More than two months after the outbreak of a war that Iran’s leadership views as existential, US President Donald Trump now appears trapped between two crises of his own making, one geopolitical and the other domestic, as Washington continues to fail in forcing Tehran to submit to American demands.
According to an analysis published by CNN, rhetoric alone will not end a conflict that Trump helped ignite years ago, nor will it provide an escape route from a war that was initially expected to last no more than six weeks but has now entered its tenth week.
Political analyst Stephen Collinson argued that as the conflict drags on, Trump’s domestic political options are rapidly narrowing. His approval ratings have reportedly fallen to around 30 percent, fuel prices have climbed above $4.50 per gallon, and public opposition to the war continues to intensify, leaving the White House with diminishing political space to sustain the conflict.
Trump’s Strategic Deadlock
The analysis stated that Trump now finds himself cornered, helping explain his repeated optimistic claims about progress in peace talks and his tendency to suddenly announce or abandon military strategies.
According to CNN, the latest diplomatic effort revolves around a one-page memorandum currently under negotiation through Pakistani mediation. The proposed document would reportedly end the war and establish 30 days to resolve remaining disputes between Washington and Tehran.
While such simplicity may appeal to Trump’s negotiating style, the analysis argued that a one-page agreement, even if finalised, is unlikely to resolve nearly five decades of hostility between the United States and Iran, including disputes surrounding Tehran’s nuclear programme, ballistic missile capabilities, sanctions relief demands, and strategic control over the Strait of Hormuz.
Iran continues to insist on substantial sanctions relief to revive its struggling economy while also seeking to preserve its leverage over one of the world’s most critical maritime energy routes.
Strategic Confusion Inside Washington
CNN described the American approach to the war as strategically inconsistent, marked by abrupt shifts, contradictory messaging, and growing uncertainty over how the conflict will ultimately end.
The analysis pointed to comments made by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who suggested on Tuesday that the war was effectively over while simultaneously promoting a new military operation announced by Trump hours earlier to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
However, within hours, the operation known as “Project Liberty” was quietly suspended after its mission was reportedly reduced to rescuing a limited number of ships. Trump later claimed the move was intended to support ongoing peace negotiations.
CNN argued that the rapid launch and abandonment of yet another American strategy projected weakness rather than determination.
The Failure of the “Silver Bullet” Strategy
The report cited Trita Parsi, an Iran expert at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, who described Trump’s approach as a “silver bullet” strategy based on the belief that one decisive move could force Iran into submission.
The sequence reportedly began with a joint American Israeli campaign targeting Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, followed by extensive bombing raids against military infrastructure, naval blockades targeting Iranian ports and shipping, and finally the short lived “Project Liberty”.
Despite these escalating measures, none succeeded in collapsing the Iranian government.
According to the analysis, Iran quickly replaced senior officials killed during the attacks with a new generation of hardliners, while the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps maintained internal cohesion with no visible signs of fragmentation that could threaten the survival of the state.
Trump’s Public Messaging Under Fire
CNN also criticised Trump’s public messaging throughout the war, particularly remarks delivered at the White House before a group of military mothers, where he appeared vague, detached, and dismissive of the scale of the military campaign.
The analysis highlighted Trump’s repeated comparisons between the prolonged Iran war and the brief operation that removed Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro from power, arguing that the comparison reflected continued political denial and narrative manipulation.
With the war now approaching 70 days, the contrast between expectations and reality has become increasingly difficult for the administration to conceal.
Why the War Failed to Deliver Strategic Victory
According to CNN, the conflict may ultimately become a textbook example of how smaller and less heavily armed states can challenge major powers through asymmetric warfare.
The analysis suggested that Trump’s reluctance to deploy tens of thousands of American ground troops may have been politically wise given America’s recent military history. However, that same restraint made a decisive military victory increasingly unattainable.
At the same time, Iran’s recognition of its strategic leverage over the Strait of Hormuz, combined with the global economic damage caused by disruptions to energy routes, placed additional political pressure on Washington and further complicated military calculations.
Ian Lesser, a distinguished fellow at the German Marshall Fund, told CNN that the war exposed “the enormous gap between American operational capability and the difficulty of achieving a strategic outcome most people would consider successful”.
That gap, the analysis argued, explains why Trump has failed to secure the swift and decisive strategic victory promised at the beginning of the war despite America’s superior battlefield capabilities.
Iran has not witnessed a domestic uprising against its leadership, Tehran has not abandoned its nuclear ambitions, and the government has not agreed to surrender its stockpile of highly enriched uranium. There are also no guarantees that the Revolutionary Guard will not attempt to rebuild its regional networks in Lebanon or Gaza.
How America’s Negotiating Position Fractured
CNN argued that Rubio unintentionally exposed weaknesses in Washington’s negotiating position during a White House press briefing on Tuesday, where he insisted the American naval blockade would eventually force Iran to yield.
Rubio stated that the United States wanted to reopen the Strait of Hormuz so that all countries could use it freely without mines or transit fees.
However, the analysis pointed out that the strait had remained open before the war began, and Iran has now discovered that control over the waterway can serve as one of its most effective deterrence tools.
The fact that the Strait of Hormuz has become central to negotiations between Washington and Tehran demonstrates, according to CNN, how the strategic balance of the war has shifted in Iran’s favour.
The analysis concluded by warning that reaching a rapid settlement is becoming increasingly urgent for the safety of American troops, Iranian civilians, global energy markets, and economies already strained by the consequences of the war.






