This Isn’t Just Trump’s War on Iran. Both Parties Paved the Way for Disaster.
We must recognize Democrats share responsibility with
the GOP for creating the climate that made such a war possible.
By
Published
April 17, 2026
Unlike the invasion of Iraq, which received the
support of a sizable minority of congressional Democrats, Donald Trump’s war on
Iran has received near-universal criticism. Still, the party has focused
primarily on process-style critiques — such as the legality of declaring war
under the Constitution and the war’s economic impact — rather than the
humanitarian consequences and flagrant violations of international law.
That should not come as a surprise to anyone familiar
with the U.S. bipartisan consensus on Iran: For over 20 years, a number of
prominent Democratic leaders — and in some cases, large majorities of
congressional Democrats overall — have helped pave the groundwork for Trump’s
war by issuing exaggerated and alarmist statements about Iran’s supposed danger
to the region, threatening the use of military force, and undermining
diplomatic initiatives, sometimes even criticizing Republicans from the right.
In 2024, the Democratic Party platform criticized “Trump’s fecklessness and weakness in
the face of Iranian aggression during his presidency” by not responding
militarily to attacks by Iran and groups in Iraq and elsewhere that share
Iran’s strategic objectives. The platform cited four separate incidents that
took place under his first administration, failing to acknowledge that each was
a direct result of Trump’s aggressive policies against Iran, including the assassination of
Qassim Suleimani, a top Iranian general.
By contrast, the party’s platform praised President
Joe Biden for having “authorized precision airstrikes on key Iranian-linked
targets,” which it claimed would “deter further aggression by Iran.” It praised
“America’s ironclad commitment to the security of Israel and our unrivaled
ability to leverage growing regional integration among U.S. partners to counter
Iranian aggression.” Though eager to stress military means to counter Iran, the
platform failed to directly call for a return to the Iran nuclear deal under
the Obama administration, which considerably reduced regional tensions — a deal
that Biden campaigned on reinstating but failed to do.
The month after the release of the party platform,
Democratic nominee Kamala Harris attacked Trump in a presidential debate, declaring that her administration “will always give
Israel the ability to defend itself, in particular as it relates to Iran and
any threat that Iran and its proxies pose to Israel.”
In an interview with CBS, when she was
asked who she considered to be the greatest enemy of the United States, Harris said it was “obvious” that Iran — not nuclear-armed
states such as Russia, China, or North Korea — was the “greatest adversary.”
She explicitly said that she would not rule out going to war against that
country.
This framing from the right continued into Trump’s
presidency, even as the president began pushing more toward sustained military
conflict. During Israel’s unprovoked bombing of Iran in June 2025, Senate
Democratic leader Chuck Schumer insisted that “Israel has a right to defend itself,”
despite the fact that Israel had started the war. Just over a week before,
he criticized Trump for even engaging in negotiations with Iran —
negotiations that provided cover for the U.S.’s own bombing of multiple Iranian
nuclear sites. Just prior to the U.S. bombing of Iranian nuclear sites during
Israel’s war, Schumer posted a video to social media accusing Trump of “folding on
Iran” by attempting to negotiate a deal, bemoaning about how “Trump always
chickens out” regarding the use of military force.
Similarly, House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries
refused to criticize the Israeli attack or call for a return to the Iran
nuclear deal. Although Iran has no capability of striking anywhere outside of
the Middle East, Jeffries claimed “the Iranian regime poses a grave threat to the
entire free world.”
Such hyperbole is not new. As far back as 20 years
ago, Democratic leaders like then-Sen. Evan Bayh were claiming that Iran “may be only months away
from having the capacity to build a nuclear bomb” and insisting military
options should be considered. Similarly, then-Sen. Hillary Clinton argued during the Bush years that his
administration was not taking the threat of a nuclear Iran seriously enough,
criticizing it for allowing European nations to take the lead in pursuing a
diplomatic solution, and insisting that the administration should make it clear
that military options were being actively considered. These proclamations came
even as the U.S. was struggling to maintain control of Iraq at the height of
its occupation.
During the 2008 Democratic primaries, Clinton accused Barack Obama of being “naive” and
“irresponsible” for wanting to diplomatically engage with Iran and other
nations that U.S. policy has often antagonized. Despite these accusations,
Obama selected her as his secretary of state, through which, according to a
story in Time magazine, Obama administration officials noted she was
“skeptical of diplomacy with Iran, and firmly opposed to talk of a
‘containment’ policy that would be an alternative to military action should
negotiations with Tehran fail.”
Clinton was far from the only Democrat pushing back
against the Obama administration’s diplomatic efforts. In 2011, in an effort
to sabotage any potential diplomatic contact with Iran, an
overwhelming majority of House Democrats voted for a Republican bill declaring “No person employed with the United
States Government may contact in an official or unofficial capacity any person
that … is an agent, instrumentality, or official of, is affiliated with, or is
serving as a representative of the Government of Iran.” Administration pressure
and constitutional questions prevented the bill from passing the Senate, but it
underscored that over 90 percent of House Democrats were intent on undermining Obama’s efforts for a
non-military resolution to the conflict with Iran.
The following year, a similarly large majority of House Democrats voted for a resolution urging the president to oppose any policy toward
Iran “that would rely on containment as an option in response to the Iranian
nuclear threat.” While Obama had already stated a willingness to consider
taking military action against Iran if the regime procured nuclear weapons,
this resolution significantly lowered the bar for war by declaring it
unacceptable for Iran simply to have “nuclear weapons capability” — not
necessarily any actual weapons or an active nuclear weapons program.
In 2013, after Clinton was replaced by the more
liberal John Kerry as secretary of state and Iranians elected the reformist
President Hassan Rouhani, yet another overwhelming majority of House Democrats
joined Republicans in voting, over the objections of the White House, to
impose punitive new sanctions on Iran. It was widely interpreted as a
bipartisan rejection of the new Iranian president’s offer to enhance nuclear transparency and pursue
“peace and reconciliation” with the West.
Additionally, in an apparent effort to poison the
atmosphere on the eve of Rouhani’s inauguration, over two dozen Democratic
senators signed a letter to President Obama demanding a “toughening of
sanctions” and “a convincing threat of the use of force.”
In May of that year, every Democratic senator joined
their Republican colleagues in supporting a resolution which “urges that, if the Government of Israel
is compelled to take military action in self-defense, the United States
Government should stand with Israel and provide diplomatic, military, and
economic support to the Government of Israel.” The wording is significant in
that it put Senate Democrats on record that the United States should support an
Israeli war on Iran not only if Israel was attacked, but even if Israel
attacked first. By giving Benjamin Netanyahu the authority to determine what
might “compel” Israel to act in “self-defense,” this near-unanimous decision
helped pave the way for Israel to make such claims in its U.S.-backed war in
June 2025 and the joint U.S.-Israeli war this year.
Fortunately, by 2015, the Obama administration — along
with Great Britain, France, Germany, Russia, and China, and with the backing of
the European Union and the United Nations — was able to negotiate an agreement
whereby, in return for sanctions relief, Iran drastically curtailed its nuclear
program to the degree that it was physically impossible to build a nuclear
weapon, while also agreeing to strict monitoring to ensure compliance. It took
perhaps the most intense lobbying efforts of the Obama presidency to get
congressional Democrats on board. In the end, only two Democratic senators,
Robert Menendez and Chuck Schumer, opposed the agreement, but their colleagues nevertheless
elected them to senior positions — Menendez as chair of the Foreign Relations
Committee and Schumer as their Senate leader.
The 2016 Democratic platform endorsed the nuclear deal — but declared that,
if Iran violated the agreement, rather than allow for the automatic
reimposition of strict international sanctions to pressure Iran to come back
into compliance as the deal outlined, a Democratic president “will not hesitate
to take military action.” Since it would take Iranians at least a few years to
rebuild their dramatically circumscribed nuclear program to the point where
they could develop even a single nuclear weapon, there would be plenty of time,
as well as serious punitive economic mechanisms, to push Iran to resume its
compliance. Immediately launching a war, as the platform called for, would
therefore not only be a direct violation of the United Nations Charter, it
would be completely unnecessary.
This is only a partial list of ways in which Democrats
have pushed for a military confrontation with Iran over the past couple of
decades. Even today, the fact that Democratic leaders still support unconditional military aid to Israel and
Netanyahu, Trump’s partner in the illegal attacks on Iran, raises questions
about their sincerity in opposing the war.
It is highly unlikely the United States would have
launched a full-scale war under a Democratic administration as it has under
Trump. However hawkish many in the Democratic leadership have proven to be,
they would have been far more likely to listen to allied governments, as well
as the broad consensus of strategic analysts, intelligence officials, and
military leaders that make up the foreign policy elite, many of whom have long
warned of the serious consequences of going to war.
At the same time, it is important to recognize how
Democrats share responsibility with Republicans for creating the climate that
made such a war possible.
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