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SG
Not even tweets = endorsements Seeking to out the truth Non-primary voter, issue-oriented. I report everyone who dms me porn & spam.

Jun 21, 20 tweets

The JD Vance MOU, if carried through successfully, risks handing the Islamic Republic of Iran a strategic lifeline that directly undermines the expansion of the Abraham Accords.
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The likely end state is not regional stability, but a recalibration in which Iran regains economic and geopolitical breathing room and rebuilds while Gulf states grow more hesitant to align openly with Israel.
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Even under nominal compliance, Ir@n has a long track record of testing boundaries—probing how far “compliance” can be stretched while preserving its long-term strategic goals.
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That pattern was evident under the Obama-era nuclear deal and there is little reason to believe it would not repeat here. Any agreement built on incremental concessions and phased incentives creates space for ambiguity, delay tactics, and strategic deception.
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The 14-point U.S.–Iran MOU represents a fundamental shift away from the Abraham Accords’ original architecture. That framework was designed to contain Iran by building a regional alignment between Israel and key Arab states.
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Direct bilateral engagement with Iran, absent a broader coalition strategy, weakens that alignment and signals a willingness to prioritize negotiation over containment.

Iran remains a state sponsor of terrorism with an extensive network of terror proxies across the region.
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A sanctions relief structure tied to “good behavior” risks unlocking billions in resources that can be redirected—directly or indirectly—into those terror networks. At the same time, Iranian leadership continues to openly affirm great hostility toward both the United States &
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and Israel, while refusing to permanently abandon its nuclear ambitions. Allowing ba!listic missile development under the rationale of regional parity further normalizes capabilities that threaten U.S. allies.
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As terrorism scholar Max Abrahms noted, this approach appears to reverse the logic of what had been considered a major foreign policy achievement President Trump often crowed about as his greatest foreign policy achievement.
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He always said that he wanted to end the forever wars and bring peace to the Middle East. The Abraham Accords were intended to isolate Iran through normalization between Israel and Arab states; a renewed Iran deal risks undoing that containment by reintegrating Tehran...
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without fundamentally changing its behavior. It undoes the progress made during this war and would not end the regimes' goal of becoming a nuclear power.
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There are also broader geopolitical implications. If Iran emerges from this process with increased legitimacy and economic relief, it strengthens its leverage over critical chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz.
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Even indirect control or influence over that corridor has global economic consequences. At the same time, perceived U.S. willingness to sideline Israel’s security concerns raises questions among allies about American reliability and consistency.
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This dynamic fits neatly into the strategic vision of actors like Alexander Dugin, who advocate for a multipolar world in which U.S. influence is diluted and shared with powers such as Iran, China, and Russia.
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A policy that empowers Iran while weakening regional alliances risks accelerating that shift. Make no mistake, it is not America First but America Last.
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Ultimately, the expansion of the Abraham Accords depends on reducing Iran’s capacity to project power through proxies and coercion. As long as the current regime retains both ideological hostility and financial means, normalization efforts will face structural limits.
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A fundamentally different outcome in the region would require a transformation within Iran itself—one that ends its support for proxy warfare and allows its population to pursue a different political and economic future.
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This would require a secession of bargaining with the t@rrorist regime, regime change, and freeing the Persian people.
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