No President Has Ever Beat Iran On Battlefield And No President Has Beat Them On Negotiation

According to Fox Tv, Fox News host Jesse Watters argued that the current U.S. confrontation with Iran could mark a historic turning point, suggesting both military and diplomatic outcomes are being tested simultaneously.

During a recent broadcast, Watters framed the situation in sweeping terms. “No president has ever beaten Iran on the battlefield and no president has beaten them at the negotiating table,” he said, highlighting what he as a long-standing challenge for U.S. foreign policy.

He pointed to former President Donald Trump as potentially changing that pattern. “So we will see if Trump can go two for two,” Watters added, suggesting that both military pressure and diplomacy could converge into a single outcome.

Watters emphasized that any successful agreement—particularly one addressing Iran’s nuclear ambitions—would be historically significant. “If Trump [can] negotiate uranium away, the key deal, it will be one of the greatest military feats in American history,” he said, linking diplomatic success directly to strategic achievement.

To underscore his point, Watters drew comparisons to past moments in U.S. history. “It will be up there with Jefferson taking down the Barbary Pirates,” he said, referencing early 19th-century conflicts during the presidency of Thomas Jefferson. He also cited more recent political developments, adding it would rank alongside “Trump taking down Maduro,” referring to tensions involving Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro.

The Fox News host concluded by stressing the gravity of the moment. “The president knows the stakes,” he said, suggesting that decisions made now could have lasting global consequences.

Watters’ remarks reflect a broader narrative among some commentators that the current U.S. strategy—combining economic pressure, military positioning, and negotiations—could produce an outcome not previously achieved. However, analysts note that such claims remain speculative, as the situation continues to evolve and any final agreement has yet to be reached.

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