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Tim Dillon Says Trump Regrets Iran War and Was Pressured by Netanyahu

Piers Morgan Uncensored · 'He BETRAYED MAGA!' Tim Dillon On Donald Trump, Tucker Carlson, Iran, Israel & More · May 19, 2026
Tim Dillon Says Trump Regrets Iran War and Was Pressured by Netanyahu
Piers Morgan Uncensored
Piers Morgan Uncensored
'He BETRAYED MAGA!' Tim Dillon On Donald Trump, Tucker Carlson, Iran, Israel & More
"I think it was pressure from Netanyahu. Yeah, I do. I would see I would say that that's a pretty rational way to think about it. I don't believe that Trump thought this was in America's best interest. I think he was kind of convinced one way or another to enter the war without a plan."
Comedian and podcaster Tim Dillon told Piers Morgan that Donald Trump regrets entering the Iran conflict and was pressured into it by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, despite warnings from the CIA and Joint Chiefs of Staff that regime change would not be easy. Dillon claimed Trump was convinced to betray his core anti-interventionist platform, calling it the biggest betrayal of a political movement he has ever witnessed.

About this episode

In a wide-ranging London interview, comedian and podcaster Tim Dillon told Piers Morgan that Donald Trump deeply regrets entering the Iran war and was pressured into it by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, despite warnings from the CIA and Joint Chiefs of Staff. Dillon claimed Republican megadonor Miriam Adelson and others made it understood that campaign funding came with expectations of regime change in Iran, calling the pivot to interventionism the biggest betrayal of a political movement he has ever witnessed. He predicted Trump has damaged the Republican brand for years to come and that the coalition is dismantling in real time. Dillon warned that the continued Strait of Hormuz shutdown will trigger a global economic catastrophe Americans are unprepared for, with fertilizer shortages driving food prices up dramatically. He argued the Iran conflict exposes fundamental limits to American military power in the 21st century, with social media making war horrors too visible for public tolerance, signaling the beginning of the end of U.S. hard power globally. The conversation also covered Trump's journey from Apprentice host to president, the future of the Republican Party post-Trump with JD Vance polling at 36 percent and Tucker Carlson at 7 percent as potential successors, and the state of political comedy and late-night television. Dillon defended controversial roast jokes about Charlie Kirk and George Floyd, arguing audiences determine limits and political double standards poison discourse. The episode concluded with Cambridge student Maeve Hannigan discussing her viral speech on gender activism, where she condemned the medicalization of children and defended women's single-sex spaces against what she called ideological enforcement masquerading as compassion.

Key takeaways

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