Secretary of State Mike Pompeo appeared on CNN this morning, touting Donald Trump’s decision to target and kill Qassim Soleimani, commander of Iran’s Quds Force. The administration’s top diplomat seemed eager to assure the public that yesterday’s airstrikes, approved by the president, were life-saving.
“[T]he American people should know that President Trump’s decision to remove Qasem Soleimani from the battlefield saved American lives. There’s no doubt about that. He was actively plotting in the region to take actions, a big action, as he described it, that would have put dozens if not hundreds of American lives at risk.
“We know it was imminent…. The risk of doing nothing was enormous. The intelligence community made that assessment.”
Pompeo added, “We have every expectation that people, not only in Iraq but in Iran, will view the American action last night as giving them freedom.”
The cabinet secretary didn’t literally say the United States will be celebrated as “liberators,” but it was hard not to notice the parallels between Trump administration rhetoric this morning and the language Americans heard from the Bush/Cheney administration in advance of the 2003 war in Iraq.
I can’t say with any confidence whether Pompeo’s claims were more reliable than the Bush/Cheney rhetoric from 17 years ago. It’s certainly possible that there was an “imminent” threat. It’s possible that the airstrike “saved American lives.” It’s possible the U.S. intelligence community made a specific assessment about Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, which Donald Trump and his team took seriously.
But Lawfare’s Susan Hennessey raised an important point this morning: “This is the moment where the White House will pay the price for demolishing its credibility with endless lies. Who will believe Pompeo this morning?”
In a time of crisis, it may be tempting for many Americans to give their leaders the benefit of the doubt. Trump and Pompeo have made that impossible.
Vox’s Matt Yglesias had a good piece along these lines this morning, noting Team Trump’s staggering dishonesty about a great many things, including Iran.
Part of Trump lying about everything is that he frequently says things specifically about Iran that are not true…. Trump, from time to time, even lies about his own past statements on Iran, spending one day last September complaining that the media reported he’d said he was willing to meet with Iranian leaders without preconditions when he clearly said in both an interview with Chuck Todd and a press conference with Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte that he was willing to meet without preconditions.
The point is that the probative value of a Trump statement about Iran is, to be generous, roughly zero. And Pompeo is no better…. Pompeo, too, engages in routine misstatements about Iran specifically, including lies about Iranian nuclear research.









