John Bolton, who previously served as national security adviser, said Friday that the United States made the correct decision in launching strikes against Iran, arguing that Washington should not wait for an immediate nuclear threat before taking action.
Speaking during an appearance on “Bianca Across the Nation” on Newsmax, Bolton said the administration acted at the appropriate moment rather than allowing Iran’s capabilities to advance further.
“I think it was the right time to go in,” he said. “I don’t think the nuclear threat was imminent, but I don’t think the United States is required to risk the imminent destruction of our people before we take preventative action to remove the threat.”
Bolton emphasized that, more broadly, the United States should not tolerate living under the long-term danger posed by a nuclear-capable Iran.
“We don’t have to live under the threat,” he said. “That’s just simply unacceptable.”
He argued that current conditions inside Iran make this a particularly opportune moment to apply pressure, describing the regime as weaker and more unpopular than it has been in decades.
“I do think that the moment was right,” he said. “I think the regime in Tehran is as unpopular, as weak, as it’s been at any point since it took power in 1979.”
Bolton pointed to growing dissatisfaction within the country, saying economic hardship and public frustration have spread widely across Iranian society.
“There’s dissatisfaction all across the country,” he said. “The economy is in the tank.”
He noted that much of this unrest is especially pronounced among younger Iranians, who make up a large share of the population and are increasingly aware of opportunities beyond their current circumstances.
“The young people who constitute under 30, or two-thirds of the population, know they could have a different life,” he said. “They can see it across the Gulf and on the internet when the regime lets it operate.”
Bolton added that opposition to the regime is also strong among women and various ethnic groups, highlighting additional internal pressure points.
“Women have been opposed to the regime ever since at least the murder of Mahsa Amini,” he said. “Ethnic groups like the Kurds, the Azeris, the Baluchis, Arabs are dissatisfied.”
Taken together, he said, these internal challenges have left the regime vulnerable, especially as external pressure continues to mount.
“This regime is very weak, and it can be pulled apart at the top,” he said. “And that’s what, in effect, what we and Israel are doing right now.”
At the same time, Bolton stressed that internal opposition will ultimately play a decisive role, calling for greater American support to those inside Iran seeking change.
“We should be aiding them, giving them communications, assistance, money, weapons if they wanted,” he said. “I think this is a time where we’ve staked a lot on this. We need to win.”
He also pointed to Iran’s threats against neighboring Gulf countries as further evidence of the regime’s danger.
“If they needed any convincing or further proof of how risky, how dangerous the regime of the ayatollahs is, this is it,” he said, adding that the regime “must be removed.”