What is Trump’s objective in Iran?

 
By Gilbert Achcar –March 3, 2026
 
As we predicted a week ago, and in light of the Iranian regime’s continued 
intransigence—its refusal to commit to ending uranium enrichment and to 
negotiate limits on its ballistic missile programme—it faced “the risk of a 
military strike that could create a situation threatening the entire regime, 
and which might ultimately lead to Khamenei’s removal from power in one way or 
another.” We concluded that the impending US strike was “planned to target Ali 
Khamenei specifically, along with the heads of the hardliners in the Iranian 
regime, in the hope that their removal would pave the way for Tehran’s 
submission to Washington’s desiderata.” (“A Game of Chicken Between Washington 
and Tehran?” [in Arabic], Al-Quds Al-Arabi, 24 February 2026).
 
We also explained how Donald Trump’s approach to Iran falls within the 
framework of the strategy he successfully implemented in Venezuela, which 
focuses on “changing the regime’s behaviour” rather than “changing the regime” 
itself, as the George W. Bush administration sought to do by invading Iraq in 
2003 (see “US: an old-new imperial doctrine”, Le Monde diplomatique, February 
2026). A significant difference between Venezuela and Iran, however, is that 
Washington had connections with key figures within the Venezuelan regime and 
believed they would comply with its demands once subjected to intense pressure 
and after the removal of their president, Nicolás Maduro, through his 
abduction. In Iran, by contrast, the regime exercises far tighter control and 
oversight over its leading figures, making the risk of any of them reaching a 
behind-the-scenes accommodation with Washington far lower. Moreover, kidnapping 
the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran was not a feasible option, 
and eliminating him alone would in any case have been insufficient to alter the 
regime’s trajectory.
 
For this reason, the American operation against Iran is far larger and more 
complex than the one that targeted Venezuela. What, then, is the Trump 
administration’s objective in Iran? It bears repeating that it is not “regime 
change,” despite the insistence of those who fail to grasp the vast difference 
between that policy—as exemplified by the occupation of Iraq—and large-scale 
military operations. The current onslaught is not accompanied by any intention 
to occupy Iran (even assuming such an occupation were possible, given that it 
would require a military effort more akin to the Korean and Vietnam Wars than 
to the occupation of a much-weakened Iraq in 2003—something the US 
administration is neither politically capable of nor willing to undertake). 
Everything Trump has done thus far appears consistent with the approach 
described above, even to the point of reassuring the backbone of the Iranian 
regime—the Revolutionary Guard Corps—that he guarantees them “total immunity” 
if they halt the war and submit to Washington’s will.
 
Full at:
 
https://gilbert-achcar.net/trumps-objective-in-iran
 
 
 



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