The arc of President Trump’s Iran policy — from military strikes to active nuclear negotiations in less than a year — was on display during his State of the Union Address, offering a window into an approach that combines force and diplomacy in ways that can be difficult to predict from the outside.
Trump described last year’s Operation Midnight Hammer, the US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, as a necessary and successful operation that destroyed Iran’s weapons program. He said it was also a demonstration of American resolve and a warning: rebuild and face consequences.
Yet less than a year later, Trump confirmed that two rounds of nuclear negotiations are underway and that Iran wants to reach an agreement. He acknowledged this might seem contradictory but framed it as consistent — the strikes were never meant to replace diplomacy, but to create conditions under which diplomacy could succeed.
The President said the talks have not yet produced the breakthrough Washington requires. Iran has not publicly committed to never building a nuclear weapon — the foundational element Trump says any deal must include. He called this commitment the “secret words” and said no deal is possible without them.
Trump also described ongoing concerns about Iran’s missile program, its human rights record, and its support for terrorism — all of which he said complicate but do not preclude a negotiated resolution. His overall message was that the US is pursuing every available tool to prevent a nuclear-armed Iran, and that diplomacy and military pressure are complementary, not competing, approaches.
From Strike to Negotiation: The Unusual Arc of Trump’s Iran Policy
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Picture Credit: nara.getarchive.net
