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President Trump Lost This War

22h 16m ago by lemmy.today/u/sanitation in politics from www.nytimes.com

He lost it the day he started it. This isn’t news.

I don't want to create a free account just to read a news article!

How many clicks/days until it expires?

It’s unlimited as far as I know…

Recipients have 30 days to read the article before access is revoked.

https://help.nytimes.com/360060848652-Gift-Articles-for-New-York-Times-Subscribers(arc)

Hope you’re a fast reader…

If I can push through a word an hour, I can do it

I see Trump's plans for the US education system are paying dividends

There are a lot more people than me who I am worried about being able to access information

accounts are never free.l, even if they say they are. it's to sell your data, and then harass you with notifications and emails to give them money for nonsense

Journalism costs money. It sucks to make an account (even a burner) or to understand how to use reader mode in your browser to bypass all of that but... we have seen how this plays out.

The "good" outlets mostly pivot to listicle slop. And the people who ARE paying for news media tend to be the boomers and we get like twelve OANs.

And the people who ARE paying for news media tend to be the boomers oligarchs

No number of subscriptions to the Washington Post I could pay for will stop them from reporting what Jeff Bezos wants

Is archive.is down?

Loser.

Once again, NYT hiding behind Opinion as if they’re not horrifically complicit.

The United States is emerging weaker — militarily, diplomatically and economically — and will pay strategic costs for years to come.

Seems to me USA lost it more than Trump did. For Trump this will soon be irrelevant for obvious reasons.
Trump lost this for USA more than himself.

Isn’t that true of pretty much everything he’s tried? He fails, declare “WINNING”, and the rest of us get the consequences

For international readers, if the story stops at this paragraph:

On balance, Iran emerges the strategic winner of the four-month war. It did suffer substantial losses, including much of its navy, air force, military-industrial capacity and political leadership, including Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader, who was killed on the war’s first day. With the war ending, however, Iran’s leadership can begin rebuilding.

The story continues:

The United States, for its part, looks weaker in the eyes of the world. The American military has shown itself unable to quash a much smaller opponent even as it burned through many of its long-range precision missiles and interceptors. The outcome damages this country’s ability to deter other potential adversaries. To begin to repair the damage, the United States would be wise to mend alliances in Europe, the Middle East and Asia that have been frayed by the war’s military and economic effects. The Pentagon will also need to modernize and prepare for the wars of the future. Neither is likely to happen under President Trump.

Before the American and Israeli attack began on Feb. 28, Iran’s leadership had endured a miserable two and a half years. The government was far weaker than it had been before the Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel by Hamas, which Iran has long funded and advised. In response to that attack, Israel significantly diminished Hamas and Hezbollah, another Iranian proxy group. In Syria, a murderous, Iran-backed dictator fell while Iran’s leaders did little to save him. Israel and the United States exposed Iran’s air defenses and missile program as paper tigers when they bombed Iranian nuclear sites last summer, setting back its program. All the while, Iran’s currency continued to plummet, and its economy was in ruins. Starting late last year, Iranians took to the streets to protest, and the regime responded by killing thousands of them, if not tens of thousands.

All these problems remain, and Iran is still weaker than it was three years ago. But the war has given it leverage it did not have when 2026 began. Its regime has demonstrated that it can survive waves of attacks from its two biggest enemies. Its leaders have not had to abandon their nuclear ambitions. And they have learned that the rest of the world seems unwilling to use military force to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. If Iran chooses to close the strait at some point in the coming months or years, what will Mr. Trump do in response?

We lay out these facts with no pleasure. Iran has been and remains a force for ill. It represses its own people, especially political dissidents, women, L.G.B.T.Q. people and religious minorities. It is a world leader in torture and executions, and it has financed terrorism in its region and far beyond. Iran’s leaders have impoverished a country where per capita income was above the global average as recently as the 1970s.

The regime’s distinct brutality should have been reason for the United States to think carefully and plan cautiously for any war. The history of modern American wars, particularly in Iran’s region, is full of hubris that incubated defeat. Yet Mr. Trump eschewed thoughtful planning at every step.

He accepted the rose-colored assessment of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, who predicted that the Iranian regime would quickly fall. Mr. Trump dismissed the views of his aides who told him that Mr. Netanyahu’s forecast was farcical. Mr. Trump ignored the Constitution and refused to seek congressional approval for the war. He did not listen to European and Asian allies who opposed his war. He failed to plan for Iran’s obvious ability to close the Strait of Hormuz. He made threats about destroying Iranian civilization that succeeded only in diminishing America’s moral standing.

But he sure made a lot of money, so he's laughing all the way to the bank

I didn't want this war to being with... so????