President Trump did not present his stance on Iran as a personal crusade during his State of the Union Address. Instead, he situated it within a long and bipartisan American tradition, arguing that preventing Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons has been US policy for decades and that he intends to uphold that commitment absolutely.
Trump told lawmakers that this is not a new position or a partisan one — it is a foundational element of American foreign policy that transcends individual administrations. His insistence on holding that line, he suggested, is not stubbornness but fidelity to a principle the United States has long considered non-negotiable.
The president accused Iran of testing that principle by resuming its nuclear and missile development, even after last year’s US military strike on its facilities. He said Iranian missiles already threaten Europe and American forces abroad, and warned that Tehran is pursuing capabilities that would put the US mainland within range.
Two rounds of nuclear talks have taken place this month, Trump acknowledged, signalling that he is willing to pursue the diplomatic path. But any agreement must include Iran’s unconditional renunciation of nuclear weapons — the “secret words” that Washington is waiting to hear.
In linking his current stance to decades of American policy, Trump was doing more than defending his own decisions. He was invoking the weight of history to send a message to Tehran: this is not about one president or one administration. It is about a commitment that America has made and will keep.
The Weight of History: Trump Frames Iran Nuclear Issue as Decades-Old American Commitment
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Picture Credit: nara.getarchive.net
