Two decades ago, George W. Bush toppled Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein after securing a bipartisan authorization from Congress, gaining the support of the majority of Americans and a year of planning the attack and making his case to the American people and the world.
Over the last two months, President Donald Trump has taken down two foes — first in Venezuela, and now Iran — without the authorization of Congress, lacking the support of most Americans and with little planning or politicking.
Critics have assailed Trump for failing to consult Congress or do more to gain the support of Americans for his unexpectedly robust use of military force. But he has won some praise for a narrower approach.
In Venezuela, U.S. forces seized Nicolas Maduro but did not topple his government or send U.S. ground forces into the country. In Iran, Trump has said he has no plans to deploy ground troops there, as well.
In a taped address on Sunday afternoon, Trump said it was up to unarmed Iranians to topple a regime that killed at least 7,003 Iranians during recent demonstrations, including 214 members of government forces, according to the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency.
“I once again urge the Revolutionary Guard, the Iranian military police, to lay down your arms and receive full immunity or face certain death. It will be certain death, won’t be pretty,” Trump said.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said on NBC News’s “Meet the Press” said that Trump is creating a new American model — a Trump doctrine — for removing foreign leaders who threaten the U.S., without being drawn into a military quagmire. Graham praised the killing of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but said it was not Trump’s job to choose Iran’s next leader.
“It’s not his job or my job to do this,” Graham said. “How many times do I have to tell you? Our job is to make sure Iran is no longer the largest state sponsor of terrorism, to help the people reconstruct a new government. No boots on the ground.”
Critics say that Trump and his allies are creating the worst of both approaches to intervention. They argue Trump is using U.S. military force aggressively and recklessly and assuming his enemies will capitulate, as they have in business and politics.
Critics say that Trump and his allies are creating the worst of both approaches to intervention.
“Trump’s entire operating theory is you come in and punch the other person in the face until they capitulate. That is the only move he’s got,” Rep. Adam Smith, Wash., the top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, told MS NOW. “That’s the only move he’s got.”
Critics predict that Trump’s actions in Iran will end with chaos, repression and a new hard-line ruler in Iran, not the emergence of a new, more moderate government that Trump hopes.
“We should have learned the lesson,” Peter Beinart, a longtime foreign policy analyst, told MS NOW. “You may remove a dictator but what you may well get in response is another dictator. Going in and bombing countries is in no way a plan for what comes next.”
A former CIA official with extensive experience in the Middle East before and after the 9/11 attacks praised the Trump administration’s limited approach in Venezuela and the U.S. military’s execution of it.
“The Caracas battle plan was flawless,” said the former CIA official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “A tribute to our military and their bravery.”
But he said the same approach will not work in Iran.









