So, What Was All The Fuss About?
Yesterday morning:
Oh, well, never mind:An unspeakably evil threat. Every soldier has the duty to disobey orders to carry this out, every government official has the duty to do whatever is in his power to stop it, every churchmen has the duty to speak out against it, every citizen to resist in any moral way possible. pic.twitter.com/1t7uP2gwr7
— Edward Feser (@FeserEdward) April 7, 2026
And the chuds wanna have it both ways!Seeing a lot of this. My entire life I've been regarded as an extreme right-winger, but suddenly, because I oppose threatening a civilization with destruction, I must really be an "MSNBC lib." This sub-moronic level of thinking prevails within a large segment of the right today. https://t.co/VowTaibj3p
— Edward Feser (@FeserEdward) April 7, 2026
At minimum, Prof Feser seems to be dialing things down -- but it doesn't matter too much; if a sinful thing, viz, making a threat, has a good outcome, that doesn't make it good. But then there's Luke 14:5:Here we go again, with the cult’s usual two-step:
— Edward Feser (@FeserEdward) April 8, 2026
1. Trump’s doing X would be a great idea, actually!, but also
2. What an idiot you are for thinking he’d ever do X!
It’s “Heads I win, tails you lose” sophistry. Whatever happens is always said to have been the goal all along.
Then he said to them, 'Who among you, if your son or ox falls into a cistern, would not immediately pull him out on the sabbath day?'
I guess even if that had a good outcome, that didn't make it good, huh? But here's the story from the UK Telegraph:
On Tuesday morning, before he posted his ultimatum to Truth Social after weeks of extending the deadline, Mr Trump had reportedly expressed in private that although negotiations with the Iranians had been “very serious”, he did not know whether a deal could be reached.
He fired off his salvo, threatening to destroy Iran’s bridges and power plants if leaders did not agree to open the Strait of Hormuz.
. . . In the other corner was China, who reportedly pressured Iran to accept the terms of the ceasefire – presented by Pakistan – at the 11th hour, according to The New York Times.
Talks had so far been indirect. Egypt, Pakistan and Turkey had passed messages between the US and Iran over the past two weeks as they desperately tried to avoid a global recession caused by the effects of rising energy prices on markets, as well as more death and destruction in the region.
On the morning of the ceasefire announcement, following Mr Trump’s warning, Tehran ruled out direct talks completely.
. . . Meanwhile, the US struck Kharg Island overnight. The island is Iran’s economic lifeline that handles 90 per cent of its oil exports.
It was a sign of the US’s determination to show that this was no bluff.
. . . As the hours ticked by, everyone from Pope Leo to the actor Ben Stiller called on the president to back down. At the same time, the administration fielded calls from executives and political allies trying to decipher whether Mr Trump was bluffing.
Then came the breakthrough. Three hours before the deadline, Iran said it was “positively” reviewing Pakistan’s proposal.
Mr Trump, who is thought to have been holed up in the Oval Office all day, was considering the proposal and would issue a response, the White House said.
The ceasefire gives Mr Trump a win, or at least the appearance of one, at a moment when it really mattered.
As The Telegraph noted, Pope Leo weighed in, saying “this threat against the entire people of Iran … truly is not acceptable”. But the problem is that Trump has developed a negotiating style over three different careers that's proven effective. It includes making wildly unreasonable demands until he gets a response he can live with, but it also includes careful study of his opponent. The Iranian mullahs are intransigent, they don't negotiate in good faith, and they treat the Western wish to seem reasonable as weakness.Trump's counter-strategy was plain all along. Yesterday I linked to Fred Kaplan at Slate, who asked, "What Kind of Person Talks Like This—Let Alone a President at War?" But he almost got things right:
[O]ne might charitably interpret Trump’s tweets as a reprise of Richard Nixon’s “madman strategy”—the notion that an enemy will surrender out of fear that the American president is as crazy as he sounds and really will carry out his threat. But it’s worth noting that the ploy didn’t work for Nixon against North Vietnam—and it’s unlikely to work for Trump against Iran.
While Kaplan accurately characterizes Nixon's "madman strategy" (which was carefully calibrated with Kissinger), he underestimates its success. In 1972, faced with North Vietnamese intransigence, Nixon progressively removed previous restraints on US strategy, ordered B-52 strikes on North Vietnam, and ultimately mined Haiphong Harbor.
Though both the Soviets and Chinese frowned on the mining, they did not take active steps to protest it. With the North Vietnamese coast effectively closed to maritime traffic, Nixon ordered a new air interdiction campaign, dubbed Operation Linebacker, to commence.
. . . With imports into North Vietnam down 35-50% and with PAVN forces stalled, Hanoi became willing to resume talks and make concessions. As a result, Nixon ordered bombing above the 20th Parallel to cease on October 23, effectively ending Operation Linebacker.
If anything, Pope Leo facilitated Trump's "madman strategy" when he called it "not acceptable". Indeed, Trump cultivates his bad-boy image, again because it serves his purpose as a negotiator:
During a phone interview with Fox & Friends on Tuesday, Aug. 19, the president gave a new explanation for taking action to end the war in Ukraine — including positioning himself as a mediator between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
“If I can save 7,000 people a week from being killed, I think that’s pretty-- I want to try to get to heaven if possible," Trump said.
"I’m hearing that I’m not doing well. I am really at the bottom of the totem pole,” he added, to laughter from the Fox News hosts. "But if I can get to heaven, this will be one of the reasons.”
But let's take the potential alternative to dropping nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki that opponents often float -- why couldn't the US have simply demonstrated the power of such a bomb by dropping it over the open ocean near Japan, instead of destroying cities? The problem is that while this might have demonstrated that this was technically possible (although in the actual circumstance, the Emperor's cabinet saw the possibility that even the actual damage at Hiroshima was American deception), it still wouldn't have sent a message that the Americans had the will actually to use it against cities.All the hysteria in the leadup to yesterday's deadline, including Pope Leo's remarks, sent the clear message, not just to the mullahs, but to the Chinese and Pakistanis, that Trump didn't even care if he went to hell, he'd destroy a civilization. Trump couldn't have asked for a better group of people to vouch for his intent. Even the mullahs began to see these weren't your grandfather's Republicans.
It's worth noting that Nixon employed the "madman strategy" to further the US's then policy of containing the Soviet Union, and negotiation that resulted in a stalemate was the desired outcome. Trump's object, on the other hand, isn't containment -- but he's employing a strategy that Nixon in fact did demonstrate was effective.




