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Iran war

Trump's war on Iran is already losing the home front

New surveys find that Americans broadly disapprove

Reporting | QiOSK
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A series of new polls show that the American public is overwhelmingly opposed to President Trump’s war on Iran.

Nearly three days after the beginning of the joint U.S.-Israel attack, Trump and his top aides have offered a series of shifting (or baseless) justifications for the attack and have failed to articulate an end game or timeline on how long the conflict will last. While the U.S.-Israeli strikes have killed Iran’s Supreme Leader and other top government and military officials, they’ve also killed dozens of civilians, including more than 100 school children in southern Iran.

The Iranian response has begun to incur costs, with damage to U.S. military bases throughout the region and at least 4 U.S. service members killed. With the strong possibility that the war will only get worse, the American public has already had enough.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Sunday found that just 27% supported the strikes, while 43% disapproved and 29% said they were unsure. More than half of Republicans polled said they supported the attack, but 42% said they would be less likely to back the war if it leads to "U.S. troops in the Middle East being killed or injured." Forty-five percent of all respondents said they would be less likely to support the war if gas and oil prices increase in the United States.

And a new CNN poll released on Monday found that 59% disapproved of Trump’s decision to start a war with Iran. Sixty percent said they don’t think Trump has a clear plan and 62% said he needs to acquire congressional approval for any further military action. (Both the House and Senate will reportedly consider the matter this week.)

Meanwhile, the Washington Post texted 1,003 Americans on Sunday and asked them what they thought of Trump’s attack on Iran. More than half (52%) said they opposed while 39 percent said they supported. Of the five options — oppose strongly, oppose somewhat, unsure, support somewhat, and support strongly — “oppose strongly” received the most support at 39%.

A plurality in the Post survey (47%) also said Trump should stop the strikes on Iran now, whereas just 25% said they should continue.

Americans’ sentiment about Trump’s attack now lines up with where they were before the war, as a series of polling from a variety of firms leading up to the U.S. attack found them to be against getting into another Middle East conflict. But these latest numbers are also quite significant, especially when compared with polling released just days after the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. Back then, a whopping 72% of Americans supported then-President Bush’s war on Iraq.

For his part, President Trump doesn’t seem too concerned.

“I think that the polling is very good, but I don’t care about polling,” he told the New York Post on Monday. “I have to do the right thing. I have to do the right thing. This should have been done a long time ago.”


Top image credit: A few hundred people protest against the war in Iran in Chicago, Illinois, on February 28, 2026. (Photo by Jerome Gilles/NurPhoto) via REUTERS CONNECT
Reporting | QiOSK
Did the US only attack Iran because of Israel?
Top image credit: President Donald J. Trump holds a joint news conference at the White House with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Feb. 4, 2025. (Shutterstock/ Joshua Sukoff)

Did the US only attack Iran because of Israel?

QiOSK

In the months that led up to the Iraq War, the Bush administration went to extraordinary lengths to convince the world of the need to oust Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. Leading officials laid out their case in public, sharing what they claimed was evidence that Iraq was moving rapidly toward the deployment of chemical, biological and nuclear weapons. When U.S. tanks rolled across the border, everyone knew the justification: the U.S. was determined to thwart Iraq’s development of weapons of mass destruction, however fictitious that threat would later prove to be.

In the months that led up to the Iran War, the Trump administration took a different tack. President Trump spoke only occasionally of Iran, offering a smattering of justifications for growing U.S. tensions with the country. He claimed without evidence that Iran was rebuilding its nuclear program after the U.S.-Israeli attack last June and even developing missiles that could strike the United States. But he insisted that Tehran could make a deal with seven magic words: “we will never have a nuclear weapon.”

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Iran says ‘no ship is allowed to pass’ Strait of Hormuz: Reports
Top image credit: A large oil tanker transits the Strait of Hormuz. (Shutterstock/ Clare Louise Jackson)

Iran says ‘no ship is allowed to pass’ Strait of Hormuz: Reports

QiOSK

Hours after the U.S. and Israel launched a campaign of airstrikes across Iran, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps is warning vessels in the Persian Gulf via radio that “no ship is allowed to pass the Strait of Hormuz,” according to a report from Reuters.

The news suggests that Iran is ready to pull out all the stops in its response to the U.S.-Israeli barrage, which President Donald Trump says is aimed at toppling the Iranian regime. A full shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz would cause an international crisis given that 20% of the world’s oil passes through the narrow channel. Financial analysts estimate that even one day of a full blockade could cause global oil prices to double from $66 per barrel to more than $120.

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trump strikes iran
Top photo credit: Truth Social

Trump: we've begun combat strikes, regime change operations in Iran

Middle East

President Donald Trump released a video on Truth Social at 2:30 a.m. ET this morning announcing that major U.S. combat operations in Iran were underway. At the end he demanded disarmament by Tehran: "lay down your arms and you will be treated fairly with total immunity or you will face certain death." He also said to "the people of Iran" that "when we are finished the government is yours to take. Your hour of freedom is at hand."

This operation would clearly go beyond the 2025 "Operation Midnight Hammer" in which Trump claimed this morning that the U.S. had "obliterated" Iran's nuclear program. This time he said the U.S. would to "raze their missile industry to the ground” and “annihilate their navy.”

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