America’s endless cycle ...

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Those who speak of diplomacy with the United States as a path to stability misunderstand the fundamental logic of American strategy. For Washington, negotiations are a tactical instrument designed to extract unilateral concessions, freeze Iran’s progress, and create internal political divisions. They are not a strategic effort to build a sustainable, respectful relationship. The United States negotiates only when pressure fails; and even then, its goal is not equilibrium; it is dominance.
Therefore, should Iran ever choose to engage in discussions again, it must do so from a position of absolute clarity: America’s promises hold value only when backed by verifiable guarantees insulated from the suicidal volatility of US domestic politics. No signature from Washington has meaning unless it is reinforced through mechanisms that prevent another impulsive withdrawal.
Iran must no longer trust words. It must trust only enforceable reality.
Moreover, Iran must never confuse diplomacy with weakness. Diplomacy succeeds only when backed by undeniable power. Iran’s defense capabilities, regional deterrence posture, and technological advancements are not bargaining chips; they are shields against American aggression. Any dismantling of these assets in exchange for temporary political calm would be a historic mistake.
Iran does not need American approval to secure its future. It needs strategic independence, economic resilience, and an unwavering commitment to national dignity. These pillars—not Western promises—have carried Iran through decades of pressure. And they will continue to carry Iran long after America’s political theater has exhausted itself.
Washington’s message is clear: “We make promises when convenient, and we break them when convenient.” Iran must internalize this reality, not debate it. The time for illusions is over. The time for strategic sobriety is now.
As the world undergoes profound geopolitical shifts, Iran stands at a crossroad. One path leads back to naïve trust in Washington’s ever-changing moods—a path proven disastrous. The other path, the path of strength, realism, and sovereignty, demands that Iran engage the United States with suspicion, not optimism; with caution, not enthusiasm; and with the full weight of its strategic capabilities, not with misplaced expectations of American goodwill.
Iran must never again gamble its national security on the integrity of a government that has repeatedly violated its commitments, weaponized diplomacy, and treated Iran’s sovereignty as negotiable. America’s history is not a warning sign; it is a complete record.
Iran must learn from its failed experiences, not repeat them. Washington does not change. It only adapts its tactics. And until the United States proves, through actions, not empty rhetoric, that it is capable of honoring an international agreement, Iran must approach every negotiation with the certainty that betrayal is not a possibility; it is an inevitability.
Only when Iran enters diplomacy with this hardened understanding can it protect its interests and prevent another era of trusting the untrustworthy. If the United States seeks genuine engagement, it must earn it. Iran owes Washington nothing, not trust, not concessions, and certainly not another opportunity to repeat the same cycle of deception.

 

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