Anne Applebaum, brilliant writer on foreign affairs, wrote the article that I wish I could have written. It appears online in The Atlantic. This is a gift article. From the moment I heard about the bombing, I realized that Trump had no plan, none, to help the Iranian people.
When the bombing ends, the mullah’s troops have the guns, the people have none.
Khomeini is dead. There are dozens of mullahs hoping to replace him.
Trump could have intervened when Khomeini was slaughtering the protestors like cattle. He said he would. He raised their hopes. But he didn’t. Thousands of Iran’s bravest were killed.
Now he says it’s up to the people to take over their institutions. How?
He says the Revolutionary Guards should surrender their weapons. To whom?
This bombing campaign will leave the status quo in place.
Applebaum wrote:
The American bombardment of Iran has been launched without explanation, without Congress, without even an attempt to build public support. Above all, it has been launched without a coherent strategy for the Iranian people, and without a plan to let them decide how to build a legitimate Iranian state.
This lack of coherence has plagued the Trump administration’s policy for many weeks. On at least eight occasions during Iran’s nationwide uprising in early January, President Trump encouraged Iranians to “take over their institutions” and promised that American help was “on its way.” But just last month, days after the Iranian regime massacred thousands of its own citizens, Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff, sent out the opposite message. He described Iran as “a deal that ought to happen” and said that the country could be welcomed into “the league of nations.” Vice President Vance has also said that America’s interests in Iran are limited. “If the Iranian people want to overthrow the regime, that’s up to the Iranian people,” Vance recently told reporters. “What we’re focused on right now is the fact that Iran can’t have a nuclear weapon.”
The absence of a broader strategy fits a pattern. For decades, American presidents from both parties have oscillated between coercion and engagement with Iran, sometimes offering diplomacy, sometimes sanctions. Doves and hawks both sought to manage the tactics of the Islamic Republic—its nuclear ambitions, its ballistic missiles, its network of proxy militias throughout the Middle East—without ever coming up with a meaningful strategy to combat the root problem: the ideology of the regime itself.
The Islamic Republic is a theocracy founded explicitly to oppose the deepest principles of liberal democracy and the rule of law. During its 47-year reign, this theocratic state underwent no meaningful political reform, made no improvement to its human-rights record, and never stopped trying to export its radicalism abroad. To maintain control, the regime has used mass violence, intimidation, and surveillance. In recent years, the regime has also sought, successfully, to use online smear campaigns to divide and denigrate the Iranian opposition. Nevertheless, as the scholar and activist Ladan Boroumand has written, Western liberal democracies have long preferred to engage the Islamic Republic “almost solely through the paradigm of Realpolitik,” to engage in negotiations that never seem to work.
There were plenty of opportunities to try something different. In 2009, at the time of mass protests in Iran, the Obama administration could have put a human-rights campaign at the heart of its Iran policy, promoting the people, ideas, education, and media that might have helped change Iran from within. In 2019, after the cancellation of Barack Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran, the first Trump administration could have done the same. But it did not.
The second Trump administration has gone much further in the opposite direction, actually dismantling tools that could have helped promote civic engagement and build a united opposition in Iran. The administration has taken money away from Iranian-human-rights-monitoring groups and defunded media projects. Under the leadership of the former Arizona political candidate Kari Lake, the U.S. Agency for Global Media has prevented Radio Farda, the Farsi-language channel of the U.S. broadcaster Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, from using American transmission equipment.
Voice of America, the U.S. government’s other Persian-language channel, cut back coverage and lost credibility by producing partisan broadcasts. The channel’s leadership has actually banned any mention of Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi, the son of the late shah of Iran, who commands a substantial following both inside and outside the country. As a result, VOA lost ground to the Saudi-funded channel Iran International. Lake also cut funding for another agency, the Open Technology Fund, dedicated to providing virtual private networks and satellite access to Iranians, among others. That decision might also help keep Iranians inside the country isolated from the large dissident movement in the diaspora.
The administration’s apparent lack of interest in the Iranian opposition adds a layer of surreality to the video that Trump posted early this morning. He called on the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, the Iranian Armed Forces, and the police to “lay down your weapons.” But to whom should they surrender? He almost taunted the Iranian people to take charge. “Let’s see how you respond,” he said. “America is backing you with overwhelming strength and devastating force.”
But who is “you”? The civil-society and women’s-rights activists who want to build a rule-of-law society, with transparency, accountability, and independent courts? The ethnic minorities—Kurdish, Baluchi, Azerbaijani, and others—who want a decentralized state and more autonomy? The sometimes-fanatical supporters of a new monarchy, who have tried in recent months to push others to the sidelines? Breakaway groups inside the IRGC who might be interested in creating a military dictatorship?
The answer matters. As one opposition insider told me at the time of the previous American attack, the mere act of bombing Iran will not by itself create a stable regime. “If there was ever a fantasy that a leader would fly in under the wings of foreign aviators,” he told me, “that is definitely not going to happen.” Another Iranian activist texted me this morning: “This is one of the best days of my life, Anne; also I am very worried about what comes next.” (Both the opposition insider and the activist requested anonymity for fear of retaliation.)
The point is not that the U.S. should promote democracy for its own sake. The goal, rather, must be to help Iranians achieve normalcy. For the region to be at peace, Tehran must transform itself from the headquarters of an insurgency back into the capital of a country seeking to build peace and prosperity for its own citizens. A stable, law-abiding Iran will help build a stable, law-abiding Middle East. But in order to achieve that, Iran needs not a new dictatorship but self-determination and a pluralist government that respects basic rights. Right now, the Trump administration is not trying to build one.

Trump is the last person in the world to lecture any nation about Freedom and Democracy, especially his own SOWC’s “Democracy at the Point of a Gun”, since he’s already done everything in his power to erode Freedom and Democracy in our country.
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Much truth in this.
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This is a time for Democrats and Republicans in the United States to come together with the shared goal of creating means by which the Iranian people can create secular alternative to fundamentalist rule in the country.
It’s time for people to start practicing statecraft and to work together to put the Iranian people first.
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And it needs to be made very, very clear to persons who served in the preceding regime that it would be dangerous for them personally to persist in that support.
OK, feel free to start the pile on now. ROFL
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Oh, By The Way, Happy ☆ Texas Independence Day ❢
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Greetings to the denizens of the Republic of Texas. Thinking it would be wonderful if Congress were alive to see the liberation of Iran.
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The President will use everyone and everything within his considerable power to forward his agenda. He had no plan for Venezuela, and he has no grand plan for Iran. People and nations are pawns to be exploited in his quest for power and wealth. He cares about optics and performative acts of bravado to distract and create an illusion of strength that will appeal to his cult. He is the ultimate narcissistic user.
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Who do you think should take over? Should the U.S. install the son of the Shah (which is currently their intent)?
Anyone who thinks wars are ever about liberating the people has lived under a rock for the last 80 years.
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One exception to your observation about wars is WWII. The allies certainly did free Europe from Nazi rule. This is one war that we did not initiate, Japan attacked Pearl Harbor and then a few days later the Germans declared war on the US. It was a war of necessity as opposed to all the recent wars of choice that could have been easily avoided, should have never happened. However, if we had not engaged in the Korean War, maybe all of Korea would have gone communist? The Vietnam War was an utter debacle and blood bath that we lost and the whole country went communist in any case. And yet today we have friendly relations with the former “enemy.”
The son of the Shah should just butt out, nobody elected him interim president, we don’t need any more autocrats who know “best,” so they think. His father’s regime was a hideous nightmare of torture and repression.
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WWII was more than 80 years ago and was not fought to liberate anyone, although that was a side effect.
So what if Korea had gone communist? Isn’t that their right to decide their own government? Was it worth years of bombing and killing to try (and fail) to impose our will on them?
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RELENTLESS RETRIBUTION AHEAD
TRUMP AND HIS MAGA MINIONS in Congress and the White House have no clue what an Ayatollah is to members of the Shia religion. Iran is 90% Shia, and all the other nations in the region have substantial Shia populations.
By killing an Ayatollah, Trump has killed a Holy Man whose title means “One Who Is the Reflection of God.”
By killing an Ayatollah, Trump and America have in the minds of millions of Shia in Iran, other Mideast nations, and Shia around the world committed a grievous sacrilege against God Himself. There can be no forgiveness…just RELENTLESS retribution.
Instantly upon hearing that the Ayatollah had been killed, even the Shia Iranians who wanted him to step aside as their nation’s political leader, turned against the United States and Israel and marched in the streets shouting: “Death to America!”
Trump and his minions had no clue that would be the result because they have no clue about Islam and its denominations. So, Trump and his ignorant, arrogant minions have made targets of America and Israel. The pursuit against America and Israel will be relentless and long term.
Chas Freeman, former United States Assistant Secretary of Defense and former U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia says that Israeli agents smuggled in 50,000 Starlink sets into Iran and distributed them to opponents of the Iranian regime. All the videos of “demonstrations” against the regime and all the reports of the regime’s crackdown have come from these Iranians who were selected by Israeli intelligence to report what Netanyahu and Trump want things to look like.
We also don’t know from our own major media what’s going on because (1) all the information about the situation is coming out through Israeli filters, and (2) U.S. media are fearful of reporting anything negative because the FCC will pounce on them.
Freeman, who is an expert on the region and on Iran, points out that it’s far more likely that the average Iranian is angry at the United States because all the hardships they have been suffering are the result of the sanctions that Trump imposed on Iran and that throughout the region the average person in the entire region is furious that current U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee said in a recent interview with Tucker Carlson that it “would be fine if [Israel] took it all,” referring to a biblically described area of land that includes major regions throughout the Middle East.
How stupid…yet it genuinely reflects the perspective of Trump’s White House advisors, especially Stephen Miller.
Freeman, who has met with the now deceased Ayatollah Khamenei, also points out that Khamenei has been a staunch opponent of Iran developing nuclear weapons. Now with Khamenei out of the picture, the rabid anti-Israel/anti-Trump Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) has free rein to go that direction.
And Freeman points out that the IRGC has a ready supplier of nuclear missiles in its ally North Korea. China and Russia are also both allies.
What happens if North Korea begins shipping missiles and nuclear technology to Iran? Will Trump attack North Korea which already has nuclear missiles that can reach cities throughout America?
And if Trump attacks North Korea which has China as an ally, what happens then?
The problem — a breath-stopping problem — is that there is NO END-GAME to what Trump has set in motion. Should U.S. cities begin oiling their air raid sirens and putting up signs directing people to the nearest underground air raid shelter?
Actually, according to former ambassador Freeman, it was Israel that set all this uncertainty in motion: Like Trump with the Epstein papers, Netanyahu is facing criminal charges and needed a huge distraction to give a lift to his sagging popularity. He doesn’t much care about what follows because in his perspective the United States is now on the hook to try to finish what he wanted started. Netanyahu is more interested in his political survival than in the consequences of launching what could — and will likely be, according to Freeman who knows the region’s dynamics very well — a rolling and expanding conflict throughout the region and whose directions and consequences are wholly unpredictable.
DOES AMERICA HAVE THE STAYING POWER?
Retired CIA analyst for the region, Lawrence Johnson, says that the conflict could spread rapidly because Iran has an estimated 10,000 ballistic missiles in its stockpile and perhaps tens of thousands of drones. As the Pentagon pointed out in trying to dissuade Trump from launching this attack, that number of ballistic missiles and drones far exceeds America’s and Israel’s COMBINED stockpile of anti-missile and anti-drone defensive weapons. That puts not only Israel, Saudi Arabia, and other regional nations at risk, it puts the entire U.S. Navy fleet at risk. Remember, the far-less sophisticated and less well-armed Houtis drove the U.S. Navy out of the region with far less deadly missiles because the fleet ran out of defensive weapons.
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None of what is going on in DC, the US, and Iran is about doing what is right for the people of this country or the rest of the world.
It is all about TRUMP. Nothing else. It is about keeping his posterior out prison. It is all about filling his pockets and those of his children with as much money as possible. It is all about keeping himself in the White House. Nothing else.
This morning he is presenting three military personnel with the Congressional Metal of Honor. And, then giving a speech about Iran. Again, it is not about the soldiers and their honor. It is about focusing on Trump. He is not doing the Medal of Honor to the soldiers to recognize them for their valor and courage. Trump calls people who serve in the military “suckers and losers”. Again, only doing the awards because he needs the attention and glory.
The speech on Iran will be all about him. He is trying to gain favor in the polls for the HIS war. That is all it is.
The worse person to service as the President of the United States in history.
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Yes. How strange that for his own bizarre reasons Trump has, here, done the right thing.
So far.
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What is this “right thing” to which you refer?
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The current administration is unequipped to do anything other than service Trump’s donors and the Gulf States.
Given the United States’ long history of arrogant and completely self-serving intervention abroad I have very low expectations for this war of choice.
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