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Sunday, May 10, 2026
Checkmate in Iran
Washington can’t reverse or control the consequences of losing this war. By Robert Kagan | The Atlantic
Trump has no clue about what he'll do next in Iran or when the war will end
Robert KaganUploaded: Apr 7, 2026 · 36 Likes

This article recognizing U.S. defeat in Iran was written by the most die-hard interventionist neocon you could imagine: Robert Kagan.
- For decades, he worked through the Kagan Institute and the Brookings Institution, producing the language, logic, and policy papers that helped spread chaos and war across the world.
- He spent years begging for war with Iran after already helping lay the ideological groundwork for the ravaging of the entire Middle East — a catastrophe that brought death, damage, and destruction to tens of millions of people.
Now, after finally getting exactly what he wanted with Iran, he’s throwing his arms up and pretending he had nothing to do with it. And by the way, his wife is Victoria Nuland — the neocon princess who helped provoke the Ukraine war back in 2014.
It’s believed there are now more than 1 million casualties in Ukraine.
Kagan and Nuland are a power couple responsible for massacring millions, destroying nations, embarrassing the United States, and weakening the
Robert Kagan on American Anti-Liberalism, from the 1920s to the 2020s
Editor’s note: POLITICO Magazine released a list of the top 50 influential people in Washington, D.C., including Brookings Senior Fellow Robert Kagan and Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Victoria Nuland, described as “the ultimate American power couple.”
Victoria Nuland and Robert Kagan fell in love “talking about democracy and the role of America in the world” on one of their first dates. It’s a shared passion that hasn’t faded over time.
It was just two years ago that President Obama was gushing to aides about an essay that Kagan, a historian and author, wrote about the myth of American decline—a theme Obama echoed in his State of the Union that January. This year, Kagan’s sprawling New Republic essay, “Superpowers Don’t Get to Retire,” insisted on America’s enduring responsibility to shape the world order—and issued a direct challenge to a president who has summarized his own foreign-policy doctrine with a minimalist “don’t-do-stupid-s—t” directive. Obama promptly invited Kagan in for a West Wing consult, but it was also clear that Kagan had helped rouse the president’s Republican critics, who have been increasingly adopting Kagan’s argument that just because it’s been a decade of wearying war in Iraq and Afghanistan doesn’t mean America can roll up its superpower carpet and stay home when new crises, from Iraq to Russia to Syria, beckon.
Nuland, overseeing European and Eurasian Affairs at the State Department, has been a strong advocate of the engaged approach her husband favors as a crisis with Russia has unfolded on her diplomatic turf this year. The point was made, rather sensationally, in February, when a leaked audio recording of her F-bomb-laden diatribe about the fecklessness of the European Union, which she accused of not exactly playing a constructive role trying to end the growing conflict in Ukraine, appeared on the Internet. Nuland, a career Foreign Service officer, has been an impassioned advocate for democracy-building in Eastern Europe, and while she got pushback from European counterparts over her “f—k the EU” comment, the United States has been leading the effort to impose sanctions on Russia since President Vladimir Putin seized Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and waged a proxy war in the country’s east—dragging a reluctant Europe along pretty much every step of the way.









