Tag: donald trump
Trump Rubio Wiles at Mar-a-Lago

Why Trump's Ego-Driven, Impetuous War Just May Leave Iran More Dangerous

Two weeks after the start of the Iran War, the picture is coming into focus. Why would a president who promised countless times not to start new wars have leapt into this conflict? As always in the age of Trump, it's necessary to separate the president's motives and mindset from the old ways we used to decide questions of war and peace, tariffs, sanctions, immigration, taxes and other matters. Before venturing into Trump's mind, let's consider the shape of the discussion.

Those who imagine that we are still operating in a normal world are making arguments in favor of military action as if we were engaged in a national debate. Where is the acknowledgment, they demand, of what a vicious regime the mullahs in Iran run? The Islamic Republic has been at war with us since 1979, they stress, and if you doubt their murderous intent, you're forgetting the 444 days our diplomats were held hostage, the attack on our Beirut embassy and on Marines stationed at the Beirut airport, the Khobar Towers bombing, and countless IEDs and other attacks by Iranian proxies during the Iraq War, to say nothing of their unofficial national slogan "Death to America/Death to Israel."

Iran's internal repression is nearly as brutal as its external support for terrorism, with women in particular bearing the brunt. The population loathes the regime, as we've witnessed many times, but most recently in January when they thronged the streets in their tens of thousands — only to be gunned down en masse.If we had a normal administration and a normal decision-making process, those factors would have been considered. We would have weighed the risks of war against the opportunity to strike a fatal blow to a terrible regime. The fact of Iran being a nasty piece of work is not dispositive on the matter of going to war. A poorly planned or executed war can make things worse.

Now we turn to the juvenile, facts-optional world of Trump, where the president commits the United States to war without planning, without consultation with allies, without congressional authorization and without a clue about how badly things could go.

Thrilled by U.S. firepower in last summer's attack on Iran's nuclear facilities, and giddy from the perceived success of removing Nicolas Maduro, Trump came to believe that the military was a magic wand that he could wave according to his whim. Of course he was aware of his vows to keep us out of wars, but wars are boots on the ground, not beautiful strikes from the skies. Disregarding warnings from wiser heads about the risks to the Strait of Hormuz, Trump dove in.

My best understanding of his motive harks back to the hostage crisis of 1979. Trump lives in the past more than most people, and due to his exceptional sensitivity to humiliation, I think he carries the shame of that episode in his heart. In a 1980 interview that is believed to be his first public statement on foreign policy, he said, "That this country sits back and allows a country such as Iran to hold our hostages, to my way of thinking, is a horror."

In addition to wounded pride, we must add vainglory. The Lindsey Graham/Binyamin Netanyahu tag team played upon Trump's lust for glory by convincing him that while Iran had been a thorn in our side for half a century and previous presidents had vowed not to permit it to become a nuclear power, no other president had the cojones to do the job.

Trump obviously thought he could achieve regime change with an air campaign alone. He invited the Iranian people in the early hours of the attacks to take back their country. Perhaps both he and Netanyahu misread the lesson of January, believing that the people would seize power. But the real lesson of January was that the regime would do anything, including massacring thousands of its own citizens, to maintain its grip on power. The brutality worked. Only the regime has guns. The demonstrations subsided.

Iran has inflicted pain on its people for decades and it is more than happy to intensify it now. They can bear shortages, blackouts, misery and death because they have no choice. All the mullahs have to do to "win" this conflict is survive. Meanwhile, an American public that was never consulted and certainly not convinced to undertake a risky war will be intolerant of even higher inflation or a recession. The advantage in a contest of wills goes to the mullahs.

The Iranian regime is one of the worst on the planet, and we must still hope for the sake of the Iranian people and the world that it does not survive. But this war is being conducted to heal psychic wounds and to boost the ego of our dangerous commander in chief, who is now obliged to plead for help opening the Strait of Hormuz from (former?) allies and enemies alike. If the Iranian regime survives, even in a weakened condition, it may be more dangerous than ever, having shown the world that it can withstand simultaneous assault from the "big and little Satans."

Mona Charen is policy editor of The Bulwark and host of the "Beg to Differ" podcast. Her new book, Hard Right: The GOP's Drift Toward Extremism, is available now.

Reprinted with permission from Creators

MAGA Debate Over Iran Conflict Degenerates Into 'Micropenis' Flame War

MAGA Debate Over Iran Conflict Degenerates Into 'Micropenis' Flame War

Megyn Kelly, the former Fox News Host turned podcaster, is in the business of getting attention. This week, it worked. She got the attention of the President of the United States in her attack on fellow conservative talker Mark Levin, not to mention the support of fellow bomb thrower Marjorie Taylor Greene.

At the center of the attack is the question of the size of Mark Levin's member.

Levin is for the war with Iran, Kelly is against it. But they aren't debating the war like we teach children to do, using their words to make a point rather than calling names. No, the way you get attention is by going on the attack.

"Poor Megyn Kelly. An emotionally unhinged, lewd, and petulant wreck. She's completely revealed and destroyed herself," Levin wrote in on social media post on Sunday. "She's everything people say she is, but much worse. Never an intelligent, thoughtful, or substantive comment. Utterly toxic."

Kelly responded to Levin, calling him "micropenis Mark," writing that he "thinks he has the monopoly on lewd."

"He tweets about me obsessively in the crudest, nastiest terms possible," Kelly wrote. "Literally more than some stalkers I've had arrested. He doesn't like it when women like me fight back. Bc of his micropenis."

That's when Trump got involved. He took to social media on Sunday to defend Levin and attack Kelly.

"Mark Levin, a truly Great American Patriot, is somewhat under siege by other people with far less Intellect, Capability and Love for our Country. Mark is Tough, Strong and Brilliant. When you hear others unfairly attack Mark, remember that they are jealous and angry Human Beings, whose "sway" is much less than the Public understands, and will, now that they know where I stand, rapidly diminish."

Megyn was not cowed. I'm sure she was delighted. The exchange was getting lots of attention. So she piled on. Kelly wrote on Monday that Levin is "such a SMALL MAN he had to go beg the president for a pat on the head (in the middle of a war!) to make himself feel better about ... well, you know ... Just like all feckless, weakling bullies Micro can dish it out but he can't take it. After just one post putting the so-called 'great one' in his place, he ran crying to Daddy," she wrote.

Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), once a staunch Trump ally, offered her support to Kelly, writing: "I wholeheartedly support Megyn Kelly telling the world that Mark Levin has a micropenis. It's the most deserved insult and I don't care if it's vulgar. And Trump's gigantic defense of Levin only enraged the base more. People are DONE. MAGA destroyed by micropenis Mark Levin."

These are our opinion leaders? Our public intellectuals? The people getting all the attention in what should be a serious discussion of our goals and our mission in Iran? This is what MAGA has devolved to.

And in the midst of this, you have the president and his FCC chair complaining about how the mainstream media is covering the war and threatening broadcast licenses. The mainstream media is a model of restraint compared to the screamers on the right. The threats clearly violate the First Amendment. If the coverage comes out to be mixed, at best, that's because this administration has so completely failed at messaging this war: stating a rationale, defining the engagement, outlining the endgame. Theirs is an invitation to skeptical coverage.

The way to deal with that skeptical coverage is to answer the underlying questions about mission and duration, not to blame the people who are asking. But MAGA is too busy throwing mud at each other to answer the fundamental questions about this war that still have not been addressed. President Donald Trump has no one to blame but his own friends for the coverage he doesn't like. They deserve it.

Susan Estrich is a celebrated feminist legal scholar, the first female president of the Harvard Law Review, and the first woman to run a U.S. presidential campaign. She has written eight books.

Reprinted with permission from Creators.


Why America Is On Its Own: Slavery, Tariffs And Trump's Dire Strait

Why America Is On Its Own: Slavery, Tariffs And Trump's Dire Strait

Donald Trump is now pleading with other countries to rescue his war on Iran by helping to open the Strait of Hormuz — although Trump being Trump, his pleas for assistance take the form of threats. Regardless, help is not on the way. Germany, Australia and Japan have flatly said no, while Britain and France have been slightly equivocal but at most hinted at willingness to supply forces after the fighting stops.

Why this effectively unanmous rejection? A large part of the answer is that other countries couldn’t secure the Strait even if they wanted to. Boris Pistorius, Germany’s defense minister, was outright caustic in remarks Monday:

What does (...) Donald Trump expect a handful or two handfuls of European frigates to do in the Strait of Hormuz that the powerful U.S. Navy cannot do?

Beyond that, who wants to take risks in support of a U.S. government that nobody trusts, a government that neither shows gratitude for aid nor punishes those who do America harm?

Indeed, even as Trump begs in his graceless way for help, his administration is preparing to hit the very nations he is appealing to with another round of tariffs — tariffs that will be imposed based on an obviously false, bad faith, totally insulting argument.

As most readers probably know, almost a year ago Trump imposed tariffs on almost every other nation, including islands inhabited only by penguins, by invoking the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. This use of IEEPA was blatantly illegal, and after dragging its heels for many months, the Supreme Court finally agreed with lower courts that the tariffs were, in fact, illegal.

One important point that isn’t emphasized enough is that in addition to being illegal under U.S. law, the IEEPA tariffs were a gross breach of contract. Most U.S. tariff rates were set in 1995, as part of the negotiations that among other things created the World Trade Organization. These tariffs were “bound” by international agreements, which have almost as much force as treaties. But the U.S. just ripped those agreements up, without even trying to make a case for its actions.

Now the IEEPA tariffs are gone, but Trump isn’t giving up. On Sunday night he posted a long, falsehood-filled rant about the Court, beginning with a condemnation of its tariff ruling. And while he can’t simply defy Supreme Court rulings — not yet, anyway — his officials have been scrambling for legal strategies to reimpose high tariffs.

And the main one they’ve come up with is a doozy. Under U.S. law the executive branch has the authority to impose tariffs without new legislation in certain specified circumstances. These include Section 232 tariffs to protect national security, the (spurious) basis for most of the tariffs that survived the Supreme Court’s ruling. (I’m ignoring the Section 122 tariffs currently in place to deal with a nonexistent balance of payments crisis, not because they’re legal — they clearly aren’t — but because they will expire this summer.)

Looking forward, however, Trump officials are planning to impose another major round of tariffs using Section 301, designed to cope with unfair foreign trading practices. In particular, they’re proposing tariffs on 60 (!) countries, including Canada, the UK and the European Union, that they accuse of violating rules against international trade in goods produced with forced labor.

Wait — is the administration accusing Canada and Europe of using slave labor to produce their exports? No, they’re saying that these countries’ governments are guilty of “failure to impose and effectively enforce a ban on the importation of goods produced with forced labor,” and that these failures “burden or restrict U.S. commerce.” In other words, they’re going to slap tariffs on Canada, not because they claim that Canada uses slave labor, but because China does, and they claim that Canada is hurting America because it isn’t doing enough to stop those slave-produced goods from entering its own market.

Nobody, and I mean nobody, believes this story. Nobody believes that Canada or Europe are worse at policing global slave labor than the U.S. is. In fact, nobody believes that the Trump administration even cares about slave labor. After all, the alleged concerns that are about to be used to raise tariffs were nowhere to be found until the Court ruled against IEEPA.

So this is nothing but an excuse for another attempted end-run around the law — an end-run that is also a massive insult to other democratic nations, the same nations Trump is pleading with for help in undoing the disaster he has created in the Persian Gulf.

The point is that it’s all of a piece. The current U.S. government has, as Trump would say, treated our erstwhile allies very, very badly in multiple ways, with the arbitrary, illegal imposition of tariffs the most consequential. And now those erstwhile allies have no inclination to help Trump out of the Iran trap he created for himself. Funny how that works.

Paul Krugman is a Nobel Prize-winning economist and former professor at MIT and Princeton who now teaches at the City University of New York's Graduate Center. From 2000 to 2024, he wrote a column for The New York Times. Please consider subscribing to his Substack.

Reprinted with permission from Paul Krugman.

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.

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