In a way, Donald Trump has been refreshingly open about the Iranian conflict that his administration kicked off on Feb. 28, 2026. However, that may change after reports that U.S. munitions stockpiles might not be where they need to be, with Trump already scrambling with excuses and blame-shifting.
There are credible reports that precision missiles like JASSM, HIMARS rockets, Patriots, SM-2/6, and Tomahawks are in dire need of replenishment after the exhaustive war in Ukraine. The president has responded to all of this with classic Trump rhetoric, partial truths, and shifting blame to former presidents.
BREAKING: President Trump says wars can be fought “forever” using US munitions stockpiles with a “virtually unlimited” supply of weapons. pic.twitter.com/xz83waydkx
— The Kobeissi Letter (@KobeissiLetter) March 3, 2026
The fact remains, however, that he entered this conflict with full knowledge of what lies in the nation’s arsenal. Now, because of his decisions, the U.S. is now staring at a potentially prolonged war with every sign of becoming yet another quagmire that’ll consume American lives, fought with suboptimal munitions. Furthermore, except for Israel, the U.S. has not been this misaligned with its allies. One can only hope that Trump knows a way out of all this, but the current prognosis isn’t great.
But even though the conflict is already claiming casualties, the Trump administration has shifted its focus to controlling the media narrative. Politico reports that the administration is insisting this is not a war but rather a mere operation. These definitions are vague and confusing in distinction and practice, but they will likely be enough to fend off Congressional action.
What Trump has been clear about, however, is that this war is not his fault. Repeatedly, top members of the administration have stated that Trump did not start this war but will end it. He left the Barack Obama-negotiated deal with Iran — which, at the very least in practice, ensured peace in the region and limited Iran’s nuclear capacity. The administration has also insisted that this was not an offensive attack on Iran and is instead being reframed as a “preemptive” defensive strike after Israel attacked Iran early on Feb. 28.
Up until this moment, Trump had promised his base not to drag the U.S. back into the era of “forever” wars and practically begged the world to acknowledge his peace efforts. It’s an understatement to say that those days are now long gone.
Published: Mar 3, 2026 09:11 am