Dangers for the US, Trump multiply a week into Iran war

Oil prices, local political support, mounting cost of conflict, humanitarian breaches all posing threats to Trump

US President Donald Trump attends a Medal of Honor ceremony at the White House in Washington, DC, US, March 2, 2026. PHOTO: REUTERS

One week into the US-Israeli war against Iran that has plunged the Middle East into turmoil, US President Donald Trump faces a growing list of risks and challenges that raise questions about whether he will be able to translate military successes into a clear geopolitical win.

Even after the killing of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and blows against Iranian forces on land, sea and air, the crisis has quickly widened into a regional conflict that threatens a more prolonged US military engagement with fallout that would be the direct result of Trump's actions, but will be beyond his control.

“Iran is a messy and potentially protracted military campaign,” said Laura Blumenfeld of the Johns Hopkins School for Advanced International Studies in Washington. “Trump is risking the global economy, regional stability and his own Republican Party's performance in the US midterm elections.”

Trump, who came to office promising to keep the US out of "stupid” military interventions, is now pursuing what many experts see as an open-ended war of choice unprompted by any imminent threat to the US from Iran, despite claims to the contrary by the president and his aides.

Read: Pakistan urges Iran to avoid Gulf attacks

In doing so, analysts say he has struggled to articulate a detailed set of objectives or a clear endgame for Operation Epic Fury, the biggest US military operation since the 2003 Iraq invasion, offering shifting rationales for the war and definitions of what would constitute victory.

US Senators like Brian Schatz, after attending a classified briefing on the US's war on Iran, said that "We remain as confused as the American people are," regarding the US's war objectives.

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