The Dispatch Podcast - U.S. and Iran Threaten Fragile Ceasefire
Episode Date: May 4, 2026Steve Hayes is joined by Kevin Williamson, Mike Warren, and Mike Nelson to discuss rising tensions between the U.S. and Iran in the Strait of Hormuz and the disconnect between the White House’s word...s and actions.The Agenda:—Attacks in the Strait of Hormuz—Who can keep the Strait open—Project Freedom—Trump’s rising political pressure—Democrats’ midterm messaging—NWYT: Philadelphia 76ers ban New York Knicks fansDispatch Recommendations:—A Pope You Don’t Have To Think About Every Day—Is There a China Strategy Behind the Iran War?—Liebling at War —All the Money in the World, and Then Some Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey, everybody, just a quick update before we jump into the recording. We recorded Monday morning from 930 to 1030. And in the hours after the recording, there was some additional activity. There were reports of Iranian strikes on the UAE. And Admiral Brad Cooper of Sentcom told reporters that Iran had opened fire on U.S. warships and commercial vessels today. So that is not reflected in our conversation here, but the main contours of the conversation remain the same.
to the dispatch podcast, I'm Steve Hayes. On today's roundtable, we'll return to the Iran war
and discuss the ever-changing rhetoric from the Trump administration. Is the war effectively over?
Or should we settle in for something longer, as President Trump recently suggested, invoking Vietnam
for context? We'll also discuss the state of the negotiations with Iran and the Trump
administration's attempt to extend the 60-day congressional authorization window requirements
of the War Powers Act. And finally, not worth your time, the Philadelphia
of 76ers restricting access to Nix fans?
I'm joined today by my dispatch colleagues, Kevin Williamson, Mike Warren, and dispatch
contributor Mike Nelson.
Let's dive right in.
Morning gentlemen, welcome.
We're recording this at about 9.30 on Monday, May 4th, and there's news this morning
out of the street of Hormuz.
Iranian state media claimed that an American warship was struck by two missiles after
the crew ignored warnings about entry in.
to the strait. The United States, however, says no U.S. warships were struck. The White House has
rejected another proposed peace deal from Iran. And following reports that this weekend that President
Trump is getting antsy, he's sour about the lack of diplomatic progress, frustrated by the
continued blockage of the strait, concerned about slipping domestic U.S. support. The president
put a statement out on social media Sunday afternoon telling the world that the U.S. will begin
helping ships unable to traverse the strait as a, quote, humanitarian gesture, warning the regime
that it best not interfere. Mike Nelson, you've got a piece up this morning and I want to go
further into depth on your piece and your argument a little bit later, but just off the news of the past
18, 24 hours, it feels to me like we are potentially sort of in the proverbial calm before the storm.
Am I right about that?
Well, I don't know if we're in the calm before the storm or foreign the beat, you know, in the outer rings of the storm itself.
But what we're seeing, I think, is a disconnect between what the president in the White House
are overtly trying to present and what the Iranians are communicating back in their actions.
Within the last 12 or 24 hours, we have the announcement of Project Freedom, which seems to be euphemistically named.
It sounded originally like a military operation to try to escort ships through the straight.
Number one, it's probably not named that because we've just declared or attested to Congress that the war is over to try to skirt the war powers timelines.
In clarifying it, some of the administration and the DOD officials have said it's no, it's more of a coordination cell that communicates to international shipping.
when and where things are clear.
Since then, we've had two incidents now.
We had international ship that UK maritime trackers are reporting called the Minoan Falcon,
ironic on Star Wars Day, that could not run a blockade and may have been struck by an Iranian missile.
And then we have the Iranian claims of having struck a U.S. warship, which Sengom has denied.
We saw something similar in the past when there was an attack on one of our CSGs that was defeated by the U.S. Navy,
but that SENTCOM had not disclosed for some period of time.
So there may be somewhere in between where the Iranians have attacked a U.S. warship, but the attack was unsuccessful.
Regardless, it shows that they are not taking seriously our communication that the strain is going to be open, that they had better not interfere.
They are sticking by their initial communication that the strait is closed, and it will remain closed until the U.S. agrees to withdraw our blockade.
one of their preconditions that they've demanded as part of their 14-point plan that, as you mentioned, was at least in part rejected by the White House.
Kevin, you wrote last week that the Trump administration's failure to keep the straight open was a sign of weakness.
You wrote the Strait of Hormuz as an international waterway under maritime law, but the Trump administration insists on treating the straight as though it were a sovereign Iranian territory doing so for reasons ranging from incompetence to political cowardice.
what would you have the administration do, given that this is an international waterway?
Well, wind back a little bit for context that this is an illegal war that Congress hasn't authorized,
and so they probably shouldn't be doing anything at all.
But let's just set aside that nicety for the moment and pretend like this is a legitimate thing that's going on there.
You know, it's a profoundly silly thing, I think, in some ways that the Iranians close the straight,
and then the Trump administration says, we're going to blockade your blockade.
So now we're both closing the straight
And the whole question isn't who can close the straight
But who can open the strait
The Strait of Hormuz could be closed by
Essentially any country that had any sort of meaningful naval power
As I argued in the P-Shoe
There are probably private organizations
That could close the Strait of Hormuz if they really wanted to
Because it's a fairly vulnerable choke point
So the problem of course is that if you want to keep the straight
You not only have to control the water in the strait
And on both sides of the strait
But also the land north of it
and probably some of the land south of it, although the land south of it tends to be,
those are U.S. allies that are more or less reliable, although their control over their own territory
isn't always absolute. And that is a major military undertaking. And it's not the sort of thing
that can get wrapped up in 60 days. We'll get back to the pause, I guess, here.
Or 64 days, three hours and seven minutes, or whatever the clock officially says, according to the
White House of the time they had to do this stuff. So there's no way to do that without doing the
things that the Trump administration has historically said it doesn't want to do, which
has involved itself in an open-ended conflict in the Middle East in which there will be an
indefinite commitment of U.S. troops and resources for a project that doesn't have any obvious
end point in sight, because as soon as you abandon the project of keeping the straight open,
then whatever party in there wants to close it can close it. And so the Trump administration
has been essentially telling the Iranians that we want you to do this hard thing for us.
don't want to come in there and do the difficult thing of keeping it open. So you tell us what you
want and we'll think about what we can give you and then you can decide whether the strait's going to be
open or not. And that essentially amounts to a concession of Iranian sovereignty over this international
waterway, which is not something we should be conceding. So you can stay out of it in the first place
because the strait was open before the war before we launched this illegal war in Iran. Not necessarily
undesirable, by the way, but certainly illegal war. But before that, the strait was open. It was a
open. The street is closed as a result of this campaign, and now the point of this campaign that
resulted in the closing of the street apparently is to get the straight open. So we are really chasing our
tails here in a way that doesn't make very much sense. Mike, the president in his statement
referred to this project freedom more than once, I believe, as a humanitarian gesture.
What's your best understanding of why he's framing it that way? And does it relate to,
this pause, so-called pause. The administration, just for background, and we'll get into
a little bit deeper, has made the claim in letters to Congress on the 60th day of the war, of the
conflict, that it does not need to seek congressional authorization for this military action
because of a ceasefire that started on April 7th. And because there has been no continued
kinetic military action from April 7th onward, the count, the count, the
clock, as it were, stops counting on that day. So we have not yet reached the 60-day threshold because
there hasn't been fighting over the past three weeks. Is the president using the words, I mean,
he's not very clean or consistent about this shortly within hours of them having said,
we don't have to do this because we're not really at war anymore. The president talked about
being at war with Iran. Is the use of the phrase humanitarian gesture some attempt to
further get around these reporting obligations or seeking this authorization or is it best understood
as something else? As far as I know, this rationale was never communicated before Secretary
Heggsett's testimony last week where he offered it as a reasoning for why the president or
the White House did not need to seek congressional approval or notification just to get that 30-day
extension on the War Powers Act. I don't know if it had been bandied about within the White
House legal team before that, but we know that was the first time it was said. The White House in
their statement and their letter to Congress, actually, I think, took it a step further. It wasn't just
we have hit pause on the stopwatch as though this were, you know, some kind of game. They claimed
that the war was terminated, that it was over. Right. So I think they took it a step further. I do think
the communication of humanitarian regarding Project Freedom does two things. Number one, it nests with that
kind of narrative that we are no longer at war and this is something else, which, you know,
on its face is obviously false. But I think the other thing, too, is there is this communication
from the White House that this is a European problem. It's an international problem. They are the
ones who benefit from straight through the straight. It's not our issue. So, but we can all see
from the rising price of oil internationally that it is an American economic problem as well as being
a European one. By communicating this is humanitarian relief for these crews that are stranded in
the Persian Gulf, it's not helping the Europeans facilitate trade. It's just rescuing those crews,
I think, that it doesn't reinforce the idea that we're doing anything to help the Europeans.
And I think that's a long-running theme in this administration. You even saw it from Vice President
Vance during Signalgate in what was not supposed to be disclosed communications. His objection
to Operation Roughright, it was not that it would benefit us in
deterring Houthi attempts on the Babal Mendeb.
It was that the Europeans might benefit more from it than we would.
And that was offensive to him.
So I think there is a certain amount of this that is,
it's not reopening European trade, it's rescuing these stranded crews
and therefore not a necessarily direct economic benefit to the Europeans.
Yeah, Kevin, Mike makes the point that the White House
and the administration has communicated that the war was in fact over.
And so it was really making an argument that goes
beyond the way that I discussed it in this pause, and he's, of course, correct to point that out,
but it's also the case that the President of the United States has, I mean, I've seen lists
with dates corresponding. The number of times the President of the United States has declared
the war over, effectively over, sometimes without the qualifier, as we pay attention to the
rhetoric of this, and we've talked about this a fair amount on this podcast, there is this
temptation, I think, to ascribe meaning and strategic thinking to the rhetoric that we see coming
from the president, from others, because that's the way that we've treated these things before.
And in past administrations and past campaigns, there has been strategic thinking.
Might have been flawed strategic thinking.
Might have been really foolish strategic thinking.
But there has been strategic thinking that leads to the rhetoric that we're seeing from
top administration officials and most especially the president.
one gets the sense that is not happening here.
And that's probably the kindest way that I can put that,
which isn't to say that there's not strategic thinking
taking place in the administration,
certainly at the Pentagon.
But when you see the president say,
the war is over, the war is not over,
you know, we're pausing, this is a ceasefire,
we don't have to go to Congress.
It feels much more like this is sort of continuation
of ad hoc decision-making by the president
based on who he's angry at at the moment.
or something he's heard in his last conversation,
rather than sort of a broader strategic frame.
Is that, am I being too uncharitable?
No.
You know, sometimes when I say things like this,
people think I'm just trying to get a rise
or express my displeasure with the administration.
But I think just as a matter of fact,
and the most important fact to understand about this administration,
is that Donald Trump is adult.
He's just not a smart person.
He's a dumb guy.
He's an unserious person.
He just says the first thing that comes into his head.
And then he's got people around him of various degrees of competence and incompetence.
You try to mop it up.
We elected this idiotic game show host president twice now.
He is almost 80 years old.
He's not getting better with age.
He wasn't super smart when he was in his 40s and 50s.
And he just, you know, runs around, say it stuff.
There's no point in over analyzing it.
He's just a guy.
He's like a third grader who like, did you break the base?
No, no, no.
The imaginary invisible chickens in the kitchen did that.
You know, he'll just say the first thing.
comes into his head, that's it.
Mike, there have been moments when you can sort of discern changes in the president's rhetoric
or rhetoric coming from the administration seem to last longer and seem to have more purpose
or suggest more purpose than perhaps Kevin and I are giving them credit for.
There was for a long time the president saying, in effect, this is easy, we destroyed them,
we decimated Iran. They have no more ships. The war is effectively over. And then about two weeks ago,
and we discussed this at the time, it felt like there was an abrupt shift to the president counseling
patience and talking about these things taking a while, taking longer than, you know, Americans are
accustomed to. Citing Vietnam. Yeah. At one point, he mentioned Vietnam and said, you know,
19-year conflict, I think, was the way that he described it.
And it wasn't just the president.
Pete Hegseth said the same thing in his congressional testimony last week over two days.
And they talked about sort of Iran as a threat, the need to eliminate the threat.
They spoke of the objectives of the war that I think some of which were sort of post hoc rationalizations for doing what the president wanted to do, some of which they did articulate at the beginning, which you've said on a number of occasions.
but there was this shift from
this is easy the war's over to hey everybody
sort of this could take a while
we might be doing this for a while
do you have any sense of what led to that
consistent and administration wide shift
or was it just the case that the president said something
everybody fell in line until the president says something else
well I think first of all overall in this campaign
and the rhetoric that supports it
the president is to a certain extent a victim of his own perceived success with previous military operations.
And I would argue that Venezuela, despite the fact that the president believes it was complete within one period of darkness,
it was actually unresolved in terms of what we're going to do politically with that country and the people there.
But in his perception, this major problem that had plagued America for 20 years was dealt with a quick decision and something very simple.
and that he could replicate that kind of success elsewhere.
I think what we're seeing across the board with his fluctuating messages and, you know,
perceived or at least demonstrated frustration with, number one, how the war is going and how
American perceptions of the war are going are his coming to terms with the fact that this is
very different from Venezuela.
And it's not an immediate fix.
It's a much more complicated situation.
And he's not doing what I believe he should be doing, which is to say to the American,
people, which he never did up front. This is clearly why we're doing it. This is clearly the conditions
that we will accept and those that we will not. And it's going to be difficult and painful to
accomplish those. Instead, he still is retaining his level of rhetoric that this is simple, this is easy.
They're secretly telling me they want to give into everything that we've asked for. But why aren't you
more patient with me? You know, if you gave, you know, the Johnson administration patients in Vietnam or
the Bush administration patients in Iraq, why aren't you giving me patience with this?
My counter is that the administration is actually arguing, they're their best argument against them.
If two months is not so long to be patient and see the benefit, two months is also not too long
for an administration to be consistent in what they're trying to accomplish, how they're going to accomplish,
and what they're asking the American people to do, and they haven't been able to do that.
Secretary Hedgeseth famously a couple times has said pointedly to Democratic congressmen and senators,
you remind me of the kinds of people I was countering in the Iraq war
who naysayed it and said that we weren't going to succeed
and then we'll immediately turn around and say
this isn't a stupid war like the Iraq war.
Well, which is it?
If the Iraq war was stupid and flawed from the onset,
then those people who were naysaying him were correct.
Now, I would argue that we eventually corrected our path in Iraq,
achieved what we were trying to achieve.
But his arguments are not consistent.
They seem to want the tolerance and impatience,
or impatience of the American people
and their political opposition
without ever presenting
why they should be given
the benefit of the doubt.
And right now, we have a situation
where the president faces basically
three choices,
accept defeat,
except that he was not able to achieve
what he wanted to,
absorb a certain amount of economic pain
through the long-term imposition
of this mutual blockade
and see who blinks first,
or accept additional costs
in terms of American blood and treasure
by escalating the military effort.
Those are really his three
choices and he wants to choose none of the above.
Yeah, Mike, I want to get back to that and Kevin, I want to ask you about that, but before I do,
your piece today on our website from unconditional surrender to please make a deal, gets at
some of the rhetorical inconsistency that we're talking about. And I wonder if you could walk people
through the argument you made in that piece with particular attention being paid to how the Iranian
regime is receiving these messages. And one indication,
we have, if any, that the regime intends to make a deal, that they are willing to sit down with
their U.S. interlocutors and actually discuss something that might represent some kind of
a diplomatic compromise. One thing we should keep in mind is the Iranian regime is and has been
for the duration since 1979 full of liars, right? They are not presenting honestly what they're
trying to do in the region, how this is affecting them. So we should not take it face value
that they are not feeling pain.
But they are much more disciplined
in how they are presenting
the way they are willing to endure this conflict.
As of yet, the president,
when they imposed their blockade in the strait,
the president very quickly started spiraling
and showing that this was a pain point for him,
that he did not want this consistent imposition
and blockade of 20% of the world's energy supplies
being held up because it was causing him
domestic and economic pain.
The regime, despite the fact that they have taken
significant casualties, not only among their military, but among their leadership cadre itself,
that they have had depleted portions of their military stocks that they had accumulated,
and that they are facing domestic upheaval that started in January and may spark up again.
Additionally, this now mutually imposed blockade is causing them economic woes in an already
weak economy.
So there is pain being exerted on the Iranians, but what they are presenting outwardly is a very
disciplined message that they have no interest in coming off of their messes.
maximalist demands. Their 14-point proposal that they just submitted over the weekend looks a lot like
the same proposal that they had submitted in Islamabad and that they had submitted before Islamabad.
They are not coming off their demands. Now, that's not to say that they expect to get all of those,
but they expect those as a starting point from which to negotiate, all of which are not
advantageous to us. Meanwhile, the president is very clearly communicating in words and actions,
how willing he is to jump when the Iranians demand.
They did not show any clear indications
that they were going to have a second round of communication
or negotiations in Islamabad,
yet he was very quickly and loudly pronouncing
that he was going to send Jared and Steve Wickoff,
that he was going to send the vice president.
We were dancing to their tune,
and we remained doing so.
So I think that the president needs to kind of tighten up
not only his message for the Iranian people,
but also for the American people.
this is not going to be that simple.
And every time he communicates that the Iranians are secretly backchannel telling us that they're going to give into everything we want, they know he's lying.
And it gives them additional leverage to understand that he is impatient for a deal.
So I wondered, Mike, when we saw this shift from the president, and it was, again, a shift in rhetoric that seemed to last for a couple weeks, really, until I would say this weekend that you had the president of the United States in his president.
his spontaneous gaggles with the news media.
You had Pete Higgas, Seth, in congressional testimony.
You had other administration of figures, Mike Walts and others on the Sunday shows,
all suggesting that this was going to be a longer undertaking, that people better be patient,
better be ready to support it.
I wondered whether that wasn't exactly the kind of shift that you're talking about.
And the first thought that I had was that it was reminiscent, at least in some respects,
to the kinds of arguments that the Bush administration was making in,
You know, in that case, after three plus years in Iraq, when the Bush administration was arguing for the surge, making sort of the psychological, the argument that could have the psychological effect on the enemy of saying, we're willing to take casualties, we're willing to suffer through this.
We are going to escalate and we are going to win regardless of what happens here.
So, you know, you better not assume that you can get cute with your negotiations or tweak us by laying additional minds in the strait.
we're serious about this, we're long term.
Was that at any part of this thinking, or am I, again, guilty of ascribing strategic thinking
where it doesn't necessarily fit?
Well, I think it may have been.
So to use your analogy that you just pointed to with the Iraq War surge and how it might
be analogous to our current situation, I think it's important to draw the distinction between
the Iraq War surge and the Afghan War surge.
Both were demonstrations of additional commitment to the conflict.
But one, the Iraq war demonstrated we are not going to withdraw. We're not going to give into the pressure that we're feeling from this asymmetric conflict that's being exerted by the Iraqi insurgency. We are in this for the duration. And that allowed the Sunni population to see that the Americans were serious about the conflict and to make a perceptional and directional shift in the direction of the country in Iraq. In Afghanistan, President Obama announced, I am committing additional forces and I'm going to tell you exactly when I'm going to
going to withdraw them because I have no interest in this war in the long term.
It's some exactly the opposite message.
So the president may feel like he is changing direction and communicating strength,
but then within 24 or 48 hours, he's demonstrating, I'm totally willing to make a deal,
I am interested in ending this as quickly as possible.
There is no perception that he is willing to sit back and say, great, I guess we have this
mutual blockade, it's going to be painful for both of us, and we're going to be painful for both of us,
and we're going to see how long it takes until one of us blinks.
The Iranians don't believe that,
and neither do the American people most likely.
They all believe that this is going to shift very quickly.
And I think that even now, you know,
when he imposed the mutual blockade,
that was a good move.
And then he started showing a little bit of weakness or flexibility.
This weekend on Friday,
when he immediately rejected the 14-point proposal,
that was a good move.
And then 24 hours later, he said,
well, there may be some stuff that we can work with in there.
So he continues to soften his hard approach
to the point that it's completely unusable.
All right, we're going to take a quick break,
but we'll be back soon with more from the Dispatch podcast.
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And we're back. You're listening to the Dispatch Podcast. Let's jump in.
Mike Warren, to Mike Nelson's point there, the Iranians can read the American press as well as we can.
And what they are seeing when they consume our newspapers, when they're,
they're looking at our internet debates about what's taking place in Iran in the straight is
growing unrest on the part of the American people. Relatively low levels of support that was
polling over the weekend, 61% of Americans, I believe it was a Washington Post-Ipsos poll opposed
the war. The president has reasonably high levels of support from Republicans, about four and five,
not quite four and five. But even there, there's a gap. And you can hear from interviews that
Republicans are giving on Capitol Hill, mostly anonymous, that there's growing unease about the war itself
and about the costs it's imposing on the country. If you look at gas prices, average price of a
gallon of gas now $4.29 per gas buddy. And this is driving inflation throughout the economy. And it's
obvious and we see it and we feel it. Is the White House, is the president, does that explain why he's
sort of making one argument on one day, one argument on the other? Is he feeling this pressure?
He says he doesn't care, but he seems to care. It's hard to know exactly why the president
says one thing at one particular time during the day or the week, but I do think the political
pressure is real. I think it is not something that is, you know, ephemeral or, you know,
or you're just hearing from, you know, Democrats who are trying to use it as an issue in the
midterm elections.
I think that the polling is out there, both public polling and also in private polling,
that the White House is certainly aware of.
And I am sure that Susie Wiles is at some ways expressing to the president that it's not popular.
And that the follow-on effects are pretty clear to people, not just gas prices, but all other
kinds of input prices, you know, that Kevin can read chapter and verse on the ways in which,
you know, petroleum is, factors into so many input prices for businesses and other places
within the economy where the effect on higher petroleum prices means, you know, costs will
rise across the board. I was in Iowa just a couple of days ago for a couple days. I was covering,
I'm covering a Democratic primary there for Senate. I was around a lot of Democratic groups.
So, you know, take that with a grain of salt, that there's a lot of, you know,
distrust of this president from Democratic voters.
But these were two Democratic candidates for the U.S. Senate who are both talking about in a,
they're in a competitive primary, and they're not differentiating themselves over, you know,
the question of the Iran war.
They're both pretty adamantly against this war and speaking out, not just, you know,
about the foreign policy elements of it, which you might expect from Democrats to,
have a different view on foreign policy from a Republican president, but they're talking about
the effects of this on the cost of not just gasoline, but in Iowa, a big ag state, they're
talking about the cost of fertilizer going up. And an important point that someone made to me
recently is that the growing season is now. And so people are buying fertilizer right now.
The effects of, say, the tariffs, but now and now this closing of the Strait of Hormuz weren't
in effect last growing season.
if they are, in effect, this growing season.
And there's just a lot of anxiety about that.
So in a state like Iowa, where there's a competitive Senate race,
but in other places across the country, maybe less ag,
but more of those, you know, that high cost of gasoline,
this is something that a lot of Democrats are saying
is a big problem and a big part of their message
about why Donald Trump and the Republican Party
are not working for their voters,
not working for the American people.
You have to think that is something
of course that Donald Trump is considering.
And I don't know much.
I've talked about, you know, it's hard to sort of put ourselves in the minds of what is,
what the Iranians are thinking about our domestic politics.
They don't exactly have, you know, a perfect window into it.
And their, you know, view might be warped.
But they do know that there is a midterm election coming up in the United States.
They do know that there are electoral concerns that the president and his party have.
And you do have to wonder if that's a part of their negotiating strategy.
Just wait this out and know that Donald Trump doesn't want to have a war that keeps on going for the next several months.
I don't know if that would save Donald Trump to sort of find a way to negotiate himself out of this quickly.
But I think they know, the Iranians know, that there is political pressure here at home.
Kevin, do you accept the framing of the president's options that Mike Nelson laid out for us just a moment ago?
In effect, option one, accept defeat or in the sort of,
characterization of the Trump administration, be happy with the military gains that we've achieved
thus far and the war pullout move on. Number two, sort of long-term pain, mutual blockades,
settling in for what would be a much longer-term fight. And then number three, sort of escalate to
win, if this shorthand works for you, Mike Nelson, with all the risks that escalating to win
might involve. Kevin, do you buy that as essentially the three options? And if you could set aside your,
you know, your concerns about this being an illegal war and the president came to you and asked you
for advice, what advice would you give him? So Steve is asking the theater critic if Mike Nelson
has adequately framed the situation. Look, Kevin, you are the one who's pointed out that a lot of
this is theater. So there's nobody better to ask that question. My, my background in
in theater criticism has served me well for the last decade of not writing about theater.
Yeah, I think that's essentially right.
C.S. Lewis has this riff about what to do when you're on the wrong path, when you've taken a
wrong turn somewhere, which is you have to turn it around and get back on the right one.
And going backward may feel like it's regress, and it may feel like it's retreat, but it's
actually the only way toward progress and advancement.
And if my phone rings, and it's John Barron asking me if I have any advice to pass along to his boss,
Donald Trump, what I would tell him to do is to go to Congress, lay out his war aims, what he thinks
we need to do to get them, and ask for their support and commitment to get that done.
Because, you know, whether this is going to be pursued and whether it's worth pursuing and how
it's going to be pursued is, as Mike suggested earlier, going to be a lot different depending
on what our actual goal here is, which seems to keep changing. So if the goal is regime change,
that's one thing. If the goal is to make sure that the Iranians never have ambitions to launch a nuclear program again, that's a different thing, but actually probably involves regime change as well. There's something very close to it. And Hexeth, by the way, going in and saying that, well, we obliterated their nuclear program, but now we have to make sure that they don't have any ambitions. We're fighting their ambitions now. So we're dropping physical bombs on a metaphysical entity on their ambitions. I don't know what you put in the coordinates to bomb an ambition, but you've got to go out there and do that somewhere.
If our goal now is just simply to try to normalize traffic through the straight-of-form moves,
that's a whole different issue, and that's a different set of obligations.
It doesn't require necessarily regime change, but it does require kind of buying them off
or beating them into submission where they don't want to mess with that anymore.
So you've got to pick one, I think.
And once you've picked one, then you've got to think pretty carefully about what it takes to get that done,
whether the American people are likely to support it, which I don't think they probably are,
and then go from there.
but I don't think there's any way to do that from, you know, we're in the problem of you can't get there from here.
You can't get there from where we are right now without going back and doing the things it should have been done from the beginning.
And Trump, of course, is unlikely to do that because, one, it's just the right thing to do and he's always resistant to doing the right thing.
And second, it would be a sort of admission of defeat or if not defeat of limitations on his supposed omniscience.
You know, we're dealing with a delusional person here.
You know, Donald Trump walks around apparently talking to people about how he's the most powerful human being who's ever lived and a bunch of rag-tag nobody's in Iran with some drones or, you know, forwarding his grand man of history ambitions.
And not to get into Jonas territory here with the Hegelian stuff, although if you haven't listened to that edition of the podcast, you should definitely go do it.
It's not something that I can see him doing.
And so the most likely thing seems to me just like this sort of extended quagmire.
They keep doing what we're doing, improvised from day to day.
And I think that the threat of an ass kicking in the midterms is diminishing every day,
just because it's now baked into the calculations.
They assume they're going to get the crap kicked out of them and that there's not much they can do about it at this point.
So why hurt the president's fragile ego and vanity if it's not actually going to make things any better politically to try and go do the right thing?
And, of course, lecturing Donald Trump that, well, this is, you know, the decent, honest, patriotic thing to do,
you may as well be yelling at your dog, you know?
Well, you know, your discussion of our efforts to bomb ambitions reminds me how far we've
traveled from J.D. Vance's speech at the 2024 Republican Convention where he said that
people will not fight for abstractions.
Seems like we're there.
But we can fight abstractions.
We'll fight against abstractions.
We'll fight for them, but we'll fight.
Right, right.
Mike Nelson, I want to ask you about the 2025 Tony Awards.
and the happy, maybe happy ending and the best musical.
No, I'm not going to actually ask you that.
I want you to go deeper into your own framing here.
And not, I'm not going to put you in the Oval Office with the president
and ask you to give him advice,
but thinking sort of the long-term best interest to the United States at this point.
If those are the three options right now,
set aside the political implications, set aside,
what's the best thing for the United States to do right now?
Is Kevin right that sort of the best thing is to walk back so that we can walk forward and make progress?
Which of those three choices right now would be best for the United States in five years, 10 years, 20 years?
Well, we've brought up a similar example a couple times throughout this conversation.
And it's a model that I think the president can look to.
But as Kevin just pointed out, he is not personally predisposed probably towards this.
You know, talking about a midterm thumping to use the victim at the time's,
of it. You know, in 2006, you know, the Republicans took a thumping, as George W. Bush put it,
and he, President Bush, fired Secretary Rumsfeld, but then also recommitted to the surge.
You know, the Iraq War was incredibly unpopular at the time. There was, Harry Reid was calling
for us to withdraw en masse. I do think that the president, and again, this works against character,
against his history, but he should make the case that this is a whole of government approach,
including, you know, members of Congress to whom he has not been predisposed to go to, to make the case.
He needs to make the case to the American people. And I do think that of the three options,
probably the most likely to succeed is to the long-term settling in for economic pain.
As I laid out in a piece for the dispatch a while ago, the ground-based options or the escalatory options
do not necessarily guarantee success either. And they come with significant risk to our own forces.
you know, the cost of blood to achieve even victory with those would be significant or could be
significant. So I do think that, you know, as we've said, the Iranian regime does have a fragile
economy and imposing long-term economic pain for them making, you know, striking that already
fragile economy, I think is probably the most likely avenue for success. Of course, again, you know,
like you said, we're paying $4.25 for gas right now on average. That's going to go up with the summer
travel season and the president is already facing, you know, we're already seeing polls that for the
first time the Democrats are polling higher at better in the economy than the Republicans are.
As Kevin said, a midterm thumping is already baked in the cake. And so the president, I think,
would be better to make the worst, the least bad option for him in terms of the outcome of that.
Yeah, he's just not given over to long-term thinking in that respect.
And can I say real quick, Steve, on that point, I think Mike Nelson is right about that.
And yet this cuts so much against Donald Trump's, sort of his message in 2024.
And the perception that was going to be from the voters who put him back into office,
that was going to be what he, what his whole entire purpose is.
And I think in some way Trump still thinks of himself as bringing in the golden age of America.
And there's a real ego problem here, shocking, I know about Donald Trump.
I do think that while that midterm thumping,
is maybe baked into the cake for all of us observers.
I just, I wonder if Donald Trump is, you know, in a position where he's just really trying
to have it all.
And he's going to keep making bad decisions about how to proceed, not taking Mike Nelson's
advice, because he thinks he can do it all and that he still is doing it all.
And more bad economic news is just going to put a lot of pressure on him to find what he might
think is an easier way out.
But if the midterm thumping.
is baked in. And I agree that it is. It's baked in for people like us. It's baked in, I think, for
a lot of the people who are, you know, making prognostications about where this will end up.
It's certainly not baked in for Republican candidates around the country. I mean, they are not
conceding defeat. They are outraising money. They're putting up new ads. They're fighting on,
I mean, I think they're having to change the terms of the fight. If their argument was six,
eight months ago, the president of the United States has brought back, you know, $2 gas,
and, you know, prices are coming down in general, even if they aren't coming down as fast as we'd
like them. They're not as high as under Joe Biden. They can't make those arguments anymore,
Mike Warren. So you talked a little bit about what you're hearing from Democrats on your
recent trip to Iowa. At what point do Republicans say, sort of enough? Like, this guy's failed.
This is not what we signed up for. You know, we didn't say. We didn't say,
sign up for this kind of war. And yes, it's taking on the leading state sponsor of terror in the
world, but the costs are too much. Or, you know, I don't agree with the president on the way that
he's handling the economy. You've seen some softening, I would say, of Republican support, certainly.
But you're not yet really seeing anyone bail on them. Even on this question of war powers,
you have most members of Congress who were willing to speak out on it, more or less say,
I defer to the president.
I just think that's going to be the case.
I mean, we've talked here about how Republicans,
and there's a rationality to it,
which is, there's no benefit in stepping out right now,
particularly if the midterm route that we expect is baked into the cake.
Well, we got to stick with the president.
There are still a lot of primaries over the next couple of months.
You want to be on the right side of the president,
because he does have power in those primaries,
not as much as he used to.
but he does still have power and he can make your life miserable.
I mean, if you're waiting for some kind of, you know, principled departure from Trump among elected Republicans,
you know, you're going to be waiting a long time, Steve.
I do think, however, voters are, even Republican voters, you look at that soft support.
I mean, yes, it's like, what did you say, four out of five, something like that, Republicans support the president in this war.
I think that's pretty soft support.
And you can see that in a lot of these states.
I mean, I mentioned Iowa, but you can look at it in other states, whether it's Maine or Georgia
or other states where there are competitive North Carolina.
There are some competitive Senate races, governor's races in those states, and the Republican
enthusiasm is down.
I imagine the midterm elections will have the potential to be a clarifying moment in the
way that 2006 was for George W. Bush, as Mike Nelson pointed out, I don't think Trump will
necessarily be, you know, affected by that route. But I do think Republicans, particularly because
this is the last term, Trump can't run for president again, they're going to be looking at the future.
They're already looking at it. And I think they'll start to say a little more about they're ready to
move beyond Trump. But it's, you know, this is the power that he has over his party, which is that
nobody is really willing to step out because he bullies him back into line.
Mike Warren says Trump can't run again. Apparently he thinks he's a federal judge now and he has
anything is possible.
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All right. We'll be right back. Welcome back. Let's return to our discussion.
Before we get to today's Not Worth Your Time, I do want to make sure that we stop and get recommendations from our panelists on things they've read in the dispatch in recent days that they would recommend most strongly to our readership.
Kevin, let me start with you.
My friend George Weigle on Pope Leo, the Pope you don't have to think about all the time.
I thought it was a really interesting essay.
George knows this stuff, of course, better than almost anyone.
And I like this idea of Leo as being the Swiss president of popes, you know, like you don't even have to think about them.
You don't really even know who they are some of the time.
And one of my little mantras that I try to always remind people, particularly my right-wing Catholic friends, is that the president isn't the country, the Pope isn't the church.
You know, there's more to this stuff than the guy in charge and the guy in the top office.
And I think it would be good for the Catholic Church to have a Pope that didn't have to think about as much.
And I hope that one day in the near future we will also have a president of the United States that we don't have to think about all that much.
From your lips to God's ears, as it were.
Mike Nelson.
So out this morning from Michael Sobeluk and Grant Romley, is there a China strategy behind the Iran War?
we've talked a lot about kind of the failed thinking or flawed thinking that has gone into the conflict within the Suncom region, but they take a broader view and look at what the implications are for America's approach to China.
Not only misunderstanding the import that China places on Iran as a partner and a trading partner, but also whether this has any kind of deterrent effect against China as they look at a potential future confrontation with the United States.
I think it provides an extra to the theater perspective that is lacking in a lot of the conversation.
Mike Warren.
Alan Jacobs has a terrific piece from this weekend about A.J. Liebling, Leibling at war, just looking back at maybe perhaps the greatest war journalist, certainly one of the best war journalist writers among war journalists.
And it's just a terrific, well-written piece about this legend.
Speaking of terrific, well-written pieces, my recommendation,
is today's Wanderland from Kevin Williamson, which looks in some depressing depth at our debt
and deficit issues and continued challenges in that level. And I'm going to actually read a sentence
from Kevin after he gives a sense of exactly the trouble that we're in and why it's of growing concern.
He writes, the bosses here at the dispatch have asked me to keep the profanity to a minimum.
So I am not going to write in plain English what it is that we are.
Let's just say that it is a problem we have not ducked.
We appreciate the restraint, Kevin.
This is a family outlet and a family show.
Not to, this is not me putting myself in the same camp at all,
but just when Liebling comes up, he had one of my favorite boasts in the history of journalism
where he said about himself, there's nobody good who's faster.
And there's nobody better who's fast.
I like it.
That's good.
And you are fast.
That's for sure.
I've told the story about your drafting of our most recent editorial from several months back.
Meeting about it ended at like 11.
And I think we had a draft by one, something like that.
The Liebling standard is something to aspire to.
Anyway.
So finally, today, I want to talk a little bit about the NBA.
For those of you who don't know, the NBA National Basketball Association,
something that used to be a sport I watched regularly.
I was passionate fan of my Milwaukee Bucks growing up.
This is in the post-Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Milwaukee Bucks era
with stars like Brian Winters, Marcus Johnson, Bob Lanier,
and others.
But I don't much watch the NBA.
So for not worth your time,
time, I think we're doing you a favor just to let you know that the NBA playoffs are taking place now
if you too no longer watch the NBA. I did go to an NBA game last year and I watched the Milwaukee
Bucks play the Washington Wizards and was stunned to learn that they play music throughout the
playing of the game now. Do you all go to NBA games? Have you all witnessed this first hand or
watched this on television? It's horribly disorienting if you go
unsuspecting to see this.
Yeah, I've seen it.
I've seen me that's not good. By the way, Steve,
it is more likely than not
that if it is just a day
of the week or the year, that we are in the NBA
playoffs rather than not in the NBA playoffs.
It is the season that seems to go on for months
and months.
Certainly feels that way.
It was a funny experience to listen to the music
and watch the gameplay. Every time the Wizards got the ball,
this was a game that took place in Washington,
they played sort of upbeat,
cool kind of hip hop, like, you know, the kind of thing that would get the players and the fans
very excited about what was happening when the Wizards had the ball. And when the Bucs had the ball,
it was sort of the, do-dum, do-dum, do-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-tall. It was like mildly entertaining. It was
the most entertaining part of the game. Let me guess. It didn't help the Wizards.
It did not help the Wizards, although the Bucks did not play very well on that particular day.
The reason I want to talk about the NBA today, however, has to do with business decisions.
and fandoms, the Philadelphia's 76ers are going to be playing the New York Knicks in round
two of the playoffs.
And the management of the Sixers has made a decision to do its best to exclude Knicks fans
from attending games, home games in Philadelphia.
It's about a two-hour drive, train ride from New York, south to Philadelphia.
The Sixers put out a statement saying, sales to this event will be restrained.
to residents of the greater Philadelphia area,
residency will be based on credit card billing address.
Orders by residents outside this area will be canceled without notice and refunds given.
Kevin, if you owned the Philadelphia 76ers, would you take this step to ensure that the crowd was more pro-filly than it otherwise might be?
You know, I lived in Philadelphia for a long time and I was, I was in newspaper there.
guy there for a while. And Philadelphia's sports fans, I would think, would almost be enough on their
own to keep the New Yorkers out of town. I mean, they did physically assault Santa Claus at one point,
as I recall, and drove him off the ice of a hockey game. And it was always great when the Eagles were
in some sort of big, you know, game because win or lose, there's going to be a riot. You know what
the news is going to be. And one way or the other, they're going to, you know, cause some trouble.
So I don't know if I would do that. I think what I would do if I owned the
the six years is I would make as much money as I possibly could because that's why you buy a sports team
unless you're some kind of lunatic who needs it for some sort of, you know, personal aggrandizement issue.
And I would just make all the ticket sales by auction, I think, to extract the very highest prices that it possibly could.
And that would be that because this is a business.
And the whole thing of treating, you know, professional sports like some sort of, you know, civic institution, I think is just nonsensical.
I'm not the biggest sports fan of the world.
I don't watch sports on television because, among other things, I don't own a television, so there's not
a lot of chance to watch sports. When I lived in New York, I did go see the Knicks play a few times.
And Nix games were a lot of fun. I've been to a couple of Sixers games and also a lot of fun.
I went to one Miami Dolphins game in Miami, and that was really a hoot. If I lived in Miami, I think
I'd go see a lot of football games. I think it's a great place to watch a football game. I like live
sports. I'd go see boxing when I lived in Vegas and that sort of thing. Also in Philly.
Philly used to have a really good boxing club up in North Philadelphia.
called The Blue Horizon, which was a great place to go see fights.
And because it makes you feel like AJ Labeling, among other things.
They might even want to make a movie about boxing in Philadelphia.
Yeah, that's true.
How about that pop culture reference, right?
Yeah.
Well, it's funny.
We were just talking about, we were mentioning Rocky just briefly before we started on the podcast,
because by modern standards of, like, you know, filmmaking that's 120 beats a minute,
Rocky is like some 1970s French, you know, existential New Way film or something.
It's so slow moving.
and thoughtful and meditative and moody and atmosphere.
It's a great movie.
I love Rocky.
But you get someone who was born after about 1990
and tried to get them to sit through Rocky.
And, well, first of all, you need a translator
because no one can understand the language being spoken,
but also I think it would be a very, very slow movie for them.
Philly is great.
I love Philadelphia.
It is an underrated city,
and their sports fans are psychotic
because Philly has this weird urban neurosis
of being not quite in New York,
not quite D.C. and feeling like it's a forgotten city that used to be really important and now isn't,
which is true, but it's a great place to live, at least it was when I was there.
I love Rocky Balboa as an Albert Camus protagonist.
Mike Warren, isn't this unfair to Nix fans?
What if you're a displaced Nix fan who's had to move to Philly for a, or you're a Nix fan who lives just outside of this area coast?
or you're a Philly fan that's moved to New York
and you want to get tickets,
but you can't because of the restrictions on purchases in the area.
It seems unfair all around.
Yeah, this is really kind of the great civil rights struggle of our time
when you put it in those terms.
Like, I don't know.
By the way, I need to correct Kevin on this.
I hate to do this.
The Santa Claus incident was at an Eagles game.
Was it an Eagles game?
I thought it was a hockey game.
Yeah, it was back in 1968,
and the team decided to parade around a guy in a Santa Claus suit
who was possibly inebriated.
I know that's shocking to hear,
and the season was pretty terrible for the Eagles,
and so they began, like, throwing snowballs at him
and all sorts of things.
Look, I think that Philadelphia is a great city.
It's got great, insane sports fans, as Kevin points out.
There is a reason that this is happening.
This isn't just sort of coming out of the ether.
I think it was two seasons ago
when the 76ers and the Knicks played in the playoffs,
and this happened where there were just,
a bunch of Knicks fans that showed up, bought up all the tickets. And the Knicks have a very,
you know, they're sort of the, well, they're the East Coast Lakers. They have lots of celebrities
who show up at Nix games and it's sort of a place to be seen. And so this was a problem where
Philadelphia, the team and the city saw all these Knicks fans at a playoff game. And I think they're
trying to correct for that. I think it's fine because I think I agree with Kevin that Philadelphia's
a great city and it often gets forgotten.
It's also a very big city.
People don't realize it.
I think it's right now it's like the fifth or six largest city in America.
And I think that they deserve to see their team in Philadelphia.
I hope they beat the Knicks because the Knicks beat my Atlanta Hawks in the first round.
And so I say more power to the 76ers.
And if it helps them, you know, the 76ers and the Flyers, if it helps them to keep the Philadelphia
Phillies down where they are, you know, in this season.
then I'm all for it as an Atlanta Braves fan, and I say, go with God, 76ers.
Steve, let me just add, by the way, that the notion that punishing some Philly guy who moved to New York
who now can't buy tickets is going to be regarded as unfair in Philadelphia, that's why they're doing this,
is to punish that guy.
Exactly, exactly.
How dare he move?
How dare he have ambition and go get a job?
Mike, this strikes those of us who are Washington Capitals fans.
as a bit ironic because when I first moved to Washington, D.C. after I graduated college in 1993,
and I lived the first 20-plus years of my life in Milwaukee, Wisconsin without an NHL team.
Despite being a huge hockey fan, I had to follow. I followed the Chicago Blackhawks. I followed the New York Islanders and the Rangers because they were on national television, like TNT, I think it was, or USA back in the day.
But Milwaukee did not have its own NHL franchise.
when I moved to Washington, I immediately adopted the Capitals, and I've been a Caps fan ever since.
But in those days, back when the Caps played in Landover, Maryland at the Cap Center, sparsely attended games with a pretty mediocre team year over year, you'd go to a game against teams in the area.
And by in the area, I mean Philly, the New York teams, and others, Pittsburgh.
and it would be two to one, three to one, four to one,
Flyers fans versus Capitals fans.
The Capitals were not in a position to, I think,
exclude Flyers fans from purchasing tickets
because then nobody would have purchased the tickets
and it would have been an economic calamity.
But these are the playoffs.
Does Philly have to resort to this?
Well, it's funny because actually the last time we saw each other,
we were watching the Caps beat a Philadelphia-based team,
watching the beat the Flyers.
So it all comes full circle.
Look, I've never been to an NBA game, actually,
since the Wizards are Washington's only second most successful basketball team
after the Washington generals who perennially lose to the Harlem Globetrotters.
What about the Mystic?
Well, that's true.
That's fair.
That's fair.
But I am a diehard nationals fan.
And like you said, from 2005 until about 2012 when they started becoming a winning team,
every time I'd go to a Nats game,
there was a baked-in away home crowd, right?
You know, everyone was there.
There was an overwhelming support for the away team
that was playing against my nationals.
So I got used to it.
As a matter of fact, Game 5 of the World Series
here in 2019, I was surrounded on all sides
by filthy Astros fans.
So, you know, I think there's a certain amount of tolerance
for this that you have to just,
it's baked into the level of performance
that you're going to have the opposition party
in representation.
One last thing I would point out,
and not many did a smirch, besmirch Kevin's speed that we all praised,
but we should also point out that I believe Stallone wrote Rocky within one weekend.
So he may have set the threshold for speed and quality when he wrote that script.
And then held out, like he turned down a lot of money for that script because he wanted to play the lead.
And he was going to, this was going to like really launch his, you know, acting career.
I don't know if everyone knows the story.
But he was broke.
He really needed money.
He, in a very disciplined and admirable way, I think, turned down a couple of big operas until he got what he wanted, which was someone who would make the movie with him as Rocky.
I like it.
Yeah.
I think before that, his biggest part had been the mugger on the subway in Woody Allen's bananas.
Yeah.
Well, I think we could agree that Rocky, whatever we think of other Philadelphia sports and Philly Sports fans, Rocky is a classic film.
And it's probably worth going back and watching it again.
And I should make my kids sit through it if it feels really long and slow.
It is such a good move.
I like to do that to my kids.
It is not overrated.
It's great.
Perfect.
All right.
Well, thank you all for taking the time today.
Very interesting discussion on Iran and all of its implications.
And pretty interesting discussion on Philly and sports, too.
Talk to you next time.
Finally, if you like what we're doing here, you can rate, review, and subscribe to the show on your podcast player of choice to help new listeners find us.
And as always, if you've got questions, comments, concerns, or corrections, you can email us at roundtable at the dispatch.com.
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That's going to do it for today's show.
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