President Trump explicitly rejected ground troops and nation-building in Iran while US and Israeli forces continued striking Iranian military and political infrastructure. The statement defines the ceiling of American commitment: Washington will destroy Iran's leadership but will not govern what follows. His earlier pledge to deploy force "never seen before" signalled maximum military commitment; the rejection of ground troops signals minimum political commitment.
The position has a direct and uncomfortable antecedent. In March 2011, the US, Britain, and France launched air strikes against Libya under UN Security Council Resolution 1973. President Obama rejected ground troops. Muammar Gaddafi was killed by rebel forces that October. No international stabilisation force followed. Libya has not had a functioning central government since. Obama later called the failure to plan for post-Gaddafi Libya the "worst mistake" of his presidency. Iran, however, is not Libya. Libya in 2011 had six million people and a tribal governance structure. Iran has 88 million people, a functioning civil service, and an IRGC economic empire that the Foundation for Defense of Democracies has estimated at $100 billion — spanning construction, telecommunications, oil, and banking.
The scale of what has been destroyed compounds the question of what follows. Khamenei, Defence Minister Nasirzadeh, IRGC Ground Forces Commander Pakpour, and Ali Shamkhani are dead (ID:470). The Assembly of Experts building in Tehran — the body constitutionally responsible for selecting a new supreme leader — was struck directly . The three-person interim council must now govern without the coercive apparatus that held the state together, while ethnic minorities with longstanding autonomy aspirations — Kurds, Baluchis, Azeris, Arabs — see central authority weakened for the first time in decades.
Trump's stance is consistent with the political lesson American voters drew from Iraq and Afghanistan: occupation costs more than intervention. It is consistent with his "ending forever wars" rhetoric since 2016. But the lesson of Iraq was about the price of staying; the lesson of Libya was about the price of leaving. No American president has found a position between the two that produces a stable outcome. And no actor — American, Iranian, Russian, or Chinese — has articulated a governance plan for a country whose Supreme Leader is dead, whose succession mechanism is physically destroyed, and whose population is split between those setting off fireworks (ID:474) and those queueing for bread.
