Trump deliberated on Iran for weeks. His ‘massive and ongoing’ operation comes with acknowledgment US lives could be lost
Kevin Liptak
https://edition.cnn.com/2026/02/28/politics/trump-iran-strikes-decision
President Donald Trump’s announcement of a “massive and ongoing” US military
campaign against
Iran — and his explicit call for the country’s citizens to shake off their
oppressive leadership — put on display his fresh appetite for geopolitical risk
and thrust his presidency into a deeper period of uncertainty.
“The United States military is undertaking a massive
and ongoing operation to prevent this very wicked, radical dictatorship from
threatening America and our core national security interests,” he said of Iran
in a video posted to Truth Social early Saturday morning, in which he starkly
acknowledged that US lives may be lost in the operation.
The eight-minute recording laid bare both the
president’s objectives in Iran — which had been unclear — and the potential for
dire consequences. Trump appears hopeful his major air operation can
successfully result in a change in Iran’s regime, despite the vast
uncertainties about what might replace it and the limited historical examples
of air power alone ousting a country’s leader.
“They rejected every opportunity to renounce their
nuclear ambitions, and we can’t take it anymore,” said Trump, who a US official
said is continuing to monitor the strikes from Mar-a-Lago.
The president reached his decision after weeks of
deliberation and an attempt by his envoys to strike a rapid diplomatic
agreement that would have forced Iran to abandon long-held red lines. The US
military is planning for several days of attacks, two sources told CNN, and
Iran has already retaliated across the Middle East, including targeting the US Navy base in
Bahrain that
is home to the Fifth Fleet, a US official said.
Trump never fully publicly laid out his case for war,
even during his State of the Union address on Tuesday, despite strikes being
a politically perilous move at home, especially for a president who
campaigned on ending foreign entanglements. He noted on Saturday the potential
cost to American lives.
“The Iranian regime seeks to kill. The lives of
courageous American heroes may be lost and we may have casualties — that often
happens in war — but we’re doing this not for now. We’re doing this for the
future, and it is a noble mission,” the president said, adding that US had
“taken every possible step to minimize the risk to US personnel in the region.”
To many of Trump’s allies, military action had long
appeared inevitable. After telling Iranian protesters at the start of the year
that he would come to their support, warning the US was “locked and loaded” to
attack, he felt obligated to enforce his red line.
“When we are finished, take over your government. It
will be yours to take. This will be probably your only chance for generations,”
Trump told the Iranian people in his video.
“For many years, you have asked for America’s help,
but you never got it. No president was willing to do what I am willing to do
tonight. Now you have a president who is giving you what you want, so let’s see
how you respond,” he said.
Trump’s motivations for his second set of strikes
within Iran since returning to office — conveyed mostly in curt, off-hand
public remarks — appeared to shift over time, moving from protecting protesters
to curbing Iran’s nuclear ambitions to ousting the Iranian regime. He’s also
cited Iran’s arsenal of missiles and destabilizing support for regional proxy
groups, like Hezbollah and Hamas.
How the latest military action from both the US and
Israel advances all, or any, of those objectives remains to be seen. Nor was it
clear what the president has been told to expect in the aftermath.
Behind the scenes ahead of the strikes, officials
wrestled with a slate of imperfect options that all stopped short of a decisive
mission like the one Trump ordered in January to capture Venezuelan leader
Nicolás Maduro in Caracas. US intelligence is uncertain on who would replace
Iran’s senior leaders if they are taken out.
Military officials have also warned the president
about the steep risks for retaliation. Thousands of American troops based in
the Middle East could now potentially be targets for Iran as it carries out
promised reprisals.
During intense Situation Room meetings over the last
several weeks, Trump and senior officials peppered top Pentagon brass,
including Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, with
questions about each options’ likelihood of success. The answers were often
inconclusive, even as Trump ordered a massive military buildup in the Middle
East.
In his vague public remarks leading up to the strikes,
Trump issued threats not backed by US intelligence — including that Iran would soon have a missile
that can hit the US.
“They should make a deal, but they don’t want to quite
go far enough,” he said Friday during a stop in Texas. “They don’t want to say
the key words: ‘We’re not going to have a nuclear weapon.’”
Yet if Iran’s words alone were the bar for avoiding
conflict, the hurdle had already been cleared. The country has repeatedly said
it is not pursuing nuclear weapons, including this week.
There are many reasons to question that claim,
including Iran’s previous enrichment of uranium to near-weapons grade. But
Trump’s emphasis on the country’s words alone only seemed to raise more
questions about what, precisely, he was looking for in a deal with the
country’s leaders.
He allowed diplomacy to proceed, despite warnings from
some senior officials that Iran was notoriously difficult to negotiate with.
Some questioned whether Iran’s Supreme Leader, who has ultimate sign-off, would
agree to any of Trump’s terms — even if his negotiators seemed more willing to
negotiate.
Many inside Trump’s orbit encouraged him to pursue a
deal. His envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, who engaged in three rounds
of indirect talks with the Iranians, entered the discussions with guarded hopes
for success.
But others were less encouraging. GOP Sen. Lindsey
Graham publicly scoffed at some reported concessions offered by the Iranians.
And Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in an urgent visit to Washington
this month, said there would unlikely be a more opportune moment to strike
Iran.
Throughout, Trump had appeared to people around him
wary of taking the country to war, far preferring a diplomatic outcome that he
could sell as stronger than the Obama-era nuclear deal he withdrew from. But he
was impatient for an agreement, setting short timelines that did not yield the
concessions he was seeking from Tehran.
In ordering the strikes, Trump overcame certain
misgivings at launching an operation his military advisers warned could have an
uncertain outcome and could prompt outsized retaliation by Tehran.
And the new operation — which follows limited US
strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities last June — poses significant political
risk for a president whose base has opposed foreign wars. In all, Trump has
used the US military to target sites in more than than a half-dozen countries
in his second term. It’s not clear how long this operation may last or cost,
either in terms of money or lives.
In an interview this week, Vice President JD Vance —
who has previously warned about sending US troops into harm’s way for uncertain
purposes — suggested any operation in Iran would not result in a prolonged
conflict akin to the wars in Iraq or Afghanistan.
“I do think we have to avoid repeating the mistakes of
the past. I also think that we have to avoid overlearning the lessons of the
past,” he told the Washington Post. “Just because one president screwed up a
military conflict doesn’t mean we can never engage in military conflict again.
We’ve got to be careful about it, but I think the president is being careful.”
Trump acknowledged the risk of a prolonged conflict in
his own assessment on Friday. “I guess you could say there’s always a risk. You
know, when there’s war, there’s a risk in anything, both good and bad.”