President Donald Trump lit up Barack Obama and his infamous Iran nuclear deal during a meeting with Egypt’s president on the sidelines of the G7 Summit in France.

Trump did what he does best and said out loud what millions of Americans have thought for years, labeling Obama a “stupid son of a b*tch” for sending pallets of cash to Tehran and calling it diplomacy.

Trump reminded the press that Obama shipped an eye watering 1.7 billion dollars to the Iranian regime, all in green cash, loaded on a Boeing 757, and flown straight into Tehran.

“Nobody could have made this deal. I mean, the JCPOA, done by Obama, he handed them 1.7 billion in cash from banks into a Boeing 757 and flew it into Iran, and they stood at the plane,” Trump said.

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The imagery speaks for itself, and Trump made sure the room felt the absurdity of what happened under the previous administration.

“I have pictures of it, like, ‘oh my, look at this money he’s giving us,’” Trump added.

“He tried to bribe his way out. They didn’t do that. Nobody mentions that. 1.7 billion and hundreds of millions of dollars, they tried to bribe their way out of it.”

Few presidents have reminded America of the price tag on weakness as vividly as Trump did in that moment.

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Then he delivered the punchline that ricocheted around the world.

“And you know what the Iranians did? They laughed at Obama, and they said he’s a stupid son of a bitch,” Trump quipped as the room erupted.

For anyone still pretending the Iran nuclear deal was a wise move, the laughter of America’s adversaries says it all.

Trump’s fiery remarks came as reports surfaced of a new memorandum of understanding with Iran, signed this week, ahead of a Friday ceremony in Switzerland.

Unlike Obama’s secret cash flights, Trump’s approach has been blunt, yes, but also centered on getting results, pushing for a temporary ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, reopening the Strait of Hormuz, and restarting trade channels without appeasement.

According to the president, the new agreement is expected to lock in a 60 day ceasefire that will allow negotiators to keep talking without fresh bloodshed.

“I think they’re going to want to get it done. Iran wants to get it done; they have to get back to business, and the relationship is now normalized, so I think it’s going to go pretty quickly,” Trump said.

His confidence, once again, stood in sharp contrast to the endless caution and double talk of the former administration.

Trump also confirmed that the Strait of Hormuz will be open “toll free” during and after the ceasefire period, ensuring vital shipping routes stay open.

“The Strait is going to be open toll free, and it’s toll free beyond the 60 days,” he stated.

Trade stability without paying off foreign tyrants sounds like the type of leadership Americans remember fondly from Trump’s first term.

Trump told reporters he will release the full memorandum to the public and personally walk through it “word by word” so that the media cannot twist or distort it.

That level of transparency would have been unthinkable under Obama’s shadowy negotiations that handed Iran a pile of cash and a path to nuclear capability.

To this day, the mainstream media politely avoids showing the infamous photos of stacks of cash flown overseas under Obama’s Iran deal.

They prefer painting Trump as the problem even while he delivers results.

The latest developments show that Trump is doing what he did before, breaking through layers of diplomatic nonsense and forcing America’s enemies to face strength rather than appeasement.

Conservatives have long criticized Obama’s Iran policy as the epitome of weakness on the world stage.

Even many Democrats eventually admitted the deal was flawed. Trump’s slap down of Obama was both personal and policy driven.

It reminded allies and enemies alike that America’s days of cash giveaways for false promises ended in 2017 and will not return if Trump is back in charge.

What makes Trump’s comments sting even more for the left is that he was proven right about the Iran deal years ago.

Tehran violated the spirit and the letter of the JCPOA repeatedly, continued enriching uranium, and ramped up its aggression across the Middle East.

Obama’s payoff only emboldened Iran, and American taxpayers footed the bill.

Beyond the theatrics, Trump’s remarks remind voters how foreign policy really works when strength replaces surrender.

When America’s enemies respect the commander in chief, peace has a chance.

When they laugh, well, you get the Obama years. Trump may have used colorful language, but his point landed exactly where it needed to.

As details of the new agreement unfold, one fact is clear.

The president has no interest in apologizing for speaking the truth or calling out what was a scandal hiding in plain sight.

After years of disastrous globalist games, Trump is saying what many Americans feel: enough is enough.

When foreign leaders laugh at us, real leadership calls them out, not sends them more cash.

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