The Daily Signal - Trump Won The Battle, But Will He Take Iran? | Victor Davis Hanson
Episode Date: March 23, 2026By all traditional methodology and criteria, Iran is now inert: naval and air forces eviscerated, missile defenses offline, and an army rendered largely useless, as no one is fighting on the ground. ...However, tactical success is not necessarily equivalent to strategic victory. It is hard to think of a single battle lost in Iraq or Afghanistan, yet the United States lacked a plan for strategic resolution in either theater. With this in mind, Iran’s current strategy is as follows: The mullahs can afford to lose their military because, ultimately, without U.S. troops on the ground, the regime will remain intact. This, and many other factors, begs the question: Where does Trump go from here? asks Victor Davis Hanson on today’s edition of “Victor Davis Hanson: In a Few Words.” “In other words, they're saying as long as we have oil, Kharg Island, and as long as we have these huge oil fields, when you get tired of pounding us into rubble, you're going go back to the United States. Israel's going go back and be quiet, and we're going get all of our oil revenues and we're going have them. “And we are going to buy from Russia, North Korea and China missiles, drones, recreate our own drone industry, and we probably have enough fissile material that you didn't get, and nobody could get. It's hidden deep in the mountains, that we will make bombs. And this time we're going to use them because we understand what you will do next time.” (00:00) Standoff And Attrition (02:08) Remaining Threats And Civilians (03:09) Tactical Wins Strategic Traps (04:30) Iran Strategy: Outlast Trump (06:49) Trump Agenda Endgame Risks 👉 The Daily Signal cannot continue to tell stories, like this one, without the support of our viewers: http://dailysignal.com/donate 👉Don’t miss out on Victor’s latest short videos by subscribing to The Daily Signal today. You’ll be notified every time a new piece of content drops: https://www.youtube.com/dailysignal?sub_confirmation=1 Also on Spotify: https://megaphone.link/THEDAILYSIGNAL9753340027 👉Want more VDH? Watch Victor’s weekly, hour-long podcast, “Victor Davis Hanson: In His Own Words,” now! Subscribe to his YouTube channel, and enable notifications: https://www.youtube.com/@victordavishanson7273?sub_confirmation=1👉More exclusive content is available on Victor’s website: https://victorhanson.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We're concluding the third week of the Israeli United States effort to amasculate Iran,
and we're sort of in a standoff period.
The Navy is non-existent.
There is no air force.
There are no missile defenses that can interrupt allied planes going over the country.
The army is useless because nobody is fighting on the ground.
The thing to remember, I think, historically, is that tactical success is not necessarily equivalent to strategic victory or resolution.
By that I mean, you can argue that when Napoleon invaded Russia, he won almost every battle and he captured Moscow.
But he did not have a plan to force Alexander. He had no plan to force him out.
We had impressive tactical victories in Iraq and Afghanistan.
It's hard to think we lost a single battle in Iraq, but we did not have a plan of strategic resolution.
So what is the remaining obstacle of Iran?
Hello, this is Victor Davis Hansen.
We're concluding the third week of the Israeli United States effort to amassulate Iran,
and we're sort of in a standoff period.
I think people have compared Iran to the Black Knight and the old Monty Python movie.
The more that he loses in leg and arm, the more he thinks that it's just a scratch.
by all traditional methodology and criteria, Iran is now inert.
This is what Donald Trump keeps saying.
The Navy is non-existent.
There is no air force.
There are no missile defenses that can interrupt allied planes going over the country.
The army is useless because nobody is fighting on the ground.
We keep hearing that, and I think accurately, that missiles and drones are,
have been attracted either by bombing or by being intercepted or being expended to about 10%.
So what is the remaining obstacle?
Target-wise, it's just two or three.
There seems to be caches are secret locations where you have three or four ballistic missiles
or three or four drone sites with maybe 20 or 30 drones.
And those are very hard to find.
So you're going to be able to stop almost all of the incoming, but not all of them.
And because they're aimed at residential areas.
Remember, the United States and Israel is trying to hit military targets and command and control,
and any civilian damage is collateral.
But in the case of Iran, it's deliberately targeting hotels in Dubai or hotels and airports in Qatar.
or cluster bomb attacks on civilian high rises in Tel Aviv or Jerusalem.
That's what they want to do.
So what's going to happen?
The thing to remember, I think, historically, is that tactical success is not necessarily equivalent to strategic victory or resolution.
By that I mean, you can argue that when Napoleon invaded Russia, he won almost every battle and he captured Moscow.
but he did not have a plan to force the Tsar out, Alexander.
He had no plan to force him out.
He had no ability to go beyond Moscow to get the fleeing imperial forces of Russia.
Same thing with the Germans.
They won every battle up until they were within the first subway station of Moscow
and around December 10th, 1941.
But they did not have a plan to, or they were not able to take Leningrad, St. Petersburg, take Moscow,
and drive all of the Russians out of European and industrialized Russia, or barring that to bomb the factories that were on the other side of the Euro Mountain.
They did not have a plan.
So they didn't have a strategic victory.
They had impressive tactical victories.
We had impressive tactical victories in Iraq and Afghanistan.
It's hard to think we lost a single battle in Iraq, but we did not have a plan of strategic resolution.
So where we are now in this war is Iran's strategy is the following,
that it can withstand repeated attacks on all of its military assets
because it believes the United States cannot afford it either politically,
economically, socially, culturally to put ground troops after the fiasco,
goes in Afghanistan and Iraq.
So it doesn't have to worry about an invasion to displace the regime.
It also believes that the more that we hit any civilian targets out of frustration,
the more it will hurt the Iranian people,
and the more theocracy will say, you may not like us,
but the fact that you don't have water or power or fuel is because they hate you and us.
And that's another strategy they are taking.
In other words, they're saying, as long as we have oil, Karg Island, and as long as we have these huge oil fields, where you get tired of pounding us into rubble, you're going to go back to the United States.
Israel's going to go back and be quiet.
And we're going to get all of our oil revenues and we're going to have them.
And we're going to buy from Russia, North Korea, and China, missiles, drones, recreate our own drone industry.
and we probably have enough fissionable material that you didn't get,
and nobody could get it as hidden deep in the mountains,
that we will make bombs.
And this time we're going to use them
because we understand what you will do next time.
And more importantly, we are planning practically that Donald Trump is an aberration.
The last seven presidents didn't attack us,
even though we blew up your American embassy in Beirut,
your barracks of Marines in Beirut,
Cobar Towers, behind you.
USS Cole, behind the MSC destruction in Africa.
So we believe that the norm is not Trump.
He will be gone in two and a half years and we will get either a left-wing Democrat or a
neo-isolationist Republican or some Republican that's feckless and not going to do anything.
So all we have to do is outlast Trump and have the oil and we'll come back.
Trump's, everybody says he had no.
His opposition said he had no point, no agenda, no purpose. He did. He said it on March 1st and March 20th.
He said he had a multi-faceted agenda. Number one, he wanted to destroy the ability to launch missiles.
He's pretty close to that, not completely, but get rid of their missiles, not just the missiles that they launch, but the ability to make them.
Number two, you said he wanted to destroy their air forces and air defenses so that they would have not air superiority, but the Americans and Israelis have air supremacy.
When you reach air supremacy, you can use tactical aircraft.
That would mean wardhogs at low-level, Apaches.
You can do anything you want if you have air supremacy.
And we do now.
He wanted to destroy additionally the Navy.
He's almost done that.
Number four, he wanted to preclude the ability of Iran, not just to launch ballistic missiles, but to make another bomb.
He's bombed all of the nuclear sites that he hit before.
He's bombed the fabrication plants.
He's killed more of the science.
He's even attacked a university research area.
So pretty much it will be very, very hard for them for eight, nine years, unless they get a lot of Chinese help in North Korean.
help and they come in en masse.
The fourth, fifth agenda is a little bit less clear because he never said my reason is to go in there
and he might have thought that.
He might have implied it, but if you look at his written statement and what he said formally,
regime change.
And yet we all know that the regime change, whether it be the Venezuela model or a true uprising
of the dissatisfied Iranian public to take control of the government and have a constitutional
system. Whichever the replacement is, it's preferable to the Mullahs. But we are not going to be
able to shepherd that in because we're not going to go in on the ground. All we can do is
demasculate the theocracy and then hope that there's a popular uprising. And then we have
to be very careful because if we're going to drain the theocracy of their ability to recoup and
recoup and have money, then you have to go into Karg Island. If you go into Karg Island and grab the
oil or attack the oil fields, then you're hurting the people that are supposedly you want to
help to take over the government. At some point, and I don't know what it is, you don't know
what it is, I don't think anybody knows where it is. Iran will have no more.
viable targets. The United States will be looking at its arsenals and wanting to make sure that we
have enough if China doesn't go into Taiwan because it's angry that we have been in Venezuela,
kicked it out of Venezuela, kicked it out of Iran, kicked it out of everywhere we could.
We have to be very careful. At some point, the Israelis, the Americans, and the Iranians will
think it's not in their interest to continue. And we don't know when that point is. For us,
in the United States, it's when the economy and the price of gas gets to such a level that it becomes
almost impossible, given the hostile media and the propaganda that's coming from the left,
that this is a disaster, that Donald Trump cannot win the midterms, and therefore the entire
MAGA agenda will be inert in the next two and a half years. If that starts to crystallize,
then he will probably say, we've done enough, and we hope.
now turn it over to the Iranian people.
Then it'll be a question, will the Iranians, when there's not an active war, go on,
and when there's such damage to the Theok, will they come out,
especially if we arm them, or we have people in there that can arm them,
and will that regime fall on the next four or five months?
If it should do that, that will be to the credit of Donald Trump.
As far as the regime, again, it will do anything, lie, steal, murder,
anything to stay in power because it knows it's on the back of a lion or tiger.
If it steps off, they're all going to be jailed and probably executed for what they've done
to the Iranian people.
Thank you very much.
This is Victor Davis-Hanson for the Daily Signal.
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