Video•Mar 9, 2026
There May Be No 'Endgame' In Iran: Former Marine
The interview with former Marine and defense journalist JD Simkins centers on the unsettling absence of a defined endgame for the United States’ escalating conflict with Iran. While officials cite objectives such as crippling Iran’s navy and missile production, Simkins points out that concrete, achievable outcomes remain vague, contradicting Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s public assurances of clear goals.
Simkins draws stark parallels to Iraq and Afghanistan, noting that a generation of veterans who fought those wars now confront a similar strategic ambiguity. He highlights the production of roughly 10,000 Iranian drones per month, the lingering debate over deploying U.S. ground troops, and the psychological toll on service members who fear a drawn‑out engagement reminiscent of past protracted conflicts.
Notable remarks include Hegseth’s claim of “clearly defined outcomes,” Simkins’ reference to General Jim Mattis’s warning to “don’t create more enemies than you kill,” and the tragic school strike that killed dozens of Iranian girls, which the administration denies involvement in. These examples underscore the human cost and the potential for hard‑line backlash.
The lack of a transparent exit strategy threatens to erode military morale, strain domestic patience, and embolden Iranian hardliners, complicating U.S. policy and raising the specter of a costly, indefinite war.