The Trump administration is standing firm on its original timeline for Operation Epic Fury in Iran, with White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt confirming Monday that the 4-6 week military operation remains on track as it enters its fifth week.
"There has been no change to the timeline of Operation Epic Fury," Leavitt told reporters during Monday's press briefing, pushing back against speculation from legacy media outlets and Washington establishment figures who have been calling for an extended military engagement.
The operation, launched in early January as part of President Trump's promise to decisively deal with Iranian aggression, appears to be proceeding according to plan despite attempts by deep state actors and Never-Trump Republicans to pressure the administration into a prolonged conflict.
Trump Keeps His Word to America
Unlike previous administrations that dragged America into decades-long quagmires in the Middle East, President Trump's approach to Iran has been surgical and time-limited from the start. The 47th President made it clear that Operation Epic Fury would be swift, decisive, and designed to protect American interests without the endless mission creep that characterized the Bush and Obama years.
"President Trump promised the American people a focused operation with clear objectives and a clear timeline. That's exactly what we're delivering," a senior administration official told reporters.
The steadfast commitment to the original timeline sends a powerful message to both allies and enemies: this administration means what it says and says what it means. No more moving goalposts, no more endless wars funded by American taxpayers while our own border remains unsecured.
With just 1-2 weeks remaining in the operation window, patriots across America can be confident that Trump is once again delivering on his promises while the military industrial complex and war profiteers gnash their teeth.
Will the mainstream media finally admit that Trump's decisive leadership approach works better than decades of establishment foreign policy failures?
