By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Let’s state the obvious: We’re at war with Iran.
My evidence? Turn on your TV. U.S. forces, working with
Israel, killed the supreme leader of Iran and many of his top aides. We sank
Iran’s navy and destroyed most of its air force. We bombed thousands of
military sites across the region. President Donald Trump, the commander in
chief, has demanded “unconditional surrender” from Iran. He routinely refers to this as a “war.” Pete Hegseth, who calls himself the secretary of war,
also describes this as a war daily, such as last week when he said, “We set the terms of
this war.”
The truth that we are at war is so simple that only
politicians and lawyers could make it seem complicated.
Indeed, a slew of
Republican legislators insist we’re not actually at war. House Speaker Mike
Johnson: “We’re not at war right now. We’re four days into a very specific,
clear mission and operation.” Florida Rep. Brian Mast: “Nobody should classify
this as war. It is combat operations.” South Carolina Sen. Lindsay Graham: “I
don’t know if this is technically a war.” Oklahoma Sen. Markwayne Mullin: “This
isn’t a war. We haven’t declared war.” Florida Rep. Anna Paulina Luna:
“Strategic strikes are not war.”
Pearl Harbor was a strategic strike, too.
Then there’s the claim that we’re not at war with Iran but Iran is at war
with us. This is half true, insofar as Iran has been committing acts of war
against the U.S. since it took our embassy staff hostage in 1979. But waging a
war in response doesn’t make it any less of a war.
One is tempted to invoke George Orwell’s 1984, in
which the existence or non-existence of war hinges on what the Ministry of
Truth (or Truth Social) puts out on a given day. But nothing so literary is at
play. This is (mostly) legalism run amok.
The main reason congressional Republicans reject the
W-word is simple. If it’s merely a “combat operation” or “strategic strike” in
response to an “imminent threat,” then the president has the authority to do it
without congressional approval. If it’s a war, then it’s arguably illegal and
unconstitutional within the framework of the War Powers Act or the Constitution
itself. That's because, under the Constitution, declaring war is the sole
responsibility of Congress. And the last thing this Congress wants to do is
take responsibility for anything.
This at least partly explains why Trump insists he had a
“feeling” Iran was about to attack us. He’s even suggested that Iran was just weeks away from having a nuclear weapon and that he
prevented an imminent “nuclear war.”
The War Powers Act—nominally rejected by every president
since it was passed in 1973—was intended to restrict the president’s ability to
use force without Congress’s consent. It backfired. It says the president can
respond militarily to threats as he deems necessary, but then must go to
Congress within 60 days for approval to continue hostilities. The result:
Presidents have a free hand to wage war for roughly two months, unless Congress
stops them.
But congressional Republicans don’t want to stop him.
That’s tactically defensible, if you believe this war was necessary. But the
tactic forces Congress to say, in effect, “Don’t believe you’re lying eyes.
This isn’t a war.”
For those who only vaguely remember what they learned in
high school about the War Powers Act—or for that matter, the Constitution—this
riot of legalism only fuels confusion.
But there’s another factor driving the evasion. Trump
made the idea of staying out of “forever wars” a central tenet of America
First. There’s no textbook definition of “forever war” — always a ludicrous
term—so you can understand why some people believed it was code for “Middle
East war” or just plain war of any kind. The irony is that Trump could make a
plausible case that this war is allowable under the Authorization to Use Military Force that
George W. Bush received in 2001. But symbolically, that would mean Trump is
continuing Bush’s “forever war.”
Regardless, Republicans aren’t just under a legal clock
to get this thing over with, but a political one too. Polling shows that Americans, including many Republicans, have no
thirst for a long conflict, which makes sense given that they were not asked to
prepare for this war at all. Hence, the insistence that this war will be short
and tidy.
The problem is that Iran knows this. Which is why they
don’t have to win, they just have to ride out the bombings until the public or
Trump loses patience with this very real war.
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