Trump has an off-ramp for Iran war, and it involves throwing Pete Hegseth under the bus

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When a room starts filling with smoke, you can expect Donald Trump to be the first one out the door. And as Operation Epic Fury grinds through its third week with no clear endpoint, mounting American casualties, global economic ruin, and a girls’ school in southern Iran reduced to rubble with more than 170 casualties, Trump is already looking for a way out. That, at least, is the darkly logical reading of what The Telegraph is reporting. Trump has been quietly positioning his Secretary of War Pete Hegseth to take the blame for his miscalculation with Iran. The White House reportedly pushed Hegseth onto programs like 60 Minutes so that someone in Trump’s inner circle could serve as the war’s public shield. “He hates shows like that,” a source told the publication. “He would only have gone out there if Trump said, ‘Hey, can you go on 60 Minutes?’” On Sunday’s broadcast, Hegseth declared that the war was just beginning, and hours later, Trump told reporters the campaign was “very complete” and could end “very soon.” A former Trump White House official told The Telegraph plainly: “It’s very possible that President Trump is setting him up.” Since the bombs started falling on February 28, Hegseth has fully sunk into his high-school bully persona. He threatened to rain down “death and destruction from the sky all day long.” He declared the U.S. was “punching them when they’re down, which is exactly how it should be.” Mr. Hegseth, I think that is exactly how one finds himself on the wrong end of a war crimes tribunal. The contrast with Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine who is even-tempered and precise has become impossible to ignore. John Ullyot, a Marine veteran who served as Hegseth’s own press secretary last year, put it in writing. Hegseth’s “penchant for performance art,” he wrote, “may have boosted his career as a weekend co-host on cable news, but it’s beyond inappropriate for a secretary of defense.” The Telegraph piece draws an instructive parallel to Kristi Noem, who until last week was Trump’s Secretary of Homeland Security. Noem became the public face of the administration’s most controversial immigration actions, declared two Minneapolis protesters shot dead by federal agents to be “domestic terrorists,” and then contradicted Trump publicly — exactly how it’s playing out with Hegseth over the Iran war too. The final straw was a Senate hearing in which she claimed Trump had personally signed off on a $220 million ad campaign featuring her on horseback. She was out the door days later. Meanwhile, a Pentagon investigation into whether a U.S. strike killed more than 150 students at a girls’ school in southern Iran is reportedly pointing toward American responsibility. Trump, meanwhile, has left himself a lot of room to maneuver. He can declare victory, continue with this farce, or even kick out his own Secretary of War with a shrug. And people still wonder why democracy is on a historic backslide.