Pentagon drafts plans for US ground forces in Iran as Trump denies troop deployment
Pentagon officials have drawn up detailed proposals for sending American ground forces into Iran, CBS News reported Friday, citing unnamed sources who say President Trump is actively weighing the option. The report landed just hours before Trump flatly denied it.
"No, I'm not putting troops anywhere," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. "If I were, I certainly wouldn't tell you."
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt moved quickly to frame the report, offering a statement to CBS that distinguished between military planning and presidential decision-making:
"It's the job of the Pentagon to make preparations in order to give the Commander in Chief maximum optionality, it does not mean the President has made a decision, and as the President said in the Oval Office yesterday, he is not planning to send ground troops anywhere at this time."
That distinction matters. The Pentagon plans for everything. That is what a competent defense establishment does. The existence of a contingency plan is not a policy announcement, and treating it as one reveals more about the media's appetite for breathless escalation than it does about White House strategy, as Daily Mail reports.
Three weeks in, and the pressure campaign is working
Military strikes against the Islamic Republic have now gone on for nearly three weeks. On Friday afternoon, before departing for Mar-a-Lago, Trump posted on Truth Social that the campaign is nearing its conclusion:
"We are getting very close to meeting our objectives as we consider winding down our great Military efforts in the Middle East with respect to the Terrorist Regime of Iran."
That is the posture of a president with leverage, not one groping for options. The CBS report, sourced to unnamed Pentagon officials, frames the ground-troop proposals as though they represent an imminent escalation. But read alongside Trump's own words, the more coherent picture is of a commander in chief keeping every card on the table while signaling the endgame is in sight.
This is how credible deterrence works. You don't telegraph your limits. You don't rule out options to make cable news anchors feel comfortable. You let adversaries wonder.
NATO's belated offer
While the United States has carried the weight of military action, seven of America's allies issued a joint statement Thursday offering to pitch in on securing the Strait of Hormuz. Six of them are NATO members. The signatories, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Japan, and Canada, expressed "readiness to contribute to appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait" and welcomed "the commitment of nations who are engaging in preparatory planning."
Readiness to contribute. Preparatory planning. The bureaucratic caution practically drips off the page.
Trump was not impressed. In a series of Truth Social posts on Friday, he unloaded on the alliance with characteristic bluntness, calling them "COWARDS" and declaring, "Without the U.S.A., NATO IS A PAPER TIGER!"
His frustration is rooted in a specific grievance that is hard to argue with on the merits. Speaking on the South Lawn Friday, Trump pointed out that Iranian attacks on ships in the Strait of Hormuz barely affect the United States at all:
"The United States, we don't need it. Europe needs it. Korea, Japan, China, a lot of other people."
"So, they'll have to get involved a little bit on that one," he added.
This is the core asymmetry that has defined American foreign policy for decades. The United States secures global shipping lanes that primarily benefit other nations' economies. American taxpayers fund the fleet. American servicemembers absorb the risk. And the beneficiaries issue joint statements about their "readiness" to maybe, possibly help.
The burden-sharing argument comes home
Trump sharpened the point further on Truth Social, calling out NATO allies directly:
"Now that fight is Militarily WON, with very little danger for them, they complain about the high oil prices they are forced to pay, but don't want to help open the Strait of Hormuz, a simple military maneuver that is the single reason for the high oil prices."
"So easy for them to do, with so little risk," he wrote.
The message is unmistakable. If European nations want stable energy markets, they need to invest in the security architecture that makes those markets possible. The free-riding era is over.
Trump also endorsed Senator Lindsey Graham's suggestion that the U.S. reconsider maintaining bases in Spain and Germany in light of the Strait of Hormuz controversy, calling Graham "right" to raise the issue. Trump noted that Graham, once one of the top Iran hawks and a staunch NATO supporter, has shifted his position. "And don't forget, he was a big NATO guy for a while, and now he's not," Trump said, adding, "I think NATO's gone down a long way."
When even the most hawkish voices in the Republican caucus start questioning the value of permanent European basing, something fundamental has shifted in the conservative consensus on alliance management.
What the media wants this story to be
The framing of the CBS report is predictable. Anonymous sources describe military planning. The headline screams escalation. The implication is that the president is careening toward a ground war he publicly denies wanting.
But consider what is actually happening:
- The Pentagon is doing its job by preparing options for the president.
- The president is publicly signaling that military objectives are nearly met.
- Allied nations are finally, belatedly, stepping forward to share the burden.
- Trump is using the moment to extract long-overdue commitments from NATO partners.
That is not chaos. That is a multi-front pressure campaign executed simultaneously against Iran and against complacent allies. The leak itself may serve a strategic purpose: nothing concentrates Tehran's mind quite like the suggestion that American boots could cross its border.
The real question no one is asking
The media's fixation on whether troops will deploy misses the more consequential development. After nearly three weeks of sustained military strikes, the United States has reshaped the strategic landscape in the Middle East. Iran's regime is under pressure it has not faced in decades. European allies who spent years hedging on Iran policy are now publicly pledging cooperation.
Trump called the allies' earlier refusal to join the fight against a nuclear-armed Iran what it was: "They didn't want to join the fight to stop a nuclear-powered Iran."
Now they want a seat at the table. Funny how that works when someone else has already done the hard part.
The question isn't whether the Pentagon has plans for ground troops. The Pentagon has plans for everything. The question is whether this campaign achieves its objectives without needing them. And on that front, the signals from the president suggest the answer is yes.





