President Trump's chief Middle East negotiator Steve Witkoff just delivered a masterclass in how real deal-makers handle America's enemies - and it's nothing like the disastrous appeasement we saw under Obama and Biden.
In a bombshell interview with Sean Hannity Monday night, Witkoff pulled back the curtain on recent negotiations with Iran's radical regime, revealing how the mullahs strutted into talks expecting Trump's team to roll over like previous weak-kneed administrations.
"Iran approached the most recent round of negotiations with the attitude that they were driving the train, and the Trump administration had no choice but to go full-metal Obama and give them what they wanted," Witkoff explained to Hannity's audience.
Iran's Arrogance Meets Trump's Steel
But here's where it gets interesting, Patriots. Witkoff described the Iranian negotiators as acting like "lineal descendants of Persian rug merchants" - coming in hot, expecting to bamboozle another weak American administration into handing over pallets of cash and sanctions relief.
The problem? They weren't dealing with Barack Obama or Joe Biden anymore.
"They thought they could waltz in and get the same treatment they got from Obama - billions in sanctions relief, looking the other way on terrorism, the whole nine yards. They were dead wrong."
This is exactly why America voted to bring back Donald Trump. While the Biden regime spent four years getting pushed around by every two-bit dictator on the planet, Trump's team comes to the table with strength, not weakness.
The Art of the REAL Deal
Witkoff's revelation shows the stark difference between America First leadership and the globalist surrender we endured under previous administrations. Iran's terrorist regime learned to expect American weakness - remember Obama's midnight cash deliveries and Biden's Afghanistan disaster?
Those days are over, folks. When you negotiate from strength instead of apologizing for America's existence, even the world's worst actors have to adjust their expectations.
The question every American should be asking: How many other enemies tried this same arrogant approach, only to discover they're not dealing with pushovers anymore?
