Analysts Decipher Pattern Behind President's Military Actions as Quest for Historical Legacy Amid the confusion surrounding President Donald Trump's simultaneous military operations in Iran, Venezuela, and the tariff war reshaping global trade, a clearer picture is emerging of what Foreign Policy columnist Michael Hirsh describes as the "Trump Doctrine"—a systematic effort to discard the post-war international order and replace it with one bearing his name. "The Trump vision is about discarding what he sees as a weak, failing world order and turning himself into the author of a new one that will always have his name on it," biographer Gwenda Blair told Foreign Policy, where Hirsh serves as a columnist. This interpretation sheds light on what has appeared to be chaotic decision-making but actually reflects a career-long pattern of "creative destruction" aimed at securing lasting recognition. The doctrine's roots trace back to a pivotal 1964 mome...
Analysts Warn of Pattern Where Small Conflicts Spiral Beyond Control, Trapping Democracies in Protracted Engagements The Trump administration's military campaign in Iran faces a dangerous trajectory that could transform the conflict into what Foreign Affairs analyst Robert D. Kaplan calls a "middle-sized war"—a category of engagement that has historically proven catastrophic for American foreign policy and democratic institutions. Writing for Foreign Affairs, Kaplan argues that middle-sized wars present a unique paradox for democracies. These conflicts are "big enough to cause immense destruction and bloodshed but small enough that they do not engage the full home front," Kaplan explains, citing military historian James Stokesbury's observation that democracies excel at small, professional operations or total war mobilization—but struggle decisively in the ambiguous middle ground. The pattern is disquietingly familiar. Vietnam, Korea, Afghanistan, and Iraq a...