Analysis-Trump seizes on rescue of downed airman to recast unpopular Iran war


U.S. President Donald Trump gestures as he answers questions from the media during a press conference in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 6, 2026. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein

WASHINGTON, April 6 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump was ⁠on the verge of a crisis in the Iran war,faced with the rare instance of an American airman shot down and stranded ⁠deep inside enemy territory.

Then, the airman's daring Easter weekend rescue gave the U.S. president the chance to quickly flip the script.

Standing before ‌cameras on Monday, Trump recast the perilous operation as a providential military triumph, leaning in to its cinematic elements to project strength and command of a five-week-old war that remains deeply unpopular with U.S. voters.

"We have incredibly talented people, and if the time comes, we move heaven and earth to bring them home safely," Trump told reporters at the White House. "God was watching ​us."

It was the second time in less than a week that the president had scheduled ⁠time to directly deliver his message on Iran to the ⁠public, taking on the role of executive producer and chief publicist of his presidency in his uniquely Trumpian way.

He has struggled to explain his rationalefor ⁠the ‌bombing campaign, including during a muddled prime-time address last week.His profanity-laced tirade on social media on Easter Sunday further pushed past the normal bounds of presidential communications and prompted questions from reporters about the 79-year-old president'smental fitness.

The scene in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room on Monday offered ⁠a familiar displayof Trump's political instincts: seizing a high-profile moment to tell the story ​on his terms and using itas a unifying ‌rallying cry to winsupport from war-weary Americans.

RESCUE DETAILS DOMINATE BRIEFING

He detailed an intricate rescue mission that he conceded was bolstered by luck. ⁠Trump administration officials, normally loath ​to discuss internal deliberations, over the weekend helped reporters write vivid accounts of the stunning operation.

Trump described a bleeding officer who evaded capture in Iran for two days, and search-and-rescue teams scaling mountains and trying to lift aircraft out of wet sand before destroying machinery that might otherwise fall into enemy hands.

"Hundreds of people could have been killed," ⁠Trump told reporters, noting that some military officials advised him against the operation.

"How many ​men did you send altogether?" Trump asked the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Dan Caine, who was standing nearby.

"I'd love to keep that a secret," Caine said.

"I'll keep it a secret, but it was hundreds and hundreds of these people," Trump said.

Reporters squeezed into the crowded room, blocking aisles and an ⁠entryway, and verbally sparred with one another to gain a more advantageous position in the president's line of sight.

Though Trump seemed to revel in the details of the military's prowess - suggesting at a separate White House event earlier on Monday that the rescue might someday be depicted in a movie - he also threatened to jail a journalist at an unnamed news outlet who first reportedthat one airman had been successfully rescued before the second missing airman was found.

FRUSTRATION WITH ​ALLIES, DIPLOMACY

Trump continued to express frustration with the speed of diplomacy to end the war, anger at U.S. ⁠allies who will not help and exasperation with the blocked Strait of Hormuz, a vital route for global energy supplies. He dismissed a question about his mental ​health, saying, "I don't care about critics."

Asked whether he planned to escalate the war or end it, ‌Trump was noncommittal.

"I can't tell you," Trump said. "I don't know."

As he moved ​to wrap up the hour-plus news conference, Trump sought to portray victory as an all-but-foregone conclusion.

"We won, OK?" he said. "They are militarily defeated."

(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in Washington; Additional by Nandita Bose, Steve Holland and Bo Erickson in Washington; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Matthew Lewis)

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