Donald Trump and Mike Pence on the CBS show "60 Minutes," July 17, 2016.

Just three days into his official role as Donald Trump's running mate, Indiana Governor and vice presidential hopeful Mike Pence has clearly defined his role in this campaign: For all intents and purposes, Pence will act as Trump's "interpreter" and filter for the traditional conservative audience.

That role was evident a few times during Trump and Pence's already much-discussed interview on "60 Minutes" on Sunday night, where Pence interjected a couple of times to either clarify, or translate, Trump's typical campaign rhetoric into the kind of language conservatives and establishment Republicans like and understand. Pence did that most notably in that interview when Trump insisted it would be a good idea to declare war on ISIS and Pence parsed that as the kind of statement that projects more American strength into the world arena. That type of reframing serves as catnip for most conservatives — the details of how we would carry out such a formal war declaration suddenly don't seem as important.