Bored of peace? Trump keeps choosing war
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US President Donald Trump has repeatedly declared himself to be a “President of Peace”.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Palm Beach - On a US late-night television show on Feb 28, the host played a clip from 2011 of a businessman warning that president Barack Obama “will start a war with Iran because he has absolutely no ability to negotiate.”
That businessman was Mr Donald Trump. Fast-forward 15 years and Mr Trump, now in his own second term as president, ordered huge military strikes on Iran when talks with Tehran brought no breakthrough.
The commander-in-chief has repeatedly declared himself to be a “President of Peace”,
His rise to power in 2016 on an “America First” platform was partly fuelled by his rejection of bloody foreign wars waged by the United States in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Back on the campaign trail in 2024, he repeatedly said he had started “no new wars”. After returning to the White House he slammed the “so-called nation-builders” who “wrecked far more nations than they built”.
In line with his vision of himself, Mr Trump earlier in 2026 held the first meeting of his “Board of Peace” – a body originally created to uphold the Gaza ceasefire that has morphed into a would-be United Nations featuring several authoritarians.
When the Nobel academy snubbed him, Mr Trump even proudly accepted a peace award from football’s world governing body FIFA that appeared to have been specially created for him.
‘Major surprise’
But in the second year of his second term, Mr Trump suddenly appears as comfortable prosecuting war as making peace.
In the space of less than two months, the man who once shunned “regime change” has reveled in the military operations that toppled Venezuela’s president and killed the supreme leader of Iran.
That’s not to mention threatening a military takeover of Greenland from NATO ally Denmark.
“All this comes as a major surprise,” said Mr Richard Haass, a former diplomat in president George W. Bush’s administration.
“This is an administration that has shown no interest in regime change or democracy promotion elsewhere,” he said in a newsletter. “Why here and now is a mystery as there is no clear evidence that the Iranian regime (however unpopular and weakened) is on the edge of collapse.”
The scion of a property empire, Mr Trump himself avoided the draft for the Vietnam war.
But the former military academy student has long shown a fascination for martial trappings, often surrounding himself with soldiers and visiting military sites.
He frequently brags about US military might, including in 2025’s strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities,
‘I got power’
The question now is what effect Mr Trump’s wars will have on US voters, especially the Trump supporters who believed his campaign promises to end its “forever wars”.
The first major test will be the American public’s willingness to tolerate military casualties, with the announcement on March 1 of the first three service members to die in action against Iran.
After the strikes, only one in four Americans approved of the attacks while 43 per cent disapproved, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on March 1.
Mr Trump’s wars could figure heavily in the November’s midterm elections, in which Republicans already fear they could lose control of the House of Representatives.
He is deep under water in the polls thanks largely to voters still feeling the pinch from the cost of living – an issue the Iran strikes could exacerbate if oil prices spike.
The effect on his base will be a particular concern. Former “Make America Great Again” firebrand Marjorie Taylor Greene, who split from Mr Trump in 2025, called the Iran attack a “lie”.
But Mr Trump makes no bones about how he enjoys commanding the world’s most powerful military.
Welcoming the Florida Panthers ice hockey team to the White House in January, Mr Trump joked that he hated the assembled players because of their good looks and “all this power”.
“But I got power too, it’s called the United States military,” he said. AFP


