Trump Is Wishcasting Victory in Iran
President Trump issued a deadline to Iran: open the Strait of Hormuz or face the destruction of an entire civilization. His threats appeared to meet the UN definition of genocide, yet the military lacked clear strategic direction beyond operational targets. As the clock ran down, a two-week ceasefire was announced — but the deal is already shaky, and the question remains: did anyone achieve their aims? The administration launched a war expecting regime change within days, then spent 39 days flailing for an exit strategy. Now, with Iran emboldened and Gulf allies questioning U.S. reliability, the consequences of wishful thinking as foreign policy are just beginning to unfold.
Kernaussagen
The administration launched the war expecting regime change within days, but when that didn't happen, the military conducted operations without strategic direction — bombing targets with no path to victory.
Iran emerged with a new form of deterrence: control of the Strait of Hormuz now gives them leverage over the global economy without needing a nuclear program.
The ceasefire is tenuous — Iran has already announced the strait is effectively shut down again after Israel struck Lebanon, violating the terms of the fragile agreement.
Gulf States are reassessing their security relationships with the U.S. after discovering that American bases made them targets rather than providing protection.
Trump received no polling bump from the war and instead bled support — unprecedented for a president embarking on major military operations — and now faces a $1.5 trillion budget request Republicans are unlikely to support heading into midterms.
Kurzgesagt
Trump's Iran war was driven by wish-casting rather than strategy: the regime didn't fall, the Strait of Hormuz closure became Iran's new deterrent, and the U.S. emerged with a weakened global standing and a Congress unlikely to fund the $1.5 trillion military bill — leaving an albatross around the necks of Republicans heading into midterms.
The Wish-Cast War
Trump launched a regime-change war expecting Iran's government to collapse within days.
The war began with a clear but unrealistic goal: hit Iran hard and watch the regime fall. Trump's expectation, despite warnings from the CIA director who called the scenario «farcical», was that overwhelming force would manifest regime change into being. When that didn't happen within the first week, the administration lost control of the situation.
Without a fallen regime, the military shifted to pure operations: destroying factories, airfields, boats, and infrastructure with no strategic endgame. Senior military leaders were supposed to ask what the president wanted next, but those positions were being systematically eliminated. Pete Hegseth fired generals and admirals — including the Army chief of staff during active combat — for personal reasons rather than military performance. The U.S. had wargamed Iran scenarios for nearly 50 years, but operational plans without strategic direction don't produce victory.
Meanwhile, Iran maintained one consistent goal throughout: regime survival and compensation for damages. They married that clarity with asymmetric warfare to neutralize America's conventional advantages. The result was a 39-day conflict that resembled Putin's miscalculation in Ukraine — an imbalance of interests where the side with clear objectives prevailed despite inferior firepower.
Trump's Genocidal Rhetoric
The president threatened to erase an entire civilization, meeting the UN definition of genocide.
“A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again. I don't want that to happen, but it probably will.”
Iran's New Deterrent
Control of the Strait of Hormuz gives Iran economic leverage without a nuclear program.
Iran's New Deterrent
Iran discovered it possesses an immediately available deterrent capability that allows it to generate revenue and exert influence over the global economy: the Strait of Hormuz. Having successfully wielded this leverage during the conflict, Iran may no longer need to pursue nuclear capabilities or invite sanctions. This represents a fundamental shift in regional power dynamics — one that emerged directly from Trump's miscalculation.
The Fragile Ceasefire
By the Numbers
The human and military costs of 39 days of combat operations.
Global Realignment
Gulf allies and European partners are reassessing their security relationships with America.
The war forced a reckoning across two key regions. In Europe, Trump's threats against Greenland and repeated warnings about leaving NATO created shockwaves about U.S. reliability as a security partner. In the Gulf, states that had built their entire defense posture around American bases and military relationships discovered those ties made them targets rather than providing protection.
Gulf States are now exploring alternatives to diversify their security arrangements. The immediate consequence may not be retaliation against the United States, but rather Iran focusing its payback on regional actors who «chose poorly» by hosting American forces. This realignment represents another consequential region reconsidering its relationship with Washington — following similar reassessments in Europe and Asia. The 39-day war may have ended, but its effects on America's alliance structure are just beginning.
The Albatross
Trump's war produced no political boost and threatens Republican electoral prospects.
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