
Carl Bildt
Prime Minister, Sweden 1991-1994
Foreign Minister 2006-2014
Trump Is Burying His Own Security Strategy
by Carl Bildt
Published: Project Syndicate, March 19th 2026
US President Donald Trump has leapt feet first into a major new Middle East war, the objectives of which are changing by the day. As the conflict escalates, the endgame scenarios are growing increasingly bleak and complicated, making a mockery of the spirit and letter of Trump’s three-month-old National Security Strategy
SOCKHOLM – Whatever one thinks of the US National Security Strategy published late last year, at least it clearly set out what President Donald Trump’s second administration sees as America’s strategic priorities. But no sooner was the NSS released than US “strategic” decision-making abandoned it.
True, the new NSS’s emphasis on the Western Hemisphere was no mere rhetorical shift. The capture of Venezuela’s dictator, Nicolás Maduro, and the growing pressure campaign against Cuba both clearly fit the new strategic framework.
At the same time, the Middle East, the region that has dragged the US into one “forever war” after another, was downgraded even more decisively than in previous administrations’ strategies. Trump’s NSS proclaims that “the days in which the Middle East dominated American foreign policy in both long-term planning and day-to-day execution are thankfully over.”
But barely three months later, US strategy has become unhinged. Trump has leapt feet first into a major new Middle East war with ever-changing objectives. As the conflict escalates, the endgame scenarios are growing increasingly bleak and complicated. The US may lose by not winning; and Iran may win by not losing. It is a slow-motion strategic disaster.
Perhaps Trump, intoxicated with US hard power after last year’s 12-day war with Iran and the tactically brilliant Venezuela operation in January, believed that he could deliver another fait accompli in a matter of days. The ancient Greeks called this cast of mind hubris, and they warned that it almost always ends in tears
Or perhaps Trump was dragged into the conflict by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has been seeking a US-backed war with Iran for many years. Netanyahu knew that Israel, for all its impressive military capabilities, could not sustain and win a full-fledged war with the Islamic Republic on its own; and he knew that, in Trump, he finally had a US president whom he could maneuver into an “excursion.” This dynamic also has a name: the tail that wags the dog.