This is an adapted excerpt from the March 8 episode of “Velshi.”
On Saturday, the Pentagon announced another U.S. service member had died of injuries sustained during Iran’s initial counterattack, bringing the American death toll to seven.
Just one day earlier, the bodies of six U.S. Army Reserve soldiers killed last week in an Iranian drone strike in Kuwait arrived at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. Some of them had served for almost two decades. The youngest was just 20 years old. Each one of them leaves behind grieving families and communities.
And as President Donald Trump signals that he intends to escalate this war of his own choice, it is almost certain that more such arrivals of bodies will occur.
Or, as the president puts it, “Some people will die.”
This is not a war of necessity, it is a war that most Americans do not understand the reasons for.
Under Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s leadership, evangelical Christian nationalism has gained unprecedented visibility inside the U.S. military.
But reluctance to spend blood and treasure on unclear objectives in war can be offset by infusing the conflict with a good reason, a clear purpose, a shared understanding of why the ultimate sacrifice is necessary.
In this case, there is none of that, not even a halfway coherent narrative to justify our war with Iran, no clear objective and no real public support.
So if the American people don’t understand this war and haven’t rallied behind it, then what is driving it?
It wasn’t that long ago that groups in parts of the Middle East invoked extremist interpretations of Islam to justify violence against the West. Regimes like Saudi Arabia encouraged an interpretation of Islam that considers anyone who doesn’t follow its doctrine, including other Muslims, as infidels. The consequences, as we all know, have been devastating.
That ideology helped give rise to movements like al-Qaida and later its offshoot, the Islamic State group, which targeted not only the West but also Middle Eastern regimes. State-sponsored clerics routinely denounced Western civilization and framed global politics as a civilizational struggle.
Americans remember the consequences of this worldview, because the violence it bred eventually landed on our shores.
But that religious extremism did not arise in a vacuum. Crucially, it was sustained by a political bargain. For decades, the Saudi monarchy maintained an implicit agreement with its clerical class: The government will protect your authority and enforce your worldview, so long as you legitimize the government. Religion, in other words, became the ideological engine for maintaining political power.
Something eerily similar is now unfolding right here at home, and it has been building for some time.
More than two centuries after the framers warned about the dangers of merging faith with political power, we are now seeing a version of that same dynamic take hold at the highest levels of American government. It’s not just creeping in; it is actively shaping how this war is being understood and justified — from those advising the president to military commanders briefing troops before their deployment.
Under Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth’s leadership, evangelical Christian nationalism has gained unprecedented visibility inside the U.S. military.
Hegseth has hosted Christian prayer services inside the Pentagon and attends weekly White House Bible studies. He has openly framed geopolitical conflict through the lens of Christian civilization.
Tattooed across his chest is the Jerusalem Cross, a symbol that was the coat of arms of the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem after 1099, and long associated with the idea of Christian warriors reclaiming the Holy Land.
At last month’s National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, Hegseth told the crowd, “America was founded as a Christian nation. It remains a Christian nation in our DNA if we can keep it. And as public officials, we have a sacred duty 250 years on to glorify Him.”
“We talk a lot about peace through strength,” he continued. “At the War Department, we see ourselves as the Strength Department. But we also need to remember that we derive our strength through faith, and through truth, and through the word of God.”
What we are now seeing play out on the global stage are the downstream effects of those beliefs.
The nonprofit Military Religious Freedom Foundation reports that it has received more than 200 complaints from service members across more than 50 military installations, spanning every single branch of the U.S. military, who say their commanders are invoking Christian prophecy to justify the war with Iran. (MS NOW has not independently verified or viewed these complaints.)
But the organization’s founder, Michael Weinstein, told Military.com this week that the reports are “continuing to come in everywhere.”








