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Well I too lived through this era. I even lived in Iraq and Afghanistan for a spell.
I think you're granting a lot of explanatory power to the GWOT that it does not deserve whatsoever.
Trump as a singular individual and a Great Man of history is a major variable for sure. His critique of the GWOT was relevant to his popularity and MAGA, but it hasn't exactly informed his foreign policy decisions, as I already noted. He's clearly no isolationist.
But did the GWOT have much to do with immigration, the single biggest issue for Trump? (No, not it did not.)
The Great Awokening, for another significant factor, is not exactly closely tied to foreign policy at all.
The constitutional issues we have about domestic issues, like the expansion of the commerce clause, long precede the GWOT and have nothing to do with foreign policy. FDR and the Warren court have a lot of explanatory power here, not the GWOT.
In general, US domestic politics are pretty separate from foreign policy. Most voters list it pretty far down as their concerns go.
Iran is not Libya and Iranians are not Libyans, so that's a major set of differences.
The comparison I've used multiple times is actually an oil-rich Turkey. Maybe try that comparison and see how it feels.
A critical skill in life is evaluating appropriate analogies, not inappropriate ones. The intervention in Libya is at least in the right ballpark. (For example, someone else unironically brought up bombing in WWII for fuck's sake in evaluating the potential efficacy of a precision bombing campaign today.)
Last time, Trump went from tweeting about regime change to suddenly demanding a cessation of hostilities after merely 12 days. Don't confuse intensity of domination with the time length of domination. Had the Israeli air campaign continued, they were on track to hit certain key economic facilities in retaliation for Iranian targeting of Israeli domestic infrastructure. We would have at some point almost certainly seen civil unrest caused by economic deterioration months ago.
Last time we dominated them hard enough to put a major dent in their missile and nuclear programs, but did not aim at devastating domestic security forces and economic capacities. There was no active domestic opposition on the ground. As the months passed, Iran's economy deteriorated further without having lost major oil or commercial capacities to the IAF, and now there is major domestic opposition.
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