The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

If Trump doesn’t want a war with Iran, he needs to make that clear

- Eugene Robinson

With a competent president in the White House, the escalating confrontat­ion with Iran would not rise to the level of crisis. With President Trump calling the shots, we should be afraid. Very afraid.

A rational president, of course, would not have abandoned the landmark deal that halted Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons. A reasonable president would not take provocativ­e steps that seem designed to goad the Iranians into a military clash. A sensible president would study the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n and learn the sobering lessons they teach. Instead, we have Trump. He campaigned on a promise to end unwinnable wars and bring the troops home, which may be what he truly wants to do. But this instinct is thwarted by the president’s insecure need to act like a swaggering bully on the world stage, pushing around our allies and punishing the adversarie­s he perceives as weak.

The sharp rise in tension with Iran cannot be entirely blamed on John Bolton, Trump’s hawkish national security adviser, who has long made clear that his goal is nothing less than regime change. Ultimately, it was Trump who decided to pull out of the nuclear deal, against the advice of his then-defense secretary, James Mattis; Trump who ordered scorched-earth sanctions designed not to cripple but to destroy the Iranian economy; Trump who approved designatin­g a unit of Iran’s armed forces, the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps, as a terrorist organizati­on.

But Bolton is guiding Trump down this dangerous path. I am no apologist for Iran’s repressive, theocratic regime, which is a destructiv­e and deadly influence in the Middle East (though hardly the only one). In shrewd and subtle hands, a push-pull policy of pressure and rewards might have a positive effect on the Iranian government’s behavior. Instead, we have Trump. The president has allowed the traditiona­l U.S. alliance with Saudi Arabia — Iran’s bitter rival for military, political and religious dominance in the region — to be turned into what amounts to a Vulcan mind-meld, with the role of Spock being played by the de facto Saudi leader, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Trump took no effective action against bin Salman, not even a stern finger-wagging, for ordering the murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi. The president has turned a blind eye to the neargenoci­dal war bin Salman is waging in Yemen. And now, Trump appears to be doing the Saudi potentate’s bidding with regard to Iran.

Trump administra­tion talk of sending up to 120,000 troops to the region if Iran or its proxies attack American forces is, at this point, just talk. But ordering home hundreds of nonessenti­al diplomatic personnel from neighborin­g Iraq, as the administra­tion announced Wednesday, is the kind of concrete step that often precedes hostilitie­s.

On Monday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo tried to convince European foreign ministers that the administra­tion is acting on credible intelligen­ce suggesting that Iran may be planning some kind of attack. But he “didn’t show us any evidence,” one senior European official told The Washington Post. U.S. officials were quoted anonymousl­y as blaming Iran for somehow damaging four oil tankers near the Strait of Hormuz in recent days. But the administra­tion has not provided informatio­n about how the damage was inflicted or proof that Iran was responsibl­e.

Trump may believe his hardline policies will force the Iranian government to capitulate and negotiate a new agreement encompassi­ng not just nuclear technology but also Iran’s toxic influence in the region and its ballistic missile program. To me, however, it looks as if the administra­tion is trying to provoke Iran into lashing out. If Trump doesn’t want a war, he needs to make that clear — not just to the Iranians, but to Bolton and Pompeo as well.

The president is blowing the chance to lead an allied coalition in applying appropriat­e pressure to Iran, just as he is blowing the chance to orchestrat­e a multilater­al stand on China’s unfair trade practices. We already have a trade war. I fear Trump may stumble into a real one.

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