Latest Israeli Attack On Iran Is Almost TOO Vicious

There’s a moment in every bar fight when even the guy who started it looks over at his buddy and says, “Okay, maybe ease up a little.” That moment? We just hit it — and the guy saying it is Lindsey Graham. Lindsey Graham. The man whose foreign policy philosophy has basically been “bomb first, ask questions never.” If he’s tapping the brakes, you know Israel went full Tasmanian Devil on Iran’s backside.

Operation Epic Fury Wasn’t Playing Around

Let’s set the scene. February 28th, Trump posts a video on Truth Social announcing Operation Epic Fury. Not a press briefing. Not a carefully worded State Department memo. Truth Social. That alone should’ve told Iran everything it needed to know about how this was going to go.

What followed was the kind of military performance that makes defense contractors weep tears of joy. Israel — tiny, surrounded, perpetually underestimated — proceeded to systematically dismantle the Iranian regime’s ability to breathe, let alone threaten its neighbors. Iran fired back with hundreds of ballistic missiles and drones aimed at Israel, Qatar, Bahrain, the UAE, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia. Basically threw everything at the wall and hoped something stuck.

Spoiler: it didn’t go well for Iran.

When Lindsey Graham Says Slow Down, You’ve Gone Full Rampage Mode

Sen. John Kennedy of Louisiana once wrote in his book, How to Test Negative for Stupid: And Why Washington Never Will, that “if you want to stump Lindsey, just ask him to name a country he wouldn’t bomb.” Tennessee Rep. Tim Burchett put it even cleaner: “Lindsey hasn’t seen a fist fight he hasn’t wanted to turn into a bombing raid, so I just take it with a grain of salt.”

These are his Republican colleagues talking.

So when this same Lindsey Graham gets on X and tells Israel to pump the brakes — specifically on targeting Iran’s oil infrastructure — you have to stop and appreciate the historic nature of that moment. It’s like watching the guy who always orders the hottest wings at the table suddenly ask the waiter for a glass of milk.

Graham, to his credit, framed it thoughtfully. “Our allies in Israel have shown amazing capability when it comes to collapsing the murderous regime in Iran. America is most appreciative,” he posted. “However, there will be a day soon that the Iranian people will be in charge of their own fate, not the murderous ayatollah’s regime. In that regard, please be cautious about what targets you select.”

He followed that up with the strategic logic: “Our goal is to liberate the Iranian people in a fashion that does not cripple their chance to start a new and better life when this regime collapses. The oil economy of Iran will be essential to that endeavor.”

That’s actually a reasonable argument. You don’t burn down the house you’re trying to hand back to the family inside.

Meanwhile, the Gas Prices Are Having Their Own Moment

While the geopolitical chess match plays out, your wallet is feeling every move. WTI crude closed Friday at $90.90 — up over $20 from the day before the strikes. Overnight Monday it spiked to $120 a barrel before settling near $100. Tankers stopped transiting the Strait of Hormuz entirely. That narrow strip of water between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman handles a massive chunk of global oil flow, and right now it’s basically a no-go zone.

Trump’s Energy Secretary waved it off as “a disruption on the way to a much better place,” dismissing what he called “fiction” about fuel shortages. We’ll see how that ages at the pump.

Where This Goes From Here

Here’s what history tells us: when you corner a regime that’s been exporting terror for forty-plus years, it either collapses or doubles down in the ugliest way possible. Iran is doing both simultaneously — firing missiles in every direction while its infrastructure crumbles. That’s a cornered animal. Dangerous, yes. But also running out of room.

Trump didn’t tiptoe into this conflict. He brought a bulldozer, handed Israel the keys, and posted the whole thing on Truth Social. Graham’s warning isn’t a sign of weakness — it’s a sign that people are actually thinking about the morning after. What does a post-ayatollah Iran look like? Who fills that vacuum? Those are the right questions to be asking, and the fact that Washington is asking them mid-operation might be the most functional thing the Senate has done in a decade.

But let’s be honest — when Lindsey Graham is the voice of restraint in the room, we have officially entered uncharted territory. Frame that moment. It won’t last long.


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