Through these he has given us his very great and precious promises, so that through them you may participate in the divine nature, having escaped the corruption in the world caused by evil desires.

2 Peter 1:4

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Trump's Iran war messaging is all over the map


Ten days after the U.S. and Israel struck Iran, President Trump's endgame is a murky, ever-moving target.

The big picture: Across interviews, press conferences and social media, Trump floated and erased timelines, predicted the war's end or promised new escalation, and argued he must choose Iran's new leader while the administration denies regime change is the goal.


  • The administration claims its goals of knocking out Iran's nuclear capabilities, ending its support for terrorism and defeating its navy are clear.
  • But Trump's messaging is more fluid.

By the numbers: Just 33% of 1,021 respondents told Reuters-Ipsos that Trump clearly explained the Iran mission's purpose.

  • Vast majorities of Democrats (92%) and independents (74%) say he hasn't articulated the goals, compared to 26% of Republicans.
  • The White House did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment.

Here are four areas where President Trump has sent mixed messages:

The timeline

Trump initially told multiple outlets the attacks would last around four weeks but were moving ahead of schedule.

  • Press secretary Karoline Leavitt also said the "achievable objectives" could take four to six weeks.

However, Trump told Axios, "I can go long and take over the whole thing, or end it in two or three days."

  • On Monday, Trump told CBS News the war was "very complete, pretty much" with "nothing left in a military sense."
  • That same day, the Defense Department posted, "This is just the beginning— we will not be deterred until the mission is over."

The endgame

Trump was bullish Monday, saying, "We could call it a tremendous success right now ... or we could go further. And we're going to go further."

  • He vowed to "go forward more determined than ever to achieve ultimate victory that will end this long running danger once and for all."

Last week, Trump said he'd accept "no deal" except "UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER."

  • But he told Fox News it's "possible" he'd speak to Iranian leaders, though "we sort of don't have to."

The oil

Trump, who often touts cheap gas as a measure of success, said oil prices went up "less than" he anticipated following the attacks and predicted they would "drop rapidly" soon.

The regime

Trump has fixated on Iran's political future despite Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth denying regime change is the goal.

  • Trump told Axios he must personally help pick Iran's next leader, calling Mojtaba Khamenei unacceptable.
  • But Monday he declined to say if Khamenei would be targeted.
  • Trump said he likes the idea of selecting a leader, citing President Delcy Rodríguez in Venezuela.

Just after announcing the strikes, Trump told The Washington Post his goal was "freedom" for Iranians, urging them to "take over" the government.

  • On Monday, he said he'd "like to" help Iranians "if they can behave." But added "they have to be in a system that allows them to be helped, and right now they're in a system that only allows failure."

Go deeper: Trump to Axios: "Unconditional surrender" is when Iran "can't fight any longer"


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5 scenarios for how the Iran war could end


Mixed messaging from President Trump and the Pentagon has left allies, markets and lawmakers guessing about how — and when — the Iran war will end.

Why it matters: Every week without resolution risks deepening the economic pain at home and the chaos abroad — raising the political stakes for Trump heading into the midterms.


State of play: Trump told Republicans at an annual retreat on Monday the U.S. has already won the war, "but we haven't won enough." That came hours after he told CBS News that the war is "very complete, pretty much."

  • Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, meanwhile, said Tuesday "will be our most intense day of strikes" yet.

Here are five scenarios for how the Iran war ends.

1. Negotiated ceasefire and nuclear deal

Ending Iran's nuclear weapons program has been one of Trump's key stated objectives since Operation Epic Fury began.

  • Iran and the U.S. held three rounds of indirect nuclear talks in Geneva just days before the war started, but Trump's envoys ultimately determined Tehran was not serious about a deal.
  • Trump told Fox News Monday that renewed talks are "possible," but that he's disappointed by the selection of hardliner Mojtaba Khamenei to succeed his late father as supreme leader.

The intrigue: The day before the strikes began, Oman's mediators said Iran had agreed to never stockpile enriched uranium and called peace "within reach." It's unclear how the war would affect future negotiations.

2. The Venezuela model

Trump has pointed to Venezuela — where the U.S. captured President Nicolás Maduro in January and established a working relationship with his successor, Vice President Delcy Rodríguez — as a template for Iran.

  • Trump said Monday he thinks Iran "made a big mistake" with Mojtaba Khamenei's appointment, and suggested the new supreme leader may not last.

Reality check: Beyond just geography, the Iran-Venezuela comparison has significant limits. Experts say treating them as equivalent misunderstands the Islamic Republic's power structure.

  • The regime has survived 47 years of sanctions, wars and internal uprisings — entrenching itself with military, religious and political institutions designed to outlast any single leader.
  • For the Iranian protesters who have risked their lives demanding regime change, a U.S.-backed leader from within the system could be seen as a betrayal rather than liberation.

3. Popular uprising and regime collapse

The potential for collapse is real: Ayatollah Khamenei is dead, the economy has cratered, and Iran saw its largest protests since the 1979 revolution just weeks before the war began.

  • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has framed the strikes as creating "conditions for the brave Iranian people to take their destiny into their own hands."

Yes, but: The Iranian opposition has no unified leader and no organized force on the ground.

  • Exiled crown prince Reza Pahlavi is among the most popular opposition figures, but Trump has downplayed his credibility — in part because Pahlavi hasn't lived in Iran for nearly 50 years.
  • Kurdish forces backed by Israel could provide some ground support, but the risks are substantial — including the possibility that Iran devolves into the kind of civil war that consumed Syria for a decade.

4. Special forces raid on nuclear stockpile

The U.S. and Israel have discussed sending special forces into Iran to physically secure or destroy its stockpile of highly enriched uranium, Axios' Barak Ravid and Marc Caputo report.

  • This scenario ends the war not with a political settlement, but with the physical elimination of the nuclear threat.

Yes, but: The mission would require boots on the ground in a country that is still actively firing ballistic missiles.

5. Trump declares victory and withdraws

In this scenario, Trump decides Iran's missile and drone capabilities have been degraded enough, declares a historic win and withdraws — whether or not the underlying political situation in Tehran is resolved.

  • Markets have been betting on a quick exit, especially as economic pain at home threatens to become a serious political problem for the president.

Yes, but: Trump himself warned that allowing the wrong leader to take over would force the U.S. back to war "in five years."

  • Ending the operation may also require buy-in from Israel — which has shown it is willing to act unilaterally and has vowed to permanently eliminate the Iranian nuclear threat with or without Washington.

The bottom line: The war in Iran started without much warning. That may be true for the ending too.

Go deeper: A world at war: Iran conflict goes global


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Scoop: U.S. asks Israel to halt strikes on Iran's energy infrastructure


The Trump administration asked Israel on Monday not to carry out further strikes on energy facilities in Iran, particularly oil infrastructure, according to three sources familiar with the matter.

Why it matters: The U.S. request marks the first time the Trump administration has reined in Israel since the two countries launched their joint operation against Iran ten days ago.


  • The Israeli strikes blanketed Tehran — a city of 10 million — in toxic black smoke and acid rain, raising urgent health warnings for ordinary Iranians.

Driving the news: The U.S. messages were conveyed at a senior political level and to IDF Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir, an Israeli official said. The Trump administration cited three reasons for its request, according to a source with knowledge of the matter:

  1. Such strikes harm the Iranian public, a large portion of which opposes the regime.
  2. Trump aims to cooperate with Iran's oil sector after the war — similar to the approach he has taken with Venezuela.
  3. The strikes could trigger massive Iranian retaliatory attacks on energy infrastructure across Gulf states.

Between the lines: Iran attacked Gulf energy facilities with drones earlier in the war, but did not cause significant or irreversible damage.

  • The U.S. concern is that a new round of strikes on Iranian oil could change that calculus — and send prices even higher.
  • A source familiar with the details said Trump views strikes on Iran's energy and oil facilities as a "doomsday option" — something to be held in reserve only if Iran deliberately attacks Gulf oil facilities first.

What they're saying: Trump telegraphed that posture publicly, warning Monday that Iran will be hit "20 times harder" if it harms global oil supplies.

  • Trump wrote on Truth Social that the U.S. will "take out easily destroyable targets that will make it virtually impossible for Iran to ever be built back, as a Nation, again."
  • The source claimed Trump was hinting at potential attacks on Iranian oil facilities.

The intrigue: Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), one of the Republican Party's most vocal supporters of the war, also criticized the Israeli strikes on the fuel depots.

  • "Please be cautious about what targets you select. Our goal is to liberate the Iranian people in a fashion that does not cripple their chance to start a new and better life when this regime collapses. The oil economy of Iran will be essential to that endeavor," Graham wrote on X.
  • On Tuesday morning, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth distanced the administration from the Israeli fuel depot strikes, telling reporters the U.S. had not attacked targets of that kind.

The White House, the Israeli embassy in Washington and the IDF declined to comment.


Scoop: White House tells House Republicans to stop talking about mass deportations


DORAL, FL — White House Deputy Chief of Staff James Blair privately urged House Republicans on Tuesday to stop emphasizing "mass deportations" and instead focus their messaging on removing violent criminals, according to sources in the closed-door briefing.

Why it matters: Mass deportations were central to the GOP's 2024 campaign message.


  • Nearly half — 49% — of Americans say Trump's mass deportation campaign is too aggressive, including 1 in 5 voters who backed the president in 2024, a Politico poll from January found.

State of play: Blair delivered the message during a policy listening session with House Republicans at their annual retreat in Doral, Florida.

  • He encouraged members to focus on deporting violent offenders rather than defending the broader concept of mass removals.
  • The advice signals a recalibration by the White House — and reflects growing concern among some Republicans that Democrats are successfully framing Trump's immigration policy as overly sweeping and indiscriminate.

The big picture: Immigration enforcement has been a defining issue for Trump and congressional Republicans, and was a central pillar of their 2024 campaign message.

What's next: House Republicans are meeting this week to map out their legislative agenda and strategy for keeping the majority in November's midterms.

  • Blair also told members to go out and find "real Americans" to highlight wins in the GOP's sweeping legislative package passed last summer.

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