The U.S. Is Sprinting Towards Disaster
In the last seven or eight weeks, the president has
made a series of unhinged threats to start a war, and he has been amassing
forces to start it
Feb 24, 2026
https://daniellarison.substack.com/p/the-us-is-sprinting-towards-disaster
The Financial Times reports on the Iran crisis that the president has
created:
“Who wants this? Nobody wants this,” said [Aaron
David] Miller at the Carnegie Endowment. “We’re sleepwalking towards a war, in
search of a strategy.”
There is almost no support for a new war, but there is
a vocal group of hardliners in the Republican Party and in Washington that has
been seeking this conflict for decades. The report mentions Mark Levin as one
example, and there are also ideological fanatics in the Senate including Tom
Cotton and Lindsey Graham. Genocide denier Bret Stephens chimed in again this week with a despicable plea for war.
They have been goading Trump to attack, and I fear they are going to get what
they want.
The vocal fanatics might not matter as much if they
faced real opposition, but there is virtually no one in the Republican Party
pushing in the opposite direction. Regardless, Trump has usually been inclined
to listen to the hardliners when there is a division in the party. The
president has consistently given the Iran hawks whatever they want, and there
is no reason to assume that he won’t do it again this time. The vast majority
of Americans doesn’t want this, but the very worst people in our country are clamoring
for it.
One of the many reasons why the decision to wage war
should not be left to any one person is that it is relatively easy for a small
faction to control that decision. It is even easier when the president is as
ignorant and easily swayed as Trump is. If the decision rested with all of the
people’s elected representatives as it is supposed to, there would at least be
a chance that more rational views might prevail.
Miller is right that attacking Iran is very unpopular,
but I don’t know that sleepwalking is the right way to describe what is
unfolding. In the last seven or eight weeks, the president has made a series of
unhinged threats to start a war and he has been amassing forces to start it.
That feels very much like sprinting towards the edge of a cliff. The president
is not sleepwalking into anything, but it seems that his opponents in Congress
are fast asleep.
I see claims that the president is trapping himself
into a war that he supposedly doesn’t want, but I see no evidence that he
doesn’t want to attack. He is doing almost everything that other
interventionist presidents would do. The only thing he isn’t doing is going
through the motions of explaining to the public why he is doing it. He feels no
need to tell Congress or the public anything, but that isn’t an indication that
he isn’t going to go through with it.
If Trump doesn’t want war, that isn’t because he
doesn’t want to use force. Saying he doesn’t want war is another way of saying
that he wants Iran to surrender without firing a shot. He wants to wage war on
them, but he would prefer it if they did not retaliate. The president’s idea of
peace is a world where he dictates extreme terms to other nations and they
gratefully bow before him. He is going to unleash death and destruction on Iran
because they refuse to bow.
It’s important to remember that the president’s “deal”
rhetoric is nothing more than a smokescreen. He is setting it up so he can
claim that he was prepared to make a “deal” but the Iranians refused to
cooperate. Trump is trying to make it look as if it is Iran’s fault if there is
a conflict when it is 100% his doing. Trump has had at least half a dozen
opportunities to change course since the start of the year, and each time he
has chosen to keep heading for the edge of that cliff. It is always possible that
he could veer away at the last moment, but at this point there is no reason to
expect that he will do that.
A wise president would never have done any of the
things that Trump has done. A wise president doesn’t fire off reckless threats
to attack another country out of the blue. A wise president doesn’t deliver
unhinged ultimatums demanding that another government surrender its core
interests. A wise president doesn’t send a huge number of ships to carry out
the reckless threats he never should have made.
If the president were wise, he would stop all of this
and recall our ships. He would drop his extreme unrealistic demands and settle
for a reasonable compromise on the nuclear issue. He would lift as many of the
sanctions on Iran as he possibly could. In short, he would repudiate his entire
Iran policy and try something else.