The White House is in crisis mode. President Trump's decision to authorise a drone strike against Iranian General Qassem Soleimani was meant to be a show of strength. Instead, it has spiralled into a quagmire of mixed messages and internal dissent.
Within hours of the strike, senior administration officials were contradicting each other on the justification. The official line: Soleimani was planning 'imminent' attacks on U.S. personnel. But leaks from the Pentagon suggest the intelligence was far from solid. One source described it as 'cigarette-ash thin'.
Trump's own inner circle is fraying. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo pushed hard for the strike. Defence Secretary Mark Esper was more hesitant. Meanwhile, Vice President Mike Pence was reportedly briefed only after the decision was made. A Whitehall source with close ties to the administration tells me: 'They are making it up as they go along.'
The fallout has been swift. Iran has retaliated with missile strikes on Iraqi bases housing U.S. troops. Trump's response: a televised address that was long on rhetoric, short on strategy. He threatened 'disproportionate' military action but offered no off-ramp. Allies were left scrambling. The UK, France, and Germany issued a joint statement urging restraint – a barely veiled rebuke.
On Capitol Hill, the mood is mutinous. Republican and Democratic senators alike are furious about being bypassed. A resolution to limit Trump's war powers is gaining momentum. Even loyalists like Senator Lindsey Graham are demanding more consultation.
Back in the White House, the ad-hoc nature of foreign policy decision-making has been laid bare. Aides describe the Oval Office as increasingly chaotic. Trump, they say, is frustrated by the lack of clear victory. He wants out of the Middle East, but his instinct for maximum pressure has driven him into a corner.
The irony is rich: here is a president who campaigned on ending endless wars, now teetering on the brink of a new one. The 'Art of the Deal' has become the 'Art of the Dodge'. Allies are exasperated. The enemy emboldened. And Trump's grip on the crisis is slipping.
What happens next? The stage is set for either a dangerous escalation or an awkward climbdown. The hawks in the administration are pushing for more strikes. But Trump's own base wants out. Something has to give.
For now, the world holds its breath. In the corridors of power, the whispers are growing louder: has the emperor lost his clothes?








