News

Hegseth’s Deal-Or-Consequences Message To Iran

War Secretary says he doesn't trust Iran, promises a "verify, verify, verify" approach to any commitments

Hank Berrien
Listen
Listen
3 min
Hegseth’s Deal-Or-Consequences Message To Iran
Omar Havana/Getty Images

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth stressed on Thursday that the deal made to end the war in Iran was “born of strength of American action,” and said the Pentagon is “ready to go” if President Donald Trump decides to restart the war.

Hegseth, a hard-liner on Iran, said that this negotiation is different from past negotiations because of the military action taken against the Iranian regime.

“One key difference between this agreement and others is this was born of strength of American action,” Hegseth said. “JCPOA came from a bunch of begging and talking — this agreement came after months of bombing and a blockade that was impenetrable.”

He said that posture will continue, and pledged that Iran should know that the War Department is “right here ready to go” if it fails to reach a deal over the next 60 days.

“Our posture is one of strength,” Hegseth said. “Iran is going to have every opportunity to cut the kind of deal they should at the table, and if they don’t — the War Department will be right here ready to go.”

Hegseth also echoed the lines previously promulgated from senior administration officials, saying the MOU is “all performance-based” and “all conditions-based,” promising a “verify, verify, verify” approach he explicitly contrasted with the Obama-era nuclear deal.

“There’s not a lot of trust here,” Hegseth said, adding, “Everything we’re going to do is verify, verify, verify. And so at every step, whether it’s our military posture or it’s the carrots that exist to ensure Iran never has a nuclear weapon, all performance-based.”

“There [are] no giveaways here. There’s no trust here. It’s all verification,” he said. “And the War Department stands behind it all — as the president has said — prepared to devastatingly do what we’ve done already.”

The MOU, however, is vague on the conditions of a deal, with senior administration officials and the president saying that a lot of what has been promised by Iran isn’t explicitly written.

Create a free account to join the conversation!

Already have an account?

Log in

Got a tip worth investigating?

Your information could be the missing piece to an important story. Submit your tip today and make a difference.

Submit Tip