Alan Zendell, April 18, 2026
If not for Iran’s 900 pounds of enriched uranium, we would not be at war today. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had good reason to want it gone. Iran as ruled by the Ayatollahs has sworn to destroy Israel for forty-seven years.
If any of the missiles Iran fired at Israel during this war had been equipped with nuclear warheads, Israel’s Iron Dome wouldn’t have been an effective defense. Unlike conventional bombs, nuclear explosives do not have to strike their targets directly. A high altitude detonation hundreds of miles above Tel Aviv would effectively devastate the entire country. The question the rest of the world asks is whether Iran would ever use nuclear weapons preemptively.
Israel has been a nuclear power for sixty years, but for Israel, having those weapons is an essential deterrent. The Ayatollahs claim that that justifies Iran’s quest to develop them, but it’s a false argument. Israel would never use its nuclear weapons preemptively. That’s not a moral judgement, simply common sense. They have no reason to, and if they did, the result would surely be the destruction of Israel itself and possibly the world.
We’ve heard dozens of expert opinions about what it would take to get Iran to give up its enriched uranium. We’ve been told that it would require either a massive ground war or the use of a nuclear weapon by the United States. We’ve also been told the hard-liners in Iran’s government would never give up their right to enrich uranium, but that may just be part of the hyperbolic bluster Trump and the Iranians exchange. The argument that makes the most sense to me suggests it is.
As some commentators have noted, Iran doesn’t need nuclear weapons, and Trump’s war made that clear. Iran’s leaders have proved that they can disrupt the world’s economy and hold the major industrial nations hostage whenever they choose to without firing a shot. How many people, before this war, understood that some of our allies could run out of oil within two months if the Strait of Hormuz remained closed or was too dangerous to transit? With the world now aware of this reality, nuclear weapons aren’t worth the trouble for Iran, and its leaders surely understand that.
The costs of continuing their development and building and maintaining deep underground facilities to protect them are enormous, and its not clear, going forward, that they’re more of a benefit to Iran than a liability. What does seem clear is that with Iran’s economy and standard of living in serious jeopardy, it has far better places to invest its resources. If Iran’s negotiators are as smart as they’re reputed to be, my guess is they would be happy to be rid of their uranium, now that the world understands their real power.
Iranian negotiators know that Trump and Netanyahu are too heavily invested in the argument that Iran’s uranium is an existential threat, a view not shared by our allies, to back off. Trump may believe our allies’ refusal to assist in his war is a clash of personalities – everything Trump does takes the form of a confrontational transaction – but I don’t see it that way. Our European and west-Asian allies are far more vulnerable to Iran’s drones and missiles than the United States is. If they believed they were really at risk of imminent attack, they wouldn’t let the kind of petty childishness Trump engages in stop them from acting in their own defense.
If I were an Iranian negotiator, I would continue to insist that Iran will never turn over its enriched uranium or promise to never create more. I would scream as loudly as Trump that it is my nation’s inalienable right, and hold out until the last possible moment before giving in, to extract the most I can in concessions. That makes the most sense for Iran from every point of view.
Why would the Iranian regime saddle itself with the enormous economic drain of a nuclear weapons program and a worldwide terrorist network, when “playing nice” will likely earn them billions of dollars in unfrozen assets and reparations for the damage our bombs caused? The alternative to giving up their quest to destroy Israel and Jews everywhere is renewed ties with the west and security guarantees that will allow Iran to rebuild its economy and thrive, something most Iranian people clearly desire.
What I find most disturbing about this war is that it has proved itself to be unnecessary. All this could have been quietly negotiated behind closed doors if Trump hadn’t torn up the JCPOA deal to limit Iran’s uranium in 2018 out of nothing more than spiteful hatred for Barack Obama. It’s clearer than ever that this war has more to do with Trump’s ego and his susceptibility to being manipulated by smarter foreign leaders than anything else.
If Trump behaved like a normal, sane person, he could have come out of this being praised by the entire world. Even I would have supported awarding him the Nobel Peace Prize.