Trump’s New Iran Strikes Are Turning Failure Into a Wider Disaster
The President’s renewed strikes will not make Iran
easier to coerce. They will make America weaker.
by Brian
Hudson | Jul
13, 2026
The easiest mistake in war is to confuse the ability
to strike again with proof that the previous strike worked. Donald Trump is
making that mistake in Iran. The latest U.S. attacks may destroy more military assets and
infrastructure, but they do not answer the political question that has haunted
this war from the beginning: what outcome is all this destruction supposed to
produce?
The Trump administration launched the initial campaign
claiming that it
would curb Iran’s nuclear program and break the military power behind what
Washington described as Tehran’s regional threat. Months later, Iran has not
surrendered, the nuclear dispute remains unresolved, and the Strait of Hormuz
has become an even more dangerous center of confrontation. The United States is
still negotiating through intermediaries
over shipping and other unresolved issues. Trump says talks can continue even as he declares
the ceasefire over and orders new attacks. This is not a strategy approaching
success. It is a strategy using escalation to avoid confronting its own
failure.
That pattern is the central danger. Each time force
fails to produce the promised political result, the administration treats the
failure not as evidence that its strategy is wrong, but as evidence that it has
not used enough force. The inability of the initial campaign to compel Iran
becomes the justification for another round. If that round also fails, its
failure can authorize the next. The strategy becomes almost impossible to
disprove because every setback is reclassified as unfinished business.
Iran has suffered enormous damage. The opening
attacks killed senior political and military
figures, while the wider
campaign struck thousands of targets and
degraded military capabilities. Yet destruction did not translate into political
compliance. Even the scale of the funeral ceremonies for the Iranian leader assassinated in the
opening U.S.-Israeli strikes, while not proof of national unanimity, showed
that foreign bombardment had not produced the easy collapse in political
authority some advocates of war expected.
Supporters of escalation will say Washington simply
stopped too soon. Iran was weakened but not weakened enough, and more
punishment will eventually force Tehran to concede. But this logic turns every
failure into a reason to repeat the policy that caused it. If bombing does not
secure surrender, bomb more. If retaliation follows, strike harder. If
negotiations remain necessary, claim that diplomacy works only because the
bombs created leverage.
Damage, however, is not leverage unless it moves the
opponent toward the outcome being demanded. The initial campaign changed the
arena of bargaining without resolving the conflict. Hormuz, not the nuclear file, has
become Iran’s most powerful instrument of pressure. Tehran now treats control over the waterway as its
strongest strategic card. Washington went to war in the name of eliminating
Iranian leverage. Instead, it helped elevate a maritime chokepoint through
which the equivalent of about one-fifth of global oil
and petroleum-product consumption passed before the war into the central
battlefield of the relationship.
The confrontation in the strait is therefore evidence
that the initial campaign failed according to its own declared logic. Washington presented the reopening
of Hormuz as proof of success. Yet commercial shipping remains exposed, tanker traffic has slowed, Iran continues to assert authority over passage, and
the United States is again using force to impose the access it claimed had
already been secured. A victory that must be repeatedly recreated through
bombing is not a durable victory. It is an unstable military arrangement
waiting for the next incident.
The deeper problem is that Trump has no visible theory
of how escalation ends. Is the objective a nuclear agreement, unconditional
access through Hormuz, the destruction of Iran’s conventional military
capacity, regime change, or punishment for attacks on shipping? Each goal would
require a different strategy and political settlement. The administration’s
shifting objectives obscure how little the bombing has accomplished. Ambiguity
allows every new strike to be described as necessary while preventing the public
from judging whether the war has succeeded.
This is how an unsuccessful campaign becomes permanent
policy. Iranian retaliation justifies American escalation; American escalation
produces further retaliation; and the resulting insecurity is presented as
proof that restraint would be dangerous. War becomes both the cause of the
crisis and the proposed solution.
The military cost is already substantial. The initial
campaign consumed advanced U.S. munitions at a rate that exposed the limits of
the industrial base. The Center for Strategic and
International Studies estimated that the United States may have used more than
half of its prewar inventory in four of seven key systems, with one to four
years required to rebuild those stocks. Each new round narrows future choices,
increases competition among theaters and allies, and turns scarce production
capacity into fuel for a war without a defined endpoint.
A serious “America First” policy would treat this as a
warning. It would ask whether another missile fired at Iran makes the United
States safer or merely postpones the moment when Washington must negotiate.
Trump instead treats the act of striking as its own strategic justification.
Firepower substitutes for political purpose, even as escalation depletes
military readiness and deepens dependence on the diplomacy the administration
publicly derides.
The economic costs follow the same pattern. Hormuz
connects energy prices, shipping, insurance, manufacturing, agriculture, and
household expenses. Oil prices fell when diplomacy appeared to
reduce the risk of disruption and rose again when U.S.-Iran fighting
resumed. That volatility
is not incidental. It is one of the principal ways the war transfers its costs
to people far from the battlefield.
A sustained campaign would raise insurance and freight
costs, unsettle investment, and increase pressure on fuel-dependent industries
and food production. The burden would fall on workers whose jobs depend on
stable trade, families already struggling with prices, and communities
repeatedly told that housing, health care, schools, and infrastructure are
unaffordable. A government cannot plausibly claim to put Americans first while
exposing them to a preventable energy shock and treating public resources as an
inexhaustible reserve for escalation.
The regional political cost is equally serious. U.S.
operations depend on Gulf states for bases,
logistical support, and access. Yet those states absorb the immediate danger when
Iran retaliates. The more Washington turns their territory into infrastructure
for an open-ended conflict, the stronger their incentive becomes to hedge and
seek arrangements that reduce their exposure. Trump’s escalation risks
weakening the very network of relationships on which American power in the
region depends.
Restraint is not surrender. It is the recognition that
force without a political theory of success becomes an expensive ritual. Before
any further attack, the administration should state its objective, explain how
military action will achieve it, define the conditions for ending operations,
identify the risks of retaliation, and provide the legal authority for widening
the war. Congress should demand those answers rather than allowing a failed
campaign to expand through presidential momentum.
The initial campaign proved that Iran could be damaged
without becoming politically compliant. The renewed strikes are proving
something more dangerous: Trump is prepared to weaken American military
readiness, economic stability, regional relationships, and democratic
accountability rather than acknowledge that bombing did not produce the
settlement he promised. The responsible course is to use the remaining
diplomatic channel to reduce escalation and negotiate the unresolved issues.
Otherwise, every failure will become the excuse for another attack, and the
United States will turn a failed strategy into a permanent war.