With just hours remaining before President Trump's midnight deadline, Vice President JD Vance delivered a chilling warning to Iran's terrorist regime: open the Strait of Hormuz or face consequences that could end "a whole civilization."
Speaking to reporters Monday evening, Vance accused Iran of "economic terrorism" for blocking the crucial shipping lane and outlined two stark pathways for the Islamic Republic as the clock ticks toward Trump's ultimatum.
"Iran has a choice to make," Vance declared. "They can stop their economic terrorism and reopen the Strait, or they can face the full might of American resolve. We're praying we're on God's side in this fight to eliminate the nuclear threat once and for all."
The Vice President's comments come as social media erupts with reports of the escalating crisis. @PulseGeo69271 posted: "US President Trump issues midnight ultimatum to Iran: open Strait of Hormuz or 'a whole civilization will die.' VP Vance warns of unused 'tools.' Escalation risks global oil supply."
Perhaps most ominously, Vance hinted at America's hidden arsenal. "The United States still has undeclared tools that President Trump is prepared to use if Iran doesn't change course," he warned, echoing reports circulating on social media platforms.
"We have capabilities Iran can't even imagine. President Trump has been patient, but that patience has limits. Twelve hours and counting."
The Trump administration's hardline stance represents a dramatic shift from the weakness shown by the previous Biden regime, which allowed Iran to grow bolder while appeasing the terrorist state with billions in sanctions relief.
As @obiewo noted on social media: "BREAKING: Vance warns the US still has unused powerful options. Trump will activate them if Iran doesn't shift its path."
With global oil supplies hanging in the balance and Iran's nuclear ambitions threatening world peace, President Trump appears ready to do what his predecessor never could: stand up to America's enemies with strength, not submission.
The question now isn't whether America has the tools to end Iran's nuclear threat—it's whether the mullahs are foolish enough to test Trump's resolve when the clock strikes midnight.
