By Mike Nelson
Friday, January 16, 2026
President Donald Trump is not always accurate
in his characterization of historical events, but he is absolutely correct in
his criticism of President Barack Obama’s weakness when he set a “red line” on
Syrian use of chemical weapons only to do nothing when it was crossed in 2013,
and of the implications of that decision in terms of adversary decision making
and understanding of America’s will to stand up to them. It is odd, then, that
he seems to be making a similar mistake.
In the summer of 2003, I was a newly promoted captain in
the 82nd Airborne trying to convince an Iraqi Shiite university
professor to take more of a leadership role in the emerging district council we
were establishing in Rashid, the southern portion of Baghdad. While U.S. forces
had taken control of the Iraqi capital to celebrations and the toppling of
statues, there was still an air of uncertainty about the future. Saddam Hussein
had not been captured yet, and there was a fear he would return to power if
America lost interest in transforming Iraq. Those we were asking to stand up
and stick their necks out had questions—namely, could they count on Americans
to help them rebuild Iraqi governance?
As we sat in the sweltering heat, the professor recounted
to me that his father and older brother had risen up against Saddam in 1991
when asked to by President George H.W. Bush—part of a larger uprising by Shias
and Kurds in the aftermath of the Gulf War—only to have those populations
suffer massive casualties in a brutal crackdown by the Ba’athist government,
while the U.S. largely sat idly by and observed. Eventually, these led to
Operations Provide Comfort, Northern Watch, and Southern Watch to enforce no-fly
zones and provide humanitarian aid—but the damage was done. Tens of thousands
of civilians lay dead. This professor went on to say we had done the same thing
to the Czechs in 1968 and the Hungarians in 1956.
While the criticism of the U.S. during the latter two
Cold War era uprisings is not entirely fair—there was very little the U.S.
could have done to prevent the communist crackdowns in either case without
escalating to a third world war—they demonstrate an internationally held
perception. Maybe we could not have helped Central Europeans throw off
communism earlier, but we have failed to support pro-freedom movements at times
when we should have. And in some cases, we failed to support those whose
movements we encouraged to rise up.
America, under Obama’s timid leadership and based on the
counsel of a Tehran-accommodating Ben Rhodes, sat idly by during the 2009
Green Movement as the Iranian people protested the questionable election of
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad over the perceived reformer Mir Hossein Mousavi. This cool
disinterest as protesters were shot remains a stain on Obama’s legacy.
But the Trump administration seems poised to repeat, if
not magnify, two of Obama’s failures—first, not supporting Iran’s popular
movement and, second, setting a “red line” with neither the plan nor the will
to enforce it.
As protests grew and intensified across the country last
week, Trump proclaimed that if the Iranian regime took lethal action against
its citizens, America would respond to protect the protesters—setting his own
red line akin to Obama’s.
The regime responded by killing thousands of civilians
and sentencing others to death after hasty kangaroo-court proceedings.
Activists and human rights groups have estimated the death toll to be upward
of 12,000, with even the regime admitting to mowing down at least 2,000 of
its citizens. This, at a minimum, demonstrated the ayatollah’s government was
not taking the president’s admonition seriously and, by any measure, had not
stepped over the red line but leapt over it. Trump responded by signaling
support for the protesters, suggesting they should keep rising up and assuring
them “help is on its way.” As recently as Wednesday, the official Senate
Republican X account posted a graphic
with Trump’s picture and his words encouraging Iranians to continue to resist,
and reiterating his promise of help.
Nobody should be under the mistaken impression that there
is an easy solution to the situation in Iran, as though a single night of
strikes (à la the Midnight Hammer operation in June that struck Iran’s nuclear
facilities) will remove the regime, result in a quick transition, and sweep in
a popular, democratic, pluralistic government aligned with the liberal West.
That’s a pipe dream. But there are myriad actions available to the president.
Striking purely military targets away from population centers creates multiple
dilemmas for Iran’s leaders, diverting their attention and resources away from
the protesters so they can defend their airspace. Striking the barracks and
staging areas of the IRGC and Basij units cracking down on the protesters
provides citizens some relief from the government violence and perhaps changes
the calculus of the commanders of these units before they carry out further
regime directives.
Any option demonstrates resolve and commitment to the
president’s clear and unequivocal statements in support of the protests. It is
possible that any action would restrain further retribution toward the Iranian
people during the current upheaval. And it is possible that punishing Iran for
crossing the red line would serve as a deterrent if there are future protests,
as with Trump’s 2018 strikes against the Assad regime after it used chemical
weapons against its own people. And it is possible that these strikes bolster
the people’s spirit, weaken the regime, and start a chain of events that lead
to the end of an already weakened and vulnerable Iranian government. That
outcome would no doubt be complex and involve more American attention to assist
in the transition, but if Trump were not prepared to deal with that, he should
not have encouraged the popular uprising.
It would be a mistake, and an enduring source of
shame—both for the country and Trump’s legacy—if the president goes back on his
promises of support based on the word of an evil regime, as he now seems to be taking
Iranian assurances about canceling or postponing planned executions as an
indication that everything can go back to normal. Obama used the dubious fig
leaf of Russian promises to take possession of and destroy Syrian chemical
weapons as an excuse for inaction; it would be an equally amateur and weak
mistake for President Trump to do the same.
It will be a grim task to tally the butcher’s bill,
determining exactly how many Iranian protesters, yearning for freedom and
putting their faith in the words of the leader of the free world, were killed
after Trump posted his statements of support and encouragement. But signaling
that he may take the word of the regime as a way to let the mullahs move past
the bloodletting of the past two weeks is shameful. Without fulfilling his
promise of help on the way, this will remain a stain on Trump’s otherwise good
record on Iran. It’s a decision far more in line with the thinking of Ben
Rhodes than a demonstration of the kind of leadership Trump exercised when he
ordered the strike on Qassem Suleimani or approved Operation Midnight Hammer.
Just as Obama had Rhodes whispering in his ear, Trump may have appeasers
and apologists for the worst regimes whispering in his, but the decision
and the responsibility belong to the president. He would do well to reject this
counsel where Obama did not.
It may be that too much time, wasted through deliberation
and inaction, has already passed, that Iran has successfully killed a large
enough number of its people to put down the protests. The killing may indeed
have stopped—the same way, as my old medic used to joke darkly, “All bleeding
stops eventually.”
If this is true, we may have squandered the best
opportunity to help the Iranian people, oppressed by an evil regime for too
long, and we may have added another black mark on the ledger of American
reliability when supporting the popular movements we asked to cast off their
oppressors.
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