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Negin Owliaei: As Trump Bombs Iran, We Need to Reckon With the American War Machine

People gather in Times Square as the nation reacts to “major combat operations” in Iran on February 28, 2026, in New York City. SPENCER PLATT / GETTY IMAGES

We cannot afford to slip into despair. We must push back against militarism everywhere, at every turn.

As news broke that the United States and Israel had launched war on Iran, two posts kept showing up over and over on my social media feeds. One was from the Israeli military’s official account, which stated an oft-repeated phrase: “Israel has the right to defend itself.”

The other was a video from the Iranian city of Minab, where the first reports of casualties were emerging. The joint U.S.-Israeli attack had hit a girls’ elementary school; the death toll kept ticking higher and higher. At the time of publication, Iranian authorities said 108 people, mostly schoolchildren, had been killed in the strike, with many more injured. 

Plenty has been written, in Truthout and elsewhere, about the totally incoherent justifications for this war, the illegality of it, the potential for regional disaster, the joke it has made of the very idea of diplomacy. All of this was and continues to be true, and all of it is important to raise. But more than anything, we in the U.S. need to reckon with the fact that so much of our state wealth, capacity, and technology goes toward burying children in rubble. 

Last year, when Israel and the U.S. launched the strikes that would be prelude to this attack, I wrote that the two countries were “shedding even the pretense and facade of the principles of a rules-based international order that has already worked in their favor.” In the wake of those strikes, once the immediate violence ceased, we largely heard crickets from U.S. lawmakers. This, despite the fact that those strikes, like these, were illegal under U.S. and international law. We cannot let this continued lack of accountability stand. If we do, what will happen next?

Over the years, U.S. and Israeli leaders have become increasingly vocal about their hopes for “greater Israel” — the boundless expansion of an apartheid state. Before the start of the current assault on Iran, former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, a favorite in the country’s upcoming elections, accused Turkey of being the hub of a threatening axis “similar to the Iranian one.” This war is not about Iran’s nuclear program. It is not a war to free Iranians from a repressive regime. This is a war to preserve U.S. power and hegemony across the entire region. 

A plume of smoke rises following a reported explosion in Tehran, Iran, on February 28, 2026.

It is also not accurate to say that Israel is dragging the U.S. into a war against its choosing. Reporting has shown that these two nuclear powers were in lockstep in their planning of this attack. In order to stop this violence, we need to really contend with how it started. The U.S. is hardly a victim here. 

This state of affairs is intolerable. I am disgusted to know that my tax dollars are being spent to bomb my ancestral homeland. I was sickened to wake up to messages from family members telling me that the city where they live was under attack from the country where I live. I’m terrified now that Iran’s government has cut internet access yet again, leaving us disconnected from our loved ones. No fear, of course, can compare to the terror of being on the receiving end of missiles or guns, whether they are wielded by a foreign power or your own government; Iranians have been killed by both in horrifying numbers over the last year. But for those of us in the diaspora, the fact that it has now become routine to check in on family and friends living through untold violence does not make it any less traumatic.

Despite the abject horror of this moment, we cannot afford to slip into despair. There is still space for things to get much worse, but, more importantly, there is still so much left that we must protect. No one can predict what will happen over the coming days and weeks, but we know they are likely to be filled with more violence and uncertainty. We need to use every single tool at our disposal to chip away at the war-making systems inflicting this horror, which are so thoroughly embedded in the heart of the United States.

We can start, of course, by demanding that Congress immediately pass a war powers resolution to put an end to this destructive assault. Beyond that we can lift up the call being made by groups like Defending Rights & Dissent for Congress to impeach not only Donald Trump but every single member of his cabinet who had a hand in making this unjust and illegal war possible.

But we shouldn’t stop there. Our elected officials need to publicly explain why they hemmed and hawed over a war powers resolution before these attacks occurred, despite an obvious military buildup.

We must demand that every member of Congress who has voted to increase our military budget to nearly a trillion dollars account for their choices. We must push those members who have personal investments in the military machine — to the tune of tens of millions of dollars — even further. They need to explain their conflicts of interest, and why they continue to profit off this death and destruction. Lawmakers who take money from groups like AIPAC that are relishing in this war especially need to answer for their votes. 

It’s also imperative to not view this war in a silo, but instead see it as part of the same violent, hegemonic project that has been conducting genocide and spreading violence across Palestine, Lebanon, Yemen, Syria, and beyond. We must hold elected officials accountable for failing to uphold U.S. and international law by continuing to support the transfer of weapons to Israel as it commits genocide against Palestinians. We must make it politically toxic for those lawmakers not to support legislation like the Block the Bombs Act, which aims to stop such transfers.

We also can’t expect elected officials to do more just because we ask them to. We need to build power. We must support grassroots movements like the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement that seek to make war, apartheid, and genocide too costly to wage. We must back campaigns like Taxpayers Against Genocide that are searching for legal avenues to keep federal funds from being used to violate human rights.

We can wage campaigns against death-dealing corporations and make sure that war-profiteering is exposed and subjected to public outrage. The No Tech for Apartheid movement has long been organizing to push Silicon Valley to stop supplying the Israeli military with computing power, and has already found some success. The Israeli military’s use of artificial intelligence (AI) in Gaza has received a great deal of reporting; now that OpenAI has announced a deal to allow the Pentagon to use its models in their classified networks, the fight against AI has taken on renewed urgency. Campaigns across the country against data centers are now also a crucial nexus of resistance against militarism.

So too are campaigns for immigrant rights and against deportations. In the wake of the U.S. strikes against Iran last June, the Trump administration rounded up Iranian immigrants for deportation. Those deportations continued into this year, even as the Iranian government staged a brutal crackdown on protesters. As we prepare for war to rage across the region, we can demand the U.S. and Europe open their borders to people fleeing violence and despair. We can continue to show the links between the occupation of cities by federal immigration agents here at home and imperial wars waged abroad. The enemies of democracy here are also the enemies of democracy abroad.

Some of these demands may seem futile under this murderous president, backed by an obedient Congress, and with a Supreme Court that has offered comparatively little restraint. But this unaccountable bureaucracy makes it all the more essential that we build grassroots power to issue these demands and force those in power to heed them. 

Polling shows that this war is unpopular. Trump may be an authoritarian, but he is not entirely invulnerable, nor are the elected officials who have given him pass after pass. We cannot let him believe for a second longer that he can get away with something this wildly illegal or recklessly dangerous without accountability. And we cannot let the leaders who follow him believe that they, too, can unleash such violence without consequences. After all, would we be here if there were any real repercussions for the 2003 invasion of Iraq, or the continuing genocide in Palestine? We need true accountability for these crimes. And the only way to get it is to wage a struggle against militarism every day — not only in moments of crisis, but whenever and wherever it rears its ugly head. 


First published in Truthout. Licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), and you are free to share and republish under the terms of the license.

NEGIN OWLIAEI is Truthout‘s editor-in-chief. An award-winning journalist, she previously worked at Al Jazeera‘s flagship daily news podcast, The Take.


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12 comments on “Negin Owliaei: As Trump Bombs Iran, We Need to Reckon With the American War Machine

  1. Lisa Zimmerman
    March 11, 2026
    Lisa Zimmerman's avatar

    All resistance is important.

    “Some of these demands may seem futile under this murderous president, backed by an obedient Congress, and with a Supreme Court that has offered comparatively little restraint. But this unaccountable bureaucracy makes it all the more essential that we build grassroots power to issue these demands and force those in power to heed them.”

    Liked by 1 person

  2. rhoff1949
    March 2, 2026
    rhoff1949's avatar

    A remarkable essay that is undistracted, angry, and accurate in its diagnosis: militarism is the enemy of working people everywhere in the world. Ever since I was a cold war kid terrified in my bed praying the rosary that I’d live to grow up, I have known that “defense” with its gargantuan budget relies on terror, on a baseline terror it promises to allevaite even as it ensures we are all deeply frightened.At the same time, our economy has been thoroughly captured by the “defense” industry. It’s a deal with the devil, a covenant with evil. The U.S. is addicted to the profit from its wars. America’s business model is based on murder. What shall we do about that?Thank you, Negin Owliaei. Thank you, Michael, for publishing this.The global arms trade that has ensnared us all in its bloody trap began as “le systeme Zaharoff” built by Zachariah Zaharoff, the Jeffrey Epstein of his day. I only scratch the surface in this essay, but it may raise questions others can try to answer: https://consequenceforum.org/remembering-the-alchemists/In any case, YES. This is the elephant in the room: militarism, which is of course armed patriarchy; in this case, old geezers with ever more horrific weaponry and ever more sophisticated propaganda to normalize the terror it produces generation after generation.Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.

    Liked by 3 people

    • Vox Populi
      March 2, 2026
      Vox Populi's avatar

      Well-put, Richard. The country is spiraling down, choking on its own waste and killing as many people as possible while avoiding consequences for the time being. Trump is Hitler/Nero/Caligula/Putin in one nasty package. Eva and I often talk about fleeing to another country, but it would mean leaving behind our friends and family which are the most important reasons for living… I guess we’ll stay on board and go down with the ship…

      Liked by 2 people

  3. boehmrosemary
    March 2, 2026
    boehmrosemary's avatar

    What Michael says. And what Negin says: “It’s also imperative to not view this war in a silo, but instead see it as part of the same violent, hegemonic project that has been conducting genocide and spreading violence across Palestine, Lebanon, Yemen, Syria, and beyond. We must hold elected officials accountable for failing to uphold U.S. and international law by continuing to support the transfer of weapons to Israel as it commits genocide against Palestinians.”

    Liked by 3 people

  4. Barbara Huntington
    March 2, 2026
    Barbara Huntington's avatar

    Today the words of Rodney King, “why can’t we all just get along” echo in my head. I know the answer, greed, power, the pathetic need to be richer, to feel oneself smarter, better looking, somehow always trying to feel superior, to dominate, to destroy the taller tower of blocks built by the other child, to overpower a country, a child, and, in the past, I would say, a woman and feel superior, but there are women as evil as the men and so I must blame my species and question why empathy and love can be lost in survival of the fittest and wonder when helping each other for mutual benefit of all was discarded and if I don’t stop I will end up a hopeless puddle on the floor but if I do stop, if we stop, then there is no hope and what then?

    Liked by 1 person

  5. zeina3azzam
    March 2, 2026
    zeina3azzam's avatar

    “But more than anything, we in the U.S. need to reckon with the fact that so much of our state wealth, capacity, and technology goes toward burying children in rubble.” — I can’t agree more.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Vox Populi
      March 2, 2026
      Vox Populi's avatar

      America was founded on the genocide of the Native Americans, and in the 20th century we have carried this violence into the rest of the world. The American people would be much better off if we invested in nature and education rather than war.

      Liked by 3 people

    • Barbara Huntington
      March 2, 2026
      Barbara Huntington's avatar

      I had copied out these same words to post.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Vox Populi
        March 2, 2026
        Vox Populi's avatar

        Yes, the American people seem to be in denial about what our country has become.

        Liked by 3 people

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This entry was posted on March 2, 2026 by in Opinion Leaders, War and Peace, Social Justice, Most Popular and tagged , , , , , .

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