Greene, Massie, and Carlson break with Trump over Iran strikes as MAGA coalition fractures
President Donald Trump announced at 2:30 a.m. Saturday, the U.S. military had launched a "massive and ongoing" attack against Iran, vowing in a video posted to social media to "destroy their missiles and raze their missile industry to the ground." Within hours, some of the most prominent voices in the America First movement turned on him.
Former Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Rep. Thomas Massie, and Tucker Carlson each condemned the strikes in sharp terms. The reaction exposed a fault line that has been running beneath the MAGA coalition for years, one that the movement's anti-interventionist wing now says has finally cracked open.
Greene Unleashes a 700-Word Broadside
Greene, previously a staunch Trump ally and MAGA standard-bearer, posted a nearly 700-word reaction to X that read less like a policy disagreement and more like a political eulogy. She did not mince words:
"We said 'No More Foreign Wars, No More Regime Change!' We said it on rally stage after rally stage, speech after speech. Trump, Vance, basically the entire admin campaigned on it and promised to put America FIRST and Make America Great Again."
She called the strikes "the worst betrayal," specifically because of who ordered them.
"But it feels like the worst betrayal this time because it comes from the very man and the admin who we all believed was different and said no more."
The ex-congresswoman framed her objection in generational terms, invoking the cost of two decades of Middle Eastern conflict on Americans her age and younger. She accused the government of abandoning ordinary citizens in favor of elite interests. The Daily Caller reported.
"My generation has been let down, abused, and used by our government our entire adult lives and our children's generation is literally being abandoned."
Less than half an hour later, Greene posted again from a separate personal X account, this time sharing a post that includes a video showing a building burning. The caption alleges U.S.-Israeli strikes hit an Iranian girls' school, a report appearing to have originated from the Iranian government, according to France 24. Greene's closing lines carried the tone of someone who feels personally betrayed:
"I did not campaign for this. I did not donate money for this. I did not vote for this, in elections or Congress. This is heartbreaking and tragic."
And then, the final line: "This is not what we thought MAGA was supposed to be. Shame!"
Massie Invokes the Constitution
Massie, the libertarian-leaning Kentucky congressman, was characteristically blunt. He posted on X: "I am opposed to this War. This is not 'America First.'"
But Massie went further than rhetoric. He announced he would work with Democratic California Rep. Ro Khanna to force a congressional vote on war with Iran, an unusual bipartisan pairing, though not their first. The two previously co-sponsored the Epstein Files Transparency Act.
"The Constitution requires a vote, and your Representative needs to be on record as opposing or supporting this war."
Massie's position carries a particular political edge. Trump has endorsed him in Kentucky's May 19 GOP House primary, backing former Navy SEAL Ed Gallrein. Gallrein, for his part, offered a statement to the Daily Caller News Foundation that stood in stark contrast to Massie's objection:
"Today's action is also about deterrence. When America is strong, our enemies are deterred and the world is safer."
The Kentucky primary just became a referendum on more than personality. It is now a proxy fight over the meaning of America First itself.
Carlson Calls It 'Evil'
Tucker Carlson, perhaps the most influential media voice in the America First orbit, reportedly called Trump's Iran operation "absolutely disgusting and evil." ABC News's Jonathan Karl reported the remark in a video posted Saturday morning to X, noting that Carlson had been at Trump's White House just a week earlier.
Karl framed the moment in terms that underscore its significance:
"This is a momentous and potentially defining or maybe redefining move for President Trump."
Karl noted that Trump entered politics promising to end "forever wars" and was harshly critical of the Iraq War throughout his political career. The ABC anchor put it plainly: "And now he finds himself starting what could be a major conflict with Iran."
The Real Fracture
What matters here is not whether Greene, Massie, or Carlson is right on the merits. Reasonable conservatives can disagree about whether neutralizing Iran's nuclear missile infrastructure constitutes a "forever war" or a decisive act that prevents one. That debate is legitimate, and it predates Trump.
What matters is the speed and ferocity of the backlash from inside the movement's own walls. These are not Lincoln Project alumni or Senate moderates. Greene was Trump's loudest congressional defender for years. Carlson's show functioned as a second briefing room for MAGA policy thinking. Massie has been one of the few members of Congress willing to cast lonely votes on constitutional principle regardless of party pressure.
When these voices break, it signals something deeper than a policy dispute. It reveals that "America First" was always a coalition held together by a shared negative: opposition to the bipartisan foreign policy consensus that produced Iraq, Libya, Syria, and two decades of nation-building that built nothing. The moment the coalition's own leader takes an action that can be framed within that old consensus, the seams show.
Greene's accusation that Americans will be "force fed and gaslighted all the 'noble' reasons" for military action echoes the exact language the right used against the Bush-era neoconservatives. That she now aims it at the Trump administration is a measure of how raw the wound is.
The counterargument is straightforward: Iran, on the verge of nuclear weapons capability, is not Iraq in 2003. Destroying missile infrastructure is not regime change. Deterrence is not occupation. Gallrein's statement reflects this view, and it is one shared by a substantial portion of the conservative base that supported Trump precisely because they trusted his judgment on when force is warranted.
But Greene anticipated that rebuttal. She cited the familiar justification that "Iran is on the verge of having nuclear weapons" and dismissed it as "always a lie and it's always America Last."
What Comes Next
Massie's push for a congressional vote will test whether anti-war sentiment on the right has any institutional muscle or whether it remains confined to social media posts. Working with Ro Khanna gives the effort a bipartisan veneer, but it also hands Democrats a weapon they will happily wield for their own purposes.
The Kentucky primary on May 19 now carries weight far beyond one House seat. A Massie victory would signal that the America First base punishes military action abroad. A Gallrein victory would suggest the base trusts Trump's judgment even when it cuts against the movement's stated orthodoxy.
For now, the coalition that won in 2024 is arguing with itself about what it actually won. Greene, Massie, and Carlson say it was a mandate for restraint. The administration's actions say otherwise. Both sides claim the mantle of America First.
Only one of them ordered the strikes.




