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Trump’s bombing of nuclear facilities could end Iran’s decades-long campaign of terror

The President bombed Iran’s three most significant nuclear sites to spare the world from an intolerable risk.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and US President Donald Trump. A nuclear Iran was a perilous threat to Israel, the nearby Arab states, and America. Picture: AFP PHOTO / IRANIAN SUPREME LEADER'S WEBSITE
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and US President Donald Trump. A nuclear Iran was a perilous threat to Israel, the nearby Arab states, and America. Picture: AFP PHOTO / IRANIAN SUPREME LEADER'S WEBSITE

President Donald Trump’s decision to strike Iran’s three most significant nuclear sites helped rid the world of a grave nuclear threat and was a large step toward restoring US deterrence. It also creates an opportunity for a more peaceful Middle East, if the nations of the region will seize it.

“Iran’s key nuclear enrichment facilities have been completely and totally obliterated,” Trump said. He made clear Iran brought this on itself. “For 40 years, Iran has been saying ‘death to America’, ‘death to Israel’. They’ve been killing our people,” he said, citing 1000 Americans killed by Iran-supplied roadside bombs and other means. A nuclear Iran was a perilous threat to Israel, the nearby Arab states, and America.

Trump gave Iran every chance to resolve this peacefully. The regime flouted his 60-day deadline to make a deal. Then Israel attacked, destroying much of the nuclear program and achieving air supremacy, and still the President gave Iran another chance to come to terms. The regime wouldn’t even abandon domestic uranium enrichment. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei wanted a bomb more than peace.

Trump gave Iran every chance to resolve this peacefully. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei wanted a bomb more than peace. Picture: AFP
Trump gave Iran every chance to resolve this peacefully. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei wanted a bomb more than peace. Picture: AFP

Military conflict is often unpredictable and the potential for Iranian retaliation can’t be dismissed, no matter how self-destructive it would be. Iran and its Iraqi proxies have threatened US regional bases with missile fire, but Trump warned that “future attacks will be far greater” if Iran goes down that road. The US has evacuated some personnel and brought military assets into the region. If the regime values self-preservation, it will give up its nuclear ambitions and stand down.

Much of the press has fixated on the idea that Trump has now joined or even started a conflict. But Iran has been waging regional and terrorist war for decades. It’s as likely that he has helped end it. Leaving Iran with a hardened nuclear enrichment facility after an Israeli military campaign would have been a recipe for maximum danger, all but asking Iran to sprint to a bomb.

The Isfahan nuclear enrichment facility in central Iran on June 14, 2025, after it was hit by Israeli strikes. Picture: AFP PHOTO / Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies
The Isfahan nuclear enrichment facility in central Iran on June 14, 2025, after it was hit by Israeli strikes. Picture: AFP PHOTO / Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies

At the same time, the Israeli campaign yielded a unrivalled strategic opportunity. Suddenly, Iran’s airspace was uncontested. Its substantial ballistic-missile program was degraded. Several of its proxies had been bludgeoned into silence. Its nuclear program had been reduced to a few key sites, one of which only US weapons could be trusted to penetrate.

The opportunity to act and the danger of standing pat may have proved decisive. We would say that they left Trump little choice, except US Presidents always have a choice, and have been known to kick the can down the road. To his credit, Trump didn’t, hitting the Fordow enrichment site as well as Natanz and Isfahan. This shows the President wanted to leave no doubt about Iran’s nuclear program and take it all down.

Good for him for meeting the moment, despite the doubts from part of his political base. The isolationists were wrong at every step leading up to Saturday, and now they are again predicting another Iraq, if not a road to World War III. Trump had to act to stop the threat in front of him to protect America, which is his first obligation as President.

“History will record that President Trump acted to deny the world’s most dangerous regime the world’s most dangerous weapons,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Saturday night. Trump thanked him and said “we worked as a team.” The Israelis, who proved their strategic value as an ally, would like to complete the mission by destroying what remains of Iran’s missile infrastructure. They deserve a green light, especially as those missiles are threatening US bases.

The chatter about TACO – “Trump always chickens out” – will now quiet down, but the more significant reassessment has to do with US foreign policy. The Obamaites of the left, and lately of the right, counselled that the world had to bow to Iranian intimidation. The best we could hope for was a flimsy deal that bribed Iran with billions and left open its path to a bomb. They were wrong.

The Wall Street Journal

Read related topics:Donald Trump

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/trumps-bombing-of-nuclear-facilities-could-end-irans-decadeslong-campaign-of-terror/news-story/0942ea4adf42f59b7de1d9afe0d64f34