
The Iran strikes have exposed a fault line that runs straight through Trump’s political base and the country at large. Longtime loyalists like Tucker Carlson and prominent MAGA voices publicly condemned the decision, framing it as a betrayal of Trump’s promise to avoid another Middle East quagmire. Their outrage echoes a wider national mood: nearly three-quarters of Americans reject the idea of sending U.S. ground troops into Iran, haunted by memories of Iraq and Afghanistan.
At the same time, Trump’s overall approval remains frozen in a familiar stalemate. Republicans overwhelmingly back him, Democrats almost unanimously reject him, and independents are left weighing economic worries like the cost of living against fears of yet another foreign war. With midterms looming, the Iran conflict has become a brutal test: not just of Trump’s foreign policy, but of how far his supporters will follow him when campaign promises collide with the brutal reality of war.