
President Donald Trump’s strongly-worded Easter threat to blow up Iranian infrastructure has prominent figures on the right pushing back, further inflaming tensions in his MAGA base over Iran.
Sen. Ron Johnson, a Wisconsin Republican and staunch Trump ally, expressed concerns about attacking Iranian bridges and power plants.
“I am hoping and praying… this really is bluster,” Johnson said April 6 on the John Solomon Reports podcast. “I do not want to see us start blowing up civilian infrastructure. I do not want to see that.”
Trump gave Tehran a deadline of 8 p.m. on April 7 to open the Strait of Hormuz, where Iran has blocked oil from flowing out of the Middle East, or face a dramatic escalation in U.S. attacks.
“Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran,” Trump wrote early in the morning on April 5, Easter Sunday. “There will be nothing like it!!! Open the F***in’ Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell – JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah.”
Prominent conservative commentator Tucker Carlson said Trump’s post is “vile” on “every level.”
“It begins with a promise to use the U.S. military, our military, to destroy civilian infrastructure in another country,” Carlson said April 6 on The Tucker Carlson Show. “Which is to say to commit a war crime, a moral crime, against the people of the country.”
Carlson said that destroying power plants would lead to the death of civilians, saying “babies connected to incubators die. People in hospitals die.” He also took issue with the language Trump used, criticizing him for “tweeting out the f word on Easter morning” and “mocking the religion of Iran.”
“OK, if you seek a religious war that’s a good idea,” said Carlson, a former FOX News host. “But by the way, no decent person mocks other people’s religions.”
Carlson added that Trump’s post also indirectly mocks Christians and is “evil.”
Carlson has criticized the Iran war from the start, along with other conservative commentators such as Megyn Kelly and MAGA figures such as former GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Criticism on the right has grown as the conflict wears on. Johnson said he supported Trump’s decision to attack Iran but “we are not at war with the Iranian people. We’re trying to liberate them.”
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: ‘Vile.’ Trump’s threat to Iran’s infrastructure enflames MAGA tensions
Reporting by Zac Anderson, USA TODAY /USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect




