Last week, President Donald Trump stepped inside a Washington theater, the lights dimmed and Broadway performers crooned about how to wow an audience.
“Razzle dazzle 'em, and they'll beg you for more,” goes one of the songs, from “Chicago.” “Give 'em an act with lots of flash in it, and the reaction will be passionate.”
It’s not clear what Trump may have taken from the Jazz Age musical. But Trump’s own mastery of spectacle has been key to his decades in public life.
It’s a political gift being tested by a war with Iran that has divided the nation, his political base and the NATO alliance.
Trump again demonstrated his ability to dominate the public conversation this week. His press conference on Monday refocused attention on the war to a daring rescue of an airman stranded deep inside enemy territory.
His profanity-laced tirade on Easter and his later eleventh-hour decision to call off what he described as a civilization-ending attack on Iran transfixed and alarmed people around the globe. A Trump administration official told my colleague that Trump’s most charged rhetoric came from the president himself as he sought to create leverage through unpredictability.
The president’s ability to control the facts on the ground has been far more tenuous than his ability to shape the narrative. Despite achieving tactical military wins in Iran, the United States could still fall short of his declared goals.