Hi, I'll be honest, I figured out you were being weird about Obama. My main question was the rest of it.
Or is the rest of your post about how diplomacy doesn't work a pre-emptive defence about how Obama managed to negotiate a deal but Trump is unable to?
A really beautiful analysis of the region for people who thinks its only about housing and grocery prices in the USA.
He (trump)does not want to be merely the ruler of Washington; he seeks to play a role in shaping the course of history, and he has already done so. He does not want to be another version of Jimmy Carter or Barack Obama. History may remember them as good leaders for America, but poor ones for the world. But the question remains: does Trump truly contradict the principle of “America First” through his interventionist foreign policy?
In reality, the opposite is true. It is in America’s interest to maintain international stability, especially in vital regions such as the Gulf and the broader Middle East. Historically, the United States ignored Nazism until it declared war on it, ignored terrorism until its towers were struck, and ignored the Iranian regime until it destabilized the region through militias and piracy in maritime straits. American hesitation has often led to a more chaotic world.
This is the first misconception. The second claims that he is a man of war rather than a man of peace. We should not forget that partisan politicians and sections of the media that oppose him for their own reasons continue to repeat and promote these accusations.
Trump operates on the principle that strength leads to peace, while weakness and containment lead to more violence. He is now confronting Iran after years of policies marked by containment and weakness, which at one point effectively handed Tehran the keys to dominate the region – had Trump not torn up the nuclear deal at the time. Trump argues, rightly, that previous presidents over 47 years failed to take meaningful action to stop the Iranian regime despite its ongoing aggression. Eliminating rogue regimes by force may be the path to peace, not the opposite. The evidence is before us: decades of Western and American rapprochement with Tehran have only led to greater chaos.
Entering a war and using military force is a last resort and an undesirable option, but leaders may be compelled to take it. European history teaches us that defeating Nazi Germany through military force was the turning point that ended a dangerous expansionist project and paved the way for a stable and prosperous Europe, eventually leading to the formation of the European market and later the European Union. Since then, major wars within Europe have ceased – until Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
In Asia, Japan’s military defeat in World War II ended its expansionist phase and opened the door to unprecedented economic growth across the region. Japan later emerged as a major economic power, followed by the rise of the Asian Tigers.
The same pattern is repeating today in the Middle East, which has for decades been caught in a cycle of unrest and proxy wars driven by the Iranian regime’s project. Diplomacy has been used, economic incentives offered, and channels of dialogue opened in attempts to deter it from its destabilizing agenda, but these efforts have not changed its behavior. As we speak, Iranian missiles and drones are falling on Gulf capitals and cities, killing civilians and destroying infrastructure, despite these countries’ continued efforts to avoid war. Tehran is seeking to drag the region into a cycle of violence and disrupt its development, but it has not succeeded.
History teaches us that some expansionist ideological projects do not stop through pledges or agreements, but only when they are clearly defeated and stripped of their ability to destabilize their surroundings. This is how Nazism ended in Europe, and how Japanese militarism ended in Asia, followed by long periods of stability and prosperity.
Today, the Middle East stands at a similar historic moment: either the chaos-driven project led by Tehran continues to consume the region, or it is brought to a halt, as other expansionist projects in history have been. Only then can the region break free from its cycle of chronic conflict and finally enter a long-awaited era of stability and development that its people deserve.