Trump Just BROKE Iran?! 7 Signs Tehran Already Caved And The Media Missed It

Jun 13, 2026‱Channel
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Published1 month ago
Duration13:34
Video IDTmjcRXtGGLw
Languageen-US
CategoryEntertainment
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video

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Views3.7K
Likes559
Comments61
Engagement Rate16.69%
Likes per 100 views15.05
Comments per 1K views16.42

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🔮 Get Access to This Technology 🔮 âžĄïž http://myredlight.com đŸŽŸïž NNN25 for single items, NNN30 for bundles 💳 Payment plans available | 3-year warranty | Full return policy Trump just changed the Iran game, and the media still has not caught up. Something major shifted in President Trump’s Iran strategy, and if you listen closely to the language coming from the White House, this is no longer being framed like a tentative diplomatic exercise. This sounds like an administration that believes the hardest part is already over. In this episode, we break down why Trump is speaking with unusual confidence about a potential Iran deal, why Vice President JD Vance is forcefully rejecting media spin and anonymous leak narratives, and why the financial markets may already be signaling that Tehran’s leverage is collapsing. For months, the political class treated the Iran talks like every other slow-moving foreign policy drama, full of vague statements, trial balloons, and carefully hedged optimism. But now President Trump is saying outright that Iran wants the deal more than he does, and he is making clear that the United States will not accept an Iran with a nuclear weapon. That is the key difference. This is not the language of a White House searching for an opening. It is the language of an America First administration that believes it has already forced the central concession and is now focused on enforcement, compliance, and making sure Tehran has no room to cheat. That is why the media reaction looks so frantic. Corporate news outlets want this framed as just another rumor, another possible framework, another diplomatic maybe. But the signals around this story suggest something deeper is happening. Oil prices moving lower, the stock market reacting positively, and growing expectations that regional risk could be coming off the table all point to the same possibility: serious investors may be pricing in a Trump foreign policy win. Markets do not move because of cable chatter alone. They move when risk calculations change, when sanctions expectations become clearer, and when the odds improve that conflict in the Middle East might be contained through strength instead of endless weakness. This video also digs into the leak war surrounding the Trump Iran negotiations. JD Vance pushed back hard on reports suggesting cash giveaways or secret surrender terms, and that matters. When governments start battling over leaked details, it often means the real fight is no longer about whether talks exist but about who gets blamed, who gets credit, and how the final terms are presented to the public. Iran’s public denials may actually be one of the strongest signs that the regime is under pressure. Tehran does not act defiant like this when it feels fully in control. It acts this way when it is trying to save face while the ground shifts underneath it. From a conservative perspective, this is the heart of the story. Trump’s peace through strength doctrine appears to be doing exactly what the foreign policy establishment claimed was impossible. Instead of apologizing to adversaries, sending mixed signals, or begging for symbolic diplomacy, Trump is using leverage. He is speaking as though the strategic objective has already been secured: no Iranian nuclear weapon, no free pass, no blank check, and no rewards without real compliance. That is a massive departure from the old failed model of Obama-era concessions, Biden-era weakness, and globalist narratives that always seem to benefit hostile regimes more than the American people. We also examine why Iran’s own messaging may reveal more than the headlines do. Public resistance, selective leaks, and carefully worded denials all suggest a regime trying to manage humiliation while preserving internal legitimacy. If Tehran had the upper hand, it would not need this level of narrative control. That is why this moment matters far beyond a signing date or a press conference. The bigger question is whether Trump has already broken Iran’s negotiating position before the official paperwork is even complete. At THE RAW FEED, we cut through fake news, media panic, and establishment spin to focus on what actually matters for the country. This story is about Donald Trump, Iran, JD Vance, Middle East diplomacy, oil prices, nuclear negotiations, sanctions, national security, and the return of an America First foreign policy that puts U.S. strength ahead of global approval. If the White House is right, then what we are watching is not ordinary negotiation but the aftermath of Trump forcing a hostile regime to bend.

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