WASHINGTON — The most hawkish think tank in Washington is telling Trump not to invade Kharg Island. That alone should make everyone pay attention.
The Foundation for Defense of Democracies — an organisation that has spent years advocating for regime change in Tehran — published an analysis this week arguing that seizing Iran’s main oil export hub would be a trap of America’s own making. Their argument is blunt: putting US troops on an island 25 kilometres off the Iranian coast doesn’t open the Strait of Hormuz, it puts American soldiers within range of every short-range missile, rocket system, and drone the IRGC hasn’t been able to use yet. The air war kept US forces out of reach. A ground operation on Kharg hands Iran the close-range fight it wants.
Meanwhile, Trump extended his energy infrastructure strike deadline by another 10 days, claiming talks are “going very well.” Iran’s response, reported through Tasnim, tells a different story — Tehran believes the negotiations are cover for a ground invasion and has laid out maximalist ceasefire demands including war reparations and a halt to Israeli operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon. Neither side’s terms have any overlap with the other’s.
Task & Purpose’s analysis below walks through the FDD warning, the Wall Street Journal’s Iraq comparison, and why the 5,000 to 10,000 troops arriving in theatre over the next ten days may be heading into exactly the kind of mission creep that Washington swore it would never repeat.
The detail worth sitting with: FDD’s argument isn’t that Kharg can’t be taken. It’s that taking it creates a problem worse than the one it solves. Once US forces occupy the island, withdrawal looks like defeat and staying puts soldiers in range of artillery and rocket fire from the Iranian mainland — weapons systems that haven’t been used in this war because there haven’t been American targets close enough to hit. Kharg changes that math overnight.
Between 5,000 and 10,000 US troops are expected to arrive in the region before the new deadline expires. Iran is publicly predicting a ground invasion and says it is preparing accordingly. Trump says talks are going well. The two statements cannot both be true.

