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The Times of India
The Times of India
World
Chidanand Rajghatta

Trump's messy makeover reveals golden age of chaos

TOI correspondent from Washington: US President Donald Trump is facing growing questions about the coherence of his middle-east policy after claiming he has deliberately "spared" Iran's military, despite repeatedly declaring that US forces had already "decimated," and "obliterated," Iran's military capabilities.

The apparent contradiction has become a metaphor for a presidency increasingly marked by conflicting narratives, stalled diplomatic initiatives, domestic legal setbacks, and a stream of wacky social-media posts that project confusion and chaos rather than confidence. Domestic and foreign policy analysts accustomed to searching for consistency in presidential doctrine are reaching for aspirin as they track a White House that often resembles reality television in which the star keeps announcing victory while the sets collapse behind him.

The latest example is Iran, where Trump is now alternating between boasting that the US had devastated Iran's military capabilities, and suggesting, in a weekend interview sans pushback with his daughter-in-law Lara Trump, that Washington had magnanimously chosen not to finish the job. The MAGA boss said eliminating the Iranian military – which he now claims is moderate – would have left the US no one to negotiate with.

At home, Trump faces a series of similar embarrassing setbacks. The much-publicized Freedom 250 celebrations marking America's quarter-millennium are crumbling amid reports that several entertainers have bailed out. An enraged President went into a petulant midnight meltdown on Truth Social over the fiasco, saying that he is scrubbing the extravaganza because “overpaid artists” were getting the “yips.” So instead, modestly announced he is “thinking about bringing the Number One Attraction anywhere in the World, the man who gets much larger audiences than Elvis in his prime,” viz himself.

Then there is the World Cup football. Administration allies had hoped the tournament would become a global showcase for Trump's America. Instead, reports of uneven ticket demand and concerns about hotel occupancy in some host cities have fueled pessimistic commentary and questions about the greatest sporting fiesta in the world being held in a country that is now in the throes of nativism and suspicion of immigrants.

Meanwhile, visitors approaching the White House increasingly encounter barricades, construction equipment and ongoing renovation that have given portions of the presidential perimeter the appearance of a large infrastructure project. Amid multiple foreign policy crises and domestic setbacks, Trump is reveling in showing off his civic projects with all the enthusiasm of an apprentice contractor impressing clients. For admirers, it reflects his identity as a builder; for critics, it is oddly detached from the concerns that dominate ordinary households – grocery bills, housing costs, healthcare expenses and gas prices.

Perhaps the most intriguing source of concern, however, has been Trump's own social-media feed. In recent days, middle of the night postings have included digitally enhanced images placing the president alongside George Washington, depictions of his likeness on Mount Rushmore, and illustrations evoking an idealized vision of mid-century white-dominated America that his MAGA base is clamoring for.

The president's continuing fascination with cognitive testing has only deepened the discussion. Trump frequently boasts that he has aced cognitive screening examinations, often describing the achievement as though he had solved advanced mathematical theorems rather than completing a test designed primarily to identify possible cognitive impairment in elders. Medical professionals note that such exams are useful screening tools but are not measures of intelligence. That distinction has not prevented Trump from discussing them with the enthusiasm of a Nobel laureate accepting a prize.

And so America finds itself trapped between two competing realities: the official narrative of national renewal and the daily spectacle of improvisation, contradiction and disruption. Whether historians eventually describe this period as a golden age or a golden mess remains uncertain. What is certain is that, in Trump-era America, even chaos is marketed as success.

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