Opinion
Michelle
Goldberg
Republicans
Know This War Is Going Badly
March 27,
2026
Michelle
Goldberg
By
Michelle Goldberg
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/27/opinion/republicans-iran-war.html
It is not
just Democrats in Congress who fear that Donald Trump’s war in Iran is going
sideways. After a classified Pentagon briefing on Wednesday, Republican
lawmakers on the House Armed Services Committee appeared shaken.
“We will
not sacrifice American lives for the same failed foreign policies,” said Nancy
Mace, warning about the possibility of American troops in Iran. The committee
chair, Mike Rogers, complained that members aren’t getting nearly enough
information about war plans. Troop movements, he said, should be “thoughtful
and deliberate.” The implication was that they might not be.
“This is
the first week where I have felt that there’s been really any resistance to
this war from Republicans,” Jason Crow, a combat veteran and Democratic member
of the committee, told me. His colleagues’ public comments, he suggested, only
hint at the depth of their anxiety. In closed meetings, he said, they express
many concerns “that they’re unwilling to show publicly.”
Some
conservatives are still arguing that pessimism about the war stems from a
blinkered and biased elite. While those in “sophisticated circles” might think
the war is going poorly, National Review’s Noah Rothman wrote on Wednesday,
their “dour outlook seems wholly divorced from an objective appraisal.” But at
least some of the Republicans hearing directly from the Pentagon aren’t so
sanguine. “On a bipartisan basis, it was pretty clear to us that there was no
plan, no strategy,” said Sara Jacobs, another Democratic member of the
committee. The briefers, she said, “could not articulate an endgame, and we are
three weeks into this war.”
The big
question now is if an American ground invasion is imminent. I suspect people
are underestimating the possibility because it’s such a manifestly terrible
idea. Americans certainly don’t want to see troops on the ground: In a
Reuters/Ipsos poll last week, only 34 percent of respondents said they would
back the deployment of Special Forces soldiers into Iran, and a mere 7 percent
support a larger-scale attack. The markets — one of the few forces that can
constrain Trump — seem to assume a relatively quick resolution to the war,
which is most likely why oil prices haven’t risen as much as some anticipated.
Trump
himself appears to be wary of letting his Iran misadventure drag on. The Wall
Street Journal reports that he wants a speedy end to the war, and at times he
seems to be begging Iran’s leaders to make a deal. “They better get serious
soon, before it is too late, because once that happens, there is NO TURNING
BACK,” he posted on Thursday morning. You could almost see the flop sweat
wafting off him.
Yet
despite all the reasons America shouldn’t escalate its war with Iran, there’s a
good chance it will. Trump is sending thousands more troops to the Middle East,
and in the past, when he’s massed military forces outside a hostile country,
he’s used them. “Some U.S. officials think a crushing show of force to conclude
the fighting would create more leverage in peace talks or simply give Trump
something to point to and declare victory,” Axios reported on Thursday.
Jacobs,
the Democratic congresswoman, told me that the Pentagon’s request for $200
billion to fund a war that’s burning through hundreds of millions of dollars a
day is a tell. “That’s not a one-time cost to wrap things up,” she said.
“That’s a down payment on a long war.”
This
would not, obviously, be the first time the United States ramped up a war of
choice just to avoid a humiliating defeat. In his memoir, former Defense
Secretary Robert McNamara wrote about how, during the Vietnam War, the C.I.A.
warned that failure “would be damaging to U.S. prestige,” leading the United
States to prolong a pointless conflict in the hope of saving face. During years
of fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan, Crow recalled, military leaders would
repeatedly claim “that one more big troop surge, one more big offensive, would
get it done and put us in a better position and win the war.”
Never
before, however, did America arrive at the threshold of a quagmire so quickly,
with so much advance warning about the precise errors it was making. We have
spent much of the past decade — in no small part because of Trump’s election —
reckoning with the cost of the Iraq war to global stability and American
cohesion. For the first time I can remember, both major parties have
significant, influential antiwar contingents. Trump ran for president, however
mendaciously, as the peace candidate, claiming that Kamala Harris would lead
America into World War III.
And yet
here we are, lurching toward a new version of a familiar catastrophe, suffering
from some national form of neurotic repetition compulsion. “This is like the
horrible, lame-dad cover band version of the worst of American foreign policy,”
said Matt Duss, the executive vice president of the Center for International
Policy.
Someday,
perhaps, when we’re picking up the pieces from yet another ill-conceived war,
Republicans will explain that behind the scenes, they opposed it. One of the
biggest problems in Congress, said Crow, is the gap between what people say
privately and their willingness to demonstrate “the strength of their
convictions” in public. “I’m always trying to close that gap with folks, and I
always remind people that it’s never too late to do the right thing,” he said.
He may be right, but the sooner the better.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário