6 Voters React to Attacks on Iran Ahead of the Texas Primaries

President Trump has said the attacks were necessary for the security of the United States and to free the Iranian people from oppression. Do voters agree?

Gael Ramirez in a black T-shirt stands in front of a passport photo sign.
Open modal at item 2 of 4Angela Gschwend smiles sitting on an outdoor bench.
Open modal at item 3 of 4Nate McHale in a black T-shirt smiles with his arms folded across his chest.
Open modal at item 4 of 4Craig Wallace in a plaid shirt with a white undershirt.

Americans woke up on Saturday to find that joint U.S.-Israeli military strikes had taken place against Iran, with a stated goal from President Trump of toppling the Iranian government and ending its pursuit of nuclear weapons.

By Sunday, it was announced that the operation was successful in killing Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and Mr. Trump repeated his call for the Iranian people to take control of the government.

What do Americans think of Mr. Trump’s decision to attack Iran? We asked six voters in Texas for their answer ahead of Tuesday’s primary election.

ImageNate McHale in a black T-shirt smiles with his arms folded across his chest.
Nate McHaleCredit…

Nate McHale, 24, has voted for President Trump twice, a product of his conservative leanings. He supports the decision to strike Iran.

“I don’t believe we’re going to get into another Iraq-style engagement,” he said. “I don’t believe it’s going to be another 20-year long war” like the U.S. involvement in Afghanistan.

Mr. McHale, a Texas A&M University student, said that some of his relatives and friends from high school and college were deployed to both of those conflicts. But he viewed the U.S.-Israeli strikes as more comparable to the Trump administration’s military action in Venezuela, in which that nation’s former president was captured and removed without many American boots on the ground.

“A nuclear-armed Iran would be a threat not only to the United States but for all countries that they don’t believe should exist,” he said.

— Mariano Castillo

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