and American interests over weakness and indecision.
