Saturday, June 20, 2026

How Do America’s Enemies Think About the Iran War?

By Noah Rothman

Friday, June 19, 2026

 

The president clearly hopes that his memorandum of understanding with the Islamic Republic will put the Iran war in the rearview mirror. It might, although it is by no means a given that Tehran, emboldened by America’s retreat, will refrain from testing Donald Trump’s commitment to pusillanimity.

 

For now, however, the conflict has cooled to the point that there is space to thoroughly evaluate the war, the “cease-fire,” the peace (such as it is), and how it all reflects on America’s tactical capabilities and strategic thinking. The United States won’t be the only nation conducting after-action assessments. America’s adversaries abroad will draw their own lessons from the war.

 

After an embarrassing 70-day cease-fire that only the United States observed — a mortifying spectacle that culminated in the even more humiliating MOU — Americans might be tempted to dismiss the kinetic phase of the war as inconsequential. But America’s near-peer competitors cannot afford to ignore American tactics even if they conclude, with good reason, that the U.S. has no stomach for its own grand strategy. For Beijing and Moscow, the 40-day combat phase of the war was surely a sobering experience.

 

Strategists inside the Kremlin and Zhongnanhai were probably familiar with the pre-war scenarios forecasting how bloody and destructive a U.S.-led war with Iran would be. They were therefore equally likely to have been impressed by the U.S. military’s performance, which exceeded even the most sanguine projections.

 

The Iran war was a contingency sparked by Tehran’s slaughter of tens of thousands of protesters in late December and early January. There was no nine-month buildup ahead of Operation Epic Fury, as there was prior to the invasion of Iraq. Trump began filtering assets into the theater only in late January, with combat operations beginning on February 28. In the space of just six weeks, the U.S. projected overwhelming air and naval power to the other side of the earth and sustained that exercise in power projection for weeks. That’s a feat no other nation on earth could match.

 

Equally unnerving for America’s enemies was the way the war began: with decapitation strikes that neutralized Iran’s senior civilian leaders and much of its ranking military and intelligence officials. Decapitation strikes are difficult to pull off, as the outset of the Iraq War attests. They are successful only when real-time intelligence-collection initiatives are matched by overwhelming technological supremacy. Again, none of America’s enemies or even a coalition of them could achieve that.

 

And we know from evolving nuclear weapons doctrine during the Cold War that the threat of decapitation clarifies the thinking among the cadres that govern totalitarian states. Conveying in no uncertain terms to the Soviet leadership that it would not survive a nuclear confrontation with the United States was key, for example, to disabusing the Kremlin of the emerging notion that the Soviets could “fight and win a nuclear war,” as Richard Pipes explained in an influential 1977 essay.

 

America’s tactical prowess during the combat phase of the Iran war was no less impressive.

 

At the war’s outset, Iran had a missile arsenal in the thousands, and it retains much of its pre-war ballistic missile capabilities. But missile launches declined by 92 percent by the end of the war because Iran could not deploy them. Even in a “use it or lose it” scenario, logistical bottlenecks limited Iran’s capacity to rain ruin down on U.S. assets or the Gulf’s civilian infrastructure — bottlenecks to which no military is immune.

 

The U.S. Navy’s performance during this engagement was equally impressive. America’s enemies have watched the U.S. wage several land wars over the course of this century, but they have not had the opportunity to assess how America conducts combat at sea. The rapid dismantling of the Iranian navy, in which the U.S. disabled or destroyed over 60 vessels, including each of Iran’s most modern Soleimani-class warships, is certainly of keen interest to Beijing.

 

So, too, was the alacrity with which the U.S. established air superiority over Iran. Just as was the case in Venezuela, U.S. Air Force and Navy jets rapidly disabled Russian and Chinese anti-air and stealth radar assets. From there, American airpower crushed the Iranian air force and crippled its air bases and runways. That allowed U.S. forces to transition rapidly away from “exquisite, stand-off munitions” (e.g., cruise missiles) toward cheaper, more abundant precision-guided gravity bombs.

 

Iran secured its own battlefield victories, of course. The enemy always gets a vote. But its successes were tempered by American martial acumen.

 

Yes, Iran managed to shoot down one F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jet, stranding its two pilots deep inside enemy territory. The rescue operation that followed was nothing short of astounding. It was a massive operation involving almost every branch of the armed forces as well as U.S. intelligence services, and it culminated in the establishment of a forward operating base on the ground inside Iran utilizing a clandestine airstrip developed by U.S. Special Operations forces.

 

Iran downed several U.S. aircraft over the course of this conflict, but it was deprived of American captives each time; the U.S. even used unmanned vehicles in one rescue operation, signaling a shifting U.S. doctrine on the use of unmanned platforms for contingencies like that.

 

All of this must be taken into account by any great power that would directly challenge the U.S. military. That’s what makes Trump’s MOU so maddening. The weakness it projects will tempt America’s enemies, and the precedents it sets are likely to outlast the memory of America’s victories on the battlefield.

 

Donald Trump has proven, once again, that America is a fair-weather friend with no stomach for a prolonged fight. Between this capitulation and Joe Biden’s bloody withdrawal from Afghanistan, U.S. inconstancy has become a reliable, bipartisan tendency.

 

Iran has demonstrated that even the modest application of force to a contested waterway is sufficient to close it to maritime traffic indefinitely. Moreover, the economic disruptions that closure produces do all the necessary negotiating on the aggressor’s behalf. China is almost certain to test this proposition in the Taiwan Strait with more sophistication and more firepower.

 

It is clear that our democracy — or any democracy, for that matter — is so sensitive to economic conditions that its leaders can be expected to turn against its embattled allies, as Donald Trump and his administration are turning on Israel. That’s bad news for the nations, like Taiwan or the Baltic states, in the shadow of expansionist powers. The threat to their independence is now so acute that some elements within their governments must be wondering whether their best course would be to make accommodations with their aggressive neighbors at America’s expense.

 

Of course, the munitions shortages America experienced during the war — particularly the newest class of ballistic missile interceptors — have been a wake-up call for policymakers, and not just those in Washington. America will adapt, innovate, and rearm, but a window of American vulnerability is now open. It won’t stay open for long. That factor, in combination with this president’s reluctance to sustain a fight to a durable conclusion, will alter thinking in adversarial capitals.

 

These competing influences — America’s tactical prowess versus its strategic ineptitude — are likely to inspire heated debates within the Chinese and Russian defense establishments. One of the two will prove more persuasive. The Iran war’s ambiguous end is likely to encourage miscalculations. And big wars can result from miscalculations.

The Giorgian Rebellion

By Nick Catoggio

Friday, June 19, 2026

 

Add this to the many surprises of this era: One of the biggest stories in politics is a diplomatic spat between America and … Italy?

 

Nothing against my ancestral homeland, but Italy isn’t a top-tier partner. Plus, the curve for grading fascinating diplomatic developments is steep under the current kakistocracy. Multiple longtime allies have had to hastily prepare for war with the United States over the past 16 months, remember. Rome bickering with the White House should barely rate by comparison.

 

Especially since, until this morning, it seemed like relations between the U.S. and Italy were on the mend. The president had a falling out earlier this year with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni over her opposition to war with Iran and his criticism of Pope Leo XIV, but the two chatted at this week’s G7 summit and appeared to have smoothed things over.

 

Then he said this to an Italian news outlet (per the outlet’s translation of his remarks): “She’s probably happy I talked to her. I didn’t have to talk to her. …She begged me to take a picture with her. She wanted a picture with me so badly. I wouldnt have taken it, but I felt sorry for her.

 

That does sound like him. Casually demeaning someone because he bears them a grudge is as instinctive to Donald Trump as applying bronzer or bloviating about “strength.” There’s no exception for fellow heads of state, either—particularly heads of state from Europe, whom he’s always viewed as subjects more than friends. They’re used to it.

 

And so there was nothing very newsworthy about what he said. What was newsworthy was Italy’s response.

 

The Italian foreign minister immediately canceled a trip he was planning to the United States, citing Trump’s “serious and offensive words” about Meloni. An undersecretary to the prime minister wondered whether it was “out of intent or ineptitude that the president had once again sabotaged relations with Europe. With his inappropriate outbursts, he has managed no easy feat, to make the United States unpopular across the entire European continent, he observed.

 

Then Meloni spoke up—on video, staring directly into the camera. “Donald Trump’s statements are completely made up,” she claimed, according to Reuters’ translation of her comments. “I am frankly astonished. I don’t ‌know why the president of the United States behaves like this towards his allies. It is not the first time, moreover.

 

“I can only say it is disappointing that he does not show the same determination with the enemies of the West and of the United States, whose leaders he instead treats with far greater indulgence,” she continued. “There is one thing he should remember: Neither I nor Italy ever beg.”

 

The clip caused a sensation on social media and then in global political media, as Meloni surely knew it would. But why?

 

Indignity.

 

After 10 years of degrading bootlicking obeisance by the president’s many courtiers, it was startling to see someone who needs a relationship with Trump assert her dignity against his insults.

 

Democrats are able to do that because they don’t depend on his favor. Independent-minded conservatives like Liz Cheney and Mitt Romney were able to do it because they knew they were breaking with him durably by holding him accountable for his crimes. But those who need to stay on his good side—like, say, every Republican official in the country—are doomed to follow the Ted Cruz career arc between 2016 and 2021, broadly speaking.

 


That is, if Trump insults your wife, you find a way to let it slide and salute when he asks you to help him stage a coup.

 

It’s not just right-wing politicians, though. A new book reveals that the president mocked Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg for sucking up to him after he was reelected in 2024. “Think of where these guys were in 2016,” he reportedly told Elon Musk. “They hated me. They were doing everything they could to knock me down. And look at them now.”

 

Look at them now. A simple way to understand the Trump era is as a grand renunciation of dignity by most of the American leadership class. Nearly everyone who had business with the president proved willing to be bought or bullied into accommodation. Nearly everyone turned out to value their grubby lust for power, status, or wealth over their own self-respect, not to mention the constitutional order.

 

Foreign leaders were forced to reconcile themselves to that, making them unwilling accomplices to the grand renunciation. If you’re a European head of state, desperate to hold NATO together and keep the White House no worse than neutral in Russia’s war on Ukraine, the cowardice of the American leadership class left you with few allies within the U.S. who’d be willing to support you in resisting Trump.

 

And so the prudent, if pathetic, thing to do when an imperious postliberal goblin insulted you was to bite your tongue. Not Meloni, though. She’s had enough.

 

Whether her gender played a role in today’s incident is hard to say. Being a creep toward the opposite sex isn’t out of character for the president, you may have heard, but it’s also true that he doesn’t exempt men from his attempts to belittle those who have crossed him. Ask his secretary of state.

 

Or ask Benjamin Netanyahu, whose obedience Trump has repeatedly boasted about in humiliating terms when discussing the war. The prime minister “will do whatever I want him to do,” the president declared last month. Netanyahu “won’t have any choice” but to accept a U.S. peace deal with Iran, Trump said more recently, because “I call all the shots. He doesn’t call the shots.” You don’t need to be a woman for him to demean you gratuitously.

 

Although I’m sure it helps.

 

I can certainly believe that stereotypes around gender drove Meloni to respond more aggressively than a male counterpart would have. Because women leaders are forever under suspicion of not being “tough” enough, letting a slight go unanswered risks doing them greater political damage. A direct-to-camera rebuke, functionally addressing Trump directly, is about as forceful a display of toughness as was possible under the circumstances.

 

But I can also believe that women, for whatever reason, are more likely to feel a dignified revulsion at Trump’s domineering boorishness than men are. Voting demographics in the U.S. point that way. So does the fact that prominent Republican women were responsible for most of the trouble he faced on the right after January 6. Even within the MAGA-fied clown car we know as the House Republican conference, it was populist women who led the way in defying him on matters like the Epstein files.

 

The central absurdity of the modern right is that it’s populated by self-styled tough guys who lionize masculinity yet who spend most of their time submissively licking the feet of a fat orange clown. The fairer sex simply lacks the same compulsion to demonstrate “manliness,” perhaps.

 

If you find all of that unpersuasive, though, there’s another possible reason for Meloni’s boldness. To borrow a phrase from the president, the United States increasingly lacks the cards in world affairs.

 

Fewer cards.

 

It can’t be a coincidence that she chose to confront him days after the White House signed a peace deal with Iran that everyone without a Fox News contract regards as a national humiliation.

 

And it’s probably not an accident that Meloni is less worried about causing a permanent rupture between Europe and the United States at a moment when Ukraine has gained the initiative against Russia.

 

America wouldn’t subdue the Iranians with military force, couldn’t subdue the Ukrainians by ending military aid, and plainly can’t be trusted to faithfully honor its foreign commitments under this administration. We don’t have the cards, or at least not as many as we used to.

 

So what do U.S. allies realistically stand to lose at this point by being a bit more assertive about their dignity?

 

Will the president punish them by dragging them into a new trade war? That’s unlikely, at least in the near term. Even if his tariff authority hadn’t been weakened by the Supreme Court, he can’t afford another drag on the economy before the midterms. He all but admitted on Wednesday that he surrendered to the Iranians in the name of bringing down gas prices and averting a global recession. He’s not going to turn around now and slap a new tax on American voters by escalating with the EU over trade.

 

Might Trump punish Meloni and Europe for their insolence by siding with Russia against Ukraine? Also unlikely. As much as he’d like to see Vladimir Putin prove to Americans that authoritarianism at home means dominance abroad, the tide of war is running in the opposite direction. There’s nothing the president hates more than associating himself with losers, and it ain’t the Ukrainians who look like losers lately.

 

Ukraine’s success after losing American aid has surely convinced Europeans that the continent is more capable of defending itself without U.S. help than it assumed—especially after watching Iranian drones confound the White House in the Strait of Hormuz. For all its firepower, the U.S. military suddenly seems dangerously behind the curve in modern warfare. Meloni must know it.

 

Then there’s NATO.

 

Trump could retaliate against “disloyal” allies like her by trying to withdraw from the alliance or declaring that he won’t honor Article 5 if Europe is attacked. But let’s be real: Everyone assumes he’s going to do that anyway. The lesson of the Iran conflict is that the president will fight a war if and only if he’s convinced that victory can be achieved quickly and easily, with next to no American casualties. Once he concludes that it can’t, he wants out at practically any cost.

 

That means he’s not going to risk war with Russia—or China, for that matter, in case things get froggy in Taiwan. Whether Giorgia Meloni is disrespectful to him doesn’t matter a bit to that, so why shouldn’t she answer his own disrespect accordingly?

 

Europeans need only look at Israel’s predicament to grasp the peril of relying too heavily on Trump’s America.

 

The Jewish state began the conflict with Iran believing that the president shared its commitment to regime change. It discovered that that commitment depended entirely on the Iranians not inflicting meaningful political costs on him, something they did when they closed the strait. Israelis now find themselves as a captive party to a deal that will send many billions of dollars to their archenemy, will do nothing to constrain Iran’s missile capabilities and terror proxies, and will incentivize Trump and J.D. Vance to resent Israel’s attempts to defend itself from provocations.

 

The Jewish state has learned the same hard lesson that officials in the president’s party have learned and re-learned since 2016. When your survival depends on Trump, he owns you. And when your interests conflict with his, his take priority.

 

Maybe Meloni reflected on that and concluded that Europe is better off having a Ukraine-style relationship with Trumpist America than an Israel-style one. Allies, sure—but no longer so dependent on the U.S. that displeasing the president might create an existential threat to one’s national security. An arm’s-length ally doesn’t pick needless fights with the White House, but neither does Meloni feel obliged to bite her tongue when the White House picks a needless fight with her.

 

You can have your dignity or you can enjoy Trump’s favor, but it’s one or the other. As he turns 80, with his job approval less than half that number and his pretensions to “strength” in ashes after Iran, his favor just isn’t worth what it used to be. Woe to a bully who’s lost his ability to intimidate, who no longer has “the cards,” as there’s no one more likely to get popped in the nose. This morning Meloni popped him.

 

Giving the right a bad name.

 

I wonder if her politics are contributing to her annoyance at him.

 

She isn’t some pomo leftist of the sort Americans typically imagine European leaders to be. She’s a right-wing nationalist, like the president himself. She promotes Christian values and the traditional family model, and presumably she’d like to see that vision make inroads across the continent.

 

Trump is killing her chances. The more right-wing politics becomes associated with fat orange clownery, the less European voters will want any part of it.

 

Far-right European leaders have been running away from the president for months, in fact. Anger at the Iran war’s impact on energy costs left them little choice, but Trump’s behavior is also partly to blame for scaring the proverbial horses. “Not only erratic but also extremely unsteady and constantly shifting” is how Jordan Bardella, the head of France’s leading nationalist party and a potential candidate for president next year, described the president’s antics recently.

 

We need to “allow powers that are a bit bewildered by the United States—and who no longer understand the comings and goings of the American president, particularly on defense—to be able to find in the French defense industry a backup option,” Bardella added. To be clear, he said that before Trump turned on a dime from insisting that Iran’s missile arsenal must be destroyed to insisting that Iran must be allowed to have missiles.

 

The incident with Meloni is simply another bewildering episode involving the American president that can only hurt the United States and make the global right he unofficially leads look petty, tactless, impetuous, and stupid. Maybe Meloni’s irritation is less a product of her pride being wounded than her resentment at being saddled with a prominent ideological ally who’s discrediting their mutual cause. She’s doing what she can to re-dignify it.

 

I’m tempted to say that Republicans in Congress should meditate on that and draw a lesson, but we’re waaaaaaay past the point of salvaging the respectability of right-wing politics in the U.S. So enjoy the Giorgian rebellion abroad. It’s the closest to dignity from a conservative official that you and I will witness in 2026.

Giorgia Meloni Unleashes Epic Fury on Trump’s G-7 Antics

By Jeffrey Blehar

Friday, June 19, 2026

 

As everyone not living in Plato’s cave already knows, the Iran war is “over” according to Donald Trump — this statement may or may not be inoperative by the time this goes to press, who knows — and in humiliating fashion: with the U.S. offering a series of concessions to Iran (to end a war that it voluntarily started) which fail to even return the world to the status quo ante. Rather, they leave us with nothing accomplished except the permanent immiseration of the global economy and the catastrophic erosion of America’s position in the Middle East and Asia as global enforcer of a fraying world order.

 

Which makes the timing for this year’s annual G-7 meeting auspicious, to say the least. Trump sure seemed eager to get this swiftly unraveling farce of a deal done just in time for one of his favorite gatherings, where he gets to rub shoulders with the leaders of the free world as an equal and (in his mind) ringmaster. Trump champed so hard at the bit to get an Iran “deal” done to reassure his peers at the G-7, held this year in Évian, France, that he signed America’s official surrender in Versailles — apparently after having been told that another famously pointless war ended there.

 

But at least one world leader at this year’s to-do did not agree: Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. Meloni has long been known for her proudly nationalistic conservative politics — there was at least a year there when the media sought to convince the world she was a Putin pawn, despite her unflinching support for Ukraine — and in that position has been labeled one of Donald Trump’s strongest European supporters.

 

She wasn’t supporting him in Évian this week. There already exists a compilation of “body language” moments on YouTube, assembled by Italian media, exhibiting Meloni’s remarkable bearing toward Trump at this year’s G-7. This climaxed in a viral video of Meloni seemingly upbraiding Trump (we cannot know the words), complete with animated hand gestures.

 

Trump — acutely aware of his shame, whatever his public averments — knew full well that the world was watching, so he did the same thing he usually does. Referring to another tête-à-tête with her at the summit, he blundered crassly in his attempt to play it off and “bigfoot” her: “She begged me to take a picture with her. She wanted a picture with me so badly. I wouldn’t have taken it, but I felt sorry for her.”

 

That is obviously not what happened. Trump is playing strong for his MAGA audience — always a desperate spin — but the world isn’t fooled. Nobody except Donald Trump thinks that other world leaders are clamoring for a picture with him, but even he may know this deep down. His New York/showbiz instincts to always play alpha and “never let ’em see ya sweat” collided with the immovable, miserable reality of European reaction to his geopolitical mistakes.

 

Meloni was having none of it. She went to social media immediately after Trump’s comments went public. And now we have something more than a mild G-7 gaffe. We have a serious diplomatic fracture with one of our allies.

 

As all who have spent time among Italians and their Mediterranean neighbors know, when they speak, 70 percent of meaning is conveyed by their body language alone. The translation of Meloni’s response is below. As for the way she delivered it? Watch the video yourself. She lays the hammer down:

 

So, certain things deserve an immediate response.

 

Donald Trump’s statements are completely fabricated. I am frankly appalled. I don’t know why the President of the United States behaves this way towards his allies; after all, it’s not the first time it’s happened.

 

I can only say it’s a pity that he doesn’t show the same determination with the enemies of the West, with the enemies of the United States, with leaders towards whom he instead proves to be much more accommodating.

 

But he must remember one thing: Italy and I never beg.

 

First, brava. Though standing a good foot shorter than some of her counterparts at the G-7, like German Chancellor Merz and President Trump, she is possessed of a disarming affect. In an age when Italian prime ministers have been perpetual figures of comedy (remember the “bunga bunga” parties of the incomparable lout Silvio Berlusconi?), Meloni impresses as a serious figure of real ideological conviction. In this sense — she will not be openly disrespected — she is quintessentially Italian.

 

Second, the subtext is clear: Meloni, along with other leaders at the G-7, is furious at the recklessness of Trump’s actions, which undermine the European economy even as he dashes the very principles on which American postwar hegemony has been stewarded for the past 75 years upon the rocks of his own fickle vanities. Though they clearly mean little to Trump, who regards the inherited advantages and alliances of the United States as toys to arbitrarily dispose of as he so desires, those principles mean an enormous amount to those who have historically counted on America to keep its word — or at the very least not to act like an inconstant, spoiled child.

 

Final note: If you think Meloni seemed angry in this video, realize she quit smoking recently. So she’s probably even angrier than she looks.

Dreams of My Mamaw

By Jonah Goldberg

Friday, June 19, 2026

 

When I saw the phrase “Hillbilly Obama” getting picked up I was worried that someone had beaten me to the punch.

 

Before I explain that, let’s explain what people mean by Hillbilly Obama.

 

Ben Domenech coined the phrase. “At some point, this Republican Party needs to decide which kind of foreign policy it’s gonna have,” he said on Special Report with Bret Baier this week. “Is it going to be an ‘America First’ foreign policy, one that is bold, that uses American power in key moments decisively in order to affect what it wants to achieve? Or are we going to just backslide into being some kind of ‘Hillbilly Obama’ kind of GOP?”

 

Domenech used the phrase to do two things. First, to describe Donald Trump’s 180 on Iran. Second, to add to the chorus assigning blame or credit for the new 14 Points at Versailles.

 

I don’t really buy that Vice President J.D. Vance is the architect of this “peace.” And even if he deserves outsize credit for convincing Trump to reverse himself, that doesn’t absolve Trump. He’s the president. It was Trump’s decision. The blame-the-bad-boyar argument just doesn’t fly with me, as I discussed earlier this week.

 

But what is clear is that Vance wants the ball. Nick Catoggio called it Wednesday night, and Thursday morning we had confirmation from Vance’s own camp. “Without question, the biggest potential political liability Vance had was the unpopularity of the war in Iran,” someone from Vanceland told Politico’s Dasha Burns. “So it’s fascinating to watch his biggest enemies in the GOP unwittingly inoculate him from that liability by branding him as responsible for the peace deal.”

 

“He now gets to do a media tour defending the president — AKA the kingmaker of our party — from their idiotic criticism of the deal,” the Vance surrogate said. “While even his critics would acknowledge that the vice president is a smart guy, sometimes what really matters in politics is how stupid your enemies are.”

 

I don’t think this analysis is ridiculous, save for one problem: The criticisms of the deal aren’t “idiotic,” and Vance’s “enemies” aren’t stupid.

 

Indeed not every critic of the deal was an enemy of Vance, but the vice president's supporters decided to make it clear they think critics of the deal aren’t just wrong, but stupid and Vance’s foes.

 

Now, the criticisms might be wrong—I don’t think they are, depending which criticisms we’re talking about—and even if they’re right, they may not be proven right on a timetable that hurts Vance. For example, there’s no way Iran builds its own nuclear weapon in the next couple years, but that doesn’t mean this fiasco won’t make it more likely it gets a nuke on some future president’s watch, proving the critics right.

 

But the idea that all of the criticisms of this deal are “idiotic” is really quite stupid. Name a foreign policy expert who is not either on the White House payroll, or auditioning to be, who thinks this is brilliant and flawless. I’m sure there’s someone. But are Walter Russell Mead, Niall Ferguson, Ray Takeyh, Bret Stephens, Benny Morris, Trey Gowdy, Jack Keane, Elliott Abrams, nearly everyone at National Review, Commentary, The Dispatch, the American Enterprise Institute, the Hudson Institute, and the Foundation for Defense of Democracies idiots? Not everyone has the same criticisms. Some are nuanced, some strident. Some are of the “wait and see” variety. But as far as I can tell, none are idiotic.

 

But this is how Vance sees politics. Despite zigzagging all over the ideological map in his very short political career, he’s always sure that he’s right where he lands at the moment and that people who disagree with him are either buffoons or liars serving their own selfish interests (or Israel’s) at the expense of the common good and real—sorry, “heritage”—Americans.

 

The Hillbilly Obama line works to describe Vance’s approach because it is eerily similar to not just the substance of President Barack Obama’s defense of the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) but also the way he argued for it.

 

On the substance, the idea of the JCPOA was basically a mix of expediency and hope. The idea was to delay any possible nuclear weapon long enough that if Iran ever got one, it would be some other president’s problem. That was the expediency. The hope was that the delay might buy time for Iran to moderate and mature to the point where the regime would recognize the folly of having a bomb. Provide enough carrots and it will abandon its pursuit of a nuclear stick. We can trust Iran’s promise not to pursue a bomb until the promise is no longer necessary.

 

Here’s how Obama put it: “My hope is that building on this deal we can continue to have conversations with Iran that incentivize them to behave differently in the region, to be less aggressive, less hostile, more cooperative, to operate the way we expect nations in the international community to behave.” And: “Do I hope that by virtue of Iran having greater commercial interactions with the world and students’ exchanges taking place and perhaps a generation of Iranian leadership changing, do I hope that the character of the regime changes? Absolutely. But I’m not counting on it.”

 

This is the exact argument Vance is making. The $300 billion reconstruction fund will incentivize the Iranians to see the folly of having a bomb and being an exporter of terror. They will moderate into normal members of the community of nations, and ultimately, join the Abraham Accords.

 

And Vance is defending the Trump administration’s deal with the same Obamaesque rhetorical flourishes. Opponents of the deal only want war. They have no other alternative, and there is no other alternative. Critics are being led by the nose by Bibi Netanyahu or by, wink-wink, neocons. It’s strawmen and accusations of bad faith all the way down.

 

I can provide quotes aplenty, but I should get to my point.

 

Hillbilly Obama all the way down.

 

Obama and Vance are different people in all sorts of important ways. But the similarities are striking. Both men were abandoned by a parent or parents and had troubled childhoods. Both went to elite law schools. Both wrote very successful memoirs before they accomplished much of substance and parlayed their literary fame into political careers. Both harbor profound grievances about the country that made them rich, famous, and powerful.

 

If you think this is far-fetched, don’t take my word for it. J.D. Vance agrees. In 2017, Vance wrote a column for the New York Times explaining how when he was young, he saw a lot of himself in Bill Clinton because Clinton had a childhood similar to his own. He wrote:

 

I often wonder how many kids look at our current president the way I once looked at President Clinton. Barack Obama was elected during my second year of college, and save for his skin color, he had much in common with Bill Clinton: Despite an unstable life with a single mother, aided by two loving grandparents, he had made in his adulthood a family life that seemed to embody my sense of the American ideal.

 

A bit further on he adds:

 

Eventually, I achieved something roughly similar to the president’s early, personal accomplishments: a prestigious law degree, a strong professional career and a modicum of fame as a writer.

 

We should pause here for a moment to appreciate something remarkable about our country. Two out of the last five presidents, as well as the current vice president, had rocky, dysfunctional childhoods, and yet they rose to the top of our system.

 

Both Vance and Obama’s rise began by leveraging their literary tales of abandonment into being welcomed into the highest echelons of our politics. They both arrived at elite law schools as outsiders and left with the confidence of insiders and the skill to market themselves as professional outsiders. They carved out a beat as representatives of racially aggrieved demographics. Obviously, there are differences. In Hillbilly Elegy Vance criticizes his people for blaming their plight on others. Their problems “were not created by governments or corporations,” he wrote. “We created them.” He added: “Public policy can help, but there is no government that can fix these problems for us.” Obama did little of that in Dreams From My Father. He mostly leaned into and amplified the racial resentments of minorities.

 

To Obama’s credit, however, as president he moved closer to the hard truths and tough love approach. He gave a strong speech at the NAACP in 2009, telling black parents and children that whatever the unfairness of the system, they have “no excuse” to let that control their lives and actions. At Morehouse College in 2013, Obama said, “I have to say, growing up, I made quite a few [excuses] myself. Sometimes I wrote off my own failings as just another example of the world trying to keep a black man down. I had a tendency sometimes to make excuses for me not doing the right thing. But one of the things that all of you have learned over the last four years is there’s no longer any room for excuses.”

 

Vance has gone the other direction, leaning into resentment and grievance as corporations, elites, and Democrats keep his people down. “America’s ruling class wrote the checks. Communities like mine paid the price,” he proclaimed in his vice presidential nomination acceptance speech.

 

What is remarkable to me is how completely Vance has become a right-wing version of a left-wing identitarian ideologue. When Ross Douthat asked Vance about the un-Christian tone of this administration, Vance fell back on a classically left-wing critique of “tone policing.” “I also think that tonal arguments are ways of, frankly, policing working-class ways of communication and covering them in elite preferences.” As Erick Erickson noted, “This is sort of like how progressives defend various destructive behaviors in various minority communities – ‘it’s just their culture, and we have to respect it.’”

 

The way I read Vance’s argument, it was not just in defense of the crude, ugly, and bigoted rhetoric out of this administration, or the crude, ugly, and bigoted rhetoric used to defend this administration, but of the crude, ugly, and bigoted rhetoric when deployed by “his” people in general. This is particularly gross when you realize he was making this case in the context of a book about his embrace of Christianity, which has a lot to say about “guarding your tongue.”

 

It’s even harder to take when you grasp just how much Vance lies and distorts the views and motives of the people he disagrees with. When the Trump campaign demonized poor, black, legal, Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio—“they’re eating the dogs, they’re eating the cats”—Vance didn’t apologize for it, he boasted that we’re “creating a story.”

 

As Kevin Williamson wrote from Springfield at the time:

 

Vance has turned Solzhenitsyn’s maxim on its head: “Let the lie come into the world, but only through me, and only if I get something good out of it.” A man who is not suffering from whatever disease of the soul with which Vance is afflicted would have a hard time even imagining wanting to be vice president—of all petty things!—that bad. A different and better sort of man would understand that bearing false witness against 15,000 poor and vulnerable people in the pursuit of political power is the same as bearing false witness against anybody else.

 

This week, Vance has casually lied and distorted the views of his critics, in America and Israel, purely out of political ambition. Critics want the war to continue “until every bomb has been dropped or until every Iranian is dead.” He falsely claimed that members of the Israeli Cabinet attacked Trump personally, and threatened that doing so risks losing America as an ally. But there were no such personal attacks. He lied about what the memorandum of understanding said, insinuating that those who relied on accurate reports were spreading “Iranian propaganda.” When the reports were revealed to be accurate, he said, “Words don’t matter, ladies and gentlemen.” Trump has the highest IQ of any president, we haven’t privileged white South African refugees over all others, Trump didn’t say he loves inflation: On and on it went.

 

But it’s all fine, because whatever Vance says in service to his ambition is self-justifying, and anyone who disagrees is an idiot or acting in bad faith. That’s the lesson Vance has taken from his meteoric rise through the meritocracy. And why not? Who can dispute it’s worked for him so far.

The Fantastical Abstract World of the Democratic Socialists

By Noah Rothman

Friday, June 19, 2026

 

If you were looking for an excruciating experience, the New York Editorial Board — a Substack — has you covered.

 

The outlet recently posted a lengthy interview with Darializa Avila Chevalier, the Zohran Mamdani-endorsed candidate mounting a primary challenge against the Democratic Party’s Hispanic Caucus chair, Representative Adriano Espaillat. In it, Chevalier’s interlocutors tried valiantly to drag the self-described socialist candidate down from the clouds, albeit to no avail.

 

They chose an easy one: murder. How would Chevalier, a “prison abolitionist,” handle that?

 

“I think a lot of folks misunderstand what that vision of the world actually is,” Chevalier replied before launching into a cerebral diatribe in which she denounced both the murderer and the nebulous environmental milieu that creates murderers.

 

“Because what we have right now is a system in whenever harm happens, there’s more harm being perpetrated, not only on the folks who engaged in the harm, but also on the victims of the harm,” read one ponderous but still representative sentence in the blizzard of newspeak she unleashed.

 

Her interviewers tried again. “But what do you do to the murderer, though?” one asked. The question was met with yet another dissertation in which a lot was spoken, but nothing much was said. “But did we answer what happens to the murderer?” Chevalier’s increasingly agitated questioner asked. “Do you not incarcerate the murderer?” Somehow, this line of inquiry did not engender a “yes.”

 

Their aggravation now palpable, another interviewer asked if it was possible for Chevalier to be “a little less abstract.” But, of course, it was not. Her contention that it is her goal to “create systems where that’s not even the possibility” — by which she meant the act of murder, an evil so intrinsic to the human experience it is literally Biblical.

 

Chevalier could not “be a little less abstract” because she deals with the world as though it were an abstraction — really, one big metaphor that an intrepid constructivist could reshape with the right combination of words and concepts.

 

For example:

 

The image depicts a political discussion on a social media platform, comparing the displacement issues in the West Bank and Gaza to those in New York City, attributed to corporate land purchases.

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

 

Once again, we’re confronted with metaphors meant to describe the reality that the Democratic Socialist left inhabits — or, maybe, wish they inhabited.

 

The system of “apartheid” she’s describing that supposedly prevails in Israel isn’t really apartheid. Israeli Arabs do not have second-class status. They are doctors, lawyers, and Knesset members — taxpaying, enfranchised citizens of a state governed by the rule of law. That’s just a strong allusion that conjures up inciting images.

 

Indeed, Chevalier isn’t even really talking about Israel, Gaza, or the West Bank. She’s talking about America.

 

You see, the all but genocidal campaign of ethnic repression over which Israel presides is eerily similar to what’s happening in Brooklyn. People have been “priced out of their homes.” She neglected to mention that they’ve been “priced out” by the very transient, wealthy young people who have formed the backbone of the DSA coalition from Washington, D.C., to New York City — often over the objections of older, black residents who care about keeping crime down and the tax base stable.

 

The conditions in the West Bank and Brooklyn are “visually similar,” she says, because “corporate interests” are “coming in” and “claiming the land” and “kicking the people who live there out.” What in the world is she talking about? None of this makes any logical sense unless you regard it as an elaborate allegory.

 

There was no logical progression from the conditions she describes above, which could fairly be described as property management on an open market, to “violence.”

 

“The tear gas that was being dropped on Palestinians in Gaza in 2014 was the same tear gas that was being dropped on black protesters in Ferguson in 2014,” Chevalier declared. We are presumably supposed to see something profound in her recognition that tear gas has the same chemical composition everywhere on earth. That “summer was very formative for me,” she mused, “because it showed me that connection is not only one that is like, but it is the very same system.”

 

There you have it: It’s a metaphor. And Israel has very little to do with it. Israel is, as it was for the Marxist and Islamist radicals of the 20th century, a proxy battle in the ultimate fight against the United States and its attachment to the rapacious capitalist enterprise.

 

To ask Chevalier to abandon abstractions and descend to ground level with us mere mortals is to abandon her entire worldview. Politics is, to her, an abstraction — an extension of a poetic struggle against the American civic and social compacts. And it must forever be an abstraction. Because when you ask her to make concrete sense of it all for anyone who doesn’t subscribe to her outlook, she can’t do it.

The Rot of Rooting Against America

By Judson Berger

Friday, June 19, 2026

 

A telling moment occurred last week when Democratic Representative Adriano Espaillat and primary rival Darializa Avila Chevalier were asked on a New York news channel which country they were rooting for in the World Cup.

 

Mexico and Senegal, respectively.

 

What? Both politicians are Dominican American, so it’s not like they were honoring ancestral heritage. It evidently just didn’t occur to them to root for the country they live in and want to represent in Congress.

 

This, sadly, is an attitude that extends far beyond sports. Every year around this time, pollsters dutifully report new data illustrating how patriotism and affection for America is declining. So it is in 2026, as the nation turns 250. National pride among Democrats is plummeting. Especially on the left, but also on the right, the public arena is becoming populated with figures who root against America or who hold up [insert trending nation of the moment] as more desirable. Who want to ditch the precepts that underpin our system and rebuild. Who declare the country fundamentally — perhaps irredeemably — flawed, racist, unjust, unequal, and so on.

 

This is a failure to distinguish between problems common to most countries and problems so baked into a nation’s DNA as to be an essential part of it. At National Review, we unequivocally reject the notion that America’s flaws are inherent. We’re here, year-round, defending and advancing the American experiment, even when we don’t get everything we want — because genuine patriotism is not provisional. It’s certainly not inflexibly pessimistic. Will you help us continue this work as part of our “Defending America” webathon?

 

We’re not going to pretend all is hunky-dory. The left is drifting dangerously toward an anti-prosperity, antisemitic, resentment-fueled mindset that history has shown to be toxic to civilizations in every instance. The Trump administration is becoming consumed by the president’s vanity projects and revenge missions. But neither will we indulge the fiction that never before or elsewhere has humanity been so oppressed as it is in the United States of 2026, where the ease of starting a business, the quality of higher education, the economic opportunities, the national parks, the diversity of cultures, and the sheer overflowing creative energy of our people, among other things, are the envy of the world.

 

Gratitude is an abiding theme of this publication. It’s something that guides us as we make the affirmative case for the American project and shoot down the misguided ideas of those who would chip away at the features that define it. It’s at the heart of NR magazine’s monthly feature, “Our Spacious Skies,” for which we travel the country to share what we love about it.

 

Earlier this week, Noah Rothman cautioned Republicans against seeing the left’s disaffection as something merely to be exploited. Rather, “Republicans should do their utmost to make celebrating America an inviting prospect.”

Boulder’s Climate Lawsuit Is a Tax on Every American

By Marc Wheat & Mitchell G. Bahnsen

Saturday, June 20, 2026

 

This fall, the Supreme Court will hear a case that could do more damage to American household budgets — and our economy as a whole — than almost any piece of legislation ever passed by Congress. It doesn’t involve a new spending bill or a tax hike but rather a lawsuit filed by Boulder County, Colo. And if Boulder wins, every American will pay the price.

 

Suncor Energy v. Boulder County is the leading case in a wave of more than 60 climate lawsuits filed by progressive localities against oil and gas companies since 2017. Boulder (the county and the city together) alleges that since ExxonMobil and Suncor Energy produce and sell fossil fuels, they contribute to global warming, the effects of which, it claims, have harmed Boulder’s property and residents. As compensation for these harms, Boulder seeks billions of dollars. In a parallel case, a single Oregon county is demanding more than $50 billion. New York’s Climate Change Superfund Act, signed into law in December 2024, seems to impose $75 billion in assessments on major fossil fuel producers over the next quarter century.

 

The architects of this litigation campaign aren’t shy about what they’re doing. David Bookbinder, a former counsel of record in the Boulder case, described the strategy last year as “a rather convoluted way to achieve the goals of a carbon tax.” This is extremely telling, as proponents of a carbon tax have tried and failed repeatedly to move legislation through Congress. Now they’re trying to achieve through lawsuits what they couldn’t accomplish through legislatures.

 

The problem is that the costs of that end run won’t stay in Boulder but will land on everyone. The oil and natural gas industry contributes more than $2.1 trillion to U.S. GDP annually and supports more than 10 million jobs across the full supply chain, from wellhead through pipeline, refinery, and to the gas station. Oil and gas extraction workers earn a mean annual wage of $114,750, roughly double the national median. When litigation forces companies to set aside massive reserves and contend with reduced credit, they curtail investment in exploration and production, tightening domestic supply and leading to higher prices.

 

This will be another pressure point on affordability for middle America and a serious hardship on the poorest households. Low-income families already spend nearly 20 percent of their income on home energy and transportation fuel — a share more than three times what the average American household pays. A litigation-driven increase in energy prices functions as a regressive tax, severely harming the poor and middle classes as concerns about affordability continue to worsen.

 

Even starker are the national security implications. Only a few years ago, Europe was woefully dependent on Russian natural gas. After the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the EU leaned more heavily on American liquified natural gas exports to keep the lights on, a shift made possible by U.S. energy companies like Houston-based Cheniere Energy. The amount of liability that progressive Boulder proposes would force those companies to price massive litigation costs into every cargo barrel, making American exports less competitive overnight and handing a structural advantage to Russia, Qatar, and Iran, all of which would happily undercut us.

 

The Colorado Supreme Court allowed Boulder’s suit to proceed on the erroneous theory that, because the Clean Air Act doesn’t expressly preempt state tort claims, Boulder is free to use state nuisance law as a regulatory tool. But that reasoning turns on its head more than a century of federalism precedents. The Supreme Court established in Georgia v. Tennessee Copper (1907) that interstate air pollution is a federal question governed by federal law, not state tort law.

 

American Electric Power Co. v. Connecticut (2011) reaffirmed the point that Congress, in passing the Clean Air Act, transferred authority over interstate air emissions from the federal courts to the Environmental Protection Agency, not to the states. State tort law has never played a substantive role in governing interstate air pollution. It cannot assume that role now simply because the effects of the pollution are called “climate change.”

 

The core question before the Supreme Court is not about the legitimacy of climate science, which is a vigorously contested issue. It’s about who decides what federal policy looks like. Does the federal government, accountable to all 50 states and all 330 million Americans, set U.S. energy policy? Or do a few government officials representing a single, very progressive county in Colorado get to impose their preferred policy on the whole nation and damage our economy by imposing huge costs on families and businesses?

 

The Constitution has a clear answer.

 

The Framers built a system in which genuinely national problems — the kind that cross state lines and affect every citizen — are handled by the federal government. They did so precisely because they’d seen what happened under the Articles of Confederation, when states pursued their own economic interests at one another’s expense. James Madison called it one of the chief “Vices of the Political System.” States trespassed on each other’s rights and imposed costs on their neighbors, triggering retaliation and economic chaos. Boulder’s lawsuit is exactly such a dynamic in 21st-century dress, and the Court should shut it down.