Done and
Dusted? Trump’s Portrayal of the War in Iran Collides With Reality.
President
Trump is confronting a crisis that is not bending to his narrative of a “pretty
reasonable” new regime in Iran and all-but-assured victory for the United
States.
Anton
Troianovski
By Anton
Troianovski
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/15/us/politics/trump-iran-war.html
April 15,
2026
President
Trump is trying to cast his Iran war as all but over, a done-and-dusted
success.
But after
years of trying to impose his own reality on the world, he has now run into a
crisis that is not bending to his narrative.
“It’s a new
regime,” Mr. Trump said in a Fox Business interview that aired on Wednesday,
referring to Iran’s new leaders. “We find them pretty reasonable to be honest
with you, by comparison pretty reasonable.”
It was
the latest instance of Mr. Trump’s trying to spin a “regime change”
accomplishment in Iran, even though analysts believe the war may have only
increased the internal sway of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, the
hard-line military force that has long been a major player in Iran’s politics
and economy. The new supreme leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, has not been
seen in public since he replaced his father, who was killed at the start of the
war, but his elevation as head of state has been another symbol of continuity.
“Most
generously you could say there is a leadership change,” said Behnam Ben
Taleblu, the senior director of the Iran program at the Foundation for Defense
of Democracies, a Washington think tank with a hawkish stance on Iran. “It is
incorrect for the proponents of the conflict to frame this as a change for the
better.”
Indeed,
trade through the Strait of Hormuz remains far from normal and Iran’s
government is not bending to Mr. Trump’s demands on its nuclear program.
But in
Mr. Trump’s telling, U.S. victory in Iran is already clear. In the Fox Business
interview, reprising his frequent comments of the last two weeks, Mr. Trump
asserted that Iran’s navy, air force and antiaircraft equipment had all been
wiped out, along with many top officials. If Iran did not rule out nuclear
weapons, Mr. Trump said, “we will be living with them for a little while, but I
don’t know how much longer they can survive.”
In fact,
analysts say, the 40 days of U.S.-Israeli bombardment that ended with last
week’s cease-fire appear to have increased the power of the military and
hard-liners in the Iranian system. Despite the widespread destruction and the
killings of officials by the U.S. and Israeli militaries, the Iranian regime is
acting emboldened, having demonstrated that it can wreak havoc in global trade
and send U.S. gas prices soaring.
The
result is that a president who has long relied on threats and bluster as
essential foreign-policy tools seems to be groping for the leverage to bring
Iran’s regime to heel. Analysts say that the success of the administration’s
latest effort, its blockade of Iranian ports, depends on the ability of the
United States and its allies to withstand the additional pressure that Iran
could impose on Persian Gulf trade in response.
Mona
Yacoubian, a former State Department official and Middle East expert, drew a
contrast in Mr. Trump’s struggle with Iran to his success in exacting
concessions from U.S. allies by threatening them with tariffs.
“This is
not something he has control over with the stroke of a pen,” said Ms.
Yacoubian, who directs the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, a Washington think tank. “This is where the president’s
approach of his own charismatic and powerful personality, in my view, is not a
match for the complexity, the opacity, that is the case with Iran.”
The
administration has been eager to portray a groundbreaking deal with Iran as
being possible. Vice President JD Vance said Tuesday that Mr. Trump sought a
“grand bargain” in which the United States would treat Iran “economically like
a normal country” if it acted “like a normal country.”
“He doesn’t
want a small deal,” Mr. Vance said.
Mr. Vance
ended an extensive session of talks with Iranian officials in Pakistan last
week without an agreement. He said Tuesday that the United States would keep
negotiating, and that “the people we were sitting across from wanted to make a
deal.”
But Iran
appears to have taken note of the leverage it has against Mr. Trump, given the
pain of rising gas prices and Republican worries that the unpopularity of the
Iran war could hurt the party in the midterm elections in November. That means
that even though Iran appears ready to negotiate, its leaders could make
demands of their own on matters like the future governance of the Strait of
Hormuz, while still driving a hard bargain on nuclear policy, the issue that
matters most to Mr. Trump.
Nate
Swanson, a former U.S. official who was on the Trump negotiating team with Iran
until July, said the regime in Tehran was not going to capitulate to Mr.
Trump’s demands in negotiations, “just as they did not on the battlefield.” Mr.
Trump was unlikely to succeed, he said, in “trying to force transformational
change on a system that feels like it just won a war.”
“Iran will
only make a deal they see as being in their interest,” Mr. Swanson, now at the
Atlantic Council, said. “That will most likely be small and transactional.”
Mr.
Swanson also cautioned against reading too much into the perceived pragmatism
of individual Iranian negotiators like Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the parliament
speaker whom Mr. Trump has cast as part of a more moderate, new crop of Iranian
leaders. Without a consolidated power base, all Iranian officials will need to
emphasize their hard-line bona fides, he said.
“It’s not
in Ghalibaf’s or anyone else’s interest to stray from the party line right
now,” Mr. Swanson said.
Anton
Troianovski writes about American foreign policy and national security for The
Times from Washington. He was previously a foreign correspondent based in
Moscow and Berlin.



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