{"id":524,"date":"2026-03-06T13:23:28","date_gmt":"2026-03-06T13:23:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/stuntsintrucks.com\/index.php\/2026\/03\/06\/from-a-bomb-shelter-in-israel-colorado-democrats-opposition-to-war-in-iran-feels-like-vietnam-syndrome-opinion\/"},"modified":"2026-03-06T13:23:28","modified_gmt":"2026-03-06T13:23:28","slug":"from-a-bomb-shelter-in-israel-colorado-democrats-opposition-to-war-in-iran-feels-like-vietnam-syndrome-opinion","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/stuntsintrucks.com\/index.php\/2026\/03\/06\/from-a-bomb-shelter-in-israel-colorado-democrats-opposition-to-war-in-iran-feels-like-vietnam-syndrome-opinion\/","title":{"rendered":"From a bomb shelter in Israel, Colorado Democrats\u2019 opposition to war in Iran feels like Vietnam Syndrome (Opinion)"},"content":{"rendered":"

Listening to the nearly reflexive statements coming from Colorado\u2019s Democratic congressional delegation<\/a> in response to the joint U.S.\u2013Israel strike on Iran\u2019s military infrastructure, I cannot help but wonder whether \u201cVietnam Syndrome\u201d still exerts a quiet but powerful hold on the party.<\/p>\n

Vietnam Syndrome — the deep reluctance to project American power abroad after the trauma of the Vietnam War \u2014 was first widely recognized as a driving ideology within Democratic circles just as I arrived in Washington, D.C., to begin my career. The mood of the city then was shaped by the revelations of the Vietnam War, the publication of the Pentagon Papers, and the findings of the Church Committee, chaired by Frank Church, on which Colorado\u2019s freshman senator, Gary Hart, served. Americans learned of CIA overreach, covert interventions, and hard truths about government deception. The national psyche shifted.<\/p>\n

By the time the Iran hostage crisis unfolded under President Jimmy Carter, the Democratic Party was deeply wary of military force. Carter chose negotiation and restraint as 52 American diplomats were held for 444 days by the new Islamic Revolutionary regime. Whether one agrees or disagrees with his approach, it reflected a broader hesitancy shaped by Vietnam\u2019s shadow.<\/p>\n

That hesitancy has never fully disappeared.<\/p>\n

Today, as the United States and Israel act together to degrade the military capabilities of the Iranian regime — a regime that has funded and armed proxy militias across the region for decades \u2014 I am struck by the cautious, almost antiseptic language coming from many Democratic leaders.<\/p>\n

For example, Colorado Sen. Michael Bennet said this week: \u201cAny use of military force must be consistent with our constitutional framework and avoid drawing the United States into another open-ended conflict in the Middle East.\u201d That concern is understandable.<\/p>\n

No American wants another Iraq or Afghanistan. But when constitutional process becomes the primary lens and the strategic objective becomes secondary, it echoes the old reflex: avoid strength for fear of entanglement.<\/p>\n

Rep. Jason Crow, a former Army Ranger, emphasized that \u201cCongress must be consulted before further escalation,\u201d underscoring the need for oversight and warning against \u201canother prolonged regional war.\u201d<\/p>\n

Rep. Joe Neguse similarly stressed that \u201cthe administration must clearly articulate its legal authority and strategic objectives before expanding military engagement.\u201d<\/p>\n

Process, process, process. Deflection from the embrace of American strength to rid the world of the worst of the worst.<\/p>\n

\"Friends
Friends and relatives of three siblings, Yaakov Biton (16), Avigail Biton (15) and Sarah Biton (13) grieve at their gravesites at the Mount of Olives Cemetery on March 2, 2026 in Jerusalem, Israel. The three siblings were killed during an Iranian missile strike in Beit Shemesh on Sunday, March 1st. Iran fired waves of missiles at Israel after the United States and Israel launched a joint attack on Iran early on February 28th. (Photo by Alexi J. Rosenfeld\/Getty Images)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

I write this not as a detached observer. I spent formative years in Washington working in pro-Israel politics, engaging both Democrats and Republicans, and watching firsthand how internal party debates over strength and restraint played out. In the year 2000, I ran as the Democratic nominee in Congressional District 6 now held by Jason Crow. Yet today, I view these events from the front row.<\/p>\n

Six years ago, I became a dual U.S.\u2013Israeli citizen and now spend most of my time in Herzliya, just north of Tel Aviv. Since Saturday morning, much of our community life has shifted underground. We move between home and reinforced shelters as Iranian ballistic missiles — fired from roughly 2,000 miles away \u2014 target civilian neighborhoods. These are not symbolic gestures; they are designed for mass casualties. The families in these shelters are not abstractions in a policy debate. They are neighbors.<\/p>\n

From this vantage point, the debate in Washington feels tone-deaf.<\/p>\n

When Iran\u2019s leadership vows Israel\u2019s destruction and arms groups who are committed to that goal, deterrence is not theoretical. It is existential. The current joint operation — undertaken by President Donald Trump in coordination with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — may be politically controversial, and both leaders are undeniably flawed. But the strategic objective of preventing a violent theocratic regime from expanding its destructive reach is neither reckless nor novel. It is long overdue.<\/p>\n