Back

NBC News Quotes JINSA President & CEO Mike Makovsky on President Trump’s Handling of Iranian Provocations

Trump’s last-minute pullback on Iran strikes may have made crisis more perilous
Analysis: At a crucial moment, analysts say, the president’s indecision emboldened Iran and left American allies uncertain.

By Jonathan Allen

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump froze at the controls.

After ordering up airstrikes on Iran in retaliation for the downing of an unmanned American drone, the commander in chief balked at the last minute Thursday.

“Nothing was green-lighted until the very end because things change,” the president told NBC’s Chuck Todd in an interview that will air on “Meet the Press” on Sunday, pointing to the expected casualty count as his reason.

“I thought about it for a second and I said, you know what, they shot down an unmanned drone, plane, whatever you want to call it, and here we are sitting with a 150 dead people that would have taken place probably within a half an hour after I said go ahead. … I didn’t think it was proportionate.”

His indecision in the face of direct hostility from an avowed enemy brought a cascade of criticism from allies and political rivals, from Iran hawks and doves, and from a host of national security experts who asserted that it demonstrated weakness at a critical moment. And it left the world wondering whether Trump, who has so often questioned the leadership abilities of past presidents and candidates for his job, can handle a real crisis.

“Many of the Trump administration’s weaknesses are coming home to roost,” said Adam Ereli, a former U.S. ambassador to Bahrain during the Obama administration.

Ereli broke that down into five pieces: Trump spoke loudly but carried no stick; he hasn’t built an international alliance to support a face-off with Iran; the absence of key permanent figures at the Pentagon and the National Security Council “severely limits” the ability of the government to “weigh options, plan for contingencies and execute effectively”; his domestic political calculations may play too big a role in his decision making; and the zig-zagging of his policy emboldens Iran while leaving allies uncertain.

“Trump is causing long-term damage to the credibility of America’s commitment to its allies and regional security in this strategically vital part of the world,” he said.

But the most stinging rebukes didn’t come from former Obama officials or the field of Democratic presidential hopefuls who hope to oust Trump from office.

“Trump has given the impression he lost his nerve, when he should’ve responded swiftly but measuredly already a couple weeks ago,” said Michael Makovsky, president of the Jewish Institute for National Security of America who was a senior aide to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in President George W. Bush’s administration.

“President Trump’s handling of rising Iranian provocations in the Persian Gulf is undermining American global credibility — the currency for foreign policy and the bedrock of deterrence — and our vital interests, as established at least since President Jimmy Carter in 1980,” Makovsky said in a statement.

Even some of the president’s political friends on Capitol Hill suggested he had choked in the clutch.

Four leading House Republicans — Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California, along with the top-ranking Republicans on the House Armed Services, Foreign Affairs and Intelligence committees — issued a joint statement calling on the president to stick to his guns, figuratively and literally.

“Iran directly attacked a United States asset over international waters,” McCarthy, Texas Reps. Mac Thornberry and Michael McCaul, and California Rep. Devin Nunes said in the statement. “This provocation comes a week after they attacked and destroyed two commercial tankers in international waters. There must be a measured response to these actions.”

In a series of tweets defending his decision Friday morning, Trump framed it as a minor hiccup in a policy designed to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

“I am in no hurry, our Military is rebuilt, new, and ready to go, by far the best in the world,” Trump wrote. “Iran can NEVER have Nuclear Weapons, not against the USA, and not against the WORLD!”

Makovsky said Trump is misguided if his only red line is Iranian nuclear weapons development.

“His tweet today suggests, perhaps mistakenly, he’s most focused on nuclear weapons and will allow continued Iranian aggression on the ground and seas,” Makovsky said. “The Middle East just became more dangerous in recent days.”

Part of the dilemma for Trump is that he has consistently signaled his aversion to war, and he has made withdrawing U.S. forces from the Middle East and Afghanistan a prominent plank in his re-election platform.

“We’re charting a path to stability and peace in the Middle East, because great nations do not want to fight endless wars,” he said Tuesday night at a rally officially kicking off his 2020 campaign in Orlando. “They’ve been going on forever. Starting to remove a lot of troops. We’re finally putting America first.”

Not all Republicans were quick to criticize Trump. He won backing from Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky.

“I have strongly encouraged ⁦@realDonaldTrump⁩ to trust HIS instincts and avoid another war,” Paul wrote on Twitter.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., sounded a similar note of support — with an addendum.

“I appreciate President @realDonaldTrump’s desire to be measured and thoughtful when it comes to Iranian provocations,” he tweeted, adding: “What will the world’s response be if Iran follows through on their threat to restart nuclear enrichment? I hope the United States will make this a Red Line.”

Many Democrats took shots at the president’s indecisiveness, but stopped short of saying he should have launched the strikes.

For example, Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, an Afghanistan War veteran who is seeking the Democratic nomination for president, said Trump’s start-and-stop action Thursday put the U.S. in greater jeopardy of conflict with Iran.

“Right now, we are in an extremely dangerous moment,” he said. “The president of the United States has trouble making decisions and is relatively easy to manipulate.”

In combination with a Congress that has not asserted itself on war powers, a Pentagon that has no permanent leader in place, the alienation of long-standing U.S. allies and Iranian efforts to test Trump, the president’s indecision adds to “exactly the kind of recipe that could lead to an escalation that would be outside of the control of both U.S. and Iranian leaders, which is exactly what we want to prevent,” he said.

But Buttigieg didn’t say Trump should have gone through with the mission.

Instead, he said, the right response would involve engaging allies to help illustrate to Iran that “further provocation will be against their interest.”

Meanwhile, in terms of America’s interest, there was broad agreement across the political spectrum on Friday that indecision on the part of the president didn’t serve it.

Read in NBC News