Letters from an American - The Administration's Views on the Iran War and Foreign Affairs
Episode Date: March 9, 2026March 8, 2026Trump wears baseball cap to ceremony returning remains of soldiers killed in Iran, Fox News displays the wrong footage of ceremony, White House portrays events in Iran as entertainment, A...dministration embraces myth of cowboy individualism, Administration has not planned for aftermath of attacking Iran, Operation Epic Fury is costing US $1 billion a day, US submarine torpedoed Iranian warship in international waters, US appears to bear responsibility for strike on girls’ school in Iran.Watch today's recording here: https://www.youtube.com/live/g9TUa1Rwd6U?si=T8_KKcHQZElhpnZ-Get full, free access to Letters from an American here: https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribeYou can also find me:Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hcrichardson.bsky.socialInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/heathercoxrichardson/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/heathercoxrichardson/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@heathercoxrichardson Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe
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March 8th, 26.
Yesterday, President Donald J. Trump was among the dignitaries who attended the dignified transfer,
returning the remains of the six U.S. soldiers killed in the military action against Iran
to the United States for burial.
At the transfer, Trump wore a white USA baseball cap for sale in his campaign store,
recognizing that Americans would recoil from seeing Trump wear a baseball cap.
baseball cap at a dignified transfer, the Fox News Channel declined to show how he had looked yesterday
and aired old footage of Trump from his first term, without the hat. Caught in their lie, the Fox News
Channel admitted they had shown the wrong footage, but claimed it was inadvertent. They did not,
however, show the real footage from yesterday, showing Trump wearing his merch. The producers at the Fox News
channel seemed to recognize that Trump's USA hat at a dignified transfer looked like a deliberate
disrespect for those whose lives had been taken in the service of our country. They seemed to
understand the gulf between the administration's cartoonish approach to the war in Iran and the
reality of war for those participating in it. The official social media account of the White House
has portrayed its military adventures in Iran as a movie or a game,
splicing images from what appear to be footage of U.S. military strikes
with clips from adventure movies and video games like Call of Duty and Grand Theft Auto.
Undeterred by criticism, White House Communications Director Stephen Chung called for supporters
to show their enthusiasm for one of the videos in comments below it.
Last Thursday, March 5th, Trump talked to ABC News Chief Washington correspondent Jonathan Carl about the war.
I hope you are impressed, he said. How do you like the performance? I mean, Venezuela is obvious.
This might be even better. How do you like the performance? Carl answered that nobody questions the success of the military operation. The concern is what happens next.
forget about next, Trump answered.
They're decimated for a 10-year period before they could build it back.
We're marching through the world, Senator Lindsay Graham, a Republican of South Carolina,
told a laughing Maria Bartaromo of the Fox News Channel this morning.
We're cleaning out the bad guys.
We're going to have relationships with new people that will make us prosperous and safe.
I've never seen anybody like it.
This is Ronald Reagan Plus.
Donald Trump is recent.
setting the world in a way nobody could have dreamed of a year ago. He's the greatest commander
in chief of all time. Our military is the best of all time. Iran is going down and Cuba is next.
The administration's approach to foreign affairs appears to be the logical outcome of two
generations of a peculiar U.S. cowboy individualism. Since the 1950s, right-wing ideologues
in the United States have embraced a fantasy world in which a hero cuts through the red tape of
laws and government bureaucracy to do what he thinks is right. That image was fed by TV
Westerns that rose after the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision to portray a world
in which dominant white men delivered justice to their communities without the interference
of government. By 1959, there were 26 Westerns on TV.
In one week in March 1959, eight of the top 10 TV shows were Westerns.
The idea of white men acting for freedom and justice on their own, unhampered by a government
that served black Americans, people of color, and women, became a guiding image for the rising
right wing, beginning with Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater in 1964.
It found a home in the Republican Party with Ronald Reagan.
in 1980, as supporters took a stand against a federal government they insisted was redistributing
the tax dollars of hardworking Americans to undeserving minorities and women.
That cowboy individualism spread into foreign affairs as well, until by 2003, right-wing talk
radio host Rush Limbaugh could use it as shorthand to defend President George W. Bush's
military operation in Iraq. Just after the 2003 capture of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein,
Limbaugh gushed about presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, who had ignored the rules
imposed by liberals and fixed what was wrong with the world. Limbaugh explained that Reagan was a
cowboy. He was brave, positive, and gave us hope. He wore a white hat. Liberals hated Ronald
Reagan. Limbaugh continued. They also hate President Bush because he distinguishes between good and evil.
He calls a spade a spade and after 9-11 called evil, evil, without mincing any words, to the shock of the
liberal establishment. That's what cowboys do, you know. In the old West, might did not make right.
Right made might. Cowboys and white hats were always on the side of right.
and that was their might.
I'm glad my president is a cowboy.
He got his man.
Cowboys do, you know.
In breaking the news today,
James Fallows wrote that way back in 2015,
he concluded that it had become far too easy
for political leaders to strut
and posture about honoring the troops.
The Hegseth term warfighters was not yet in common use.
But then to commit them in half-thought-through-forever war,
since so much of the public was insulated from the consequences.
But if Trump's Iran venture began with the strutting and posturing of a military performance,
it's running hard into reality.
It appears that Trump saw the strikes themselves as the culmination of his performance
and did not have a plan for what would happen after them.
He has said he was surprised that the conflict has included neighboring states.
Now the ships that carry about 20% of the world's oil
are not traveling through the Strait of Hormuz,
and oil prices are surging.
Rising oil prices are already hitting Americans at the gas pump.
Gasoline prices rose 14% last week,
and will also hit the economy in general
as jet fuel and diesel fuel for trucks and tractors
become more expensive.
Trump tonight posted that high oil prices are
a very small price to pay for USA and world, safety, and peace. Only fools would think differently.
The public support for the financing of this war is different from that of past adventures.
While President George W. Bush could borrow to pay the cost of Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003,
2026 is a different story. The national debt has ballooned in the last two decades since the Iraq War,
and Republicans last summer justified their dramatic cuts to government programs,
including health care and supplemental nutrition assistance,
by insisting that it must be addressed.
Now, Trump is spending an estimated $1 billion a day on Operation Epic Fury,
highlighting that while there was no money for programs that helped the American people,
there appears to be plenty for a war of choice in the Middle East.
Since the 1980s, Republican presidents have been able to sell their military adventures
with the argument that, like cowboys, they were cutting through bureaucracy and laws in order to do what was right.
As Limbaugh described it, they were never looking for trouble, but when trouble came, they faced it with courage.
They were always on the side of right, defending good people against bad people.
They had high morals and spoke the truth.
they were a beacon of integrity in the wild wild west.
The fantasy of those who embraced cowboy individualism
was that if only they could have full sway,
they would solve the world's problems and keep Americans safe.
But the conduct of the war is starting to illustrate
that any claims of a moral code disappear
when a leader exercises military might on a whim.
According to Defense Secretary Pete Hegesith, the U.S. will not be bound by any stupid rules of engagement
and will rain down death and destruction from the sky all day long.
This was never meant to be a fair fight, he said, and it is not a fair fight.
We are punching them when they're down, which is exactly how it should be.
On Wednesday, March 4th, a U.S. submarine torpedoed an Iranian warship in international waters.
The vessel was not participating in hostilities. It was off Sri Lanka, returning from a naval exercise organized by India in the Bay of Bengal.
In the past, the U.S. has participated in those exercises.
Andrew Roth, Kate Brown, and Hannah Ellis Peterson of The Guardian noted that submarine attacks,
since World War II have been incredibly rare,
as are attacks on vessels not taking part in hostilities.
The ship was believed to have 180 people on board.
Sri Lankan officials said they rescued 32 and recovered 87 bodies from the water.
Hegseth boasted,
An American submarine sank an Iranian warship that thought it was safe in international waters.
On Thursday, Phil Stewart and Idris Ali of Reuters reported that the U.S. appears to bear responsibility for the February 28th strike on a girl school in Manab in southern Iran in the early waves of the Israeli U.S. attack.
The strike appears to have killed 168 people or more, many of them children.
Since the Reuters report, others have noted that the U.S. was operating in the area and Israel was not.
The strike remains under investigation.
After Saturday's dignified transfer, Trump told reporters on Air Force One,
I hate to do it. It's a sad part of war. It's the bad part of war.
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.
