As Israeli and U.S. forces continue their bombardments of Iranian targets across Tehran and the whole of the Islamic Republic, President Donald Trump and his allies have struggled to articulate their basic timetable for a war that threatens to spill across the broader Middle East. After just over a week of combat operations, the war is “very complete, pretty much,” said Trump to CBS on Monday. However, his message of fait accompli was “quite different from what he would say later that afternoon,” said CNN, when the president would insist American forces “haven’t won enough.”
Despite, or perhaps as a result of, Trump’s scattershot timeline predictions, it’s the president who ultimately “gets to control the throttle,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said yesterday at a Pentagon press briefing. It’s “not for me to posit whether it’s the beginning, the middle or the end.”
Hegseth’s caution comes as the “ever-shifting goals” Trump has “laid out for the war in Iran” have left staff, allies and aides “struggling to keep up and at times contradicting the president,” said The New York Times. Trump’s declarations of near victory, followed shortly by his vow on Truth Social to bomb Iranian targets “20 times harder” should oil transportation be disrupted in the Strait of Hormuz, came as markets “went into shock over fears of supply disruptions,” then “fell back after Trump suggested the war might end soon,” said NPR. |