I agree with not getting involved in regime change. Unless the Ayatollah straps himself to the door of one of those deeply buried nuclear facilities, I wouldn't advocate any action against him. For exactly the same reasons you call out, that's not our fight.BDKJMU wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 1:34 pmGive (or better sell) Israel the MOABs (and/or whatever other giant bombs they need to get to the deep underground nuke facilities) and let Israel drop them. It’s their fight.GannonFan wrote: ↑Thu Jun 19, 2025 11:41 am
Diplomacy failed. It happens. Just like it happened when diplomacy failed to stop North Korea from getting the bomb during Clinton and Bush's tenures. Diplomacy failed when India and Pakistan got the bomb. We should always try diplomacy, and we should never stop trying diplomacy. But the reality is, sometimes armed conflict is necessary. What's good about this, is that this doesn't even need to rise to the level of a war. Israel, as the German chancellor said, is doing all the heavy lifting for the rest of the world. All that will be needed from us is dropping the big bombs in an airspace that Israel has already cleared for us. All we have to do is devastate the underground nuclear facilities. We don't need to engage enemy forces. We don't need to occupy a country. We don't need to overthrow a government. We just need to do our part.
For what it's worth, I see us doing this sometime this weekend. Even something as big as us flying a combat mission over Iran is something that can have less of a news impact on a Friday or Saturday night. I think Trump has been persuaded to act - to leave Iran in control of their nuclear facilities would be lunacy. Just because you hate Trump (and I don't like him in the least) doesn't mean that I can't see what's in America's interest and the interest of the world. Everyone agrees that Iran shouldn't have nuclear weapons - that's what we've been trying to accomplish via diplomacy for years, through multiple Presidents, without success. The opportunity, thanks to Israel, is upon us. To not act would be the mistake.
Just like the US shouldn’t be involved in regime change. Sure it would be preferable if the Iranian Royal family was back in charge, but the US shouldn’t have anything directly to do with getting rid of the Ayatollahs. Can’t create a power vacuum with a civil war and cause millions more Muslim refugees to flood Western Europe. The Iranian people have to get rid of the Ayatollahs. It’s their fight.
Where I disagree is that it is our fight, indeed the international communities fight, to stop Iran getting the bomb. All of this started with the IAEA declaring that Iran was in violation, significantly, of enriching material closer to a weapon. Israel didn't act until then. If diplomacy can result in those facilities being disassembled without a bomb, great. But Iran has been at this for a couple of decades and spanning 3 different Presidents at least. If they don't agree, then the bombs drop. If Israel is capable of dropping that bomb, I'm fine with giving them what they need to do that. If we have to do it (the bombs are controlled via satellite on their descent) then we do it. However we get to not having those facilities exist is fine by me.






