Trump's call for Iranians to overthrow their own government landed with zero infrastructure to actually deliver the message.
Trump's surrender demand was pretty vague
Trump's surrender demand was pretty vague
- Trump told Iranian soldiers to lay down their weapons without specifying to whom.
- His regime-change pitch targeted 90 million people with no clear plan.
- Philip Gordon flagged the absence of ground troops to accept any surrender.
- Gordon warned that regime change without boots creates dangerous power vacuums.
- Voice of America had nearly all 1,400 staffers put on paid leave.
- Trump tried to shut down Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty entirely.
- Ilan Berman called the gutted media apparatus totally unsuited for this moment.
- Decades-old tools built for exactly this scenario got dismantled beforehand.
- Radio Farda lost access to its Kuwait-based transmitter for months.
- Steve Capus said Farda was literally built for a moment like this.
- Saturday's deal restored AM broadcasting from Kuwait at RFE/RL's cost.
- Internet and satellite disruptions inside Iran complicated everything further.
- Lake had previously slammed RFE/RL for not aligning with U.S. foreign policy.
- Her agency reversed some Voice of America Persian-service cuts last year.
- A Persian translation of Trump's speech hit Truth Social quickly.
- Lake celebrated the moment on X as glorious.
- Gordon worked on the NATO air campaign against Gaddafi in Libya.
- That operation helped topple the dictator but threw Libya into chaos.
- Iraq and Afghanistan followed similar regime-change-to-disaster arcs.
- Every comparable U.S. intervention ended up becoming a costly mess.