Trump refocuses message on winning amid waning support for Iran war

As the U.S. war against Iran enters its third week, President Trump and his administration are emphasizing a narrative of victory amid faltering public support. Polls indicate skepticism among Americans, with rising gas prices and declining global markets adding pressure. Correspondent Franco Ordoñez reports from Florida on the shift in messaging.

The conflict with Iran has now lasted three weeks, prompting the Trump administration to pivot toward claims of dominance. Speaking over the weekend in Florida, President Trump stated, 'As far as I'm concerned, we've essentially defeated Iran,' while boasting of destroying Iran's air force and navy, leaving it with 'little fight left.' This comes after initial confusion over the war's rationale, including suggestions of aiding protesters or preempting an Iranian strike, for which no evidence was provided beforehand. Trump later described acting on a 'feeling' that Iran would attack first and offered vague timelines, saying the war would end 'soon' or 'as long as necessary.' NPR White House correspondent Franco Ordoñez noted the administration's struggle to justify the war politically, now countered by repetitive assertions of winning. Jenny Stromer-Galley, a political messaging expert at Syracuse University, described this as Trump the 'showman' projecting strength to unify support and avoid perceptions of a quagmire like Iraq. She said, 'This strong, repetitive we're winning, we're winning, we're winning... is strategically an effort to try to get everybody on the same page with this story.' Challenges persist: 13 U.S. service members have died, oil prices have risen, and polls show division even among Trump's base. The president has blamed media coverage, posting that outlets want the U.S. to lose, while the FCC chair threatened a station's broadcast license over its reporting. Despite military successes, public backing wanes as economic impacts mount.

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President Trump delivers national address on U.S. war progress against Iran, with visuals of Operation Epic Fury, blocked Strait of Hormuz, high gas prices, and veteran protests.
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Trump to address nation on Iran war progress

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President Donald Trump is scheduled to deliver a national address Wednesday evening on the status of the U.S. war against Iran, known as Operation Epic Fury. A White House official said the speech will provide an operational update, highlighting progress meeting or exceeding benchmarks. The address comes amid closed Strait of Hormuz, rising U.S. gas prices above $4 per gallon, and growing protests by veterans.

Following his recent suggestion of winding down U.S. operations, President Trump threatened new strikes on Iran while lifting sanctions and requesting massive funding, underscoring strategic uncertainty in the third-week war.

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Iran has stated it will decide when the war with the US and Israel ends, emphasizing no oil will be shipped out of the Middle East if attacks continue. President Donald Trump said the war will end in four weeks or sooner. However, Iran's military insists there must be a winner and calls Trump's statement nonsense.

Iranian airspace closed on Wednesday night amid signs of an imminent US attack, but no strike occurred, leaving experts to describe it as part of President Trump's characteristic unpredictability. Military assets moved and bases partially evacuated, yet Trump shifted his tone, stating that killings in Iran had stopped. Analysts view this as a psychological operation to confuse Tehran while US forces reposition.

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About a month after the United States began military operations against Iran, some Republican organizers in battleground states say they continue to support President Donald Trump’s decision while warning that higher gasoline prices and rising farm input costs are fueling voter irritation ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

Young supporters of President Donald Trump voiced frustration over the ongoing war in Iran during the Conservative Political Action Conference in Grapevine, Texas, revealing a generational split in the Republican base. One month into U.S. strikes alongside Israel, attendees debated interventionism while older conservatives cheered the campaign. Trump skipped the event for the first time in a decade amid these tensions.

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Iran's foreign ministry spokesman called false Donald Trump's claims that Tehran requested a ceasefire. He denounced US demands as 'maximalist and irrational' amid the Middle East war. The statement comes on the 34th day of the conflict triggered on February 28 by US-Israeli strikes on Iran.

 

 

 

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