President Trump's military commanders are unleashing hell on Iran's terrorist regime with an operation so devastating that even seasoned military leaders are stunned by its effectiveness. Retired 3-star Lt. General Keith Kellogg Jr., Trump's battle-tested national security advisor, appeared on Fox News Friday and delivered a bombshell assessment of "Operation Epic Fury" — calling it unlike anything he's witnessed in his distinguished military career.
"This is something I'd never seen in my lifetime — a relentless drive to take shackles off our armed forces and focus on what they do best: win," Kellogg told Fox viewers, describing Trump's no-nonsense approach to dealing with Iran's death-to-America regime.
The general didn't mince words about Trump's strategy, which patriots on social media are calling "Whac-A-Mullah" — a systematic dismantling of Iran's terror infrastructure that has the mullahs scrambling for cover.
Kellogg revealed the operation's crown jewel target that could cripple Iran's ability to fund global terrorism. As one military analyst noted on social media: "The seizure of the single biggest energy and financing choke point of Iran: Kharg Island. 'What I would hope they would do is really go and take Kharg Island. If you take out that island, that's 80% to 90% of the petroleum usage the Iranians have,' Kellogg told the Fox host."
This isn't the measured, weak-kneed approach we saw from previous administrations. Trump is targeting Iran where it hurts most — their wallet. Cut off their oil revenue, and suddenly the regime can't afford to arm Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis.
Predictably, some military commentators are nitpicking tactical details, with one tweeting criticism about "dumb bombs" versus precision weapons. But they're missing the forest for the trees — Trump has Iran on the ropes for the first time in decades.
After years of Biden's pathetic appeasement and Obama's cash-filled pallets, America finally has a commander-in-chief who understands that strength prevents war. The question isn't whether Trump's strategy will work — it's whether Iran's regime can survive it.
Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.
Source: Next News Network