President Trump used his State of the Union Address to highlight what he described as a fundamental contradiction in Iranian behavior: Tehran says it wants a nuclear deal, but its actions — rebuilding its nuclear program, advancing its missiles, defying American warnings — suggest otherwise. He said the US is watching what Iran does, not just what it says.
Trump confirmed that Iran has expressed interest in reaching an agreement and that two rounds of talks have taken place this month. But he said this verbal interest is contradicted by Iran’s decision to restart its nuclear program following last year’s Operation Midnight Hammer strikes, which he said were accompanied by explicit warnings to Tehran not to rebuild.
He also pointed to Iran’s advancing missile capabilities as evidence of a country that is not behaving as one interested in de-escalation. He said Iranian weapons already threaten Europe and US military bases, and that longer-range missiles aimed at American soil are in development — activities that run counter to the spirit of diplomatic engagement.
Trump said the test of Iranian seriousness is not verbal interest in a deal, but a willingness to make the one commitment that would give that deal credibility: a public, categorical declaration that Iran will never build a nuclear weapon. Until that declaration is made, he said, words of interest are not enough.
His message was a familiar one in diplomacy: trust, but verify. And in the case of Iran, the verification starts with a public commitment that leaves no room for ambiguity. Iran’s actions, Trump argued, have not yet justified the trust a deal would require.
