Trump’s Iran uprising call echoes Bush’s failed 1991 Iraq strategy

ray90
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ray90
3 Min Read
Iranian protesters with phone flashlights in crowded Tehran street at dusk

✅ Verified

President Donald Trump has publicly called for Iranian citizens to rise up against their government, mirroring a strategy that spectacularly failed when President George H.W. Bush encouraged Iraqi Shia and Kurdish populations to rebel against Saddam Hussein in 1991. Bush’s administration then watched as Hussein’s forces brutally crushed the uprisings, killing tens of thousands while US troops remained stationed nearby.

The parallels extend beyond rhetoric. Both presidents issued calls for domestic resistance while maintaining military pressure through sanctions and regional deployments. In 1991, Iraqi rebels believed American support would follow their uprising — a miscalculation that cost countless lives when promised assistance never materialised.

Regional powers calculate responses

Gulf states are watching closely, particularly the UAE and Saudi Arabia, which must balance their alliance with Washington against the risk of Iranian retaliation. Energy markets across Asia and Europe remain sensitive to any escalation, with Brent crude prices reflecting ongoing uncertainty about Persian Gulf stability.

The key point: Trump’s team faces the same fundamental challenge that confronted Bush three decades ago — how to pressure a regime without triggering consequences they cannot control. Iranian opposition groups remember 1991’s outcome as clearly as American policymakers should.

⚡ TechSyntro Take

Watch for Trump to either escalate with concrete military support or quietly abandon the uprising rhetoric within weeks — the 1991 precedent suggests he cannot maintain this middle ground. Regional oil infrastructure will become the key vulnerability if Tehran chooses to respond asymmetrically rather than suppress domestic dissent.

📰 Source: BBC News · Reported by TechSyntro

James Carter

By James Carter

Senior News Editor · TechSyntro

James Carter is a senior news editor at TechSyntro covering global politics, business, and breaking news. He has 8 years of experience in digital journalism.

Follow: @JamesCarterTS

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