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ווענס זאגט אז איראן באקומט גארנישט אין דעם דיעל

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Vance Obliterates Iran Deal Critics With One Word: Iran Gets 'Nothing' — But Hezbollah Gets Cut Off Cold

Vice President JD Vance delivered what may be his most devastating rebuttal yet to opponents of the Trump administration's Iran ceasefire agreement, cutting straight through the noise with a response so simple and so direct that critics are still struggling to counter it. Addressing the loudest talking point circulating among deal skeptics — that Iran stands to walk away from the agreement loaded with new benefits and renewed leverage — Vance posed the question himself and then answered it with surgical precision. What exactly does Iran get out of this deal that it didn't already have? According to the Vice President, the answer is a single, unambiguous word: nothing. No new money, no new power, no new standing on the world stage that Tehran hadn't already forfeited through years of aggression, terror sponsorship, and economic mismanagement under the crushing weight of American sanctions.

But Vance didn't stop at dismantling the critics' economic argument. He went further, making explicit something that supporters of Israel and regional stability have long demanded to hear from the White House directly — that a central, non-negotiable pillar of this entire diplomatic process is ensuring that not a single dollar flowing through the agreement finds its way into the hands of Hezbollah. For years, Iran's terror proxy network — with Hezbollah at its center — has been bankrolled by Tehran's oil revenues, frozen asset windfalls, and every sanctions loophole that weak Western diplomacy allowed to exist. Vance's statement signals that the Trump administration built this deal with those pipelines specifically in mind, and that cutting off Hezbollah's financial oxygen is not an afterthought but a core objective of the framework from day one.

For those who care deeply about Israel's security and the broader stability of the Middle East, Vance's message is exactly what they needed to hear — and it arrives with far more credibility than any promise made under the disastrous 2015 Obama nuclear agreement, which famously unlocked billions in Iranian cash that went almost immediately toward fueling Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthi terror infrastructure that plagued the region for years afterward. The Trump deal is structured differently, negotiated from a position of strength, and defended by an administration that is unambiguous about who the enemy is. Iran gets nothing it didn't already have. Hezbollah gets cut off. And America, for once, walks away from a negotiating table having given up nothing and gained everything. That is not a bad deal — that is a masterclass.

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