What Trump’s war against Iran tells us about the US government, the UK political right and the mainstream media in both countries
What did over 150 children in Iran die for on the first day of this new war? Did the US attack that killed them have a purpose? When the answer to this question changes many times in a week, and none make sense, you are entitled to believe this is a war without a strategy. As Ian Dunt writes: “It is a war that is so insane its own perpetrators seemingly do not know why they started it.” At least no purpose for the nation as a whole. Trump and some of those around him might hope that the war and its repercussions might allow him to avoid the humiliation of mid-term elections this year, and Trump must know this war will help Russia.
The US Secretary of Defence Pete Hegseth, on the other hand, seems to regard the war as another crusade. (Trump has appropriately issued an Executive Order renamining him as the Secretary of War!) Hegseth holds monthly religious services at the Pentagon, and in 2020 wrote a book called the "American Crusade". Hegseth has praised the Crusades, claiming that people who enjoy the benefits of Western culture should "thank a crusader". He has supported Donald Trump's threat tp destroy Iranian cultural sites. About the current war he has said “"No stupid rules of engagement, no nation building quagmire, no democracy building exercise, no politically correct wars.” He has blocked U.S. military personnel from taking courses at the most elite American universities, and instead stresses the warrior ethos. Before becoming Trump’s Secretary of Defence he spent a decade as a presenter on Fox News.
The initial justification for war was the prospect of Iran becoming the second country with nuclear weapons in the region. (Israel has had them for decades.) President Obama negotiated a deal with Iran that could have prevented its development of nuclear weapons, but it was torn up by Trump in his first term as President. According to one of the negotiators, just before Trump attacked, the US was close to securing another nuclear deal with Iran, but Trump attacked anyway.
The idea that the US had to attack because Israel was going to regardless is ludicrous. The US has always had the power to stop Netanyahu using force because it supplies its weapons, and previous US Presidents were not afraid to use that power. Trump, on the other hand, is easily led and Netanyahu has been doing his best to lead him in the direction of using force in Iran, again (with a little help from Republican friends). The most likely explanation is that Israel and the US had intelligence about where the Iranian Supreme leader would be and saw their chance to assassinate him. If Trump’s actions in Venezuela had a logic it was to show the capability of the US to abduct or kill the head of state, and therefore scare other heads of state to do Trump’s bidding. But in Iran they seem to have killed the whole line of succession. If that was Trump’s strategy, the tactics were not clever, and Iran’s new leader is more hardline.
Was the idea to return democracy to Iran, after the US and UK helped overthrow it in 1953? Initially Trump seemed to suggest this was one motivation, but has since said he doesn’t care. As someone who has a rather fraught relationship to democracy in the US this is hardly surprising. Also it is difficult enough for a foreign power to impose democracy when they have troops on the ground, as Iraq showed. Doing so from the air is almost impossible.
In truth the Commander in Chief and those advising him are not capable of any strategy beyond enriching themselves (corruption has always existed in the US, but now it is off the scale), entrenching fascism at home and spreading it to the rest of the world. This includes encouraging regime change in the UK. There is no reason why fascism has to involve a fool being the all powerful leader, but with Trump that is the case. Unlike 2016, today Trump has surrounded himself with people who are either as foolish as he is or know when to keep quiet. Here is a video recently released by the White House. And these are the words of the President.
When the UK’s Labour government refused to allow the US to use its bases to attack Iran, the UK’s right wing politicians and media became apocalyptic. According to them, the UK should have joined Trump in fighting his pointless war. To do this without the appearance of a moment’s thought about the objective of this illegal war just shows how deep in Trump’s image the UK right has fallen. They are now as much fools as he is.
Have they considered what impact this war will have on the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, and Europe’s ability to support Ukraine? Does it not worry them that it was Trump who attacked President Zelensky in the Oval Office, who ended all US military aid for Ukraine, who has undermined Ukrainian air defense, who has tried to bully Ukraine in handing over territory, who has rolled out the red carpet for Putin, and reduced oil sanctions on Russia. Does it not worry them that despite all the help Trump has provided Putin it is now Putin who is providing intelligence to Iran on US military assets?! But perhaps asking for a moment's thought and any consistency from those who write for the right wing press is asking too much. Perhaps they are paid not to think, but just to have a modest talent for transcription.
Trump duly obliged by saying Starmer was no Chrurchill, and Hegseth complained that America’s traditional allies “wring their hands and clutch their pearls, hemming and hawing about the use of force.” Hegseth seems to believe that attacking a country for no lawful reason is one of the masculine values he is so keen to promote. Trump, despite being at war, seems to have plenty of time to meet right wing UK politicians or journalists to attack our government.
The claim that Starmer has now destroyed the ‘special relationship’ between the UK and US, conveniently forgets that Harold Wilson refused to send UK troops to support the US in Vietnam. It also forgets that it is Trump that has threatened to invade a NATO state, and who is imposing tariffs on UK goods. It should now be clear that in political terms the ‘special relationship’ is nothing more than a device used by the right in the UK to tie the UK to US foreign policy. [1] The US has always acted in its own interests, and the idea that Trump would do anything otherwise as a favour to the UK is simply ludicrous. When these papers declared they wanted to leave the EU to take back control, what it seems they really meant was to give control instead to a fascist in the United States. Patriotic they are not.
Does the UK populist right, that very much includes the leadership of the Conservative party, worry about the impact a prolonged attack on Iran will have on energy prices and the global economy more generally? I doubt it, as such difficulties can be reckoned to assist the chances of the right winning the next election. Just as Conservative politicians have in the recent past put party before country, so does the right wing press. If the war does bring long term harm to the UK economy, the right will blame Starmer who opposed the war and conveniently forget that they were the ones supporting it.
These newspapers claim to speak for the UK public in describing the government’s stance as humiliating, but the reality is very different. A large majority of Britons oppose US air strikes on Iran, and overwhelmingly do not want the UK to join the war (and even the minority support for the war is falling). Like Trump, the right wing press has learnt to lie without shame.
In any sane world the deadly foolishness of Trump and the dangerous nonsense coming from the right wing press would be regarded as some idiot wind that we needed to shelter from but at the same time we could laugh at. Unfortunately the right wing press, although slowly dying in terms of people who actually buy their papers, has an incredible influence on the mainstream broadcast media in the UK. The right wing press so often sets the agenda for the broadcast media.
There is a desperate desire in mainstream media in both the US and UK to pretend that Trump isn’t the fool he obviously is, but instead to treat Trump like just another US President. This media’s reaction to fascism in the US is to pretend it is not there, and invent strategy where there is none. To ‘sanewash’ where there is no sanity. In the UK Robert Peston provides a good example of this failure, although Chris Mason is more thoughtful here.
Much of the mainstream media in the US will very soon be in the control of those who support Trump, and that is true for a growing proportion of the UK media. For that which remains free to tell the truth, an obsession with balance rather than knowledge and a deference to power means this media also assists rather than resists the onset of fascism. The good news is that with a fool at the helm fascist overreach is a constant danger, and the UK government and US opposition may end up benefiting from Trump’s bombardment of Iran. Those that die in this pointless war will not get the chance to be lucky.
[1] There are of course close military and intelligence ties between the UK and US. However the idea that because of these the UK should always follow the wishes of the US President, and particularly a President like Trump, is just absurd. Should we support his pro Putin, anti Ukraine stance?! It is equivalent to saying that all NATO members should acquiesce to any demand from Trump, including selling him Greenland, because otherwise NATO might be weakened.
