Skip to content

How Words Become Weapons

Let’s take a dispassionate look at what happened. Donald Trump, President of the United States, delivered a threatening message that was enough to prompt the Iranian delegation to physically walk out of the talks. Think about that for a second. No bombs. No visible military deployment at that precise moment. Just a statement. And yet, the effect was immediate, brutal, and total. This highlights a disturbing truth about contemporary geopolitics: the words of leaders carry as much weight as armies. When the leader of the world’s leading power speaks, the entire world listens—and sometimes backs down. The Geneva talks, intended to pave the way toward peace, have thus been held hostage by aggressive rhetoric. But we must qualify this, once again. Iran has not walked away. Tehran has maintained its commitment to the process, a sign that behind the displayed anger, there is a genuine willingness to continue talking. It is this dynamic of symbolic gestures that dominates international diplomacy today: walking away, but remaining reachable; slamming the door, but leaving the window open. It is a coded language that only insiders truly understand. Negotiations on Iran’s nuclear program and the war in the Middle East have always worked this way, with their theatrical breakdowns and discreet resumptions. What’s changing today is the intensity, the frequency, and the sense that everything could come crashing down at any moment. The thread is holding. But it’s stretched to the breaking point.

What astounds me is how easily a single message can move mountains. I think back on all those hours of work by diplomats—weeks, sometimes months of preparation—compromises wrested away one by one. And then, in a matter of seconds, a leader throws out a threat and everything teeters. There’s something deeply unfair about that. I feel a kind of simmering anger toward this impulsive style of governance. But—and I correct myself immediately—perhaps I’m judging too quickly. Perhaps this threat is part of a broader strategy that I don’t see. Columnists like me tend to want to explain everything, understand everything, judge everything. And sometimes, we get it terribly wrong. So I try to stay humble. But I can’t help thinking about the civilian populations. About those ordinary people who didn’t ask for any of this. Who just want to live, work, and raise their children. And whose very existence depends on these verbal sparring matches between the powerful. It tightens something inside me. This powerlessness. We watch, we comment, we analyze. But deep down, we don’t decide anything. The real decision-makers are elsewhere, in rooms we’ll never see. And they—they’re playing games. They’re playing with lives. I’d like to shout at them to be careful. To weigh every word. Because one word, from now on, can destroy everything. Or save everything. It’s terrifying. It’s mind-boggling.

Sources

Le Monde, “Live Updates: War in the Middle East—Following a Threatening Message from Donald Trump, the Iranian Delegation Leaves the Venue Where Discussions Were Taking Place in Switzerland but Continues the Talks,” published on June 22, 2026.

This content was created with the help of AI.

facebook icon twitter icon linkedin icon
Copied!

Commentaires

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
More Content