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OPINION

If I Were Them… I’d Just Do What He Says

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
If I Were Them… I’d Just Do What He Says
AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

Theres a moment in every conflictevery negotiation, every standoffwhen reality becomes unavoidable. Not debated, not spun, not messaged.” Just obvious. And we are living in that moment right now.

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Step back from the punditry, the pearl-clutching, and the endless parade of experts who seem perpetually wrong about everything, and what you see unfolding is not complicated at all. Its simple. There is overwhelming strength on one side and diminishing options on the other. Which is why, if I were themhonestlyId just do what he says.

Now, I know thats not the kind of advice that wins you invitations to Georgetown cocktail parties. Its not the language of think tanks or the posture of diplomats whove built careers on sounding sophisticated while achieving very little. But it is the language of reality. And reality has a way of asserting itself whether you acknowledge it or not.

Lets talk about whats actually happened. A regime that for decades has projected power through proxies, intimidation, and carefully cultivated fear has suddenly found itself facing something it has rarely encountered: decisive, unapologetic force. Not hesitant. Not half-measured. Not bogged down in endless deliberation. Decisive.

And the results have been swift. Military capabilities have been degraded. Strategic assets have been neutralized. Regional influence has been disrupted. And perhaps most telling of all, diplomatic posture is shifting.

Heres what people often misunderstand about power: it doesnt just change what happens on the battlefield. It changes how people think. It changes how they calculate risk. It changes what they are willing to say out loudand what they are willing to concede behind closed doors.

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Right now, those calculations are being rewritten in real time. You can see it in the sudden willingness to talk. You can see it in the quiet channels opening. You can see it in the public statements that sound strongbut feel different. Less certain. Less defiant. More like positioning.

Because when you know youve lost leverage, you start looking for off-ramps. And make no mistakethats what this is. An off-ramp.

Now contrast that with the chorus we heard just days ago: Forever war.” “Quagmire.” “Another endless Middle East disaster. Weve heard it all before. The same voices. The same predictions. The same absolute certainty that America, if it acts, will inevitably fail.

And yet here we are.

Daysnot yearsinto a conflict that has already reshaped the strategic landscape. Daysnot decadesinto a moment that has forced adversaries to reconsider their entire position. Daysand already the conversation has shifted from how bad will this get? to how quickly can this end?

That doesnt happen by accident. It happens when strength is applied with clarity, when objectives are defined, and when leadership understands that half-measures dont end conflictsthey prolong them.

And thats the part that seems to confuse the critics the most. They have built an entire worldview around the idea that American power is inherently destabilizing, that it inevitably leads to chaos, and that it cannot produce order.

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But what we are witnessing right now tells a very different story.

When American power is used decisivelywhen it is not shackled by hesitation or diluted by indecisionit creates clarity. It forces choices. It brings timelines into focus. And it makes the cost of continued resistance unmistakably clear.

Which brings us back to the simplest, most obvious conclusion of all.

If you are on the receiving end of that kind of clarityif your options are narrowing by the hour, if your leverage is evaporating, and if your ability to dictate terms is gonethen what exactly are you waiting for? Pride? Optics? A better deal that isnt coming?

This is where leadershipreal leadershipreveals itself. There are moments when continuing to posture is not strength; its denial. There are moments when defiance is not courage; its recklessness. And there are moments when the smartest, most rational, most life-preserving decision you can make is the one that ends the conflictnot prolongs it.

That moment is now.

And thats why I say, without hesitation or apology, and without any need to dress it up in diplomatic language: if I were them, Id just do what he says.

Not because its politically convenient. Not because its emotionally satisfying. But because its the only path that avoids further destruction, the only path that preserves what remains, and the only path that acknowledges reality instead of fighting it.

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And for those here at home who are still clinging to the tired scripts of the pastwho are still hoping this somehow turns into the catastrophe they predictedI would simply ask: at what point do you admit you were wrong?

At what point do you recognize that strength, properly applied, doesnt trap us in endless warsit prevents them?

Because thats whats happening here. Not escalation, but resolution. Not chaos, but clarity. Not a forever war, but an ending.

And endings, as it turns out, are a lot easier to reach when one side finally recognizes the obviousand acts on it.

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