In the not-so-distant past, a major U.S. military strike on a foreign power announced in a private social media post by the commander-in-chief would have seemed like satire. Add to it a cheesy USA baseball cap, allegations of sexual crimes swirling around him and shifting rationales for the action and you have the makings of an over-the-top political parody.
But this is the reality show brought to you by President Donald Trump. U.S. and Israel attacks on Iran, begun on Feb. 28, killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and many other leaders of the Islamic Republic along with hundreds of civilians. Counterattacks by Iranian drones and missiles have left six U.S. military personnel and nearly a dozen Israelis dead so far and sent oil prices spiking.
There is nothing funny about death, destruction and destabilization in the volatile Middle East and the abandonment of constitutional order by a president intent on unilateral decision-making. And there is no certainty that such “wag-the-dog” diversions will make Trump’s ties to convicted sex abuser Jeffrey Epstein go away, especially with the recent discovery of missing files tying Trump to abuse testimony, or persuade voters to back the GOP in what is shaping up to be a disastrous outing for Republicans in the fall midterm elections.
We can agree that the 47-year reign of the Shia clerics over the Islamic Republic has left Iran and its people in tough shape. Battered by sanctions, buffeted by corruption and cowed by repression, Iran’s 92 million people have suffered enormously. Massive protests in January resulted in security forces gunning down tens of thousands of Iranians who turned out in the streets. Theocratic rule, enforced by the brutal Iran Revolutionary Guard Corps, has driven some five million Iranians into exile since the 1979 fall of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
Trump included in his eight-minute war video a call for the Iranian people to rise up and take back their country, while knowing that an air campaign alone might eliminate some leaders but will not overthrow a regime. Scenes of Iranians celebrating the ayatollah’s death in their homeland or on the streets of Paris, London and “Tehrangeles,” as some call L.A.’s Persian community, raise false hopes of deliverance.
Nor is an extended aerial bombardment likely to entirely degrade the country’s development of ballistic missiles or even end steps towards nuclear weapons — programs that went deeper underground after June’s 12-day war against Iran. Trump, having abandoned his campaign pledges to avoid foreign wars and concentrate on “America First,” seems to be recycling the Venezuela strategy he unleashed on our South American neighbor when Delta Force commandoes snatched President Nicolas Maduro from Caracas and brought him in chains to the United States to face trial.
Fears of being targeted by American firepower — guided by extraordinary intelligence technology and human assets on the ground — have made Venezuelan’s leadership more compliant with U.S. wishes, especially in its submission to what becomes of its valuable oil reserves. Trump’s team obviously hopes Iran’s new leadership will get the same memo and not only bend petroleum policy to align with U.S. interests but also end the support of terrorist proxies like Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza and Houthis in Yemen.
If there’s an overarching argument to be made for Trump’s approach, he has not brought along Congress or the American public as partners in the
shaping of his far-reaching war policies. He barely mentioned Iran in
his February State of the Union address and has ignored his Article 1
obligation in the U.S. Constitution to reserve for Congress the power to
declare war, reflecting a long erosion of Capitol Hill oversight of
military adventures abroad.
House
Minority Leader Hakim Jeffries, one of the most powerful Black men in
government, criticized Trump over the weekend for ignoring the concerns
of American households over affordability while ignoring the
constitutional balance of powers.
“The
administration somehow found the resources, has found billions of
dollars for bombs but can’t find any money to actually bring down the
high cost of living here in the United States of America,” Jeffries told
CNN. “Article 1 of the Constitution explicitly provides Congress with
the authority to declare war, period, full stop. And the framers of the
Constitution made that decision because they were concerned about kings
throughout time getting their people into unnecessary wars,
impoverishing them or imperiling their very well-being by sending them
off to a foreign conflict.”
While
a War Powers Act resolution is coming up in Congress this week aimed at
containing Trump’s military reach, it is not given much of a chance to
pass — and certainly, if passed, not to survive a presidential veto.
One
of the most disturbing angles on American action in Iran is the degree
to which the notion of an imminent threat to U.S. interests is being
subverted in favor of deference to the interests of a foreign power and
to financial family interest. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
has long sought the overthrow of the Islamic Republic, rightfully
fearing that its rhetoric of “Death to Israel” may lead to a nuclear
strike on the Jewish state. But how realistic are those hopes when you
look at Israel’s failure to uproot Hamas after a four-year campaign in
its own backyard?
Arab
states in the Persian Gulf also rightly see Iran as a threat. Is it
completely cynical to connect U.S. attacks on Iran to the billions of
dollars poured into the coffers of Trump family business entities by
Arab sovereign wealth funds? Is there any accident that such investments
have occurred while Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, has been a lead
negotiator in proximity talks with Iran while keeping his Arab business
partners on speed dial?
We
do not question that the world would be a safer place if Iran were not
to foment disorder abroad, employ repression at home and join the caucus
of nuclear states. Achieving those goals through diplomacy and building
alliances is the kind of hard, grinding work rejected by Trump’s
approach to governance. His record of playing fast and loose with
tariffs is bad enough. The consequences of playing fast and loose with
missiles, bunker-busting bombs and lethal drones are far worse. The
president ends up undermining important global alliances while
encouraging countries like Russia to continue its brutal campaign
against Ukraine and China to hungrily eye Taiwan.
The
ultimate irony of Trump’s warmongering is his constant quest for a
Nobel Peace Prize. You just can’t make this up: a president who has
taken military action against seven countries — Iran, Venezuela, Syria,
Nigeria, Somalia, Iraq and Yemen — and threatened nations such as
Mexico, Denmark and Canada hoping against hope to be crowned the Prince
of Peace.
Ronald Mitchell
Editor and Publisher, Bay State Banner