Biden Admin Giving Mullahs a Free Pass? 60 Days of Wokeness with Iran
Rumor has it the US is handing Iran a 60-day participation trophy for...reasons. Strait of Hormuz, sanctions relief, nukes – what could go wrong?

D.C. Swamp - So, word on the street (or, you know, from actual news reports) is that the Biden admin is cooking up a little something-something with Iran. A 60-day MOU, they're calling it. Sounds like a participation trophy for a regime that's been bad, real bad.
Apparently, this dealio involves the Strait of Hormuz. You know, that little choke point where, like, 20% of the world's oil goes through? The same strait where Iran's been playing bumper boats with tankers? Yeah, THAT Strait of Hormuz. What could possibly incentivize them to continue bad behavior here?
And get this: sanctions relief is on the table. Sanctions, the only things keeping the mullahs from buying more yachts and funding more terrorist training camps, are potentially getting the axe. Because, you know, reasons.
But wait, there's more! This MOU also supposedly touches on Iran's enriched uranium program. You know, the one that's totally, 100%, for peaceful energy purposes, and definitely NOT for building a nuke. Wink, wink.
Remember the JCPOA, aka Obama's Iran deal? That thing was such a banger, right? Except it wasn't. We gave them billions, they promised to be good, and then...surprise! They were still bad. Now Biden's trying to resurrect the corpse of that deal, but with a 60-day trial run.
What's the point? It is just so those in charge can pat themselves on the back before November? It is simply theater?
And our allies? Israel and Saudi Arabia are probably thrilled. (Narrator: They weren't.) They're just sitting around waiting for a nuke to be tested in the region.
What’s next, letting them build a nuclear weapon, then writing a strongly worded letter telling them that we are very disappointed. Classic.
So, buckle up, buttercups. This 60-day MOU could be the start of something beautiful...or it could be another colossal foreign policy blunder that makes the Iran deal look like a stroke of genius. Place your bets now!
Sources:
* U.S. Department of State * International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)

