The war memoirist Tim O'Brien once quoted a fellow soldier on his experience traversing booby-trapped South Vietnam.
"It's more than the fear of death that chews on your mind," he wrote in "If I Die in a Combat Zone." "It's an absurd combination of certainty and uncertainty: the certainty that you're walking in mine fields" along with "the uncertainty of your every movement."
Three weeks into the military campaign in Iran, the conflict has become both a literal and a metaphorical minefield for Trump.
Iran has planted mines in the Strait of Hormuz, forcing oil vessels to stay in port, choking off a major source of the world's energy. Diplomatically, Trump's pressure on allies to do more to clear the Strait risks backfiring (see this week's view from Tokyo). And politically, the Republican leader is treading through dangerous territory at home as the costs -- the price of gas at the pump continues to rise -- of an unpopular war mount.
Before the war, Trump had largely succeeded in shaping his own reality, wielding expansive power as president, refashioning political weaknesses into strengths and bringing potential adversaries to heel.
Now, he's struggling to control the message as he works to portray the Iran operation as a success.
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