Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Fascist Move of the Day
Trump declares victory in the Iran war — while deploying 1,000 more troops, with 1,348 civilians confirmed dead, and Iran publicly denying the "peace talks" the White House claims are underway.
Source: The Guardian, March 24 2026
Historical Parallel
On October 3, 1935, Italy invaded Ethiopia. Within six months, Mussolini was declaring victory in speeches across Italy. The reality was grimmer: the war required mustard gas and aerial bombardment of civilian populations, the campaign extended far beyond initial projections, and the international community had formally condemned Italy as an aggressor at the League of Nations. Mussolini declared the war over in May 1936. Ethiopian resistance continued for years. At home, each phase of the campaign had been reported as a triumph. Newsreel footage of cheering crowds, flags waved in piazzas, the leader's speeches playing in town squares. The propaganda of triumph served domestic consumption. The corpses were real. The victory was not.
Premature victory declarations during active wars are not mistakes. They are a specific feature of authoritarian information management — one with a consistent purpose. The declaration of victory reframes ongoing violence as a mopping-up operation, positions any continued resistance as illegitimate or irrelevant, and prevents domestic audiences from accurately assessing the costs. It is also a trap: once the victory has been declared, the leader cannot easily walk it back without appearing weak. The war continues; the "victory" must be maintained; the definition of what victory means must be quietly revised until the ongoing conflict can be reconciled with the original claim.
"We have won the war. Iran knows they've lost."
— Donald Trump, Truth Social, March 24 2026 — as 1,000 more US troops were being deployed to the region and Iran's government denied that any peace talks were underwaySources: Wikipedia: Second Italo-Ethiopian War · USHMM — Fascism in Italy
The Full Dispatch
On Tuesday, Donald Trump declared victory in his war on Iran. At the same time, the US military was in the process of deploying approximately 1,000 additional airborne troops to the region. Iranian barrages continued to strike Israel, Gulf Arab states, and northern Iraq. US and Israeli warplanes continued striking targets inside Iran and Lebanon. Iran's UN ambassador confirmed at least 1,348 civilians had been killed since the war began, now entering its fourth week. Iran's government publicly and explicitly denied that the "very good" peace talks Trump had described were taking place. Israel indicated it planned to occupy swaths of southern Lebanon. The war was not over. The White House said it was.
Mussolini's Ethiopian campaign is the sharpest historical parallel, but the broader pattern extends across 20th-century authoritarian warfare. Hitler declared in September 1939 that Poland had been "defeated" before Warsaw had surrendered. He declared the Soviet Union "essentially beaten" in October 1941, two months into Barbarossa, more than three years before Germany's actual defeat on the Eastern Front. The premature victory declaration serves several functions: it manages domestic morale, it allows the leader to avoid accountability for escalating costs, and it creates a frame in which ongoing violence can be reinterpreted as something other than what it is. It also sets a trap: the leader who has declared victory cannot later admit the war is still happening without revealing that the original declaration was false.
The specific detail that makes this declaration particularly notable is the simultaneous deployment. You do not send 1,000 more soldiers to a war you have won. You do not describe the peace talks you claim are underway as "very good" when the other party is publicly denying they exist. These are not inconsistencies that result from bad information or miscommunication. They are the product of a communications strategy in which the declared reality and the actual reality are simply different things, maintained in parallel for different purposes. The declared reality is for domestic consumption — for the people who voted for a president who would end the wars and bring the troops home. The actual reality is what is happening on the ground in Iran and Lebanon and Iraq.
There is a moment in every authoritarian war when the gap between declared reality and actual reality becomes too large to sustain. Mussolini reached it in 1943. Hitler reached it in early 1945. The question is not whether the gap will eventually close — it always does, because reality reasserts itself regardless of what is announced on Truth Social. The question is what the cost of maintaining the fiction is while it lasts, measured in the currency that matters: the people dying in a war whose victory has already been declared.
The Playbook
Declare victory — reshape the domestic narrative → Continue the war — deploy more troops → Redefine ongoing violence as "mopping up" → Deny that the declared reality contradicts the actual one → Reality reasserts itself — after the cost has been paid