The news arrives with the usual fanfare of a president who mistakes belligerence for statesmanship. Donald Trump, the man who once promised to end America’s endless wars, now vows to strike Iran a second time in the same day. This is not strategy. This is the petulance of a decaying empire, a Roman emperor flinging his legions at Parthia to distract from the crumbling Forum.
Let us examine the facts. The first strike was, by all accounts, a calibrated response to an alleged provocation. But a second strike within hours? That transforms a justified retaliation into a campaign. It signals not deterrence but escalation. It whispers that the man in the Oval Office has no off-ramp, no concept of a controlled conflict. He is not fighting a war; he is indulging a tantrum.
We have seen this pattern before. The late Roman Republic, bloated with hubris, could not resist the temptation to expand every skirmish into a legionary disaster. The result was a century of civil war and the death of liberty. Today, America's intellectual decadence has stripped its leaders of the ability to think in terms of long-term consequence. They live in a perpetual present, chasing headlines and approval ratings.
And what of the Iranian response? Tehran knows that Trump's threats are as much for domestic consumption as for international pressure. Yet each new strike gives the mullahs a propaganda victory. They can rally a fractious populace against a foreign enemy, delaying the internal reckoning that threatens their regime. Trump, in his 'deal-making' ignorance, is doing the Ayatollahs a favour.
The tragedy is that this is all so unnecessary. A mature power would have used intelligence, diplomacy, and economic pressure to contain Iran. Instead, we have the slapstick of a man who thinks 'Art of the Deal' applies to geopolitics. He is a caricature of a 19th-century imperialist, blundering through the bazaars of the Middle East with a cheque book and a gun.
And yet, perhaps this is what America deserves. A nation that has lost faith in its institutions, that mistakes reality television for leadership, that celebrates ignorance as authenticity cannot expect Edmund Burke as its avatar. It gets what it elects. And what it elects is a man who will hit Iran again today, and perhaps again tomorrow, until the entire region is ablaze.
But let us not be too grim. This crisis may yet have a salutary effect. It may wake the American public from its slumber. It may remind its elites that history does not repeat itself as farce; it repeats itself as tragedy. And if they do not learn to manage their decline gracefully, they will manage it chaotically. The choice is theirs.
For now, we watch. We wait. And we wonder if this is the first act of a new war or the last gasp of an old order. Either way, it is a spectacle. And the man in the centre of it all, the man vowing to hit Iran again, is not a statesman. He is a symptom. And the disease is terminal.








