Democratic Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut described the Trump administration's plans for the ongoing war in Iran as 'incoherent and incomplete' following a closed-door briefing. He highlighted conflicting statements on war aims and urged Congress to end the conflict by denying funding. The war has led to significant civilian casualties and global oil disruptions due to Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
The United States is engaged in a war with Iran, initiated by the Trump administration, which has prompted sharp criticism from Democratic lawmakers. In an NPR interview on March 12, 2026, Senator Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) stated that administration officials in a recent briefing clarified that military operations are not targeting Iran's nuclear sites and are not pursuing regime change. This contrasts with President Trump's public statements aiming to end Iran's nuclear program, achieve unconditional surrender, and select Iran's next leader.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio publicly outlined war goals as eliminating Iran's missile capacity and navy, while also claiming the U.S. did not initiate the conflict but responded to defend interests from blowback of a planned Israeli strike. Murphy described these varying rationales as incoherent, noting daily shifts in justifications for starting the war. A Slate podcast episode from the same day discussed how Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz has caused oil prices to skyrocket, with potential U.S. gas prices reaching $5 per gallon, amid opaque U.S. war aims.
A Pentagon investigation confirmed that a U.S. tomahawk missile struck a girls' school near an Iranian naval base, killing more than 100 people, despite Trump's denials and suggestions that Iran might have fired the missile itself. Murphy condemned the president's lies, arguing that air campaigns lead to civilian deaths that harden opposition and elect more anti-American leaders, as seen in past conflicts like Afghanistan and Iraq.
Murphy warned that failing to achieve regime change could leave Iran with a more provocative government and remnants of its nuclear program, alongside historic oil flow disruptions lasting months. He advocated ending the war immediately, rejecting ground troop involvement, and called on Congress—controlled by Republicans—to debate a war declaration and withhold funding. Trump told Axios, 'anytime I want it to end, it will end,' but Murphy contested the president's unilateral war powers, emphasizing the foreseeable risks of Hormuz closure and limited regime change prospects from intelligence estimates.