Opinion
Michelle
Goldberg
The Idea
That Trump Was Antiwar Was Always Delusional
March 2,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/02/opinion/trump-iran-antiwar.html
Michelle
Goldberg
By
Michelle Goldberg
Opinion
Columnist
In 2023,
JD Vance, then a freshman senator from Ohio, endorsed Donald Trump for
president in a Wall Street Journal column headlined, “Trump’s Best Foreign
Policy? Not Starting Any Wars.” It suggested that despite his impolitic
rhetoric, Trump was a statesman who understood that “the U.S. national interest
must be pursued ruthlessly but also carefully, with strong words but great
restraint.”
If Vance
really believed his own words — with him, it’s always impossible to say — he
shared the strangely widespread delusion that Trump was antiwar. So, evidently,
did Tulsi Gabbard, who once sold “No War With Iran” T-shirts. Endorsing Trump
in 2024, Gabbard, now Trump’s director of national intelligence, said she was
“confident that his first task will be to do the work to walk us back from the
brink of war.”
The
ludicrous idea of Trump as a promoter of peace — a notion his 2024 campaign
leaned into — rests on a deep, willful misunderstanding of Trump’s record and
character. It is true that he broke with key elements of neoconservative
ideology, particularly when it comes to nation-building and promoting
democracy. In 2016, he set himself apart from his Republican rivals with his
willingness to call the Iraq war a disaster. But what Trump has always hated
isn’t conflict but sacrifice, the notion that American power should ever be
constrained by a veneer of idealism or care for global opinion.
As he
said at a 2015 rally: “I’m really good at war. I love war, in a certain way,
but only when we win.” One of his chief complaints about the Iraq war, let’s
remember, was that George W. Bush had failed to take Iraq’s oil.
Those on
the isolationist right who thought Trump shared their views made the mistake of
inferring too much from his domestic policy. When it came to the United States,
Trump channeled traditional strains of reactionary nativism: He’s
anti-immigrant, hostile to free trade and given to John Birch Society-style
conspiracy theorizing. Through him, the once marginalized politics of Patrick
Buchanan became a dominant force in the Republican Party.
But Trump
was never Buchanan’s heir when it came to foreign policy. His views are too
inconsistent, his instincts too fundamentally bellicose. It’s true that Trump
has allied himself with some paleoconservatives who are skeptical of foreign
entanglements, but that’s largely because he’s attracted to right-wing cranks
of all stripes. He’s been just as friendly, at times, with the most fanatical
of neoconservatives, particularly on the movement’s anti-Muslim fringe. His
ambassador to Israel, recall, is Mike Huckabee, who recently told Tucker
Carlson that it would be “fine” if Israel were to take over most of the Middle
East.
Indeed,
Trump’s foreign policy has often been less a repudiation of neoconservatism
than a mutation of it. The former leftists who dreamed of spreading democracy
at the barrel of a gun, after all, were only one part of the neocon movement.
Neoconservatism was also fueled by contempt for diplomacy and multilateral
organizations like the United Nations, and a sense that a decadent America
would be reinvigorated by international aggression.
Jonah
Goldberg captured this ethos in 2002, when, writing in National Review, he
paraphrased the neocon grandee Michael Ledeen: “Every 10 years or so, the
United States needs to pick up some small crappy little country and throw it
against the wall, just to show the world we mean business.” Ledeen would go on
to write a book with Michael Flynn, who became Trump’s first national security
adviser.
Trump’s
first term was marked by a huge surge in drone strikes: According to the BBC,
he ordered 2,243 in his first two years in office, compared with 1,878 in
Barack Obama’s eight years. He reversed the longstanding American policy of
treating Israel’s settlement building as illegitimate under international law,
one of many sops to the American right.
It’s true
that Trump did not start any new wars, though, in retrospect, that seems like
luck as much as design. In 2020, when Trump ordered a drone strike on Iran’s
top military commander, Qassim Suleimani, The Washington Post reported that the
decision “came as a surprise and a shock to some officials briefed on his
decision, given the Pentagon’s longstanding concerns about escalation.” If that
assassination didn’t spiral into a wider conflict, it may well have been a
result of Iranian restraint, with some reporting suggesting that Iran provided
America advance warning of its retaliatory strikes in Iraq.
The
lesson Trump learned from his first term, it seems, is that there’s no real
cost to his belligerence, and so he has ratcheted it up. Trump, according to
Axios, “authorized more individual airstrikes in 2025 than President Biden did
in four years.” Given the lack of meaningful resistance he faced from his base,
it’s not surprising that he has become even more reckless. Across many
different realms, Trump’s pattern is basically the same: He goes as far as he
can until someone stops him.
At a
petulant, bombastic news conference Monday morning, Defense Secretary Pete
Hegseth argued that America was fighting “on our terms, with maximum
authorities. No stupid rules of engagement, no nation-building quagmire, no
democracy-building exercise.” This has always been the real Trump doctrine. Not
no wars, but no rules.


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