Trump's Nuclear Temptation
The Current TACO Only Delayed It.
This post is sponsored by Incogni.
Perhaps you’re thinking that last night’s TACO, Trump’s crudely obvious Iran pause, the ceasefire announced in all caps on Truth Social like a WWE storyline, means the world is back on its axis.
It isn’t. It won’t be. This is a lacuna, a brief moment before the ride of chaos races back in.
And if you’ve been paying attention for the last decade, you already know why.
This is the pattern. The endless, exhausting pattern.
It has always been the pattern. Trump escalates on some terrible idea, markets shudder, allies panic, the generals go pale, and then, at the precise moment the consequences become real to him, not to anyone else, he reverses.
He calls it strength. He calls it a deal. He calls it the greatest something in history. The press, exhausted and grateful for a news cycle that doesn’t end in fire, calls it de-escalation. Everyone exhales.
And then, days later, sometimes hours, the same crisis returns, worse than before, because nothing was resolved. Nothing was negotiated. Nothing was built. A tantrum was paused. That’s all.
We have seen this movie so many times that the reels are worn through. Tariffs on, tariffs off, tariffs on again. North Korea love letters into nuclear brinkmanship into love letters. NATO is obsolete, NATO is fine, NATO is obsolete. Every single time, the off-ramp is temporary, because the underlying condition, a man who cannot tolerate the feeling of being cornered, is permanent.
So here is what happens next with Iran, and I’d like to be wrong about this, but I won’t be.
The ceasefire holds for a news cycle or two.
Maybe for the weekend.
Iran, which has its own domestic audience to perform for, does something Trump decides is a humiliation: a statement, a missile test, a mocking Lego video, a single Revolutionary Guard commander saying the wrong thing on state television.
Or Israel and Bibi, which has no interest in a ceasefire for both domestic political and regional strategic reasons, creates a fact on the ground that Trump cannot ignore without looking weak. Or the intelligence assessment that the strikes didn’t actually destroy what he said they destroyed, the ones already leaking out of DOD and DIA in fragments, becomes undeniable, and he has to prove the assessment wrong by hitting again.
Pick your trigger. All the guns are loaded.
Every day, data brokers profit from your sensitive info…your phone number, DOB, even your Social Security number, and selling it to the highest bidder. And who’s buying it?
Best case: companies target you with ads. Worst case: scammers, hackers, and identity thieves. It’s time you check out Incogni. It scrubs your personal data from the web, confronting the world’s data brokers on your behalf. And unlike other services, Incogni helps remove your sensitive information from all types of shady data brokers, including those tricky People Search Sites.
Once your data is out there, it’s not just calls. It’s phishing, impersonation, and identity theft. That’s why I was a client of Incogni before they were a sponsor: It works. They delete your info from the web, monitor and follow up automatically, and continue erasing data as new risks emerge. Try Incogni here and get 55% off your subscription with code RICK55.
And when it happens, Trump will be in a worse position than he was 24 hours ago, not a better one. Because he will have already spent the rhetorical capital of “we won.” He will have already declared victory. He will have already told his base the war is over and the mullahs are broken. To go back in means admitting that the first round (and the second, third, and fourth) didn’t work, which he cannot do, so the next round has to be bigger. Louder. More final.
This is the part that should be keeping people awake.
Every TACO in Trump’s career has been followed by a larger escalation, because the reversal itself becomes a wound he has to cauterize. The pause is never the end. The pause is the windup. And the windup on an Iran war, a war he chose, a war he cannot define victory in, a war where the adversary gets a vote and the adversary is furious, is going to arrive inside a man who has spent his whole life believing that the answer to any problem is to hit it harder than anyone expected.
Which brings me to the thing I haven’t been able to stop thinking about. The thing I’ve been turning over since the first bombers lifted off a month ago. I’ve been thinking about nuclear war lately, more than I have at any time since the late 1980s, when I thought about nuclear war as a professional.
There are moments in history when the world changes in a blink. On a human scale, most changes happen so slowly we can barely understand them. In this era, technology has altered who and what we are over the past two decades, but nations and politics move more slowly.
But not always.
I’ve been thinking about the most consequential, most dangerous change that could come from this doomed and deranged war with Iran, not from where it is tonight, but from where it will be two weeks from now, when the ceasefire is rubble and Trump is cornered worse than he’s ever been in his life, by markets, by allies, by his own collapsing story, by the mirror.
Not a full exchange, not Armageddon, not a first. Not a dozen ICBMs bearing multiple warheads toward Iranian targets. No, not yet.
A “demonstration.” That’s the word they’d use. A clinical, bloodless word. A focus-group word. The kind of word that sounds like it belongs in a McKinsey PowerPoint deck, not attached to a mushroom cloud clawing its way into the stratosphere.
Donald Trump, cornered by a collapsing strategic position in Iran, boxed in by markets in revolt, oil spiking, allies fleeing, by his increasingly obvious mental infirmities, a domestic political environment turning from brittle to shattered, decides to send a message.
Thinking about the single, blinding, retina-searing flash that may soon burn away the illusion that things will somehow hold together, that the Madman Theory doesn’t include an actual madman. I pray you won’t comfort yourself with the illusion that “someone” will stop him if he tries to press the Bad Button. No one will.
There is no one who can if he summons the military aide with the football and decides to make Tehran brighter than a thousand suns for a single moment.
This is one of those moments. Not tonight, maybe.
Tonight he’s taking his victory lap.
But perhaps soon. Perhaps sooner than we think.
This post is sponsored by Incogni. You can get 55% of Incogni by using my link.



Equally concerned. He’s increasingly unstable and with his level of psychopathology and dementia he’s obviously taking stimulants or getting some fix that makes him presentable yet manic. Take away his adderall and he dies.
One good thing that came out of this war to counteract the Russian windfall on oil prices and the lifting of sanctions, is that Ukraine is now seen as a viable partner in weapons production, and has gained wealthy clients in the Middle East who will boost and expand Ukraine's drone and hopefully missile production and who appreciate the need for their expertise in interception and the conduct of modern war in general. I respect Zelenskyy's courage and savvy more every day. Europe should take note.