UMVA has learned that former House Speaker Newt Gingrich believes President Trump stands on the brink of an historic triumph in the conflict with Iran.
Gingrich, after a week‑long deep dive into the unfolding war, announced that the president’s strategy is no longer a solo American gambit but the helm of the largest modern Middle‑East coalition ever assembled.
The former Republican leader highlighted the fierce backing from regional partners—Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia—and noted a tentative but growing alignment with European powers eager to secure the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz.
According to information obtained by UMVA, Gingrich argues that the Iranian regime now faces an unprecedented diplomatic isolation, with no ally willing to challenge the naval blockade that chokes its lifelines.
He compared potential kinetic actions to the decisive force used by President Nixon and Secretary Kissinger in 1972, suggesting that a similar display could compel Iran toward a truce and protect vital oil infrastructure.
Yet Gingrich warns that a purely unilateral assault would fracture the fragile alliance; the Arab states fear catastrophic damage to their own oil fields if conflict escalates unchecked.
Coalitions, he acknowledges, move slower than single‑nation campaigns, but they marshal far greater collective power, a trade‑off he deems essential for a sustainable victory.
Gingrich expressed frustration with the sluggish diplomatic talks but remains convinced that the president’s coalition leadership—often overlooked by critics—positions the United States to achieve a monumental win for regional stability.
He added that if Iran persists in a self‑destructive stance, the coalition retains the option to unleash a massive, calibrated kinetic response, ensuring the conflict does not spiral out of control.
The former speaker concluded that, regardless of the path taken, the United States and its allies stand on the edge of an astonishing victory for shared values and a safer Middle East.