The Clock Is Ticking: America's War With Iran Enters Its Final — and Deadliest — Chapter

The Clock Is Ticking: America's War With Iran Enters Its Final — and Deadliest — Chapter

Washington is signaling the beginning of the end of its military campaign against Iran — but the final days may prove to be the most dangerous.

Standing before a podcast microphone Saturday, U.S. Vice President JD Vance delivered what sounded like a victory speech — measured, confident, and threaded with a quiet warning. The United States, he said, has knocked out the "gross majority" of its military targets in Iran. The job, for all intents and purposes, is nearly done.

But nearly isn't finished.

President Donald Trump, Vance made clear, intends to press forward just a little longer — long enough to guarantee that when American boots finally leave Iranian soil, they won't have to return. "We need to neuter them for a long, long time," Vance said bluntly, leaving little doubt about the administration's ultimate goal: permanently crippling Iran's nuclear ambitions.

A War With No Staying Power — By Design

This is not a war built for occupation. Vance was emphatic on that point. One year from now, two years from now — America will not be there. "We're taking care of business, we're going to be out of there soon," he said, in language more street corner than State Department.

For a region watching oil prices spike and tankers sit idle near the blockaded Strait of Hormuz, those words offer some relief. Vance brushed aside economic fears, calling the energy disruption "a temporary reaction to a short-term conflict." Whether markets believe him is another matter entirely.

Guns, Cameras, and Iranian Warships

While diplomats talked, U.S. Central Command let its footage do the speaking. Saturday saw the release of airstrike videos showing Iranian naval vessels being destroyed — ships that Washington says spent decades bullying commercial shipping across the region's waters. The message from CENTCOM was unmistakable: "Those days are over."

Tehran Fires Back — With Words and Missiles

Iran, however, is not going quietly.

State media outlet Tasnim News Agency carried explosive claims Saturday from an IRGC spokesperson, alleging that Iranian forces had struck two American military "hideouts" in Dubai — sites allegedly housing more than 500 U.S. personnel. The strikes, Iran claimed, inflicted "heavy casualties," with ambulances rushing through Dubai's streets for hours.

The claims remain unverified, and Western officials have offered no confirmation. But in the fog of war, the line between propaganda and reality grows thinner by the hour.

A Warning to the Neighbors

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian, meanwhile, turned his gaze toward the Gulf. His message to neighboring nations was equal parts advice and threat — stay out of this, or pay the price. "To the countries of the region," he said, "if you want development and security, don't let our enemies run the war from your lands."

It was a reminder that while this war may be nearing its final act, the tremors it sends across the Middle East are only just beginning to be felt.

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