Trump Should Do Three Things to Win over Ordinary Iranians

Victory Comes Not Only with Bombs and Missiles, but by Winning Hearts and Minds

President Donald Trump in the White House East Room.

President Donald Trump in the White House East Room.

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It is inevitable that in war, ordinary citizens suffer. After more than four decades of clerical dictatorship, Iranians are accustomed to suffering. As the war grinds on and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps gambles on American politics and seeks to outlast President Donald Trump, Trump should do three things to show the Iranian people that he stands with them.

Trump should publicly announce deployment of the USNS Mercy and USNS Comfort and offer free medical care to Iranians injured in the conflict.

First, he should dispatch U.S. hospital ships to the region. Many Iranians have been wounded. Some are civilians, but many others are members of the Iran’s conscript army and Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Trump should publicly announce deployment of the USNS Mercy and USNS Comfort and offer free medical care to Iranians injured in the conflict, including Revolutionary Guardsmen. Not only would this reinforce to the Iranian people that the regime, and not Iran itself, is the U.S. target, but it also would signal to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps that if they stand down, ordinary rank-and-file members can expect mercy rather than retribution. The quicker fissures develop in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and it collapses, the faster the regime will collapse.

Second, he should announce a new Iranian rial and display mock-ups of the new currency. The December 2026 protests erupted because of a bank failure, and the Tehran bazaar shuttered in protest of the regime’s financial mismanagement. The rial is symbolic of this. At the time of the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Iranians used rial notes that ranged from ten rials to 10,000 rials; the exchange rate was roughly seventy rials to the U.S. dollar. Under late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s management, the rial plummeted in value. To bypass the psychological impact of higher banknotes, the Central Bank began issuing “bank checks” in denominations of 500,000 rials and one million rials, which circulate as currency. Even the one million rial notes are worth less than a dollar; to add insult to injury, Iranian financial papers regularly report seizures and confiscations of counterfeit bank checks.

The U.S. Bureau of Engraving should develop a new run of Iranian rial, with five or six zeros removed, featuring not Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s face or commemorations of the regime’s illicit nuclear program or, indeed, previous shahs’ visages, but rather, the cultural sites and figures that define Persian culture: the epic poet Ferdowsi, for example, Isfahan’s Si-o-Se Pol Bridge, Tehran’s iconic Burj-e Shahyad, or the ruins of Persepolis. Doing so not only would suggest a better, more normal future for Iranians, but also would signal profound respect for millennia of Iranian culture.

As the war continues, it is essential that Trump not only outlines his vision to the Iranian people.

Finally, the Persian New Year—Nowruz—rapidly approaches. Traditionally, U.S. presidents have greeted Iranians with a Nowruz statement or address. Iranians welcomed this tradition, at least until President Barack Obama decided to legitimize their oppressors by speaking to the “Islamic Republic of Iran” rather than Iranians themselves.

When Saddam Hussein controlled Iraq, he forbade celebration of Nowruz. In response, many Kurds would light tires on fire. Not only were they difficult to extinguish, but their smoke symbolized opposition. Trump should suggest Iranians do the same thing as symbols of their opposition to the clerical regime.

As the war continues, it is essential that Trump not only outlines his vision to the Iranian people but, if the United States has achieved complete air superiority, Trump should consider airdropping at least a few symbolic Nowruz kits. He will not be able to supply 90 million Iranians, but it is the thought the counts.

Victory comes not only with bombs and missiles, but by winning hearts and minds. The Pentagon developed the unfolding war plans over decades. Trump did not create them; he just did what Obama and President Joe Biden did not: He chose to employ them. No one likes being bombed, however. Trump risks snatching defeat from the jaws of victory if he does not demonstrate to Iranians respect for their culture and hope for what the future holds.

Michael Rubin is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where he specializes in Middle Eastern countries, particularly Iran and Turkey. His career includes time as a Pentagon official, with field experiences in Iran, Yemen, and Iraq, as well as engagements with the Taliban prior to 9/11. Mr. Rubin has also contributed to military education, teaching U.S. Navy and Marine units about regional conflicts and terrorism. His scholarly work includes several key publications, such as “Dancing with the Devil” and “Eternal Iran.” Rubin earned his Ph.D. and M.A. in history and a B.S. in biology from Yale University.
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