Just days after the assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Tehran has appointed his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, as the next leader of the Islamic Republic. The move is historic, controversial, and deeply symbolic. But the story does not end in Tehran. It extends thousands of miles away to Washington. Because the war that was meant to reshape Iran is now beginning to test something else: Donald Trump’s political narrative. During his 2024 campaign, Trump promised Americans “no new wars.” Yet within weeks of taking office, the United States is now engaged in a direct military conflict with Iran. Oil prices are rising, markets are fluctuating, billions of taxpayer dollars are already being spent, and public opinion in the United States is beginning to fracture. At the same time, questions remain unanswered. Why exactly did the U.S. go to war with Iran? Was it preemption, retaliation, or strategic alignment with Israel? And perhaps most importantly, what is the endgame? In this episode, we examine the war through three questions: the promise, the pretext, and the plan. And we ask a larger question that few in Washington are openly discussing: Could the war meant to change Iran’s regime end up reshaping American politics instead?
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