Trump Vows to Bomb Iran “Back to the Stone Age” — And He’s Not Bluffing

In a rare live televised address from the White House, President Donald Trump
delivered one of the most chilling war speeches in modern American history —
and the world is still processing what he said.

“We will send them back to the Stone Age where they belong.”

These were not the words of a campaign rally. This was a sitting U.S. president,
speaking to the nation, describing an active war already 32 days old.

What Trump Actually Said (And What It Means)

Trump’s address on April 1 confirmed what many feared: the U.S. military
operation against Iran, codenamed “Epic Fury,” is not winding down — it’s
escalating.

Here’s what he announced:

  • 2–3 more weeks of “extremely powerful” strikes are coming
  • Iran’s navy has been “vanished,” its air force “lies in ruins”
  • Most of Iran’s leadership is “dead”
  • B-2 bombers have already destroyed Iran’s nuclear facilities
  • If no deal is reached, every piece of Iran’s infrastructure will be hit
    simultaneously

This is not a threat. According to Trump, this is already happening.

A B-2 Spirit stealth bomber flying over a desert landscape with smoke rising from destroyed Iranian nuclear facilities below after a precision military strike

The Nuclear Angle Everyone Is Missing

Trump made a stunning claim that has barely made headlines: U.S. B-2 stealth
bombers have already destroyed Iran’s nuclear weapons facilities.

“Approaching nuclear dust will take months,” he said.

If true, this represents the most significant non-proliferation event since the
Cold War. Iran’s decade-long nuclear program — the source of global tension for
years — may already be gone.

Aerial satellite view of the Strait of Hormuz showing military tension with oil tankers and warships amid the US-Iran conflict, with red danger zone lines marking the strategic waterway

What Happens to Oil Prices?

The Strait of Hormuz — through which roughly 20% of the world’s oil flows —
remains the biggest wildcard.

Trump’s message to U.S. allies was blunt: “Nations relying on oil via the
Strait must manage it themselves.”

Translation: America is stepping back from being the world’s oil policeman.
That’s a seismic shift in global energy policy — and markets are already
reacting.

Trump expressed confidence that gas prices will recover quickly, predicting
Iran will want to sell its oil to rebuild. But between now and then? Buckle up.

The Bottom Line

This is not a regional conflict anymore. With nuclear facilities destroyed,
Iran’s military leadership decimated, and the Strait of Hormuz in question,
the next 2–3 weeks could reshape the Middle East — and the global economy —
for a generation.

Trump said regime change was “not the goal.” But tonight, Iran’s government
as the world knew it may already be over.

What do you think? Is Trump right to push this to the end — or is this going too far? Drop your thoughts in the comments.

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