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Norms Impact

Trump’s plan in Iran not ‘regime change’ but ‘endless war,’ senator says

A war is being waged while Congress hears goals that contradict the public case—normalizing executive war-making without coherent, accountable objectives.

Iran War

Mar 11, 2026

Sources

Summary

A senior U.S. senator says classified briefings indicate the administration’s Iran war goals do not include destroying Iran’s nuclear weapons program or pursuing regime change. The executive branch is advancing a military campaign while, in closed-door briefings, lawmakers are left describing objectives that do not match the public rationale. The practical consequence is a conflict trajectory defined by recurring strikes, rising casualties, and mounting costs without a stated end state.

Reality Check

When the executive branch conducts a major war effort while offering shifting or contradictory objectives, it weakens the democratic premise that force is used under transparent, accountable purposes. Normalizing open-ended bombing justified by one goal in public and described differently in closed briefings conditions our institutions to accept perpetual conflict without measurable end states. Over time, that precedent narrows Congress’s practical ability to oversee war powers and leaves the public funding and staffing a campaign whose endpoints are undefined.

Media

Detail

<p>Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy said he attended a two-hour briefing on the White House’s aims for the conflict with Iran and later posted a thread on X describing what he said the briefings indicated, while noting he could not share classified information. Murphy wrote that the administration confirmed the war goals do not include destroying Iran’s nuclear weapons program and that regime change is not among the stated objectives. He said the administration’s continued aims were primarily destroying missiles, boats, and drone factories, and he said officials implied further bombing when asked what happens if Iran restarts production after strikes stop.</p><p>Murphy also said the administration had no plan to safely open the Strait of Hormuz, which he said Iran has effectively closed, halting Gulf oil flows and driving up prices globally. Separately, Senator Richard Blumenthal said he believes the administration is on a path toward deploying U.S. troops on the ground in Iran after a classified Senate Armed Services Committee briefing. Trump said he is keeping options open on “boots on the ground.”</p>