Tag: donald trump
No Plan: Weeks Of Bombing Iran Have Brought Not Success But Global Chaos

No Plan: Weeks Of Bombing Iran Have Brought Not Success But Global Chaos

There are, as it turns out, a few small gaps in the Trump administration’s war planning and execution.

For example: doing any advance preparation for new leadership on the ground, or even identifying forces who might step into the vacuum if the regime collapses.

Or explaining to the American people why we are there in the first place. The administration has now offered seven different answers to that question, which suggests that no one really knows—least of all the supposed leader of the free world.

Or preparing for the spike in oil prices that follows when Iran blockades—and now mines—the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 20 percent of the world’s oil supply moves.

Or, most importantly, explaining how this mess ends, and what success even looks like.

By the raw metrics of aerial bombardment, the United States is delivering. Pete Hegseth has promised that each day will be more intense than the last, and the strikes around Tehran and other strategic targets are confirming the boast. Israel has nearly obliterated Iran’s air capabilities.

As the bombing increases, the war expands. There are now about a dozen countries involved. The spillover has also unsettled America’s traditional partners, who now look less like allies in a shared strategy than like governments nervously calculating how close the blast radius might come.

What Iran cannot do against the United States or Israel, it now does against countries in the Persian Gulf, such as the UAE and Saudi Arabia. Even Turkey, a NATO member, now finds itself caught in the expanding vortex. Russia reportedly lends technical assistance to Iran’s drone program, one of the few military capabilities Tehran still operates effectively.

The war has broadened well beyond any semblance of the mission the administration ever offered the public.

None of that is success.

It is metastasis.

Of the shifting rationales the administration has offered, the one that seems arguably in our strategic interest would be regime change. Of course, that is a patently illegal reason to start a war, but the war’s illegality is a given, as I and many commentators have noted.

Since the ascent to power of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in 1989, the regime has been a powerhouse in the Middle East and a force for repression at home and instability abroad—silencing dissent, brutally crushing protests, executing opponents, restricting the rights of women and minorities, and funding militant proxy groups across the region.

But our campaign to date, as damaging as it has been to Iran, has not advanced the cause of regime change. In fact, no sustained aerial campaign in modern history has produced regime change on its own. You need boots on the ground. You need, before the bombs ever fall, a cultivated opposition, a prepared population, a political infrastructure capable of stepping into the vacuum.

This administration laid none of that groundwork—because, it appears, no one thought that far ahead.

The prospects for regime change plummeted with the selection of the son of Supreme Leader Khamenei to succeed his father, a pointed and deliberate act of defiance against President Trump, who earlier this week remarked that he wished to have a say in the next leader of Iran.

The move signals, with unmistakable clarity, that Tehran does not intend to yield.

Trump has suggested the new leader would not last long without American approval, but there’s no real basis to believe that. Indeed, intelligence reports indicate the Iranian regime remains largely intact and is not at risk of collapse, even after weeks of sustained US and Israeli bombardment.

Meanwhile, the domestic situation in Iran is extraordinarily dangerous for any would-be rebels, who would face the regime’s full security apparatus with no assistance or protective umbrella from the United States.

Then there is the nuclear question—the only other justification for the war that survives serious scrutiny.

Here is the nightmare scenario the administration has conspicuously declined to address: if the Iranian state destabilizes sufficiently, what happens to that material and who controls it?

Iran’s enriched uranium sits buried deep underground. The bombing has not reached it.

The prospect of enriched uranium passing into the hands of some ragtag successor faction, or worse, is a critical question. The administration not only provides none; it gives no indication it has even seriously considered it.

Trump, meanwhile, in Trumpian fashion, says everything and nothing simultaneously.

In an interview with CBS News, he declared the war “very nearly complete.” Markets moved on the word. Oil prices dipped briefly; stocks jumped.

Then, within hours, he reversed course—the war would end “very soon,” but “we’ve got much more to do.”

By afternoon: “We have won in many ways, but not enough.”

These slight changes of key carry worldwide consequences. Oil prices have gone through the roof—gas at levels Americans have not seen since the energy shock of 2022—and the political advisers in the White House, you can be certain, watch that number with the focused dread of men watching a fuse burn.

Iran, for its part, has decided that defiance is its only wartime currency. It has announced, with some bravado given the circumstances, that Tehran will decide when the war ends.

Meanwhile, the war is stunningly, historically unpopular with the American people.

Every American war, even ones that later passed into historical disrepute, began with a surge of popular support.

Pearl Harbor: 97 percent.
Afghanistan, in the raw aftermath of September 11: 92 percent.
The Persian Gulf War: 82 percent.
Panama: 80 percent.
The Iraq war, for all that followed: 76 percent.
Korea: 75 percent.

Twelve days into this war, Americans support it by an abysmal 41 percent—the lowest opening number for any American conflict on record.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll puts support at 27 percent. The Fox News poll—not exactly a Democratic house organ—finds 50 percent.

The spread itself tells a story: public opinion is still forming, which means it has nowhere to go but down as the costs come into focus.

The American people did not choose this war. No one prepared them for it, consulted them, or gave them a framework for understanding it.

They woke up one morning to find the United States bombing Iran.

No Colin Powell moment at the United Nations. No sustained public case or national debate. George W. Bush, for all his failures of candor on Iraq, at least made his case before the American people. He gave them an argument.

Trump gave them a fait accompli.

That failure to prepare the public mirrors the failure to prepare the ground.

They are expressions of the same underlying disorder: a president, and therefore an administration, that moves on impulse; disregards law, morality, and consequences; and confuses raw strength and destruction with foreign policy achievement.

So here is what we have to show for the war: a widening conflict, an undefined mission, an undisturbed nuclear program, a regime that shows no signs of collapse, a historic spike in oil prices, and a president who cannot give two consecutive sentences pointing in the same direction.

The paramount question—how to exit, on what terms, under what framing, with what claim to success—has no prepared answer.

Because preparation, of any kind, was never part of the plan.

Harry Litman is a former United States Attorney and the executive producer and host of the Talking Feds podcast. He has taught law at UCLA, Berkeley, and Georgetown and served as a deputy assistant attorney general in the Clinton Administration. Please consider subscribing to Talking Feds on Substack.

Reprinted with permission from Talking Feds.

Nuclear Expert Says Trump's Iran Argument Lacks Even 'A Scintilla Of Evidence'

Nuclear Expert Says Trump's Iran Argument Lacks Even 'A Scintilla Of Evidence'

President Donald Trump, like the previous Republican president George W. Bush, incorrectly claimed that the Middle Eastern country he wished to invade possessed a nuclear weapon. Unlike Bush, however, Trump never even attempted to create a convincing argument as to the nukes' existence.

“Trump hasn’t presented a scintilla of evidence that Iran represents an imminent nuclear or missile threat to America,” wrote Joseph Cirincione, national security analyst and anti-nuclear activist, wrote on his Substack on Sunday. “He has skipped the laborious process of manipulating the intelligence, presenting false reports and assessments, of trying to convince the American people, the Congress, our allies and the United Nations that there was an urgent necessity to go to war.”

Instead of creating a large body of supposed evidence that could be presented to the public, Cirincione said that Trump relies “on friendly and compliant media to amplify his lies over and over” and a “slavish Republican majority in the House and Senate who parrot his lies and refuse to hold any open hearings on the war or debate an authorization resolution.” The president has even tried to curtail the First Amendment right of the press to critique their activity.

“As part of his effort to consolidate Trump’s authoritarian rule, his Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr is threatening to revoke the licenses of broadcasters who ‘want us to lose the war’ by reporting stories unfavorable to the administration,” Cirincione wrote. “Trump is also aided by legions of well-funded groups backing the far-right government of Israel who are happy to support a war that they believe will destroy a country they consider the arch-enemy of Israel.”

The anti-nuclear activist also commented that Trump is better serving the agenda of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu than he is his own.

“I have been in Washington for over 40 years and I cannot remember a time when Netanyahu did not want to invade Iran,” Cirincione wrote. “His persistence paid off. He finally found an American president so stupid that he would do what every Republican and Democratic president since Ronald Reagan refused to do: start a pointless, enormously costly war with an adversary on the other side of the globe that, however odious, posed only secondary threats to America.”

Ironically, Trump spent months prior to invading Iran (and, before that, Venezuela) demanding that he be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

“Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace, although it will always be predominant, but can now think about what is good and proper for the United States of America,” Trump told Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre earlier in March regarding being snubbed. He later added, “I’m no longer interested in it [the Peace Prize]."

In the words of Steve Schmidt, a Republican strategist who advised Bush, Trump’s exchange with Støre showed Trump has no interest in peace and wishes to wage war.

“No man of violence and venom can resist the siren song of modern warfare, which, after all, is just a game,” Schmidt wrote for his Substack, employing the term “game” sarcastically “This is Trump’s team: Hegseth, Rubio, Vance, Cain, Bondi, Noem, Kushner, Witkoff, Musk, Weiss, Ellison, Hannity, Graham, Patel. Never have so many nitwits commanded so much power. They are a terrifying bunch, to say the least.”

Schmidt concluded by writing “war is no game. Yet, it is treated as such by a group of vile men and women who are playing with human life as if they were gods. Trump is no god. There is no divinity lurking around Trump. There is only blackness. Only death. Only misery. Only wreckage. Only corruption.”

Earlier this month, a former employee for Trump expressed concern that the president will ultimately cause a nuclear war over Iran.


“Few Americans realize how close the president took us to the brink of nuclear war in his first term before aides talked him down,” Miles Taylor, the Department of Homeland Security chief of staff during Trump’s first term, wrote regarding the president’s warmongering against North Korea at that time. “What the public didn’t know at the time — and until years later — was that the president’s team was worried he might start a nuclear war.”


MAGA Push For Voter Suppression Splits Angry Senate Republicans

MAGA Push For Voter Suppression Splits Angry Senate Republicans

Senate Majority Leader John Thune has been forced into a "political pressure cooker" by MAGA members of the GOP, per a new report from Politico, as they push for him to go around the filibuster to pass an unpopular election reform bill demanded by Donald Trump.

According to the Wednesday morning report, Thune "is at the center of a relentless pile-on from prominent figures in the GOP’s MAGA wing" to pass the SAVE America Act, a bill that, among other things, would require voters to provide identification proving their citizenship at polling locations, an idea driven by Trump's debunked claims about widespread voter fraud committed by undocumented immigrants. Trump is so insistent on the passage of the bill that he has pledged not to sign any others until it is passed and sent to his desk.

MAGA Republicans such as Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) are pushing for Thune to invoke a "talking filibuster" to get around the typical "legislative filibuster" rules, which would require 60 votes for the SAVE Act to proceed, an impossibility given Democratic opposition. Under a talking filibuster, only a simple majority of 51 votes would be needed, and Democrats would have to physically hold the Senate floor and speak for hours to keep it from proceeding.

Thune has dug in his heels in opposition to this idea, arguing that there is not actually enough support for it. He has also previously stated that the plan could have more complicated consequences than its proponents realize, and could result in Democrats eating up valuable Senate time with talking.

“It just kind of comes with the territory,” Thune said in an interview on Tuesday. “You just roll with it, you know. It’s the times in which we live.”

Other non-MAGA-aligned Republicans have also begun to speak out against their colleagues' calls for a talking filibuster, including Sen. Thom Tillis, a prominent Trump critic who is set to retire soon.

“Spare me the insights,” Tillis said. “They’re worse than Democrats because they’re so-called Republicans that are trying to undermine Republicans.”The pressure campaign against Thune reached a "crescendo" this week, according to Politico, with Tesla CEO and one-time Trump ally Elon Musk joining the calls for him to be removed as majority leader. For his part, Thune does not appear to be bothered.

He added that lawmakers calling for a talking filibuster “have no earthly idea how unlikely it is we’ll be successful at the end of the day. And yet they want to pressure me into exposing some of our candidates to votes that make no sense, that are not going to succeed.”

Other GOP senators spoke to Politico anonymously about their frustrations, with one calling the antics of their MAGA colleagues "bulls——," and another saying that, "A lot of us are done."

Reprinted with permission from Alternet


Courage Over Fear: Will Americans Stand Strong For Free And Fair Elections?

Courage Over Fear: Will Americans Stand Strong For Free And Fair Elections?

Rep. James E. Clyburn (D-SC) is the go-to for both reassurance and resolve. That makes sense, since the South Carolina Democrat is a student of history — and has lived it.

He chronicles some of the country’s past, and his own, in his book The First Eight: A Personal History of the Pioneering Black Congressmen Who Shaped a Nation, published late last year.

It’s instructive to learn about the lives of these eight and the Jim Crow discrimination that thwarted Reconstruction and the political and civil rights progress of African Americans for nearly a century during and after their time.

But that doesn’t make what they accomplished meaningless. And it’s not as though the hard work stopped in the years between the post-Civil War eight and Clyburn’s election in the 1990s.

That’s the lesson Americans who fight for justice must never forget, even when the outlook is discouraging. Clyburn is a very real symbol of how risks can turn into rewards shared by those who follow — and as we witness the current retreat from those gains, initiated at the highest levels of government, his perspective couldn’t come at a better moment.

It is a week that has seen the 61st anniversary of what has become known as Bloody Sunday, the march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama. On March 7, 1965, state troopers violently attacked peaceful citizens seeking equal rights, particularly the voting rights denied African Americans during decades of disenfranchisement.

Many gathered this past weekend in Selma, among them Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Maryland Gov. Wes Moore — a Democratic presence when GOP representation at the event has been sadly shrinking with each passing year — and people from the original march.

One thing they all had in common was worry that the battle over voting rights is far from finished. “I’m concerned that all of the advances that we made for the last 61 years are going to be eradicated,” 78-year-old Charles Mauldin, beaten on Bloody Sunday, told the AP.

The Supreme Court seems primed to obliterate what remains of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, passed after the bloody sacrifice of that day shocked the national consciousness. If given the green light, Republican-led efforts could eliminate majority-minority districts that have given Black and Hispanic citizens representation and a voice in Washington.

President Donald Trump, amid an unpopular war with Iran, has found plenty of time to demand that Congress pass stricter federal voting requirements to fight nonexistent fraud.

The federal government has embarked on what seems like another wild-goose chase in Arizona, seeking records related to the 2020 election, where numerous audits and reviews have proven Trump lost — a truth the president of the United States refuses to accept.

Critical midterm elections are around the corner, with the first primary elections a week old. How certain are free and fair elections, without interference or intimidation?

It was my question during a press conference preceding Trump’s State of the Union address last month. Clyburn was joined by fellow Congressional Black Caucus member Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove of California to offer insight that might be missing that evening.

Does the congressman fear a weakened Voting Rights Act would spell doom for Black voters?

“A lot of things went against us before we ever got the right to vote.”

He offered a reminder of what was happening in Alabama and a host of states in the South when John Lewis and the rest of the brave men, women and children marched. Many African Americans then did not have the right to vote.

“It wasn’t lack of desire, but obstacles placed in their way,” Clyburn said, noting poll taxes, literacy tests, “the violence and intimidation meted out to anyone who would even think of trying to vote, or registering a Black person to vote.”

“Yet there they were on that bridge, fighting injustice for themselves, of course, but mostly for those who would follow.”

No matter what the Supreme Court rules, “it will not take the vote away.” And one vote could make the difference, he said.

Maybe it does take people who have lived the fight to supply a call to action to those who might be scared away by state election laws designed to confuse or by poll watchers whose goal is intimidation rather than assistance.

Folks like Clyburn and Mauldin, who remembered what it took that day in 1965: “It wasn’t that we didn’t have fear, it’s that we chose courage over fear.”

Mary C. Curtis has worked at The New York Times, The Baltimore Sun, The Charlotte Observer, as national correspondent for Politics Daily, and is a senior facilitator with The OpEd Project. She is host of the CQ Roll Call “Equal Time with Mary C. Curtis” podcast. Follow her on X @mcurtisnc3.

Reprinted with permission from Roll Call

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