Saturday, March 14, 2026

Trump Reverses Obama on Iran

By Rich Lowry

Friday, March 13, 2026

 

Donald Trump has always been the anti-Obama.

 

He rose in opposition to President Obama and has reversed many of his Democratic predecessor’s policies. But perhaps no Trump undertaking runs so directly counter to Obama’s approach than the Iran war.

 

Obama sought to accommodate the Iranian regime, while Trump hopes to topple it.

 

Obama tolerated an Iranian nuclear program, even if one theoretically constrained by a nuclear deal, whereas Trump wants to destroy it.

 

Obama facilitated the rise of Iranian power in the region. Trump, in contrast, is endeavoring to crush it.

 

Back then, Obama operated on the basis of conciliation and caution. Today, Trump is all about confrontation and assertion.

 

We don’t know how Trump’s operation in Iran will turn out. There are many ways it could go sideways. But there’s no doubt that Trump’s vision of the Middle East — with Israel and the Arab states putting their enmity behind them, while the Iranian regime is defanged or eliminated — is more in keeping with U.S. interests than Obama’s.

 

The Obama theory was that Iran could be made into a responsible regional player if the nuclear issue were set aside, and if the U.S. forged a balance of power between Sunni powers in the region and Shia Iran. The 2015 Iran nuclear deal restricted Iranian nuclear activity, while allowing the regime to sit on the cusp of a nuclear weapon and giving it major sanctions relief. The Obama administration literally sent pallets of cash to Tehran, and the relaxation of sanctions gave the regime more runway to build up its missile arsenal and its terrorist proxies.

 

Trump 1.0 disrupted this model by tearing up the nuclear agreement and creating a “maximum pressure” campaign to squeeze the regime financially. The campaign had kneecapped Iranian oil revenue, when Joe Biden came into office in 2020 hoping to revive the Obama strategy.

 

Before October 7, Iranian power had reached a high-water mark. Its proxies dotted the region, from Gaza to Lebanon to Iraq to Syria to Yemen. It was working with U.S. adversaries China and Russia. It was a regional leader, just as Obama had imagined, but not a moderate one. Iran wielded its proxies as instruments of an Islamic radicalism threatening to Israel and U.S. interests.

 

In retrospect, October 7 looks to be for Islamic extremists what Pearl Harbor was for the Japanese — a brilliant tactical success that carried within it the seeds of strategic defeat.

 

Israel went about systematically degrading Iran’s proxy forces and then hit Iran’s defenses in retaliation for Iranian missile launches. This paved the way for the twelve-day war, and Trump’s strike on Iran, Operation Midnight Hammer. The operation was a signal that we weren’t going to trust or verify — we were going to blow up as much of the Iranian nuclear program as possible.

 

Operation Epic Fury is the second act. It seeks to destroy Iran’s nuclear program and is going after the foundations of Iranian power unaddressed in the Obama nuclear deal — namely, the missile program and other elements of the Iranian military.

 

If it achieves maximal success, there won’t be any Iranian regime to deal with any longer; failing that, it can still reduce Iranian power and influence (assuming Iran isn’t allowed to establish de facto control over the Strait of Hormuz).

 

The hope is the war will open the way to build on the Abraham Accords. That first-term Trump initiative rejected the conventional wisdom that the U.S. had to distance itself from Israel to make diplomatic progress. Instead, the U.S. could embrace Israel in a way that was anathema to Obama and bring together the Jewish state with its Gulf allies, while marginalizing Iran.

 

Much depends on successfully prosecuting Operation Epic Fury, but what Trump is trying to achieve would be better for the peace and security of the region than the policy of one of the least worthy Nobel Peace Prize winners in history.

The Concept of Jewish Collective Guilt Goes Mainstream

By Seth Mandel

Friday, March 13, 2026

 

A remarkable exchange took place yesterday on GBN, the British news network. Regarding the attempted mass shooting at Temple Israel in Michigan yesterday, Stephen Kent and Angela McCahey went back and forth on whether, essentially, the synagogue was an understandable target:

 

McCahey: “This was an Israeli temple, it was aligned with Israel.”

 

Kent: “A Jewish temple. A Jewish synagogue is not an Israeli temple.”

 

McCahey: “It’s called the ‘real Israel temple.’”

 

Kent: “They’re Jewish, they’re the people of Israel.”

 

McCahey repeated herself once more: “So, they’re called the ‘real Israeli temple,’ yes? And they do align with Israel and their beliefs.”

 

Kent’s heroic attempts to correct McCahey went nowhere, but bless him for trying.

 

This exchange is important because we tend to take for granted that of course it’s wrong to kill random Jews because of something that happened thousands of miles away. But this is not actually a universally held principle. It seems barbaric, but it’s true: whether or not all Jews anywhere are considered an outpost of the armed forces of the state of Israel is considered a legitimate debate.

 

Yesterday, as the terrorist’s identity was released, English-language pro-Hamas propaganda sites reported that the man had lost relatives in an Israeli strike in Lebanon. Thus began a reframing of an attempted massacre of young children as some kind of tit-for-tat. The mayor of the terrorist’s town, Dearborn Heights, put out a statement that mentioned this detail right at the top and never mentioned the words “Jews” or “anti-Semitism.” He did, however, mention Ramadan.

 

This mayor, Mo Baydoun, said he reached out to the town supervisor of the town where the attack took place. Perhaps the town supervisor can pass on his message to the local Jewish community.

 

To call Baydoun’s statement cynical would be too kind. It is a sign that the anti-Semitic “collective guilt” rule, as applied to Jews, is gaining purchase in American politics. And it is because there are lots of people out there like McCahey, who are simply blundering out of ignorance or naivete into repeating versions of this calumny.

 

Yet the designation of synagogues as legitimate subjects of grievance is not new. In early December, a mob descended on a synagogue in New York City that was having an event for those considering making aliyah. Mayor Zohran Mamdani infamously responded: “every New Yorker should be free to enter a house of worship without intimidation,” but that “these sacred spaces should not be used to promote activities in violation of international law.”

 

There was no promotion of activities in violation of international law, of course. Mamdani didn’t even bother to check. He just fed the mob’s idea that synagogues are fair game in the new global intifada.

 

The most prominent Islamic pressure group in America is the Council on American-Islamic Relations. In 2021, its San Francisco director, Zahra Billoo, said that “we need to pay attention to the Zionist synagogues.” She told the audience to “know your enemies,” which included “the Zionist organizations” and shuls and “polite Zionists.” In response to the ensuing outcry, CAIR said it would “proudly stand by Zahra and all American Muslim leaders who face smears and threats because they dare to express an opinion about Palestinian human rights.” A synagogue in Texas was taken hostage a month later.

 

Jewish institutions have since October 7 been attacked for being “Zionist institutions.” Campus Hillels, the centers for Jewish life on campus along with Chabad houses, continue to be widely targeted. Chabad too—witness the recent target put on those houses of worship by Tucker Carlson. Kosher restaurants and Jewish-owned cafes are a common target too.

 

Meanwhile, in the wake of the Michigan attack, the deranged rationalizations for going after synagogues caught on. For example, influencer Wally Rashid posted a picture of Temple Israel staff visiting the Temple Mount, as many Jews do. Responding to that post, University of Utah economics professor Marshall Steinbaum said of Temple Israel: “And don’t forget we taxpayers are paying for their security.”

 

So the synagogues of Jews who visit Israel are fair game for attack? Or is Steinbaum just upset that American Jews will be protected from terrorist attacks?

 

The fact that the concept of Jewish collective guilt is getting a hearing in America is a pretty clear indication of the direction of anti-Semitic discourse. And it’s why Jews must increasingly fortify their houses of prayer.

The Iran War Fog

By Judson Berger

Friday, March 13, 2026

 

We can leave it to more credentialed professionals to determine whether President Trump’s evolving characterizations and goalposts for the Iran war are meant to confuse the enemy or simply reflect his own uncertainty and/or desire to stay flexible. But if you’ve had trouble keeping up with the protean assessments emanating from Washington, you are not alone.

 

Andy McCarthy sums up the status reports:

 

We’ll demand regime change . . . or not. Unconditional surrender . . . or not. Ground troops not off the table . . . and not on the table. Reinstatement of the draft . . . or no such plans . . . or no plans for now.

 

Axios reported Friday that Trump told G-7 leaders Iran is “about to surrender,” but because so many leaders have been killed, nobody is around to announce it. Sources said Trump was “ambiguous” on his objectives and timeline: “Some participants left the call believing he wants to wind it down — others felt the complete opposite.” Adding to confusion, Energy Secretary Chris Wright (the X account version of him, anyway) initially claimed this week that the U.S. Navy had escorted an oil tanker through the Strait of Hormuz, then backtracked.

 

“One thing that we can be absolutely certain of in this ongoing U.S. war with Iran,” Jim Geraghty writes, “is that the remaining leaders in the Iranian regime have no idea what the U.S. objectives or victory conditions are, or whether the U.S. military has just begun the fight or whether the commander in chief believes the war is just about over . . . because the messages from the president himself are contradictory and erratic.”

 

The messaging of the war, it can be said, has not been on par with the precision of its military strikes (with the possible exception, tragically, of the deadly strike on an elementary school, which is under investigation). This aspect of a campaign that was both long telegraphed yet sudden with regard to the making of a public case for it — only four days elapsed between Trump’s inclusion of a concise but compelling justification for action in his SOTU and the strikes themselves — creates its own problems. The war’s unpopularity threatens to put added pressure on the administration to find an end point, even as the regime holds on.

 

As of this writing, the signals from the White House and Pentagon are being interpreted widely, partly for cynically partisan reasons, partly because much is left to interpretation. Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal claimed earlier this week, after a private briefing, that the administration seems to be gearing up to deploy ground troops. Iran’s menacing conduct in the Strait of Hormuz could pull the U.S. in deeper. At the same time, recent comments from Trump indicate that he’s at least contemplating what an off-ramp would look like.

 

He told CBS News that the war is “very complete, pretty much,” with Iran having “no navy, no communications, . . . no air force,” and degraded missile and drone capacity. “There’s nothing left in a military sense,” he said.

 

Speaking to reporters earlier this week, he did not evince the same enthusiasm about an Iranian-people-led overthrow of the regime as he did in his original (online video) declaration of hostilities: “We want a system that can lead to many years of peace, and if we can’t have that, we might as well get it over with right now.”

 

Senator Tom Cotton, speaking Tuesday at a symposium on antisemitism hosted by National Review and the Republican Jewish Coalition, offered a similar characterization of possible, acceptable outcomes for the United States and Israel. He said that, hopefully, the Iranian people can rise up against the regime, but, “even if that’s not the case, at least Iran will be totally neutered as a military threat to the United States, to Israel, and to the rest of the civilized world.” The implication was that even if Iran’s government survives, the regime’s being “defanged” of its navy and missile arsenal can count as a victory.

 

Andy argues that it would still be an embarrassment to “leave the regime in place,” albeit one “Trump could try to explain away by saying he’s left it a shell of its former self” — depending on whether the threat to trade has also been resolved.

 

Noah Rothman, who lists here what is going right in the war even amid media pessimism about its trajectory, notes that the White House has simply “not communicated what victory looks like, how it will be achieved, or what is expected of the American public.”

 

Anticipating the need for the forbearance of the American people in the days ahead, he advises: “It’s never too late to correct that oversight.”

CNN’s Strait of Hormuz Allegation Makes No Sense

By Noah Rothman

Friday, March 13, 2026

 

“I’m dumbfounded,” said one unnamed “former U.S. official” who provided CNN with color commentary for its report alleging that Trump administration officials were shocked by Iran’s efforts to close the Strait of Hormuz to maritime traffic. “Planning around preventing this exact scenario — impossible as it has long seemed — has been a bedrock principle of US national security policy for decades,” the official added.

 

Indeed, the claim is hard to believe. But CNN is sticking to the story to which no fewer than four of its reporters contributed:

 

Top Trump officials acknowledged to lawmakers during recent classified briefings that they did not plan for the possibility of Iran closing the strait in response to strikes, according to three sources familiar with the closed-door session.

 

The reason, multiple sources said, was administration officials believed closing the strait would hurt Iran more than the US — a view that was bolstered by Iran’s empty threats to act in the strait after US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities last summer.

 

The salacious claim this unidentified “lawmaker” is retailing strains credulity. As the report itself conceded, “multiple current and former” U.S. officials observed that the military “has long maintained and updated plans to address Iranian military action in the critical corridor.” Not only have contingencies for a potential action designed to close the Strait featured prominently in publicly available war games against the Iranian regime for decades, the U.S. has even executed those contingencies in the past.

 

In 1987, during the Iran-Iraq War, Iran’s armed forces targeted oil tankers in the Persian Gulf, compelling U.S. warships to escort commercial traffic and reopen the Strait — a fraught operation in which one tanker struck an Iranian naval mine. When Iran continued its mining operations in the Strait, damaging an American destroyer in 1988, the Reagan administration launched Operation Praying Mantis, which subsequently destroyed a significant portion of the Iranian Navy and its mine-laying vessels, among other targets.

 

Were the Trump administration’s war planners unfamiliar with this history? That’s highly unlikely. Even if they were, they got an education last year in the wake of Operation Midnight Hammer, during which U.S. officials told reporters that they had seen indications that the Iranians were loading naval mines onto ships in advance of potential action in the Strait. The administration even acknowledged that threat: “Thanks to the President’s brilliant execution of Operation Midnight Hammer,” the White House’s statement read, “successful campaign against the Houthis, and maximum pressure campaign, the Strait of Hormuz remains open, freedom of navigation has been restored, and Iran has been significantly weakened.”

 

Had Trump administration officials somehow forgotten about all this in the months after the strikes on Iran’s nuclear program? If so, the Iranian regime provided them with plenty of reminders.

 

In mid-February, as the Trump administration amassed naval forces in the Persian Gulf, Tehran announced its intention to hold one of its many regular exercises aimed at closing the Strait. The occasion of these exercises amid heightened tensions provided media outlets with ample opportunity to review Iran’s long-known plans for closing the Strait, the history of similar operations, and how an attempt to reprise the tactic might unfold today.

 

And yet, some public reporting has also indicated that security experts were skeptical that Iran’s armed forces might try to close the Strait again — not because such an operation was no longer consistent with Iranian doctrine but because it would be so hard to pull off.

 

If Iran made the attempt, it could expect that its capacity for power projection in the Persian Gulf would be pummeled from the air, Forbes contributor Gaurav Sharma wrote last year. Additionally, a serious effort to shut down the Strait would halt Iran’s commercial traffic, too, and Tehran’s oil exports would feel the pain of that initiative more acutely than its Gulf neighbors. The Saudis and the Emirates, in particular, had developed alternative export routes that would render any disruption to their oil export capacity decidedly temporary. Even if Iranian naval forces tried to close the Strait, it would not stay closed for long.

 

It is possible that the Trump administration did not anticipate how the current Iranian effort to partially close the Strait (its own traffic, as well as China-bound vessels, continue to flow through it) would affect global markets. Surely, the administration’s sudden about-face on the sanctions it imposed on Russian oil exports following a public diplomatic offensive in support of those sanctions last year wasn’t part of any plan. But that is not the same thing as failing to “plan” for the prospect of Iranian hostile action in the Strait.

 

Administration officials maintain that the operations required to forcibly reopen the Strait — a fraught exercise that will take U.S. ships close to Iranian shores where they could be vulnerable to road-mobile anti-ship missiles and drones, as well as fast boats and even mines — cannot commence until U.S. forces have effectively neutralized Iran’s power-projection capabilities along Iran’s Persian Gulf coast. First things first.

 

Perhaps the administration did not anticipate the speed with which markets would react to the paralysis of naval traffic in the Gulf — a condition that is due less to the threat of Iranian hostile fire, real though that threat is, than to the fact that commercial traffic through a warzone is not financially underwritten. But it is hard to believe that no one in the Pentagon anticipated this outcome. It’s even harder to believe that the U.S. has “few options” to reopen the Strait, as CNN reported.

 

CNN’s item concludes by revealing its motive. “Energy executives” seek “an early end to the war,” and Republicans in Congress want Trump to “refocus on domestic issues ahead of the midterms.” Maybe the question this piece asks isn’t whether the Trump administration was prepared to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to commercial traffic but, perhaps, whether it should even bother to try.

Jihad in America: The Michigan Attack

By Andrew C. McCarthy

Saturday, March 14, 2026

 

Two jihadist attacks were carried out on Thursday. That makes four since the start of March — that is, since U.S. and Israeli forces commenced the aerial invasion intended to finish the jihadist war the Iranian regime has been waging, mainly through proxies it controls and inspires, since 1979. (See our editorial regarding the four recent attacks, and our editorial regarding the March 1 attack in Austin.)

 

At this early stage, we don’t know if any of these attacks was triggered by the war. Thursday’s two are intriguing in that regard.

 

In this post, I’ll address the Michigan attack. In the next one, I’ll turn to the Virginia attack.

 

In West Bloomfield, shortly after noon, Ayman Mohamad Ghazali plowed an explosive-laden car into Temple Israel, a synagogue with a preschool on the premises. He was armed with a rifle and began firing. Security personnel — which, infuriatingly, synagogues must now retain in the United States of America due to the rising tide of Jew hatred — returned fire. Ghazali perished as the car burst into flames. One temple congregant was knocked unconscious, but the 140 preschool children and other attendees were unharmed.

 

Ghazali, who was 41, resided in Dearborn Heights, a municipality bordering on and deeply interconnected with Dearborn. The latter, with over 100,000 residents, is the first city in our nation with a majority Muslim population — about 55 percent. Dearborn Heights, with over 60,000 residents, is close to 40 percent Muslim.

 

In both places, the percentage of residents of Lebanese descent is high. Lebanon, of course, is the birthplace and stronghold of Hezbollah (the “Party of Allah”), Iran’s most ruthless jihadist militia, whose first acts included the murders of several U.S. officials, culminating in the 1983 bombings in Beirut of the U.S. embassy (killing 17 Americans and at least 43 others) and a U.S. Marine barracks (killing 241 American servicemen; a separate, nearly simultaneous bombing killed 58 French paratroopers in their barracks). Dearborn and its outskirts, perhaps not surprisingly, have long been notorious hotbeds of sharia supremacism.

 

Dearborn is in the district that sent the Palestinian radical, Rashida Tlaib, to Congress. It is where a rally was held after the death of Hassan Nasrallah, the longtime emir of Hezbollah. At the rally, the locals chanted such ditties as “Oh beloved Nasrallah, strike and blow up Tel Aviv,” and “We heed your call, oh Nasrallah, Death to Israel.” Also proclaimed was the ever-popular chant, “Khaybar, Khaybar, oh Jews, the army of Muhammad will return.” It’s an allusion to the prophet of Islam’s conquest of Jewish tribes of Khaybar in 628 A.D., after which he had the male tribe leaders killed (a seminal event in Muslim scripture).

 

Dearborn has figured in numerous terrorism investigations and prosecutions in the last quarter century. (To get the picture, I recommend searching “Dearborn” on the website of the Investigative Project on Terrorism.) Just four months ago, the Justice Department charged several Dearborn men with conspiring to help ISIS try to execute a terrorist attack in the United States.

 

Ghazali — surprise, surprise! — was a Lebanese national whose brothers were reportedly members of Hezbollah. After President Obama took office in 2009, an alien relative and a woman who appears to have been Ghazali’s wife (or fiancée at the time) petitioned immigration authorities to have him admitted. He was granted entry in 2011 on an immigrant visa as the spouse of an American citizen, then naturalized five years later. It has been reported that four of his relatives, including the two brothers just mentioned, were killed last weekend in Israeli strikes in Machghara, a Hezbollah stronghold in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley (where the organization has historically provided training to members of al-Qaeda and other jihadists). Hezbollah has joined Iran in coordinated bombings of Israel.

 

The Islamist/leftist alliance in the United States (the subject of my 2010 book, The Grand Jihad) is forever assuring us that its confederates are merely anti-Zionists politically opposed to the state of Israel, not antisemites who hate Jews — any and all Jews, wherever they can be found.

 

I have repeatedly countered (see, e.g., here, here, and here) that Jew hatred is doctrinal in sharia supremacist ideology. The lore of Khaybar detailed above is just a part of it. In accordance with the hadiths (authoritative collections of the prophet’s words and actions that have scriptural standing in Islam), young Muslims are taught that, following the conquest, Muhammad was poisoned by a Jewish woman from a Khaybar tribe, eventually resulting in his death. (See Sahih Bukhari, Vol. 3, Book 47, Hadith No. 786, and Sahih Muslim, Book 26, Hadith No. 5430.)

 

Who you gonna believe, your honey or your lyin’ eyes? You can go with the Islamist/leftist storyline, but I’ll stick with the impression that if you try to ram a car through a synagogue full of Jewish children in Michigan, your problem is deeper than political opposition to a tiny country 6,000 miles away.

Dire Strait

By Rich Lowry

Saturday, March 14, 2026

 

The CNN report the other day that the administration didn’t properly plan for a closure of the Strait of Hormuz has come in for heavy criticism. My guess has been that both sides in the debate over the piece have been talking past to each other — yes, the administration obviously knew that the Iranians could close the strait, but it didn’t necessarily think they would close the strait.

 

The CNN report was clearly dependent on Democratic sourcing for what the administration has been saying in briefings. This Wall Street Journal report seems better sourced and rings true to me:

 

Before the U.S. went to war, Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told President Trump that an American attack could prompt Iran to close the Strait of Hormuz.

 

Caine said in several briefings that U.S. officials had long believed Iran would deploy mines, drones and missiles to close the world’s most vital shipping lane, according to people with knowledge of the discussions.

 

Trump acknowledged the risk, these people said, but moved forward with the most consequential foreign-policy decision of his two presidencies. He told his team that Tehran would likely capitulate before closing the strait — and even if Iran tried, the U.S. military could handle it.

 

The story notes later:

 

The president and some advisers were surprised at the breadth and scope of Iran’s retaliation, which included missiles and drones launched at regional countries from Azerbaijan to Oman, according to people familiar with the matter.

 

And part of the problem here was the lack of a robust planning process:

 

Typically, war preparations include weeks or months of classified deliberations, written planning documents, the airing of dissenting views from diplomats and intelligence officials, and National Security Council meetings with cabinet members to make the most informed decision.

 

Only a small group was looped into the preparations for Iran — including Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Hegseth. That narrowed the advice, information and ideas available to the president, who had to balance the many downsides of an attack. . . .

 

Left unanswered were such questions as how to evacuate U.S. citizens in an escalating conflict — or ensure the next Iranian leader was friendly with Washington, U.S. officials said.

 

Some senior aides and U.S. diplomats who manage Middle East affairs were told little to nothing about plans for the war. They learned the bombing had started from social media and news reports.

 

Now, the current situation doesn’t mean the apocalypse — the price of oil is the highest it has been in four years, not in, say, 50 years — but we almost certainly have weeks to deal with this issue, not months.

Friday, March 13, 2026

Why We Fought

By Paul D. Miller

Friday, March 13, 2026

 

One of the more head-scratching facts about World War II is this: The United States responded to the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor by sending more than 5 million troops to Europe. It is counterintuitive, at least, that the U.S. would send half its military to the opposite side of the globe from the enemy who attacked it.

 

Even after Nazi Germany declared war on the United States—on December 11, 1941, days after Pearl Harbor—the U.S. could have prioritized Japan and left Europe to Britain and the Soviet Union. Many Americans, including Adm. Ernest King, the commander in chief of the United States Fleet, argued for a “Japan First” strategy. The U.S. did the opposite. Why?

 

The answer reveals something important about the role the United States chose to play on the world stage. American power was supposed to be different from the great powers of the Old World. It would not be cynical, narrow, used exclusively for its own preservation to the detriment of others. American power would be linked to American ideals.

 

It would be tough-minded, yes, and prudently self-interested. But American statesmen took a longer view and understood that a truly self-interested strategy was not the short-term, cynically transactional, calculating self-interest in dollars and cents, but relational and ideological, measured in the growth of American ideals and the networks among like-minded nations.

 

These ideals found expression in President Franklin Roosevelt’s idea of the neighborhood of nations, in his Four Freedoms, and in the Atlantic Charter, the clearest and most consequential expressions of the American experiment on the world stage.

 

The neighborhood of nations.

 

Earlier in 1941, months before Pearl Harbor, the American and British militaries had already war-gamed a possible global conflict against the Axis powers. They rejected the “Japan First” strategy and agreed, at least for planning purposes, on “Germany First.”

 

The logic was straightforward and starkly realist. Germany was the center of gravity of the Axis powers: It was the largest, richest, most technologically advanced industrial power. If it conquered Britain, it imperiled the Atlantic Ocean. If it conquered the Soviet Union, it would amass untold resources. Japan, by contrast, could be contained.

 

Yet when it came time to sell the war to the American public, Roosevelt made a different argument. He did not argue to the American people about Germany’s GDP, how many metric tons of steel its factories produced, or the advanced state of its armaments factories. He linked American security to the moral meaning of the war.

 

“The Nazi masters of Germany have made it clear that they intend not only to dominate all life and thought in their own country, but also to enslave the whole of Europe, and then to use the resources of Europe to dominate the rest of the world,” he said in his December 1940 fireside chat.

 

The Nazis “openly seek the destruction of all elective systems of government on every continent—including our own,” Roosevelt told the White House Correspondents Dinner in March 1941. “They seek to establish systems of government based on the regimentation of all human beings by a handful of individual rulers who have seized power by force.”

 

That is why the United States could not be aloof from events in Europe. In December 1940, explaining his proposed lend-lease program, Roosevelt argued that if a neighbor’s house caught fire, any decent person would immediately lend their garden hose to help put out the fire. The analogy played to Americans’ sense of altruism but also their self-interest: Fires spread, including in the neighborhood of nations.

 

The neighborhood of nations: That image is key to Roosevelt’s—and America’s—vision of what the war was about. If America was intent on defending its house alone, it would have adopted a “Japan First” strategy, possibly leaving the fighting in the European theater to the British and Soviets armed with American weapons. Adopting a “Germany First” strategy was not just a calculation about the relative strength of the Axis powers. It was also a statement about America’s vision of the world and its role in it.

 

Fires spread, and America would be the fire warden.

 

The ‘Four Freedoms.’

 

The fire warden had a firm idea of how the neighborhood should be organized. In January 1941 Roosevelt reiterated the injustice of the Nazis’ vision of the world and contrasted it with the principles of American freedom.

 

“No realistic American can expect from a dictator’s peace international generosity, or return of true independence, or world disarmament, or freedom of expression, or freedom of religion,” Roosevelt told Congress. He argued that the “principles of morality” prevented him from “acquiesc[ing] in a peace dictated by aggressors and sponsored by appeasers,” because “enduring peace cannot be bought at the cost of other people's freedom.” The Nazis, he said, wanted to build a new “one-way international law, which lacks mutuality in its observance, and, therefore, becomes an instrument of oppression.”

 

Contrasting with the Nazis’ vision of the world, Roosevelt famously outlined his Four Freedoms: freedoms of speech and religion, freedom from want, and freedom from fear. Freedom from want referred to conditions that enabled a nation to provide a “healthy peacetime life for its inhabitants,” and freedom from fear meant disarmament to the point that aggressive warfare became impossible.

 

Roosevelt saw a cohesive moral order underlining American democracy at home and the Four Freedoms abroad. “Just as our national policy in internal affairs has been based upon a decent respect for the rights and the dignity of all our fellow men within our gates,” he said, “so our national policy in foreign affairs has been based on a decent respect for the rights and dignity of all nations, large and small. And the justice of morality must and will win in the end.” American strategy in World War II was an outworking of American ideals on the world stage.

 

“By winning now, we strengthen the meaning of those freedoms, we increase the stature of mankind, we establish the dignity of human life,” he later said. He called for the nations of the world to “serve themselves and serve the world” by respecting the Four Freedoms and “abandon man’s inhumanity to man.” The Four Freedoms are the best summation of Roosevelt’s understanding of the just cause for which the war would be fought.

 

The Atlantic Charter.

 

Roosevelt’s moral vision of the war received its formal expression in the Atlantic Charter, a joint declaration with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in August 1941. The Charter became a declaration of war aims, a touchstone outlining the sort of world the allies were fighting for, and became a foundation of the postwar order.

 

The allies foreswore territorial conquest, affirmed the consent of the governed, affirmed free trade and economic cooperation and the freedom of the seas, called for general disarmament to a level that would make aggressive warfare impossible, and looked forward to a durable and lasting peace “which will afford assurance that all the men in all the lands may live out their lives in freedom from fear and want.”

 

The charter is the founding document and constitution of what is clunkily called the “liberal international order,” but is more accurately called the free world. It was later incorporated into the Charter of the United Nations—but the real animating spirit of the charter found life in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), an alliance of free democracies that has anchored world order for eight decades.

 

Most Americans today have only the dimmest understanding that for most of human history, most people were poor, unfree, and miserable. The emergence of a free world order—with democracy and rights, capitalism and free trade, international cooperation and collective security—is the greatest thing that has ever happened in (secular) history.

 

It happened because of the convergence of American power with American ideals. We did not beat the fascists with the power of American ideals; we beat the fascists because we had bigger guns. But so did the Soviets, and the Soviets did not write the Atlantic Charter, did not talk about Four Freedoms, and did not create a free world order in the aftermath.

 

Global ambitions and national identity.

 

Armed idealism is usually a straight road to zealotry, crusading, and tyranny. But consider: The same ideals that led America to assemble the mightiest army in world history, to build and use nuclear weapons, are the same ideals that led America to annex no territory, to voluntarily demobilize its military, and to go home. As Colin Powell often said decades later, “The only land we ever asked for was enough land to bury our dead.”

 

Of course, there was a measure of hypocrisy in preaching a gospel of liberty while overseeing Jim Crow at home. But rather than letting our imperfections hobble our aspirations for the world, the causal arrow went the other way: We let our global ambitions reshape our national identity. Black veterans came home and demanded rights, white veterans came home readier to grant them, and Americans stung by the horror of white supremacy’s atrocities abroad were more prepared to acknowledge them at home. Sometimes foreign policy leads, rather than follows, our national mission.

 

If there was ever a moment when one nation had the means to conquer the world, it was the United States of America in 1945. That we did not is an underrated tribute to American virtue, a national reenactment of George Washington’s resignation at the height of his power. And it happened because of American beliefs in limited government and republican liberty; in a neighborhood of nations that look out for each other; in freedom of speech and religion, freedom from want and fear; in consent of the governed, free trade, freedom of the seas, and international comity. These are America’s greatest legacy and, through the Second World War, our greatest bequest to the world.