Home » Trump Has Set a Timer on Iran’s Government — and He Controls the Clock

Trump Has Set a Timer on Iran’s Government — and He Controls the Clock

by admin477351

The White House press secretary made a revealing statement on Friday that exposed the full logic of President Donald Trump’s approach to the war with Iran. Iran, she said, would be considered in a state of unconditional surrender once Trump determined it no longer posed a threat to the United States — whether or not Tehran formally agreed with that assessment. In other words, Trump controls both the military campaign and the criteria for ending it. He has set a timer on Iran’s government, and he alone decides when it stops.

The military campaign operating under that framework has been relentless. American B-2 stealth bombers have struck Iran’s buried missile infrastructure with dozens of 2,000-pound penetrating munitions. A large Iranian naval vessel has been hit and possibly sunk. Israel has issued mass evacuation orders in Lebanon covering over one million people and struck Hezbollah’s command infrastructure across Beirut. The defense secretary has confirmed that US firepower is about to surge dramatically.

Iran has not accepted the framework Trump has established. Its government continues to function. Its military continues to fight. The Revolutionary Guards have launched fresh missiles and drones at US bases across the Gulf and at Israel. Hezbollah has maintained its rocket campaign in Lebanon and wounded Israeli soldiers near the border. Iranian state television has broadcast mass mourning and defiance. The leadership council has met to plan succession. No one in the Iranian establishment has accepted the premise that they are already defeated.

The practical consequence of Trump’s framework is that the campaign has no clearly defined endpoint that Iran can trigger by taking any specific action. If Iran destroys all of its missiles, Trump might say it still poses a threat through proxies. If its proxies are defeated, Trump might say its nuclear program remains a threat. The ambiguity is, from Trump’s perspective, a feature rather than a bug: it gives him maximum flexibility to define victory on his own terms.

For Iran, the framework presents an existential challenge. If surrender cannot be formally negotiated and its terms cannot be clearly defined, the only options are to fight until one side collapses or to hope that international pressure eventually forces Trump to accept something less than total victory. Neither option is appealing. The timer Trump has set is running. The Iranian government does not know what will stop it.

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