White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt stated on Friday that ground forces are "not part of the plan" — walking back Trump's "never say never" on ground troops from two days earlier . Trump separately called a conventional invasion a "waste of time" but, for the second time in three days, declined to issue a categorical ruling-out.
The formulation is worth parsing. "Not part of the plan" is a statement about current operational planning, not a policy commitment or a constitutional pledge. Military plans change — that is their nature. Trump's original position was explicit rejection of ground troops and nation-building , stated when war aims were limited to nuclear infrastructure. The aims have since expanded twice. Each escalation in objectives has been accompanied by a corresponding softening of the ground-troop prohibition: from "no" to "never say never" to "not part of the plan" to "waste of time." The trajectory is consistent — and consistently in one direction.
The strategic logic of refusing to rule out ground forces is straightforward: ambiguity forces Iran to defend against both air and ground threats, diluting its defensive posture across a longer perimeter. Whether Washington genuinely contemplates an invasion or is preserving rhetorical flexibility, the effect on IRGC planning is the same — forces must be allocated to border defence and internal security rather than concentrated on missile operations or decentralised strike commands. But the contradiction between demanding unconditional surrender and foreswearing the only means that has historically achieved it remains unresolved. Congress rejected war authorisation in both chambers , . It has not been consulted on any escalation of war aims — let alone the deployment of ground forces that those expanded objectives would logically require.
