By Nick Catoggio
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Conventional wisdom has it that J.D. Vance has been set
up to be the fall guy for our new devil’s bargain with Iran. I don’t
buy it.
Although there’s evidence to support it, I admit.
The vice president, not his boss or the secretary of
state, will be in Switzerland on Friday for meetings that will take the place
of the signing ceremony, after the deal was formally signed ahead of schedule
on Wednesday. He’ll be forced to smile awkwardly for the cameras and glad-hand
conniving Khomeinists whom the White House hoped to depose as recently as four
months ago. That photo op is a 2028 attack ad waiting to happen.
It’s also the vice president, not Donald Trump or Marco
Rubio, who’s spent the week doing the rounds of national media to sell the deal
to skeptical Americans. He’s selling a book too, I realize, which gives him a modest
financial incentive to seek out airtime. But he surely understands that his
visibility at this moment is making him the public face of a geopolitical
s—t sandwich.
And as I conceded on
Monday, it’s the vice president who’ll be scapegoated for the deal by
Republican hawks in politics and media. Blaming Donald Trump for a policy
failure is a poor career move for anyone whose professional success depends on
the favor of a right-wing constituency. So politicians
and pundits will tailor their criticism accordingly to hold
Vance, not the alleged greatest
dealmaker on the planet, responsible for this one.
Fox News contributor Ben Domenech derisively described the worldview behind the
Iran deal as “Hillbilly Obama,” alluding to another work in the veep’s literary oeuvre. Vance will wear
that all the way to the next election cycle. Going forward, hawks will treat
his “America First” isolationism as nothing more than a MAGA-friendly veneer
for feckless Democratic-style accommodationism toward enemy regimes. Among
traditional conservatives, suspicions that he’s a weakling will be set in
stone.
The events of the past 72 hours have all the trappings of
making him a fall guy for the deal. Yet I still don’t buy it.
I don’t buy it because it seems probable to me that Vance
wanted to become the White House’s chief public advocate for the deal.
This wasn’t a case of him being tapped by Trump to do a thankless job and
accepting dutifully but reluctantly, to prove he’s a good soldier. This was him
seeking out an assignment and getting it, I suspect.
He’s gambling on the direction of the right post-Iran.
“At some point, this Republican Party needs to decide which kind of foreign
policy it’s gonna have,” Domenech told Fox. “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?”
I think J.D. Vance would agree with all of that. The
Republican Party does need to decide, and it will decide in 2028.
It will decide to be a “Hillbilly Obama” GOP, he’s
wagering.
An unpopular war.
The Iran war put the vice president in a
terrible position. Isolationists like Tucker Carlson clamored to have him
on the ticket in 2024, believing he’d be a counterweight inside the White House
to the war-hungry “blob” of interventionists that dominates Washington.
They got their wish—whereupon Trump turned around and
attacked Iran not once but twice in his first 14 months in office. Vance had
failed miserably at his core task of preventing another Middle East
misadventure. The right’s Lindbergh faction, whom he’s counting on to turn out
for him two years from now, was sorely disappointed.
The VP needed to atone to them, and now he has. He
couldn’t stop the war from starting but he could, and did, spearhead the effort
to end it before it escalated. Making himself a spokesman for the deal this
week in national media is his way of showing the Tuckerites that he’s still one
of them, still committed to curtailing foreign entanglements even if his boss
isn’t.
That will help him in the next primary, particularly when
you remember that he faces more danger from the GOP’s isolationist flank than
from its hawkish majority. Vance has always been more careful not to offend
the right’s postliberals than he has been not to offend Reaganites, and not just because he’s a postliberal
himself. I think he assesses, correctly, that a postliberal challenger could do
him more damage in 2028 than any traditional Republican could.
All the charisma and grassroots energy is on that side of
the party. Ted Cruz isn’t going to successfully primary J.D. Vance by calling
him an Obama-esque weakling for brokering a deal blessed by Donald Trump, but a
passionate Lindberghian demagogue like Tucker Carlson could cause trouble by
accusing the vice president—and his boss—of having sold out “America First” by
waging a foolish war with Iran. By making himself the face of a peace deal,
Vance is hedging against that.
He’s also aligning himself with the vast majority of
general election voters. That’s normally a smart thing for a politician to do,
no?
Support for the war in Nate Silver’s polling tracker
stands at 37.9 percent as I write this. Never once since it began
has it exceeded 40.5 percent in popularity. It doesn’t necessarily follow that
because most Americans oppose the war they’ll be in favor of the terms Trump
and Vance have negotiated for peace, but it’s noteworthy that Democrats like
Sen. Chris Murphy who hate the deal are backing it nonetheless in the name of ending the conflict.
My guess is that public opinion will run that way too: The
deal is bad, but the war—and the persistently high gas prices it’s caused—are
worse. If the former ends up curing the latter, Vance will take credit for
having restored something akin to the prewar status quo.
Bear in mind too that, by 2028, all factions of American
voters are likely to have landed on the position that the conflict with Iran
was a failure. Even the right will end up in broad agreement on the point, as I
noted yesterday,
with Republican hawks and doves split only with respect to whose fault that
mistake is. The war failed because its aims were unrealistic from the jump,
isolationists will say; the war failed because the president refused to “finish
the job,” interventionists will counter.
There are worse fates politically than being known as the
guy who wound down a conflict that literally everyone agrees fell short of its
goals. That’s the fate J.D. Vance is trying to engineer for himself.
But there’s risk.
Suckers and fighters.
The vice president is making a wager with respect to the
future of his own party.
The wager is that Republican disillusionment over Iran
will lead the right to become more reluctant to flex America’s military muscle.
“If even a pillar of national strength like Donald Trump couldn’t impose
America’s will on the Iranians by force, no one can,” right-wingers might
conclude. “Military interventions don’t work.”
J.D. Vance, man of peace, will be in a strong position if
that’s how things shake out, especially if Democrats take interventionist
stances in 2028 with respect to supporting NATO and Ukraine. A dovish nominee
will look more attractive to the right if hawkishness in the next election
appears more left-coded.
But there’s another scenario. The right might conclude
that failing to “finish the job,” not undertaking the job in the first place,
was the key problem with the Iran war. They’re primed to do so, frankly:
Trump’s party has been conditioned to believe that all problems can be solved, and solved easily, through applications
of sufficient ruthlessness. If America failed to bring the Iranians to
heel—to “use American power in key moments decisively,” in Domenech’s words—its
failure must have been a failure of will.
And which peace-loving figure around the president
demonstrated the most conspicuous lack of will to engage Iran militarily?
Vance aspires to lead a party whose members divide
the world into “suckers” and “fighters.” It is very risky for him to
tout himself as reluctant to “fight” in the belief that the party will change
so much in the aftermath of the war that it will come to see such reluctance as
prudent, not weak.
And it will get riskier still if Iran’s behavior in the
months ahead ends up making him look like a sucker.
The early signs don’t look good. NBC News reported yesterday that the Iranians launched
drones at commercial ships in the Strait of Hormuz after the agreement
with the U.S. was signed. Sources tell Reuters that Iranian leaders fully intend to share the
wealth their country will receive under the deal with Hezbollah. And news
is circulating that federal law might force Trump to take the embarrassing step
of delisting the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a foreign
terrorist organization if he undertakes to lift sanctions.
Vance himself had been reduced to mumbling about “sensitivities”
in the Muslim world to justify why the U.S. hadn’t officially released the text of the peace agreement until today. Other U.S.
officials who spoke to CNN have taken to insisting that the text hardly matters at
all. “What’s more important than the actual document is the understandings we
have with each other,” one said, referring to the Iranians, “and that’s why
it’s important to get it done, that we can create the environment to go and
talk about all these things.”
Supposedly, per one source, Iranian officials have told
the White House privately that they’ll satisfy Trump’s nuclear demands.
Supposedly.
One regional expert summarized the White House’s grim
predicament in an interview with the Wall Street Journal: “When it comes to nuclear
negotiations, we are back at the prewar stage, but with the U.S. leverage [of a
military attack] removed.” That’s not J.D. Vance’s fault, but the schmuckier
this deal comes to appear to the average American, the schmuckier the
administration’s most enthusiastic mouthpiece for it is destined to appear by
extension.
Faith in Trump’s “toughness” and alleged negotiating
savvy is such that most of the right won’t let itself be persuaded that a deal
he supports is a sucker’s bargain. That will give Vance cover against naysayers
as long as the boss continues to reassure Republican voters that it’s a
great compromise, maybe the greatest compromise ever. But if our fickle
president’s all-important
image ends up battered by hawkish attacks, it’s possible that he’ll get
cold feet and scrap it, leaving the VP hung out to dry. His feet might be getting
cold already.
Republicans will nominate a dove for president—they
already did, or thought they did, in the last three elections—but they won’t
nominate someone whom they’re convinced is a sucker. The president disowning a
deal that the VP is excited about would brand Vance a sucker to the right
forever.
Crisis management.
Ending an unpopular war without looking like a pitiful
rube in the process is the vice president’s challenge. What will he, or can he,
do to manage his risk?
One thing he’s going to do is try to broker a durable,
comprehensive peace with Iran.
Listen to any Vance interview this week and you’ll find
him cooing over the possibility of rapprochement with the Iranians. On Monday,
for instance, he told CNN that “the coolest thing about the progress we’ve made
over the last few weeks is that you see people within the Iranian system—senior
leadership, even IRGC officials—say, ‘You know what? We may have some
animosity, we may have some mistrust. But we recognize the way that we’ve done
business with the United States for 47 years is a mistake. Let’s try something
else.’”
Yesterday he told Megyn Kelly that the president
deputized him to do nothing less than “negotiate a deal that transforms the Middle East.” The
linchpin of that transformation is the $300 billion under the deal that Iran
will be able to access if it ends its nuclear program permanently. According to Reuters, the money consists entirely of private-sector
funds, more than half of which have already been committed to “securing loans,
establishing credit lines or directly financing the reconstruction of sites
damaged in the war.” For the first time in decades, Iran might see meaningful
foreign investment.
It’s the China playbook, in other words. The West is
going to try to deradicalize a dangerous regime by wooing it with filthy
corporate lucre and integrating it into the global economy. If it works, with
Iran ultimately agreeing to more normal relations with the U.S. and its
neighbors, Vance will say that the agreement signed this week ended up
defanging the Khomeinist menace to a degree that no war ever did or could. (An
Obama talking point from 2015, not coincidentally.) “Suckers” don’t normally
score transformational diplomatic breakthroughs, do they?
If that really is the play, Vance and Trump will spend
the rest of their term courting the Iranians in hopes of justifying this week’s
deal retroactively as the first step toward a more meaningful peace. Which
brings us to the second thing the veep will do to manage his political risk: As
Jonathan Last notes, he’s all teed up to shift blame to
Israel if the deal collapses.
The text was practically designed to make it easy to do
so. The official text draft says nothing about restraining Iran’s use of terror
proxies while declaring in its opening sentence “an immediate and permanent
termination of military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon.” Iran
demanded that Lebanon be included in the agreement because it wants Trump to
use his leverage over Israel to prevent further Israeli attacks on Hezbollah.
Israel opposed including Lebanon in the deal for the same reason. Iran won.
Because it did, Vance now has a ready scapegoat if the
Iranians fail to meet their obligations under the agreement. It’s not that he
and the president were schmucks for trusting the Khomeinists, and it’s not that
the Khomeinists aren’t willing to be friends. It’s that Israel—which is
destined to resume hostilities with Hezbollah and Iran at some point—selfishly
refuses to absorb a few missile strikes now and then without retaliating as the
White House goes about trying to secure lasting regional peace.
That spin has already begun, as you probably know. The hostility
between Washington and Jerusalem is allegedly such that, as of yesterday, the
White House had refused thus far to show the text of the deal to the
Israelis, our allies in the conflict since day one.
And it’s unfortunately smart, cynical politics in America
2026, particularly for someone like the vice president who has his eye on the
next election cycle. Vance’s Tuckerite postliberal base will love seeing him
take up the cause of peace against Benjamin Netanyahu. So will Democrats and
independents, as more members of each group now view Israel more negatively than positively. And so
will plenty of Republicans between the ages of 18 and 49, of whom 57 percent now hold an unfavorable opinion of the Jewish
state.
Vance wasn’t a rube for making a bad deal with the
Iranians, you see. He was just saddled with the bad luck of having a renegade
Israeli regime as his partner.
We should not underestimate the degree of difficulty
involved in convincing the American right, a faction populated by millions of
evangelical Christians, that Iran is a more trustworthy broker than Israel. But
if the last 10 years have proved anything, it’s that right-wingers are willing
to change their beliefs about all sorts of things to rationalize their
allegiance to Donald Trump. J.D. Vance is betting that embracing Hillbilly
Obama-ism toward a terrorist regime is one more belief that they’ll come around
to. I wouldn’t bet against it.
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