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Mark Levin: Now, that is a great point. They can't do it again. But we may have to come back in 10, 15 or 20 years.
You see the opposition to what the president is already doing.
I see the opposition here in the United States is growing.
We have this isolationist movement.
We have this Marxist Islamist movement.
We have these woke right neo-fascists.
We have a Democrat Party that is radically pacifistic.
This is my concern.
How long can this be managed once President Trump leaves office?
Can it be managed in an effective way, given our politics and given the Democrat Party and these other elements?
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Rebeccah Heinrichs: Well, it's a great question. I think that President Trump is really the only president that has decided to finally take on this terrorist regime that has been an enemy of the United States, killing Americans for 47 years.
And we know that all of this diplomacy, the Iran deal, Obama's attempt with the JCPOA, it was a failure.
At the end of failed diplomacy, you have to have military force to reestablish deterrence.
President Trump has done that.
The Iran regime, I think, Mark, is already completely crumbling.
And we basically have a rump regime in place.
It's splintering.
It's part of the reason that we can't get a deal at this point, because the IRGC isn't listening to the people who are negotiating with the Americans at this point.
And so I think that, you know, we have to do what we can to eliminate those who are the most obstinate, the most committed to the Islamic revolution, and try to get to a point where we can have a regime that can comply with the United States and our demands.
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Mark Levin: When we come back, my question to you is this: Why don't we just keep the pressure on economically if they're crumbling?
Do as you say. Our military is sitting there. It's a beautiful military ready to do what it needs to do.
Put this additional pressure on them.
And that way, maybe they will collapse.
And that's the surest way to make sure in 15 or 20 years from now they won't be back.
We'll be right back.
Welcome back, America.
We're here with Rebeccah Heinrichs.
Rebeccah, so why have a deal at all? Why not keep the pressure on, the pressure on, pressure on?
They want a deal. Of course they want a deal.
That's the nature of the beast there.
They'll take a deal.
Maybe they'll sign something that's really in our favor, but probably won't honor it in the out years and so forth.
If they're crumbling, why don't we give them the extra push?
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Rebeccah Heinrichs: Yeah, I think we do need to give them the extra push. And whenever I say that we might have some sort of diplomatic, you know, political outcome to this, it's really not a deal that I'm looking for.
It's not something that I'm not going to believe anything that the Iranians sign.
It just means that they've completely submitted to American demands.
And Trump has, President Trump, has not moved off of his red lines.
He has kept his red lines in place to his credit.
But I do think we keep the economic pressure in place.
We keep the blockade in place.
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