In major speech, Trump says Iran war will be over ‘shortly’ but offers little clarity
WASHINGTONย โย In his first formal address to the nation since launching a war on Iran more than a month ago, President Trump on Wednesday night repeated a familiar list of claimed successes โ and brushed aside setbacks โ while providing little clarity on a clear path to ending the conflict.
โWe are going to finish the job, and weโre going to finish it very fast. We are getting very close,โ the president said from the White House.
Trump said Iran is โno longer a threat,โ yet he spoke of potentially needing to escalate the conflict and increase bombings on Iranโs energy and oil infrastructure if it continues to fight back.
โIf there is no deal, we are going to hit each and every one of their electric generating plants, very hard and probably simultaneously,โ he said. โWe have not hit their oil, even though thatโs the easiest target of all, because it would not give them even a small chance of survival or rebuilding. But we could hit it, and it would be gone, and thereโs not a thing they could do about it.โ
Trump earlier this week said he expects to pull American forces from Iran within three weeks, and emphasized that the United States does not have to be in the Middle East but that it is only there to โhelp our allies.โ
In his speech, Trump did not lay out a specific timeline for an exit strategy, but said the the U.S. is โon track to complete all of Americaโs military objectives shortly, very shortly.โ
โWe are going to hit them extremely hard over the next two to three weeks. We are going to bring them back to the Stone Ages, where they belong,โ he said. โIn the meantime, discussions are ongoing.โ
He also repeated his assertions, made for weeks, that the U.S. has basically already defeated Iran and won the war, which he characterized as a โdecisive, overwhelming victory.โ
He also stressed that it is โvery important that we keep this conflict in perspective,โ before listing out โ by month and day โ the length of World War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War and the Iraq War.
Before Wednesday nightโs formal address, Trump had spoken of the war โ which U.S. and Israel launched against Iran on Feb. 28 โ only in less formal settings, during media gatherings and other public events.
The speech was a key messaging moment for the president, who, 33 days into the war, has struggled to clearly explain the scope and objectives of a conflict that has killed thousands of people in Iran and neighboring countries and disrupted global markets.
Trump repeatedly insisted that the U.S. is doing great, is โin great shape for the future,โ and doesnโt need the oil that Iran has put a stranglehold on in the Strait of Hormuz, ignoring the clear effects of the war and those disruptions on the U.S., including on gas prices.
Those effects are already contributing to fractures within Trumpโs base. Some have expressed frustration with the administrationโs decision to enter a new conflict in the Middle East, concerns that could become a political liability for Republicans ahead of the high-stakes midterm elections in November.
In his remarks, Trump appeared to be speaking to those who have criticized him for deviating from his campaign promises by entering the war, saying he had promised to never allow Iran to have a nuclear weapon โfrom the very first dayโ he announced his first presidential campaign in 2015.
Trump has repeatedly downplayed the economic pressure the war has placed on Americans, including rising gas prices, arguing that the short-term financial strain is necessary for national security. He has also promised that gas prices will โcome tumbling downโ when the conflict ends.
โGas prices will rapidly come back down,โ Trump repeated on Wednesday. โStock prices will rapidly go back up. They havenโt come down very much. Frankly, they came down a little bit, but theyโve had some very good days.โ
Trump appeared less energetic during his evening speech than during some of his previous daytime events, where he has consistently maintained an upbeat tone about the war, while offering inconsistent accounts of what his administration aimed to achieve, or how long and what it would take to meet those objectives.
Those inconsistencies were evident even hours ahead of the address. In an interview with Reuters, he said he was not concerned about the enriched uranium held by Tehran โ a statement that appeared to undercut a central justification for the war.
โThatโs so far underground, I donโt care about that,โ Trump said, adding that the U.S. military will be โwatching it by satellite.โ
In public remarks ahead of the address, Trump said the war was launched to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, but also that the U.S. had completely obliterated Iranโs nuclear capabilities months prior in separate attacks over the summer. He also said he was worried about Iranโs enriched uranium, wanted the U.S. to take it, and would even consider sending U.S. forces inside Iran to collect it.
There have also been mixed messages about the U.S.โ intentions for Iranโs leadership since Iranโs Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed at the start of the conflict, leaving a leadership vacuum that was filled by his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, a 56-year-old hard-line cleric who Trump initially called an โunacceptable choice.โ
As Iranโs clerical rulers maintained a firm grip on the country, Trump administration officials, such as Secretary of State Marco Rubio, argued that U.S. war objectives had โnothing to doโ with Iranโs leadership. But Trump in recent days has repeatedly talked about how โregime changeโ was achieved.
On Wednesday, Trump said a deal remained within reach with Iranโs new leaders, who he called โless radical and much more reasonable.โ
Hours before Trump was to deliver his speech, Rubio posted a video which he began by saying, โMany Americans are asking, โWhy did the United States have to attack Iran now?โโ โ an apparent acknowledgment that Trumpโs own answers to that question in recent days may have failed to resonate.
Rubio also pushed another rationale for the war that the administration has floated on and off for the last month, saying that Iran was building up an arsenal of missiles and drones to shield its nuclear ambitions, and that the war was the โlast best chanceโ for the U.S. to eliminate those weapons capabilities before it was too late.
โWe were on the verge of an Iran that had so many missiles and so many drones that nobody could do anything about their nuclear weapons program in the future,โ Rubio said. โThat was an intolerable risk.โ
Others also tried to frame the war narrative Wednesday.
Before Trumpโs speech, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian issued a public letter denouncing what he described as โa flood of distortions and manufactured narrativesโ from the U.S., and arguing Iran is not a threat and has only ever defended itself against U.S. aggression.
He called on the American people to โlook beyond the machinery of misinformationโ from the Trump administration and reach their own conclusions about the war and its purpose, at one point echoing a question also being asked by some in Trumpโs base: โIs โAmerica firstโ truly among the priorities of the U.S. government today?โ
He noted Iran was in the midst of nuclear negotiations with the U.S. when the U.S. attacked it โas a proxy for Israel,โ and accused U.S. leaders of committing a โwar crimeโ by targeting Iranโs energy and industrial facilities.
โExactly which of the American peopleโs interests are truly being served by this war?โ he asked.