Tell Congress: No US War on Iran
It begins again. In the dark, with the roar of jet engines and the sudden silence after impact. Israel has launched a sweeping assault on Iranian military and nuclear sites, deep inside a sovereign nation, far from any front line.
This was not self-defense. It was sabotage: of diplomacy, of restraint, of the thin thread holding back catastrophe.
Iran was not building a nuclear weapon. As recently as March 2025, the U.S. Director of National Intelligence reaffirmed that Supreme Leader Khamenei has not authorized one. The International Atomic Energy Agency confirms there is no evidence of weapons diversion. And yet Israel, a non-signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, has struck a nation that remains within its bounds.
Even now, experts agree: bombing can only delay Iran’s program by a year. Diplomacy could have done so for decades. But what has been destroyed is not only infrastructure; it is trust. Iran has ejected inspectors. Its parliament is voting to end cooperation. In trying to stop a bomb that didn’t exist, Israel may have lit the fuse.
President Trump said he did not support an Israeli attack. Negotiations were underway. Yet Netanyahu again defied Washington, betting that he could drag the U.S. into another war it does not want. He must not be allowed to succeed.
The American people oppose war with Iran. Congress has not authorized it. The consequences would be enormous: strikes on U.S. bases, a closed Strait of Hormuz, surging oil prices, and the likely deaths of American troops in a conflict with no exit. We know this script. We’ve seen it staged in Baghdad, Tripoli, Kabul.
A diplomatic agreement is still possible. It is the only way to ensure Iran never develops nuclear weapons. The U.S. must refuse to be pulled into a war of choice: Netanyahu’s war. We must raise our voices now, before the silence of consent becomes the roar of warplanes overhead.