June 30, 2025 | The Dispatch

Trump Ends the Folly of De-escalation

June 30, 2025 | The Dispatch

Trump Ends the Folly of De-escalation

Excerpt

In my first year at West Point, I was part of a cordon of cheering cadets who lined Thayer Road to welcome back to American soil 52 people who had been held hostage by the Iranian regime for 444 days. We saluted as six green-and-white Army buses took them through the scenic campus on the way to a three-day respite with their families at the Hotel Thayer. The hostage crisis was just the beginning of what would become a four-decades-long “twilight war” that the Islamic Republic of Iran has waged against the United States, Israel, and its Arab neighbors. The U.S. response, across seven different administrations, has suffered from a failure to consider adequately how historical memory, emotion, and ideology drive and constrain the theocratic dictatorship in Tehran.

The exception has been President Donald Trump, who from 2017 to 2021 implemented a strategy of maximum pressure on Iran and in January 2020 decided to kill the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) Quds Force, Qassem Suleimani, and his Iraqi militia puppet, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, in Baghdad. Trump recognized that the Iranian regime cannot be conciliated and that efforts to de-escalate confrontations with Iran had allowed it to escalate on its own terms with impunity. Early in his second term, Trump has reversed the self-defeating policies of the Biden administration, restored maximum pressure on Iran, and, most notably, ordered U.S. strikes on three facilities related to its nuclear program.

Lieutenant General (ret.) H.R. McMaster is the Chair of the Center on Military and Political Power at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD).

Issues:

Issues:

Iran Military and Political Power U.S. Defense Policy and Strategy

Topics:

Topics:

Iran Israel Tehran Iraq Donald Trump Arabs Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Joe Biden Baghdad Quds Force Qasem Soleimani United States Military Academy Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis