BELIEBTE ARTIKEL

In the early hours of February 28, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was confirmed dead. Multiple senior commanders of the Revolutionary Guard were eliminated in targeted strikes, and more than five hundred targets across over one hundred counties were bombed. From a purely military perspective, it was a textbook surprise attack. Strategically, however, the underlying logic of the war may have contained the seeds of failure from the outset. Below are six reasons why Trump may have miscalculated this time.
1.A Mismatch of Strategic Objectives
Trump once addressed the Iranian people directly: “Tonight, your moment of freedom has arrived… When we finish our mission, take back your government.” This statement reveals the core contradiction of the war: Trump seeks regime change through airstrikes, yet refuses to assume responsibility for what comes afterward.
Vice President Vance publicly emphasized that the operation would “absolutely not” drag the United States into a prolonged conflict, stressing that no ground troops would be deployed and no American blood would be shed. This “strike and withdraw” approach was aptly described by The Economist as “smashing the venue without cleaning up afterward.”
History offers no precedent for such a strategy. Stimson Center researcher Evan Cooper noted bluntly: “The Trump administration appears to lack a substantive post-Iran plan and a coherent long-term strategy.” Airstrikes can remove leadership figures but cannot erase ideological foundations. Missiles can destroy military infrastructure but cannot automatically produce a pro-American government in a power vacuum. Iraq, Libya, and Syria all serve as cautionary examples.
2.Misjudging Military Capacity
Trump repeated “four weeks” three times in interviews, perhaps as reassurance — or self-persuasion. Within the Pentagon, however, the timeline has triggered concern.
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Kane reportedly highlighted ammunition reserves as a key vulnerability. Internal assessments suggest that because Iran’s missile-launch capabilities remain partially intact, U.S. and Israeli defensive interceptors are being depleted faster than expected. Current stockpiles in the region could be exhausted within ten to fifteen days.
A deeper miscalculation lies in underestimating Iran’s resilience. Trump appeared to assume that eliminating Khamenei would cause regime collapse. Instead, Iran swiftly established a provisional leadership council, demonstrating cohesion and launching retaliatory strikes. By March 2, multiple U.S. bases in the Middle East had been attacked, resulting in American casualties.
3.Fractures in the U.S.–Israel Relationship
While Trump signaled openness to renewed negotiations, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu declared that military operations would intensify in the coming days. The divergence underscores fundamental differences in strategic objectives.
Israel operates according to its own timeline and definition of victory, which may not align with Washington’s priorities. Trump can announce negotiations, but he cannot unilaterally halt Israeli operations. This structural tension makes it increasingly difficult for Washington to control escalation.
Compounding matters, Trump has alienated other allies. On March 3, he publicly criticized Spain and expressed dissatisfaction with the United Kingdom. In a conflict that demands broad international support, such diplomatic isolation weakens America’s position.
4.Iran Is Not Venezuela
In 2025, Trump implemented one of the most aggressive tariff increases in U.S. history, raising average effective rates significantly. Federal Reserve data later confirmed that most of the costs were borne by American importers and consumers.
With midterm elections approaching, Trump needed a political win — or at least a major external event to shift domestic attention. The strike on Iran, particularly the “decapitation” operation, offered such an opportunity.
But the strategy appears to be faltering. A CBS and YouGov survey shows that only 28 percent of Americans believe the administration provided sufficient justification for the strikes, while a majority oppose them. Democrats are already linking rising living costs to the Iran conflict, framing higher oil prices as the direct consequence of Trump’s war gamble.
5.Economic Fallout Spiraling
As of March 3, traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has nearly halted. Roughly 13 million barrels of crude oil per day transit the strait, accounting for around 31 percent of global seaborne oil flows. The disruption has pushed Brent crude above 82 dollars per barrel.
For Trump, rising gasoline prices pose a serious political risk. During his first term, he repeatedly pressured OPEC to increase production and lower oil prices as a tangible achievement for voters. A sharp surge in fuel costs could transform the war from a political asset into a liability.
Beyond oil, supply chain disruptions could drive broader price increases, compounding inflation pressures already heightened by tariffs. For American households facing rising grocery and fuel costs, the war’s economic burden may translate directly into electoral backlash.
6.Domestic Instability at Home
Late on March 2, a shooting at a bar in Austin, Texas left two people dead and fourteen injured. The suspect reportedly wore clothing bearing Iranian symbolism, prompting an FBI investigation into possible terrorist motives.
If Iran-linked violence were to occur on U.S. soil, the political calculus would shift dramatically. For voters already skeptical of foreign interventions, the perception that “war brings danger home” could become a potent campaign issue.
Meanwhile, Congress is preparing to respond. The House may soon vote on a war powers resolution accusing Trump of launching an unauthorized conflict. With only a narrow Republican majority, dissent within his own party could further complicate matters.
Conclusion
Trump’s strategic logic rested on three assumptions: achieve regime change through air power, reassure the public with a “four-week” timeline, and leverage military success to strengthen his midterm standing. Each pillar now appears unstable.
Airstrikes cannot fill a power vacuum. The “four-week” pledge may not align with logistical realities. And the economic and domestic security consequences threaten to overshadow any military gains.
Most critically, the assumption of a quick and decisive campaign has collided with a nation possessing deep historical resilience, even in the aftermath of leadership loss. Trump’s risk tolerance may have outpaced preparation for the complex consequences of destabilizing Iran’s power structure.







