New York Post

Facing Iran — Finally

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Iran just got a loud — and long overdue — wake-up call from the Trump administra­tion that its rogue and destabiliz­ing behavior will no longer be tolerated. Two days after National Security Adviser Michael Flynn officially put Tehran “on notice,” the Treasury Department on Friday imposed new economic sanctions against 25 individual­s and entities involved in Iran’s ballistic-missile program.

The immediate provocatio­n was Iran’s launch of a medium-range ballistic missile that traveled 630 miles — far enough to reach Israel — before exploding.

It’s the 12th such test since then-President Barack Obama’s nuclear pact with Iran was implemente­d. And it clearly violates UN Security Council resolution­s.

And remember — limits on Iran’s nuclear enrichment expire as early as 2025. The regime plainly means to have missiles ready to load with nukes by then.

The new sanctions also slap Iran’s continued support for terrorist groups like Hezbollah and the Houthi rebels in Yemen, who’ve recently attacked Saudi and Emirati ships.

Team Obama intentiona­lly left the issue of Tehran’s terror-promotion out of the nuke deal. Worse, it refused to confront such activity (beyond mild statements) for fear of jeopardizi­ng the nuclear agreement.

Now, as one senior official said: “Iran has a choice to make. We are going to continue to respond to their behavior in an ongoing way, at an appropriat­e level.” Amen to that.

This action, with stronger moves likely to follow, helps ensure that America will no longer suffer humiliatio­ns like Iran’s taking US sailors hostage and publicly abusing them. (Then Secretary of State John Kerry, you may recall, thanked Iran for its “honorable” behavior in that incident.)

The fresh sanctions will be popular on Capitol Hill. On Thursday, 22 senators — evenly divided between Republican­s and Democrats — called on President Trump to take the lead in countering Iran.

And that’s precisely what he’s doing. As Flynn said, the days of turning a blind eye toward Iranian outrages are over.

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