As Trump Threatens Iran, We’re on the Brink of a Generational Catastrophe
A US war with Iran would be illegal, immoral, and
dangerous. We can still stop it.
By Negin Owliaei ,
Published
February 20, 2026
Wielding a golden gavel and a playlist featuring the
Beach Boys, Donald Trump ushered in a new era of international humiliation at
the inaugural meeting of the U.S.-led Board of Peace. The new body, while
established by Trump, has been tasked by a UN Security Council resolution to
administer Gaza’s reconstruction efforts. But Trump has also suggested his
ambitions for the board go far beyond Gaza, saying it would “almost be looking
over the United Nations and making sure it runs properly.”
Trump has demanded that world leaders pony up $1
billion for a permanent seat on the ostensible peacekeeping body, even as he
defunds the actual peacekeeping mission of the United Nations, which he has
suggested his new institution will supplant. Altogether, the February 19
inaugural meeting was a perfect distillation of Trump’s preferred method of
extortion masked as diplomacy.
As soon as the Board of Peace was created, Palestinians and solidarity activists decried it as a farce and as a naked display of
imperial ambition; the entire reason for its existence is to fully sidestep
Palestinian autonomy in the rebuilding of Gaza. But any lingering doubts about
the president’s lack of interest in peace were fully wiped away by his multiple
references to bombing Iran during the Board of Peace’s first meeting, which
took place in the newly branded Donald J. Trump Institute of Peace.
Meanwhile Trump has initiated a huge military buildup
near Iran including multiple aircraft carriers and warships. The buildup is so
massive it has drawn parallels to the buildup preceding the U.S. invasion of
Iraq in 2003.
The buildup comes on the heels of the U.S.’s June 2025
aggression against Iran, when the U.S. bombed multiple Iranian nuclear sites
during negotiations over the same nuclear program that the U.S. claims to be
negotiating over today. That attack came during Israel’s 12-day war with Iran,
which was conducted with U.S. arms and logistical support and funded with the
help of U.S. taxpayers. During that war, more than 1,000 Iranians were killed.
Trump has now said that Iran has “10 to 15 days” to make a deal. Following the
charade of last year’s negotiations, analysts expect a U.S. attack on Iran to
now come at any moment. New reporting has suggested that U.S. strikes could even
target individual Iranian leaders, with the aim of bringing about regime change
in the country.
A war between the U.S. and Iran would be undeniably
disastrous. U.S. allies across the region have spent weeks urging restraint.
Even the U.K., in an uncharacteristically defiant move, has reportedly told
Trump it would not allow the U.S. military to use Diego Garcia, the Indian
Ocean island that the two countries ethnically cleansed in order to build a
military base, to bomb Iran, for fear of violating international law.
The majority of people in the U.S. are also against
such an attack. Multiple U.S. polls from recent weeks have shown broad resistance to
the use of military force in Iran, and a strong desire for Trump to seek
congressional approval before launching an attack against another country.
So how did we arrive in this position, where, despite
widespread domestic and international opposition, Trump’s murderous impulses
are treated as inevitable? Over and over, pundits have framed this as a war
that the U.S. is falling into, or one that it is sleepwalking toward. But there
is not some gravitational force pulling the U.S. and Iran toward major military
catastrophe. This is a war of choice by the U.S., and we must remember that it
could be stopped in an instant.
We’ve been on a slow march toward this outcome, both
over the decades that the powers that be in the U.S. and Israel have worked to
manufacture consent for military action against Iran, and more deeply since
they broke the dam on such an attack last June. There has been no
accountability for that illegal attack, just as there has been no
accountability for the U.S. kidnapping of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro —
neither move was met with articles of impeachment for Trump nor for the cabinet
members who orchestrated the attack. And there has been no accountability for
the U.S.’s backing of Israel’s genocide in Gaza, even when some of those
backers acknowledge themselves that U.S. support for the Israeli
military went against domestic law.
And even before these last years, there has been no
real accountability for the invasion of Iraq, to which a war with Iran has long
been compared. Many of the architects of that war have proceeded to build
storied careers in government and media without seeing so much as a single
consequence for their devastating actions. In a grim twist of irony, even
former Bush speechwriter David Frum — the same man who labeled Iran a member of
the “axis of evil” — is now wringing his hands about the lack of consent from Congress or the
U.S. public for a regime change war in the Middle East, writing: “We are poised
days away from a major regime-change war in the Middle East, and not only has
Congress not been consulted, but probably not 1 American in 10 has any idea
that such a war is imminent.”
Trump is getting away with this because, for decades,
we have let warmongers unleash their worst with little to no repercussions. But
when it comes to Congress, part of the lack of opposition is because, at some
level, there actually is a lack of opposition: Coercing other countries,
especially Iran, has long been a bipartisan pastime.
During the Obama administration, Senate Minority
Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York) bucked his own party to come out against the landmark nuclear deal with Iran, which is
widely considered to have been one of the most successful tools keeping
escalations like this from happening. After Trump’s prior attack against Iran
in June, Schumer hit him from the right, accusing the president of folding too early and letting
Iran “get away with everything.” Meanwhile, House Minority Leader Hakeem
Jeffries (D-New York) has been largely silent about Trump’s saber-rattling,
save for a singular reference to Congress’s authority to declare war.
While some lawmakers have been more vocal in their opposition to Trump’s buildup, the only
halfway meaningful response from Congress to the Trump administration has come
from Reps. Ro Khanna (D-California) and Thomas Massie (R-Kentucky), who are
moving to force a war powers vote next week, to bring Congress on the record
about whether Trump should be forced to terminate his military plans against
Iran. But while these kinds of votes are necessary — anything that could
potentially stop such a disaster is necessary — real opposition to Trump’s
warmaking would require more than these process-oriented critiques.
A war with Iran is wrong because it’s morally wrong —
not only because it’s illegal under the Constitution, or under international
law. Laws can be useful tools for stopping military action — indeed, it appears
the U.K.’s concerns about running afoul of international law could in fact
materially affect Trump’s plans for military action. But we must be honest
about the limitations of such laws as we hear the drumbeats for war, illegal or
not, grow louder. We need real, principled opposition that will put fear of
accountability into the hearts of the architects and defenders of this
aggression, whether that comes from the streets or the ballot box or legal
avenues or the halls of Congress.
Inherent in some of the critiques of Trump’s buildup
is the idea that a war with Iran could be conducted a “right” way — with
congressional permission, with actual strategic objectives, or as a more
limited air war compared to a 2003-style invasion with boots on the ground. But
there is no right way to conduct this war; no matter what happens, no matter
who approves it, it will be deadly and dangerous and lead to further terror across the entirety of the region.
This escalation also comes at an especially brutal
time for Iranian civilians, who faced a marked increase in state repression in
response to anti-government protests earlier this year. As U.S. airpower moved
into place, Iranians were observing traditional 40-day mourning ceremonies for
the thousands of people killed in the violent crackdown on protesters. The
grief has been heavy to bear. And as Hanieh Jodat wrote in Truthout last
month, the back-and-forth threats from the United States have added a burden of
psychological warfare to those of us with ties to Iran — we were already
struggling to reach loved ones in our homeland due to the state-imposed
communications shutdown there.
While some in the diaspora have cheered on an invasion
out of rage toward the Iranian state, those of us who study history know there
is no such thing as bombing a country into liberation, especially not at the hands of the same people who
have spent years backing genocide in Palestine. As it did last year, the
Iranian state will use the instability and fear of a war to further crack down
on labor, student, and feminist movements pushing for liberatory change within
the country. A war would only inflict further trauma on a population onto which
a desperate amount of violence and repression has been forced in under a year.
Back in July, after Israel’s assault on Iran, a video
emerged that put to rest the already laughable idea that Israel’s “precision
attacks” were targeting Iranian military sites, as if that would have made a
war of choice more defensible. The video shows a densely populated street in
Tehran’s Tajrish district. Two missiles strike in quick succession, one hitting
a building and another hitting the city street, forcefully pushing cars into
the air. The video is dramatic and heartbreaking, especially because it
features a popular area that anyone familiar with Tehran likely knows well.
Iranian authorities said that 17 people were killed in the strike,
including two children and one pregnant person.
That is what war looks like. That is what the U.S.
could impose on Iran yet again if we do not act to stop it. And the
consequences this time around could be far more wide-ranging and disastrous for
everyone involved.