Dr. Rebecca Grant was blunt on Fox Report: Iran is stalling and posturing because it knows it has no viable military option against a rearmed America. That kind of straight talk from a national security analyst should reassure every patriot who remembers what a weak foreign policy looks like. The American people deserve leaders who call bluffs and prepare to act when our interests and allies are threatened.
The administration has answered words with action, sending a carrier strike group into the region to make our resolve unmistakable to Tehran’s rulers. That show of force — a necessary and long overdue return to credible deterrence — demonstrates that the era of unilateral retreat and appeasement is over. When adversaries see strength, they think twice; when we hesitate, they test us relentlessly.
Let’s not kid ourselves: Iran’s regime is on shaky ground after months of internal unrest and brutal crackdowns, and its threats are often designed for domestic consumption and to rally their allies. The West should not be swayed by Tehran’s saber-rattling or the predictable chorus demanding restraint from those who would rather avoid hard decisions. The choice facing the United States is simple — defend our interests and prevent a nuclear-armed Iran, or pay a much higher price later.
National security professionals know the options on the table are calibrated and limited; they are meant to deter, degrade, and deny Iran’s dangerous pathways, not to be reckless. Dr. Grant and other experts have laid out proportionate strikes and maritime actions as practical tools to blunt Tehran’s capacity without plunging the region into needless chaos. Conservatives who value peace through strength understand that deterrence requires capability and the willingness to use it when diplomacy fails.
Some in the international community will urge caution — and privately, many of our allies prefer quiet diplomacy to confrontation — but American leadership cannot be hostage to timidity. History proves that appeasement only emboldens dictators; responding decisively now protects our personnel, secures global energy supplies, and upholds the rules that keep small powers from being crushed by ambitions of regional hegemons. If our leaders want true partnership, they should welcome allies who stand with us when it counts, not when it’s convenient.
Patriots must demand clarity from Washington: back our commanders, fund the forces, and give them the authority to act in defense of America and her interests. Let Tehran learn the hard lesson that America will not be bullied into weakness — we will confront threats, we will protect allies, and we will preserve peace by being ready and willing to defend it. The time for equivocation is past; the time for American resolve is now.

