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There’s a silent, deadly game playing out across the globe, and America’s elites in Washington are either too blind or too distracted to see it for what it is. While our own border crumbles and our economy stumbles, truly evil forces are expanding their reach, weaponizing chaos and exporting death. And the latest front in this unfolding disaster? Sudan, where Iran’s killer drones are actively fueling a forgotten war, turning a regional conflict into a slaughterhouse.
It’s not some conspiracy theory; it’s plain for anyone with eyes to see. Iran, the world’s foremost state sponsor of terror, isn’t just rattling sabers in the Middle East anymore. They’re providing their Mohajer-6 attack drones directly to Sudan’s armed forces, via foxnews. These aren’t just surveillance tools; these are instruments of death, precision-guided terror machines designed to eliminate and terrorize. And make no mistake: the blood spilled in Sudan is on the hands of the mullahs in Tehran, but it’s also a stark indictment of the West’s continued appeasement and weakness.
Think about that for a moment: A radical Islamic regime, sworn enemies of freedom and a theological death cult, is now openly exporting advanced military technology to one of the world’s most volatile regions. This isn’t just about Sudan; it’s about Iran testing boundaries, establishing new proxy networks, and projecting power far beyond its immediate neighborhood. It’s a playbook we’ve seen before: arming Hezbollah in Lebanon, backing the Houthis in Yemen, funding Hamas in Gaza. Now, Africa is their next target for destabilization.
Where is the outrage? Where is the decisive action from the Biden administration? We’re told to worry about pronouns and climate change while the forces of genuine evil expand their reach, sowing discord and death. This isn’t just incompetence; it feels like a deliberate weakening of American resolve, a self-inflicted wound that emboldens our adversaries. When America projects weakness, chaos fills the void. It’s a timeless truth, one our current leaders seem determined to ignore, or perhaps, actively encourage.
From a Biblical perspective, we see the very real consequences of a world turning its back on righteous strength and moral clarity. The Bible warns us about the serpent’s cunning, about those who sow discord and delight in violence. “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.” (Ephesians 6:12). Iran’s actions are a clear manifestation of that spiritual wickedness, a global proxy war against the very concept of peace and order.
Our leaders in Washington preach globalism and multilateralism, yet they stand by as a tyrannical regime expands its sphere of influence, directly threatening regional stability and indirectly, American interests. Sudan isn’t a problem a million miles away; it’s another piece in a larger puzzle of global instability that will inevitably knock on our door. The flow of refugees, the rise of new terror cells, the disruption of trade routes—these aren’t abstract concepts; they’re real threats that will impact American citizens.
This is what happens when we abandon the “America First” doctrine, when we prioritize the whims of global elites over the security of our nation and our allies. A strong America, unafraid to call out evil and to act decisively against it, is the greatest deterrent to these kinds of aggressions. But what we have instead is a leadership seemingly more concerned with managing decline than projecting strength.
It’s time to wake up, patriots. The world is a dangerous place, and adversaries like Iran aren’t waiting for permission to act. They are bold, they are aggressive, and they are capitalizing on every perceived weakness of the West. We can’t afford to let Washington’s dithering turn forgotten wars into global catastrophes.
How long can America afford to dither while adversaries like Iran sow destruction across the globe? Sound off below.
Providence watches over the bold.