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Trump Admits He Has No War Plan in Bombshell Letter

A president launched major combat operations and then told Congress he cannot predict their scope or duration, stretching war powers norms while the statutory 60‑day clock runs.

Iran War

Mar 3, 2026

Sources

Summary

President Donald Trump told Congress it is not possible to know the full scope and duration of U.S. military operations against Iran as “major combat operations” continue. The administration has initiated and expanded hostilities while offering shifting rationales and timelines under a War Powers Act notification rather than a prior congressional authorization. The result is an open-ended campaign with mounting casualties and a 60-day statutory deadline that forces Congress to either authorize the war or confront an ongoing operation already underway.

Reality Check

Open-ended war-making initiated first and explained later corrodes the constitutional balance that forces collective accountability for national violence. When shifting justifications and uncertain timelines become normalized, Congress is reduced to a deadline manager under the War Powers Act instead of a co-equal decision-maker on whether we fight. That precedent weakens separation of powers and conditions the public to accept major combat operations as an executive choice, not a national authorization.

Media

Detail

<p>President Donald Trump sent a letter to Congress on Monday, obtained by CBS News, formally notifying lawmakers of U.S. strikes against Iran under the War Powers Act. In the letter, Trump stated that while the United States “desires a quick and enduring peace,” it is not possible to know the full scope or duration of military operations that may be necessary, and that U.S. forces remain postured to take further action to address threats and attacks against the United States or its allies and partners.</p><p>Trump wrote that the strikes were undertaken to protect U.S. forces in the region and the U.S. homeland, to advance national interests including maritime commerce through the Strait of Hormuz, and in collective self-defense of regional allies including Israel. The War Powers Act requires notification within 48 hours of deploying forces absent a declaration of war and limits such deployments to 60 days without congressional approval. The campaign began Saturday as a joint U.S.-Israeli effort; six U.S. service members have been killed in retaliatory strikes since it started.</p>