The U.S. got lied into a war it can't escape.
Joe Kent, Trump’s former counterterrorism director, resigned claiming Israeli officials manipulated the president. On Breaking Points, Kent stated there was no intelligence indicating Iran was an imminent nuclear threat. The red line shifted from preventing a weapon to opposing any enrichment - a move designed to lock out diplomacy and escalate toward regime change. Kent told Tucker Carlson the only imminent threat was Israel's plan to attack Iran, which dragged America into the conflict.
That conflict is now an economic bear trap. Iran responded by effectively closing the Strait of Hormuz, plunging tanker traffic to zero. Jack Mallers, on his podcast, argued the U.S. cannot militarily reopen it. Trump’s public pleading for NATO allies to help secure the strait, reported on Breaking Points, is a stark admission the administration had no plan and misjudged Iran’s capabilities.
The consequences are global. The Intelligence from The Economist noted Iran didn't need a physical blockade; the threat alone scared off shippers. Peter St Onge warned Asia faces an oil crisis: India has 30 days of stockpiles, Southeast Asia 60 days, China just three months. When those run out, rationing and factory closures will trigger mass layoffs and potential unrest. The U.S. is insulated by domestic production, but the world economy is not.
With the strait closed and regime change failing, the only escalation left is ground troops. Netanyahu publicly called for a U.S.-led ground component, saying a revolution “can’t be done from the air.” Kamran Bokhari, on Bankless, framed the strike as a prerequisite for American retrenchment - a loose end to be tied so the U.S. can shift security burdens to regional allies. But the reality, as Saagar Enjeti noted, is that the regime is designed to persist even if leadership is decapitated.
The path forward points to more American blood and treasure in a war the U.S. was told was necessary, but wasn't.
Joe Kent, Breaking Points:
- Was Iran on the verge of getting a nuclear weapon? No, they weren't.
- We had no intelligence to indicate that they were.






