What to Follow Right Now: The War Comes Home
The pressure points are getting clearer: the rescue mission, the price shock, the budget choices, and the institutional strain.
Mary’s roundup this morning catches the mood of it, but the fresher way to frame today is this: we are watching the point where a war sold as swagger starts producing consequences that are harder to spin away. The biggest story is not Trump’s language. It is whether the facts on the ground are starting to outrun the performance.
First, keep your eyes on the rescue mission. The U.S. is still searching for a missing crew member after two American aircraft were shot down, and Iranian state media have urged civilians to help capture the downed airman. That matters because this is where “controlled escalation” can suddenly stop looking controlled. One bad recovery mission, one more loss, one more humiliating image, and the whole posture of dominance starts to crack.
Second, watch the economic blowback. This war is already moving from the battlefield into daily life. Oil surged this week, U.S. gas prices had already pushed above $4 a gallon, and new reporting says Americans could soon feel the strain through fuel surcharges, higher shipping costs, and broader price pressure, with California especially exposed. That is the part of the story people will feel in their wallets long before they read a policy memo.
Third, watch what the administration is trying to lock in at home while the war dominates attention. Trump’s new budget asks for $1.5 trillion in defense spending while cutting non-defense domestic programs by 10 percent. That is not just bookkeeping. It is a statement of priorities, and a very blunt one: more force, less public life, and fewer resources for the things that make a country livable.
And then there is the institutional strain. Pam Bondi is out, Todd Blanche is in on an acting basis, and a federal judge has again refused to revive the DOJ effort targeting Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Read together, those stories say the same thing: this White House is still trying to bend institutions around Trump’s personal and political needs, and it is still running into resistance, churn, and embarrassment.
So that is what we are keeping our eyes on today: whether the rescue mission turns into a larger disaster, whether the war’s costs start hitting ordinary people faster, whether militarized spending becomes the excuse for gutting domestic priorities, and whether the machinery at home keeps buckling under the pressure. The story is getting bigger than the sales pitch, and messier than the people running it want to admit.




Thank you for this column. You and Mary tie these issues together and look at the implications, which are profound. It was obvious to all the hundreds of generals and admirals that Trump brought together that he and Hegseth see war as theater for US consumption, with no consideration of the consequences or of the ways war is waged and won. The top brass sat in stony silence, and must’ve been horrified to hear Trump‘s desire to build big battleships because of their size and appearance, much like he’s treating his ballroom and the proposed arch. And Trump and Hegseth have no clue as to an exit strategy or any of the consequences. No sensible nation wants Trump’s war to become their war, too.