Pete Hegsethâs Worrisome Press Briefing
If you want to believe the Iran war is going as planned, donât listen to the defense secretary.
By Jonathan ChaitHowever well or poorly you think the excursion in Iran, as President Trump calls it, is going, you might want to lower your assessment after Pete Hegsethâs press conference today.
The defense secretary, who calls himself the âsecretary of warâ but might need to change his title to âexcursion secretary,â addressed the public after CNN reported that the administration had erroneously assumed that Iran would keep the Strait of Hormuz open. Since the war began, Iran has mined the strait, fired on ships, choked off traffic, and caused the price of oil and other commodities to soar.
Hegsethâs response is that we shouldnât worry our pretty little heads about a minor body of water. âThey are exercising sheer desperation in the straits of Hormuz,â he said. âSomething weâre dealing with. We have been dealing with it and donât need to worry about it.âHegseth went on to call CNNâs report âpatently ridiculousâ and âfake news.â Yet when he elaborated, he seemed to inadvertently give it credence.
âFor decades, Iran has threatened shipping in the Strait of Hormuz,â he said. âThis is always what they doâhold the strait hostage.â
Read: âWe would be entering a completely different worldâ
Itâs true that Iran has long threatened to close the strait. The accusation is that the administration bungled by not believing that Iran would follow through on its threats. Hegsethâs blithe assurance that Iran is behaving no differently from before confirms the report that he is trying to discredit.Hegsethâs presentation gave no remotely skeptical viewer any new reasons to trust that the administration expected the war to go as it has nor that there is a realistic plan to end it. Instead, his briefing suggests he believes that the administrationâs only challenge in the Middle East is to prevent news organizations from reporting on anything but Iranâs desperation.
Hegseth is fond of the trick of using a dismissive tone while actually conceding skepticsâ main point. Returning to the topic of the strait, he casually insisted, âThe only thing prohibiting transit in the straits right now is Iran shooting at shipping. It is open for transit should Iran not do that.âWell, yes. Everybody understands why the strait is closed. Nobody is saying that the Strait of Hormuz is closed because Trump hates oil tankers. By pointing out that the enemy is to blame for doing the bad thing, he is reinforcing the suspicion that he didnât expect the bad thing to happen.
Hegseth urged reporters to focus on more important developments, such as, âWe know the new so-called not-so-supreme leader is wounded and likely disfigured.â
Itâs understandable that a man who installed a makeup studio at the Pentagon and expelled photojournalists for shooting him at an unflattering angle would consider disfigurement an especially devastating strategic setback. But given that the administration has never listed making Iranâs mullahs less attractive as a primary war objective, this is a minor comfort.
Also, a small point on trash-talking: You can call him the âso-called supreme leaderâ or the ânot-so-supreme leader,â but combining the two insults negates them both. He is not âthe so-called not-so-supreme leader,â because he is not calling himself the not-so-supreme leader.
Hegseth mainly berated news outlets for failing to cover the war in the propagandistic fashion that heâd practiced as a Fox News talking head. He quoted a CNN chyron that read Mideast War Intensifies. A better chyron, he suggested, would have been Iran increasingly desperate.
In fact, a headline emphasizing Iranâs motives and state of mind would be less objective than one emphasizing what the parties to the war are actually doing. But objectivity is the opposite of Hegsethâs intent. âThe sooner David Ellison takes over that network, the better,â he said, referring to the Trump ally who heads Paramount Skydance and will soon acquire CNN.
Trump seems to have used the threat of regulatory pressure to install his friends at CNN. Hegseth is openly asking the new ownership to crack down on reporting that casts an unflattering light on the administrationâs behavior. Cracking down on reporting is definitely the kind of priority Trump and Hegseth would care about. But it does not seem like what theyâd emphasize if the war were going smoothly.
https://archive.ph/u37WJ#selection-609.0-999.404
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