Letters from an American - American Adventurism in Iran
Episode Date: March 3, 2026March 2, 2026Trump workshops rationale for attack on Iran, Fox News hosts goad Trump to start a war against Iran, Military strikes fueled by heat over Epstein, tariffs, Ideology of Cowboy individualis...m, smashing the achievements of the United Nations and Geneva Conventions, Trump's Board of Peace, Pete Hegseth claims attacks on Iran are defensive, Trumps disparages Rules of Engagement, Americans question rationale of attack, America is over endless adventurism. Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe
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March 2, 26.
The Economist's Middle East correspondent Greg Carlstrom noted that Trump appears to be workshopping the causes for his attacks on Iran and his goals for the war by talking to journalists.
As Midas touched summarized Karlstrom's argument, he said,
Trump doesn't sound convinced by any of it. He's throwing spaghetti at the wall.
Ultimately, I suspect he just wants to say he solved a problem that has vexed every American president.
since Jimmy Carter.
But there's no clear idea what that looks like
and no plan for how to get there.
And there are plenty of possible scenarios
in which Trump declares victory
and leaves the region with an absolute mess.
Matt Gertz of Media Matters noted today
that Trump, who watches the Fox News Channel consistently,
appears to have shaped his attack on Iran
in response to encouragement from FNC hosts.
Gertz recalled that for decades, the FNC hosts Trump Trust the most have called for military strikes on Iran.
Last June, FNC personality Sean Hannity, Mark Levin, and Brian Kilmead urged Trump to bomb Iran and then lavished praise on him when he did.
Hannity said the bombing would go down in history as one of the great military victories.
In the past weeks, Gertz wrote,
the same figures have been urging Trump to attack.
But their goal appeared to be the bombing itself.
They expected an easy victory without defining
what that might look like.
According to Kilmead, the US would lose credibility forever
if it didn't hit Iran.
On Friday morning, Kilmead said,
I hope the president chooses to go at it.
We've been looking at these headlines for 47 years,
and we have an opportunity to end it.
And this president likes to make history.
On Friday night, Levin told Hannity,
this president knows right from wrong.
He knows good from evil.
He knows that this regime is a death cult.
And he knows that there's only really two countries
that are prepared and willing to put an end to this.
We don't need to put up with their crap.
It's time to put it to an end.
On Saturday, after Trump had started the bombing,
Levin said, Donald Trump did what
nobody else could do for half a century. How do you like that? And you know why he did it? Because
he loves his country. Trump strikes on Iran could have had something to do with the increasing
heat over the Epstein files or his fury that the Supreme Court struck down his tariff walls,
which were central not only to his economic program, but also to his pressure on foreign
governments and companies to do his bidding. Possibly he was responding to pressure from
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu or Saudi crown prince Muhammad bin Salman, or both.
Whatever their immediate trigger, the strikes fall in line with the ideology of cowboy individualism
that began to take over the Republican Party in the 1980s and which, under Trump, has turned
into brutal displays of dominance. The old idea of a cowboy from rural America who cuts through
the government bureaucracy that threatens his livelihood by coddling racial minorities and women,
has curdled into the notion that a leader can do whatever it takes, including violence,
to force opponents to submit to his will. In foreign affairs, that means smashing the international
alliances built after World War II. One of the crowning achievements of that international order
is the United Nations, constructed to maintain international peace and security by
creating organizations that could provide a forum for diplomacy
and stop countries from attacking each other.
The U.S. currently owes the UN nearly $4 billion in unpaid dues
as Trump seeks to replace the organization
with his own Board of Peace that he alone controls.
This month, the U.S. holds the presidency of the UN Security Council,
enabling it to set the agenda.
Today, Trump sent for first.
sent First Lady Melania Trump to chair the meeting the first time a presidential spouse has
done so. Another of the crowning achievements of the post-World War II international order
is the Geneva Conventions, which define the legal treatment of non-combatants in war.
In his confirmation hearings, Defense Secretary Pete Hegesith refused to tell Senator Angus King,
an independent of Maine, who pressed him on the issue that he would uphold the Geneva
In the ideology that honors violent domination, Trump's bombing Iran without regard for the Constitution or international law, when no president before him had done so, proves his strength.
Hegzith illustrated that idea this morning when he said, for 47 long years, the expansionist and Islamist regime in Tehran has waged a savage one-sided war against America.
Hegseth, who was a Fox News Channel weekend host before becoming Secretary of Defense,
tried to turn the administration's military operation into a heroic stand in a silent war
that had lasted for two generations.
Claiming the U.S. attacks on Iran that started this conflagration were defensive, rather than offensive,
Hegseth claimed, we didn't start this war, but under President Trump, we are finishing.
it. It took the 47th president, a fighter who always puts America first, to finally draw the line
after 47 years of Iranian belligerence. He reminded the world, as he has time and time again,
if you kill Americans, if you threaten Americans anywhere on earth, we will hunt you down
without apology and without hesitation, and we will kill you. Hegseth celebrated Israel
and it strikes alongside the U.S., while he condemned, so many of our traditional allies who wring their hands
and clutched their pearls, hemming and haying about the use of force. America, regardless of what so-called
international institutions say, is unleashing the most lethal and precise airpower campaign in history.
No stupid rules of engagement, no nation-building quagmire, no democracy-building exercise.
no politically correct wars.
We fight to win and we don't waste time or lives.
In this ideology, the dominance itself is the point.
There is no other endgame.
But this ideology was always based on a myth that played well on television.
Three days into the attack on Iran,
there is increasing scrutiny of the assertions from government officials.
According to Dustin Voles, Alexander Ward, and Laura Seligman of the Wall Street Journal,
lawmakers and experts say those assertions are incomplete, unsubstantiated, or flat-out wrong.
And as the conflagration spreads, taking the lives of now six of our military personnel,
the administration is now discovering that the American people would like to know why we are engaged
in what appears to be a war of choice,
and why this approach to the world is better
than the one that kept us safe for 80 years.
Today, the State Department told U.S. citizens
to leave Gulf states immediately
because of serious safety risks
using available commercial transportation.
But many of the airports in the region are closed,
some because they have been hit in the fighting.
Representative Ted Liu,
a Democrat of California, posted on social media,
Dear Secretary of State Marco Rubio,
you told Americans to depart now via commercial means
when you know many airports, airspace, are closed.
You must immediately schedule U.S. government evacuation flights
for the stranded Americans in danger.
Maybe you should have thought of a frat-pland plan first.
Retired Major General Randy Manor,
who is currently stranded in the United Arab Emirates, told CNN,
it seems to me that the purpose and mission have been shifting
over the past few days and the past few weeks.
Initially, it was to ensure that they could not continue to develop nuclear weapons.
Now it's about regime change, and then there's so many things that are being piled
onto the mission list, it almost seems like someone googled it before the brief
to throw everything in the kitchen sink into it, so it's a little bit disconcerting.
And in fact, one of the small things that does matter to tens of thousands of people here, as well as to their families,
it's a little bit disheartening and a little bit envious to hear that the BBC has announced that the UK government is actually arranging transport for the British citizens to be able to extract them,
whereas here, for us Americans, we feel abandoned.
The state departments have talked to two embassy personnel, two different embassies.
They're in survival mode, quite frankly, because as we know, the administration reduced their budgets by almost one half over the past year.
So this is a difficult situation for people who are not used to being in a combat situation.
And that, of course, is, quite frankly, probably 99% of the travelers that are here.
Former paratrooper and army ranger, Representative Jason Crow, a Democrat of Colorado,
also had something to say about the reality of war.
I learned years ago that when elites like Donald Trump
bang the war drums and pound their chests in Washington, D.C.,
and talk about sending troops into the ground or into combat,
he's not talking about his kids,
he's not talking about all of his minions' kids.
He's talking about kids like me and the people that I grew up with
in working-class areas, rural places around the country,
that have to pick up rifles, jump in the tanks or helicopters,
and do the tough work.
Well, America is over it.
America is over the $3 trillion we've spent.
The quagmires of failed nation building.
The sending of our sons and daughters and brothers and sisters
to enrich oil executives.
America is over endless adventurism using our military
because they want their infrastructure rebuilt.
rebuilt. They want affordable health care. They want to be able to afford groceries. They want to be able to afford a home.
They want to be able to send their kids to school. Letters from an American was written and read by
Heather Cox Richardson. It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts. Recorded with music
composed by Michael Moss.
