Wars are never excursions. They bring destruction, loss of
life, and long-term instability. Reports indicate that nearly 1,500
Iranians—many of them women and children—have already been killed since the
conflict began. The situation escalated further when extensive air operations
by Israel reportedly led to the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei.
The event alone was sufficient to transform an already volatile confrontation
into a crisis with far-reaching regional implications.
Equally troubling is the timing of the military escalation.
The United States and Iran were reportedly engaged in negotiations over
Tehran’s nuclear program, and by several accounts those discussions were moving
in a constructive direction. Launching large-scale military action during such
negotiations has inevitably raised doubts about whether diplomacy was given a
genuine opportunity to succeed.
The consequences are already visible beyond the battlefield.
Oil prices have surged toward US$100 per barrel, heightening economic
uncertainty worldwide. Regional tensions have intensified as Iran signals
readiness for a prolonged confrontation, raising the possibility that the
conflict could draw in additional actors across the Middle East.
At the same time, the objectives articulated by Washington
appear expansive and shifting. Statements from the US administration have
referenced preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, dismantling military
capabilities, and even influencing the country’s political future. History
offers ample evidence—from interventions in Iraq and Libya—that attempts to
reshape political orders through military force rarely produce stable outcomes.
Perhaps the most damaging aspect is the rhetoric surrounding
the war itself. When a conflict that has already taken thousands of lives is
described as an “excursion,” it risks trivializing the gravity of military
action and undermining the credibility of the United States in the eyes of the
international community.
For these reasons, serious questions must now be asked in
Washington. If presidential conduct has indeed inflicted lasting damage on the
global image of the United States, then the constitutional mechanisms of
accountability cannot be ignored. Initiating impeachment proceedings against
Donald Trump may therefore become not merely a political debate, but a
necessary test of democratic responsibility and institutional integrity.




