"Every politician knows that preventing future catastrophe requires decisive action now, that will spark a crisis... The champion of the law of catastrophe was U.S. President Barack Obama. He advocated Chamberlain-style 'restraint' and 'containment.' He capitulated to Russian President Vladimir Putin in Syria, thereby abandoning Syrians to genocide. He refused to say 'Islamic terror,' despite being hounded by terror attacks at home and abroad.
He also failed to stop the dictator Kim Jong Un when he began conducting nuclear tests, thus allowing North Korea to become a dangerous nuclear power. And to top if off he signed a particularly bad nuclear agreement with Iran – a move Obama's successor, Donald Trump, is now trying to correct.
Trump can't abrogate the agreement unilaterally, but he can change Obama's capitulatory approach. He's trying to keep Iran from becoming a nuclear power with long-range missiles that will threaten the entire world...
Trump is in effect trying to amend the bad agreement Obama signed, which enables Iran to progress toward a nuclear bomb. He wants to alter three provisions.
First, he wants much tighter supervision of Iran's nuclear facilities, which doesn't exist today. For instance, the Iranians won't allow inspectors into their military bases to see what nuclear work is being done there.
Second, Trump wants to prevent the continuation of Iran's long-range missile development, which threatens the entire world – an issue Obama neglected completely. The third issue is stopping Iran from continuing to fund terror around the world, a matter the previous president, that best of men, also didn't address.
We have a clear interest in Trump's success. The moment Iran becomes a nuclear power, our entire existence will be at risk – without a single bomb being dropped..."