Hour 2 of The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show zeroes in on what may be the most consequential global story of 2026: the escalating Iranian uprising and the Trump administration’s deliberations on how to respond. Clay, reporting from Washington, shares insights from the White House, noting that President Trump is weighing options as Iran’s regime brutally cracks down on nationwide protests. Estimates suggest thousands—possibly up to 10,000—Iranians have been killed, dwarfing historical atrocities like Tiananmen Square. Buck explains the strategic calculus behind Trump’s decision-making, outlining two categories of potential U.S. actions: non-kinetic measures, such as cyber operations and restoring communications via Elon Musk’s Starlink, and kinetic strikes targeting Iran’s Basij paramilitary forces or Revolutionary Guard facilities. Both hosts stress that Trump’s approach avoids the failed nation-building model of Iraq and Afghanistan, focusing instead on empowering Iranians to topple the regime organically.
The discussion explores whether Iran’s military will continue obeying orders to kill civilians or fracture under moral and practical pressure. Clay and Buck compare the situation to historic turning points like the fall of the Berlin Wall, suggesting that Trump’s “peace through strength” doctrine could trigger a geopolitical domino effect, toppling authoritarian regimes in Iran, Venezuela, and Cuba. They also highlight the psychological impact of recent U.S. and Israeli operations, including the takedown of Venezuela’s narco-terrorist leadership, which signals America’s unmatched capability to neutralize threats swiftly.
In a surprising twist, the hour shifts to Greenland negotiations, as Clay reveals that Danish and Greenlandic delegations are meeting with U.S. officials, reviving Trump’s long-discussed vision of expanding America’s strategic footprint. The hosts defend the concept of territorial acquisition as historically grounded in U.S. policy—from the Monroe Doctrine to the purchase of the Virgin Islands—and argue that expanding influence in the Arctic aligns with national security and economic interests. They even speculate on hypothetical scenarios involving U.S. territories like Guam or American Samoa, framing the debate as a return to bold, expansionist thinking.
The segment closes with sharp cultural commentary on selective outrage: while campuses erupted over Gaza, there is near-total silence on Iran’s mass killings. Clay and Buck call out the hypocrisy of activists and media who ignore atrocities when they can’t blame “white oppressors,” underscoring the ideological lens distorting global human rights discourse.
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