Trump playing a dangerous game with Iran on his way out the door
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS — For someone who can’t keep himself from firing up his Twitter account 
in reaction to even the smallest media-reported details that he considers to be 
“fake news,” U.S. President Donald Trump has been conspicuously silent about the 
shocking New York Times report that he requested military options last week for 
attacking Iran in the final two months of his presidency.
Only Congress can declare war, according to the Constitution — unless Iran has 
attacked the U.S., which it hasn’t. But disturbingly, there has been a recent 
intensification of efforts to justify aggression against Iran by conflating it 
with al-Qaeda. During an online forum last month, National Counterterrorism 
Center Director Christopher Miller said Tehran was hosting al-Qaeda command and 
control cells.
Iran and al-Qaeda are actually sworn enemies, and Iran has been actively 
involved in anti-jihadist activities in the Middle East.
Iranian officials denied a New York Times report last week that al-Qaeda’s 
second-in-command, Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah, was killed in the streets of Tehran 
last summer by shadowy Israeli agents at America’s request. The Times story was 
based on anonymous U.S. intelligence sources.
Does anyone seriously think Trump could have restrained himself from tweeting 
about that, particularly amid his reelection campaign?
Still, the efforts to link Iran with terrorism have been ramping up. Trump fired 
Secretary of Defense Mark Esper last week and replaced him with Miller, the 
Iran/al-Qaeda conflater from the National Counterterrorism Center. Trump signed 
off on the January assassination of ISIS-fighting Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani 
inside Iraq without that country’s permission. With tensions heightened, the 
Iranian military mistakenly shot down a Ukrainian Airlines passenger jet that 
had turned toward a Revolutionary Guards military base, killing all 176 people 
aboard.
You’d think that disaster would have been a lesson in the unintended 
consequences of war, but apparently not. Trump reportedly had to be talked down 
by senior advisers, including Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley 
and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, when he asked about options for a military 
strike against Iran’s main nuclear site. When a neoconservative interventionist 
like Pompeo ends up being the voice of reason, you know your idea for a military 
strike has to be completely insane.
As part of last week’s Pentagon shakeup, Trump appointed retired Gen. Anthony 
Tata to be the acting policy chief for the Defense Department. Tata is a gruff 
former Fox News guest commentator who has referred to former President Barack 
Obama as a “terrorist leader” and has claimed on Twitter than Iran is developing 
nuclear weapons at locations it labels as cultural sites.
If Trump has been taking advice on Iran from the loyalists he just installed in 
the Pentagon, no wonder he’s developed a warped view of Iran. He clearly needs a 
reality check — and it’s up to Congress to give it to him.
In obsessing over Iran in the waning days of his mandate, Trump risks losing 
support from his “America First” fan base, for whom the Middle East isn’t 
considered vital to America. He also risks losing the goodwill of moderates who 
have turned a blind eye to Trump’s antics for one reason: He’s the first 
president in nearly a half-century who has refrained from starting a new war 
while in office.
If he persists in ginning up a pretext for bombing Iran — which could easily be 
done with a false flag event to make it appear that Iran is a threat to U.S. 
interests — Trump will lose the only lasting legacy of his presidency. You can’t 
go down in history as the antiwar president when you start World War III on the 
way out the door and fulfill every warmongering interventionist’s fantasy.
And make no mistake: An attack on Iran would lead to World War III. Iran is a 
strategic ally of Russia and China. Does anyone think they’re going to sit idly 
while America bombs one of their allies? And if the U.S. attacks Iran, who’s to 
say that Iran won’t react by targeting America’s Middle Eastern allies — namely, 
Israel, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates — who have long attempted to 
co-opt U.S. troops as their bought-and-paid-for proxies to fight on their 
behalf.
Trump clearly hates the fact that he lost the election and wants to hand 
President-elect Joe Biden a dog’s breakfast. Fine. Mess around with the White 
House furniture or change the language on all the computers to Chinese. What you 
can’t do is muse about options to effectively launch a world war as if it were 
on the same level as strategically placing a few whoopie cushions on the way out 
of the Oval Office.
COPYRIGHT 2020 RACHEL MARSDEN