News
Analysis
Trump
Embraces U.S. Military Power After Years of Caution
The wars
in Afghanistan and Iraq offered a stark lesson in the limits of military force.
The Iran attacks suggest an era of postwar wariness is over.
Greg
Jaffe
By Greg
Jaffe
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/02/us/politics/trump-military-power.html
March 2,
2026
In his
three runs for the presidency, Donald J. Trump, more than any other candidate,
spoke of the limits of U.S. military power, especially in the Middle East.
In 2016,
he blasted the Iraq invasion as a “big, fat mistake.” In 2023, he kicked off
his third run for the White House by boasting, “I am proud to be the only
president in decades who did not start a new war.”
Mr. Trump
was channeling a deep and widespread pessimism that dominated the Pentagon and
the foreign policy establishment in the years after the Iraq and Afghanistan
wars.
The
hopelessness ran through both political parties.
“In Iraq,
the U.S. intervened and occupied, and the result was a costly disaster,” Philip
Gordon, a top foreign policy adviser in the Obama White House, famously wrote
in 2015. “In Libya, the U.S. intervened and did not occupy, and the result was
a costly disaster. In Syria, the U.S. neither intervened nor occupied, and the
result is a costly disaster.”
But it
was Mr. Trump who transformed the frustrations into a popular political
movement.
One year
into his second term, Mr. Trump seems to have shed his earlier skepticism and
turned repeatedly to the U.S. military as a low-cost, high-payoff means of
solving problems that have bedeviled American presidents for decades.
In June,
he dispatched B-2 bombers on a mission to strike Iran’s nuclear facilities.
So far
this year, he has given the green light to a high-stakes raid that resulted in
the capture of President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela. “No nation in the world
could achieve what America achieved,” Mr. Trump said hours after the operation.
Then he
signed off on a major U.S.-Israeli attack that killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
Iran’s supreme leader. Mr. Trump said on social media that the attacks would
continue “throughout the week or, as long as necessary to achieve our objective
of PEACE THROUGHOUT THE MIDDLE EAST AND, INDEED, THE WORLD!”
The
president’s sudden embrace of U.S. military power is a stunning reversal.
Democrats warned over the weekend that he was ignoring the lessons of the long
and bloody wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“The
American people have seen this playbook before — claims of urgency,
misrepresented intelligence and military action that pulls the United States
into regime change and prolonged, costly nation-building,” Senator Mark Warner
of Virginia, the top Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, said in a
statement.
The
attacks on Iran have also come at a cost to the United States. Retaliatory
strikes have so far killed six U.S. troops, the military’s Central Command
announced on Sunday.
During
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, senior military officials repeatedly
emphasized that the United States could not bomb or kill its way to victory.
America’s enemies would rearm and replace leaders lost to airstrikes and raids.
Civilian casualties, an inevitability in war, would feed the enemy’s ranks.
Mr. Trump
appears convinced that he and his top advisers, including Gen. Dan Caine, the
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have found a more effective way of
wielding military might.
In the
days leading up to the Iran attack, General Caine emphasized that an operation
aimed at toppling the government or debilitating the military would be much
more difficult than the capture of Mr. Maduro or the strikes on Iran last
summer.
Publicly,
Mr. Trump played down the risks and insisted that General Caine believed any
military incursion into Iran would be “something easily won.”
The
president’s string of relatively low-cost military successes in his second term
seemed to have shifted his views on American military interventions.
“He has
accepted that the U.S. military is very good,” said Daniel L. Byman, a senior
analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “He seems to
believe that if you avoid major ground operations and keep it limited, it’s
probably going to work.”
In the
aftermath of military defeats, senior uniformed leaders have often acted as a
check on presidential ambitions. Gen. Colin Powell, who was wounded in Vietnam
and went on to serve as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, insisted that
the U.S. military should be deployed only when vital American interests were at
stake, the objectives were clear and an exit strategy had been defined.
His
dictum became known as the Powell Doctrine.
A decade
later, Mr. Powell set aside his skepticism and made the case in a presentation
to the U.N. Security Council for the 2003 invasion of Iraq, a decision he later
came to regret.
In Mr.
Trump’s first term, senior Pentagon leaders like Defense Secretary Jim Mattis
and the Joint Chiefs chairman, Mark A. Milley, who led troops in Iraq and
Afghanistan, sought to temper his military instincts. The president came to
loathe and distrust both of them.
In Mr.
Trump’s second term, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has fired or sidelined more
than two dozen generals whom he viewed as out of step with the president’s
policies and instincts regarding the employment of military force.
The
dismissals, which are without precedent in recent decades, have had a chilling
effect on those who remain, military officials said.
Mr.
Trump’s view of military force is not totally unconstrained. In both Iran and
Venezuela, he has repeatedly ruled out the large-scale deployment of ground
forces that characterized the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
His
approach to military powers, such as Russia and China, has been far more
conciliatory than confrontational.
Mr. Trump
has also shown a willingness to pull the plug on military interventions, such
as his campaign to reopen shipping in the Red Sea by bombing Houthi militants
in Yemen into submission. He wanted to see results in 30 days of the initial
strikes.
When
senior military leaders suggested it would take as long as 10 months to
debilitate the Houthis’ air defenses, Mr. Trump cut a deal with the militants
rather than continuing the operations. The United States would halt the bombing
campaign, and the militia would no longer target American ships. The Houthis
did not commit to ending attacks on other vessels.
“He
basically seemed to conclude that the costs, including the financial costs, of
continuing the operation were too high,” said Richard Fontaine, the chief
executive officer of the Center for a New American Security.
Other
presidents contemplating military action often leaned heavily on advisers to
craft strategies that balanced ends, ways and means to achieve a clearly
defined conclusion. Today, Mr. Trump seems to be operating by instinct rather
than any strict ideology or planning process.
“He has
been explicit that he will not allow American power — or his own credibility —
to be undermined,” said Anne Dreazen, a former Middle East analyst at the
Pentagon who is now with the American Jewish Committee, which supports Jewish
causes around the world. “When Iran continued using the nuclear negotiations to
stall and play games, that was a serious miscalculation.”
The big
question is whether Mr. Trump’s approach, with its emphasis on continued
coercion through air and missile strikes, will produce a more sustainable peace
than previous strategies did.
His
tactics are well suited to narrowly defined objectives. In Iran, Mr. Trump’s
goals are far more ambitious.
Greg
Jaffe covers the Pentagon and the U.S. military for The Times.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário