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03/03/26 08:40 AM #18977    

 

Jay Shackford

CAN DONALD TRUMP WIN A WAR WITH

IRAN IF HE CAN’T EXPLAIN WHY HE STARTED IT?

So far, explanations are few and the goals—from regime change to ending a nuclear program the President already claimed to have “obliterated”—are many.

By Susan B. Glasser 

March 2, 2026

 

In the two and a half days since Donald Trump unleashed a new war in the Middle East, the President and his Administration have come up with an astonishing array of different, even contradictory, rationales for the American military attack on Iran. By my count, and I’m sure I’ve missed a few, these include outright regime change, assistance to the oppressed peoples of the Islamic Republic, stripping Iran of “the ability to project power outside its borders,” stopping future Iranian-sponsored terrorist attacks while exacting revenge for past ones, preëmptive action against an imminent Iranian threat to attack U.S. forces, preëmptive action to block Iran from building ballistic missiles that could hit the U.S. mainland, and preëmptive action to stop the Iranian nuclear program that Trump had, as recently as last week, claimed was “obliterated.” Many of these explanations are based on false premises; some already seem to have been abandoned.

All of which raises perhaps the most urgent question thus far about the most dramatic military action undertaken by the United States since the 2003 invasion of Iraq: Can the U.S. win a war of its choosing when it cannot explain why it chose to fight or what, exactly, victory would mean?

Trump himself has been the author of most of the confusion. In an eight-minute video, which was released in the predawn hours of Saturday morning, soon after the strikes began, the President vaguely warned of “imminent threats,” while offering a litany of decades-old complaints about Iran’s long and deadly campaign of terror against the U.S. and its allies. His call for regime change was explicit, though the level of American assistance to achieve that was notably ambiguous: he told Iranians that “the hour of your freedom is at hand” and “now you have a President who is giving you what you want,” and he called on them to help topple “this very wicked, radical dictatorship.”

But in several quick phone interviews that he conducted with various news outlets over the weekend Trump offered a different vision for victory, suggesting to the Times that “the perfect scenario” would be a repeat of his recent intervention in Venezuela, where, after removing Nicolás Maduro from power, he abandoned the U.S.’s long-standing support for the democratic opposition and endorsed Maduro’s Vice-President to run the country. As for Iranians choosing who would rule them, our democratically elected President seemed to rule that out, all but announcing that he and he alone would pick who would run the country next.

On Monday morning, the Pentagon leadership held its first press conference since the start of the attacks, and the Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, responded to the increasingly loud concerns about what the U.S. hoped to achieve by saying that the goal of Operation Epic Fury was to “destroy” Iran’s Navy, its missiles, and its nuclear ambitions. “This is not a so-called regime-change war,” he insisted, “but the regime did change.” Like much of what we’ve heard from the Trump Administration over the past few days, this was both confusing and misleading—Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed in the first wave of strikes, but his repressive government, at least for now, remains. The Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, hardly cleared things up when he announced, a few hours later, that the focus of the operation was “destruction of their ballistic-missile capabilities,” with regime change downgraded to a “hope,” not an “objective.”

When the President, in his first public remarks about the military campaign, appeared at the White House on Monday, he didn’t say a word about regime change, aspirational or otherwise, or even nod to the brave protesters whom he had so recently urged to rise up against their leaders. He also did not discuss the consequences—from oil-price spikes to possible terrorist reprisals in the U.S.—that Americans can expect as the war unfolds. Nor did he so much as mention America’s partner in the war, Israel, or the conflict’s rapid spread—Iran has already launched retaliatory strikes on Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Iraq, Israel, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, which have made this the widest-ranging war in the Middle East in decades.

But you wouldn’t have known that from Trump’s few sentences of bluster. He offered no evidence beyond bald assertion that Iran posed an “intolerable threat” to the region and the American people. Nor did he explain why he had initiated this war without permission from Congress or a more robust effort to seek the approval of the public, who, according to polls since the strikes began, are not in favor of Trump’s action. Perhaps most remarkably, as a politician who has spent years promising his followers “no new wars” and an end to the folly of endless U.S. military engagement in the quagmire of the Middle East, he did not even bother to address his epic flip-flop from war-hater to warmonger.

He did, however, promise to remain intensely focussed on defeating Iran for however long it takes, even if that turned out to be “far longer” than four to five weeks, which is how long he said he expected the war to last. “I don’t get bored,” he insisted. “There’s nothing boring about this.” Forty-six seconds later, he began waxing about the “very, very beautiful” new White House ballroom he’s building, which he thinks will be “the most beautiful ballroom anywhere in the world.”

If there has ever been a more politically tone-deaf pivot from an American President, I can’t think of one. In fact, until Trump came along, I am pretty sure there has never been a White House speech that veered from sombre matters of war and peace to our Commander-in-Chief’s brilliant interior-design decisions. Six U.S. service members have so far died in this war, and Trump has acknowledged that there will “likely” be more. But what he really seems to care about is the color of the White House drapes.

There is a certain method to this madness, of course. As Robert Satloff, director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, observed to me on Monday, Trump, by presenting a “Chinese menu of possible objectives,” spanning “everything from total regime change to getting rid of the nuclear program and all variations in between,” is leaving open the possibility to claim victory no matter what happens. In the end, “it will be what Trump says in retrospect was the objective.”

The question of why Trump did this might be almost as hard to answer as what he hopes to achieve. During his first term, Trump repeatedly confronted the possibility of large-scale action against Iran, but pulled back, siding with military advisers who counselled caution, such as his first-term Defense Secretary, Jim Mattis, over his more hawkish aides, including the national-security adviser John Bolton and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who were longtime advocates of striking Iran. “His risk tolerance was lower then,” one of Trump’s senior national-security officials from his first term recalled. “More of his notion was to get out of things rather than to get into them.”

Part of the difference can be explained by personnel: Trump, in his second term, is advised by a collection of sycophants purposely selected to say yes to whatever he wants. Another crucial difference is the facts on the ground in the Middle East, which has been transformed since the terrorist attack on Israel by the Iranian-funded proxy group Hamas on October 7, 2023. Israel’s response has been not only to wage war on Hamas in Gaza but to effectively destroy much of Iran’s regional capabilities and, acting in concert with Trump last June, to knock out key facilities associated with its nuclear program. Despite Trump’s loud claims of imminent attack, the most rational case for his decision to launch the war now is to take advantage of Iran’s weakness, not its strength.

To a legacy-obsessed leader who is seeking opportunities to write his name in the history books, the chance to topple a regime that has tormented American Presidents since 1979 may have been simply too tantalizing to turn down. All the more so because Trump has gotten used to the sheer rush from his repeated, relatively low-risk, high-reward deployments of American force around the world. America’s most performatively macho President has always been attracted to spectacular displays of military power; in his first year back in office, he ordered attacks on seven different nations—more than any other modern President.

Last year, when Trump insisted on renaming the Department of Defense as the Department of War, despite not having the legal authority to do so, it might have seemed a discordant note from a draft dodger who was, at the time, insistent upon styling himself the “President of PEACE.” But, to me, it was the moment when this conflict took on a certain inevitability: when he created a War Department, sooner or later he was always going to have to have a real war. ♦︎

Susan B. Glasser, a staff writer at The New Yorker, has a weekly column on life in Washington and is a host of the Political Scene podcast. She is also a co-author of “The Divider: Trump in the White House, 2017-2021.”

 

03/03/26 08:52 AM #18978    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jay thank you for that very good article by Susan Glasser...this part of it was especially telling:

"Despite Trump’s loud claims of imminent attack, the most rational case for his decision to launch the war now is to take advantage of Iran’s weakness, not its strength."

This is really a sad time. Its a regional war with so many countries attacked now. and so far six American troops killed and maybe as many as 150 little children dead with a bomb at their school. Trump can't even focus on the gravity of what he did. He continues to muse about his beautiful gold curtains and amazing ballroom plans. Love, Joanie


03/03/26 09:45 AM #18979    

 

Jay Shackford

What the Hell — Let’s go to War

 

Perhaps there isn’t any good or credible explanation for going to war with our long-time enemy — Iran.  

 

Consider our bat-shit crazy President’s desperate situation.  He’s being hounded by the unfolding Epstein scandal and declining poll numbers.  Now the media and others are talking about missing FBI 302s (interviews with victims and witnesses as well as other evidence) collected years ago about Donald Trump allegedly raping and beating up a 13-year-old babysitter as part of the Epstein files. What’s next?  Melania unknowingly being a scout for Epstein’s sex trafficking ring by helping to recruit Russian and Eastern European girls dreaming about becoming models in New York? 

 

The economy is sinking into a recession.  The affordability crisis is worsening — with the costs of rent, food, medical care, child care and other basics of living still going up at alarming rates.  More than 16 million Americans have lost their health care insurance in recent months.  

 

With the war, prices at the pumps are bound to rise at least 25 cents in the weeks ahead.  Gas lines at the pumps could be next. Unemployment is rising, with Trump managing to create only 15,000 new jobs per month during his first year in office; 180,000 new jobs per month were created during Joe Biden’s four year in office. And Trump’s  high-tech bros are pushing Artificial Intelligence (AI) that promises to make getting a good job or starting a career all that much tougher.  The unemployment rate among recent college graduates is about 10 percent and rising.  The political outlook is bleak — with Democrats likely to sweep the upcoming mid-term elections.

 

“What the hell,” our narcissistic, draft-dodging President must be thinking.  “Let’s go to war and change the headlines and narrative.”    


03/03/26 10:38 AM #18980    

 

Jack Mallory

You know you're an old fart when . . . 


https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/03/dining/pizza-hut.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share
 


03/03/26 11:32 AM #18981    

 

Jack Mallory

“What the hell, let’s go to war and change the headlines and narrative.” 

Can't help but wonder if this isn't a driving factor in Bone Spurs' thinking. 
 

Trying to get myself away from concentrating on our casualties. They are already low compared to the overall death and destruction. Today's NYT:


Bone Spurs' administration has prepared to support US  casualties in this war of choice with his cuts to our VA health care. Also from the NYT:

". . . the V.A. chose not to hire replacements for roughly 14,400 unfilled medical vacancies at its health care division."

 

My own research, with a little AI assist:

There are folks, on the Forum and off, who will look at 6 KIA and think, "Only 6?" Just as in the late 50s and early 60s--when almost no one was looking anyway-- there were surely those who looked at our casualties in Vietnam and thought, "Only a few dozen?" 

Not until the mid-60s when our casualties rose into the thousands, the late-60s and early 70s when cumulative US deaths rose into the tens of thousands, did the "bring 'em home" movement rise to a crescendo. (By this time, Vietnamese wounded and dead, military and civilian, were in the hundreds of thousands.)
 

When will our voices rise against THIS war? Will we look at ALL the deaths, or once again focus on only passport carrying American deaths?
 


03/03/26 02:59 PM #18982    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Thomas, so sorry to hear a fellow classmate, Michael Riskin died. I didn't know him personally but he was someone you knew well.  Hey Jay and Jack, I was thinking too that Trump would want to go to war to divert from the present headlines he disliked about an FBI interview revealing his being accused of sex crimes of a minor. Love, Joanie ❤️


03/03/26 03:45 PM #18983    

 

Jack Mallory

WASHINGTON—In light of increased pressure on President Obama to order a military strike on Syria, leading historians and military experts on Tuesday simply pointed to the United States’ longstanding and absolutely impeccable record of successful bombing campaigns over the past 60 years. “The record clearly shows that, in every instance since the Second World War in which the U.S. government has launched strategic missile attacks on foreign soil, our military forces easily targeted enemy assailants with total precision, leaving no civilian casualties, collateral damage, or any long-term negative consequences for the affected country or region, American foreign policy, or international relations as a whole,” said Harvard University historian Dr. Michael Carmona, adding that such past U.S. bombing operations have gone particularly well in Middle Eastern countries over the last century. “Just look at the 1954 bombings in Guatemala, the 1965-to-1973 bombings in Laos and Cambodia, the 1982 bombings in Beirut, the 1986 bombings in Libya, the 1987 bombings in Iran, the 1998 bombings in Iraq, the 1998 bombings in Sudan, the 1998 bombings in Afghanistan, routine airstrikes in Pakistan since 2005, the 2007 bombings in Somalia, the 2011 bombings in Somalia, and essentially the entire American military effort in Vietnam from 1960 to 1975. Those were all executed perfectly, and led, in the long run, to the most desirable possible outcome.” All experts on the subject then agreed unanimously that, if you want to create positive and lasting change in a troubled region, change that you will one day look back on with a deep sense of confidence, pride, and assurance that you did the right thing, then bombing campaigns are almost always the way to go.


 

The nice thing about historical/political satire is that it can be used over, and over, and over again. Because, beyond providing rueful chuckles, it has no effect. See dateline above. 


03/03/26 08:45 PM #18984    

 

Jack Mallory

Salute. 

"Amor was an avid gardener who enjoyed making salsa from the peppers and tomatoes in her garden with her son, a senior in high school. She also enjoyed rollerblading and bicycling with her fourth-grade daughter." 

Helluva Brave New Squeeze.

https://patch.com/minnesota/saintpaul/mn-soldier-killed-iran-war-mom-2-days-return-home


03/04/26 10:16 AM #18985    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

What a tragedy. Six soldiers who should be alive but Trump had to wage an unnecessary war putting our troops and the lives of so many at risk.  Love, Joanie


03/05/26 11:24 AM #18986    

 

Jack Mallory

A lot of things coming down for me, these days. Turning 80 in a week. Another war. And to remind me of my war, as if I need reminding, the last American with his feet on the ground in that war just died. 30+ years in the Marine Corps, senior NCO, not just another commie antiwar protestor like me.


“A lot of good people got killed, and for what? And when we left, we left with our tail between our legs.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/04/us/politics/juan-jose-valdez-dead.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share

Sometimes history doesn't rhyme; it repeats itself.
 

From one of the comments on the article in the NYT:

"We remember that day of helicopters on the embassy roof, which seemed as strange as the moon landing. It was America's first taste of being in the wrong. 

 

"I recall witnessing the massive daily protests against the war on the campuses around the Bay Area. One day a group of men marched together carrying the flag. They wore blue jeans and leather and held a banner that said, 'Vietnam Veterans Against the War'. That was a moment in history . . ."

 


03/05/26 05:49 PM #18987    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

No more Noam. Poor lady. She got fired by tweet just as she was making a speech, not knowing she'd been fired. The felon doesn't even have the balls to fire her to her face, or at least in a phone call.  So now she's THE SPECIAL ENVOY FOR THE SHIELD OF THE AMERICAS! WHA? Is this straight out of DC comics? No seriously, would it be even possible to come up with a more hilarious name for a non-existent job? 


03/05/26 06:49 PM #18988    

 

Jack Mallory

I thought Shield of the Americas was a Marvel Comic! Maybe this is really a promotion for her?

 

And one of Trump's pardonees just got a sentence the Felon can't pardon him on, as much as he might like to.


One of the many "great people," as Trump called them, who have committed crimes again. Too bad this scumbag isn't even mentioned in the Epstein files like Trump is--might get him some richly deserved special treatment in prison if he were.

https://www.npr.org/2026/03/05/nx-s1-5725470/trump-jan-6-pardon-sexual-abuse-prison

********

A crime not yet prosecuted, and that probably won't be under this administration:


https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/05/world/middleeast/iran-school-us-strikes-naval-base.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share

Although I'm sure Bone Spurs would pardon it. NBD, just kids. 


03/05/26 07:15 PM #18989    

 

Robert Hall

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse spoke for the record on the very long history of connections between Russia, Epstein, the Maxwell family and Trump--and others
https://www.youtube.com/live/ylvTFvJvB84?si=v3c1S0gnO3OzcWaathers.

03/06/26 04:20 PM #18990    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

jack Thank you Robert.  That was an amazing video of Sheldon Whitehouse speaking about Epstein. I had no idea there was such a Russia connection in the crimes. The extent of Epsteins sex crimes and corruption is so vast.  I have always thought Sheldon Whitehouse to be an outstanding Senator.  
 

 


03/07/26 10:52 AM #18991    

 

Jack Mallory

Many of us have been hoping that we didn’t pay for the deaths of over one hundred Iranian children. The U.S. media has been very cautious about conclusions, but as this article and others indicate, it looks as if we’re killing children again. It's what we pay for when we buy a war. Any war.

https://apnews.com/article/iran-minab-girls-school-airstrike-us-israel-c3095dc9729881b567277a1c5c47efb2

 


03/08/26 11:58 AM #18992    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, it does seem likely  US hit the girls school.  How horrific that these little ones just starting their life are no more...and the six troops killed are now gone forever and 1,000's of Iranians.  They should all be alive today.  What happened to Trump saying he was the peace President.  So many attacks on countries are started by him.  He is eying Cuba next. Meanwhile billions go for the war for the taxpayers to pay. Programs to help the needy in our country are being cut. Recently during a sports event Trump was asked about intelligence that Russia was letting Iran know where to target the US.  Trump was outraged and then went called the person stupid to ask such a question during the event he was at.  Love, Joanie


03/09/26 07:18 AM #18993    

 

Jim Boone

You have to remember these folks only care about children prenatally


03/09/26 09:22 PM #18994    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jim, I know what you mean...Its hypocritical to defend the unborn but not the already born children as well...Love, Joanie


03/10/26 05:14 PM #18995    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Hey campers, are you ready for some more quotes from the felon and his minions? 

The felon was responding to questions about his war when he said "“MAGA loves what I’m doing. MAGA loves everything I do. MAGA is me. MAGA loves everything I do, and I love everything I do, too."

And from his trusted pal Stephen Miller, also about wars, he said during the 2024 campaign, “Kamala equals world war, Trump equals peace.”

How about some inspiring words from his inaugural address? The felon said, “Never again will the immense power of the president be weaponized to persecute political opponents — something I know something about. We will not allow that to happen.”  How's that working out? 

I see that the felon has vowed not to sign a single bill until ....well, I'll let him talk:

"“I, as President, will not sign other Bills until this is passed,” he wrote on Truth Social on Sunday. “AND NOT THE WATERED DOWN VERSION – GO FOR THE GOLD: MUST SHOW VOTER I.D. & PROOF OF CITIZENSHIP: NO MAIL-IN BALLOTS EXCEPT FOR MILITARY – ILLNESS, DISABILITY, TRAVEL: NO MEN IN WOMEN’S SPORTS: NO TRANSGENDER MUTILIZATION FOR CHILDREN! DO NOT FAIL!!!”

Okay first of all I really don't know what transgender has to do with voting rights. But I wonder if the felon knows that if a bill lands on his desk, he has 10 days to either sign it or veto it. If he does nothing, it becomes law. I guess nobody told him. But this is a moot point because Thune and Johnson will not allow anything to come to the floor for a vote, and so they will shut down the possibility of Congress accomplishing anything.

Do you suppose the felon understands that the Kennedy Center's full title is The John F Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts? Does he realise that the word memorial means it's a place honoring a dead person? Does he realize that he's implying that he's dead?  I guess nobody told him. 


03/10/26 05:48 PM #18996    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Joan, I agree with your points. Trumps Save Act is a voter suppression bill. There has been clearly documented that voter fraud is almost non existent so Trump needs a way to supress voting of Democrats with this requirement of voter ID and other requirements to vote. They were trying to gerimander their States to get rid of the black people who tend to vote Democratic. Trump is terrified that he will lose the midterms...I hope I am right. I think no matter what shanigans he pulls, he will be creamed in the midterms. The democrats are fired up...Yes, Trump doesn't seem to understand that the Kennedy Center was formed to honor John F. Kennedy, not Trump who is still alive and causing extreme cruelty and hardships. I'm sure when another President is in, there will be a way to take off Trumps name. Love, Joanie


03/11/26 04:14 PM #18997    

 

Jack Mallory

It now appears certain that our tax dollars bought the deaths of about 175 Iranian civilians, mostly school children, in Iran. Old, out-dated intelligence seems to have been used in the targeting of two American missile attacks on a school. 


https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/11/us/politics/iran-school-missile-strike.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share

Although the investigation hasn't mentioned the possibility, perhaps more stringent targeting guidelines--what Hegseth refers to as "stupid rules of engagement"--might have saved the lives of these children and their teachers. 

"Epic Fury" is a surprisingly fitting euphemism for blowing up elementary schools. More so than the genteel "collateral damage." 
 

"Brave new squeeze" is another circumlocution that obfuscates effectively, allowing some tax payers to ignore the deaths they're financing.


In the post that gave us Brave New Squeeze we also heard about "far left screams."

Nori--when school children are torn apart by our high explosives (much more likely than being squeezed to death), which direction do their screams come from?

 


03/12/26 08:32 AM #18998    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, I too heard that it became conclusive that the US blew up the school killing all those little children and their teachers...and for what...for "an excursion" as this war has been called and all the other reasons they give..This is so tragic that the teachers and those just starting out their lives are no more. Now its 7 troops killed and so many thousands just killed from our bombs.It will be oil prices rising or the stock market crashing that will get Trump to end the war. Looks like even a harder line regime will replace the one taken out. Trump always finds a way to hurt our country severely and also branch out to hurt the world. ..Love, Joanie


03/12/26 09:50 PM #18999    

 

Robert Hall

Our current president has clarified that his war--isn't. It's just "a little excursion". . .......

03/13/26 10:52 AM #19000    

 

Jack Mallory

Turned 80 yesterday.  Does that explain my state of confusion? I wake up in the morning trying to remember who we're at war with today: Iran? Iraq? I know it’s one of those “I” countries. Ireland? 

Or maybe I’m totally confused. Eurasia? NO, EASTASIA! That’s it! We’ve ALWAYS BEEN AT WAR WITH EASTASIA! 

Or, not at “war.” Just an "excursion." Whatever Big Bonespurs says.


03/13/26 02:07 PM #19001    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

 

Soon Robert it will be just a tiny stroll.  
hey Jack, Happy Birthday to you, Happy Birthday to you, Happy Birthday dear Jack.  Happy Birthday to you/ou!!!  🎈🥳🎂🎉You look great in the photos.  Maybe it's best we all think of this milestone as just 8x 10.  It sounds less formidable.  Let's all keep going strong. My b day is 7/13. I have 4 months to go🤣

 

 

 


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