This is one of Tucker's most explosive interviews about Trump, Iran, and who is actually in control of the U.S
He said Trump was pressured into a war he didn't want, knew it was a bad idea, understood it could wreck his presidency and blow up the global economy... and did it anyway.
Not because he was fooled or misinformed, but because he couldn't stop it.
Think about what that means.
Trump spent years campaigning against forever wars. If he understood the risks of attacking Iran, hated the idea of another Middle East disaster, and yet ended up there anyway, then the story isn't about Trump.
It's about the forces that were able to move him so far away from his campaign promises and values.
And Tucker goes there.
He talks about the donors, Netanyahu, the pressure Trump was put under, and how he changed after the Butler shooting.
He also talks about why he believes he'll eventually be silenced.
And then, right in the middle of the interview, Trump posts that peace may finally be on the table.
So the whole conversation suddenly becomes something bigger: Can Trump still break free? Can he actually walk away?
Or was the moment everyone voted for in 2024 already lost long ago?
Whether you agree with Tucker or not, this isn't some recycled Fox News talking-point session.
This is asking a question that almost nobody in mainstream politics is willing to ask:
If the most powerful man in the world can't do what he wants, then who the hell is actually in charge?
@TuckerCarlson,
@TCNetwork