News
Analysis
Trump Is
Finally Eyeing an Exit From Iran. But Will He Take It?
President
Trump says he is considering “winding down” operations in Iran. But many of his
original war goals remain unaccomplished.
David E.
Sanger
By David
E. Sanger
David E.
Sanger has covered five American presidents. He writes often on the
intersection of technology and national security, and the revival of superpower
conflict, the subject of his latest book.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/21/us/politics/trump-iran-offramp.html
March 21,
2026
Ever
since President Trump began what he now delicately calls his “excursion” into
Iran, Washington has been consumed by the question of when he would call it a
day — even if many of his war goals remain unaccomplished.
On Friday
evening, as he headed to Florida, Mr. Trump seemed to be designing that
much-discussed exit. But he clearly has not yet decided whether to take it.
And there
is mounting evidence — average gas price approaching $4 a gallon,
infrastructure in ruins across the Persian Gulf, a decimated Iranian theocracy
digging in and American allies at first rebuffing and now struggling with
demands to patrol hostile waters — that the repercussions of Mr. Trump’s
excursion may outlast his interest in it.
As
always, Mr. Trump’s messaging is inconsistent, which his critics cite as
evidence that he entered this conflict with no strategy and his followers cheer
as strategic ambiguity. With thousands of additional marines headed to the
region and the pace of American and Israeli attacks quickening, Mr. Trump told
reporters on Friday he had no interest in a cease-fire because the United
States was “obliterating” Iran’s missile stocks, navy, air force and defense
industrial base.
Hours
later, perhaps sensitive to a Republican base understandably nervous about the
political effects, he posted on his social media site that “we are getting very
close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down our great Military
efforts in the Middle East.”
But his
latest list of those objectives left out a few of his previous goals and
watered down others. He made no mention of defeating the Islamic Revolutionary
Guards Corps, which appears to remain in power, along with Mojtaba Khamenei,
who has succeeded his father as supreme leader, though he has yet to be seen or
heard in public. Mr. Trump also omitted any message to the Iranian people, whom
he told only three weeks ago: “When we are finished, take over your government.
It will be yours to take.”
And after
insisting in the failed negotiations that led up to the war that Iran had to
ship all of its nuclear material out of the country — starting with the 970
pounds of enriched uranium that are closest to bomb-grade — he suggested a new
goal. “Never allowing Iran to get even close to Nuclear Capability,” he wrote,
“and always being in a position where the U.S.A. can quickly and powerfully
react to such a situation.”
Mr. Trump
ended the posting with a new demand for American allies, whom he had frozen out
of his deliberations before starting the war, and gave no warning to prepare
for its consequences. “The Hormuz Strait will have to be guarded and policed,
as necessary, by other Nations who use
it — the United States does not!” American forces would help, he said.
“Think of
it as the new Trump Doctrine for the Middle East,” Richard N. Haass, the former
president of the Council on Foreign Relations, who served on the National
Security Council and at the State Department during the Persian Gulf War and
the Iraq war, wrote on social media.
“We broke
it, but you own it.”
Mr.
Trump’s shifting goals continued into Saturday evening. Just a few days ago, he
was calling on Israel to avoid targeting Iranian energy sites, for fear it
would lead to an escalating round of retaliatory counter-strikes across the
Gulf. But on Saturday, he threatened to hit Iran’s power plants if it did not
“FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT, the Strait of Hormuz” within 48 hours.
He said
that U.S. strikes on Iranian plants would start “WITH THE BIGGEST ONE FIRST.”
Iran’s biggest plant appears to be its only operating nuclear power plant, at
Bushehr. For decades, nuclear power plants have been considered completely off
limits for strikes because of the obvious risk of environmental calamity.
This is
not where Mr. Trump expected to be after three weeks of war.
Foreign
leaders, diplomats and U.S. officials who have spoken with the president said
that in the first week he voiced expectations that Iran would capitulate. That
was clear in Mr. Trump’s demand on March 6 for Iran’s “unconditional
surrender.”
The
demand was mystifying, said one European diplomat with long experience dealing
with Iran, given the country’s competing power centers, its national pride and
a Persian state that has existed within the rough boundaries of modern-day
Iran, enduring many rises and falls, since the days of Cyrus the Great around
550 B.C.
(That
demand was also missing from his latest set of objectives. The White House has
since said that the president does not expect a surrender announcement from
Iran, but that Mr. Trump will determine when Iran has “effectively
surrendered.”)
Iran’s
refusal to “cry uncle,’’ as Mr. Trump termed it to reporters on Air Force One,
has been only one of the surprises to the president in recent weeks.
The first
was the crisis in the energy markets, which the International Energy Agency has
called “the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market.”
It has sent Mr. Trump and his aides scrambling. They have promised releases
from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, which was only 60 percent full,
reflecting a lack of planning. Over the past week the Treasury Department has
issued licenses for the delivery of Russian and Iranian oil already at sea. In
other words, to calm the markets, the president has approved enriching an
adversary that is at war with Ukraine, an American ally, and another that is at
war with the United States.
So far,
the effects are minimal. Brent crude closed at around $112 a barrel on Friday
after the Treasury announcements, and Goldman Sachs warned on Thursday that if
ships were reluctant to make their way through the Strait of Hormuz, prices
could remain high into 2027.
The
Iranians clearly understand that market chaos is their one remaining
superweapon. On Saturday, Tehran warned it could set fire to other facilities
in the Middle East. The United States believes the country entered the war with
3,000 or so sea mines — some of which are believed to have been destroyed — and
the United States has focused on destroying small boats in the Iranian fleet
that are targeting tankers associated with American allies.
“All it
takes is for one of those things to get through to shut down traffic,” said
John F. Kirby, who served as both Pentagon and State Department spokesman after
retiring as a naval officer. “The fear alone can be paralyzing to the shipping
industry, as we have already seen.”
Mr.
Trump’s second surprise was his sudden need for allies. He didn’t imagine it at
the beginning of the conflict, the defense minister of one Gulf nation said
recently, because he thought the war would be short. But patrolling the strait,
and other checkpoints, appears to be a task that could last months or years.
His third
surprise was the absence of any uprising among either the Revolutionary Guards
or ordinary Iranians. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in the Oval Office
earlier this week “we are seeing defections at all levels as they’re starting
to sense what’s going on with the regime.” But American and European
intelligence officials say they have no evidence of such defections — even
after Israel targeted, and eliminated, Iran’s supreme leader, its top security
and intelligence chiefs and many top military officials.
All that
could yet come. Wars are not won or lost in three weeks. But Mr. Trump entered
the Iran war after enjoying the fruits of quick victories. A bombing run over
Iran’s three major nuclear sites in June was a one-evening expedition,
essentially burying the country’s nuclear stockpiles and wiping out thousands
of its centrifuges, which are used to enrich uranium.
The
commando raid to seize Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela from his bed in Caracas was
similarly swift. And so far, the government Mr. Trump left in place —
essentially Mr. Maduro’s government — has been compliant. That operation has
helped Mr. Trump destabilize Cuba, which has lost the Venezuelan fuel supplies
that it has long depended on. The other day the electric grid in Cuba
collapsed, and administration officials have been openly suggesting that the
government will, too.
Perhaps
those quick results encouraged Mr. Trump to believe the U.S. military was
all-powerful, and that the mullahs and generals and militias that run Iran, a
country of 92 million people, would crumble. Perhaps he rushed.
Military
historians will be dissecting this conflict for a long time. But for now it is
clear that Iran is a different kind of challenge. Mr. Trump started using the
word “excursion” to suggest this is just a short trip, a brief diversion. But
there is no real end in sight.
David E.
Sanger covers the Trump administration and a range of national security issues.
He has been a Times journalist for more than four decades and has written four
books on foreign policy and national security challenges.


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