Trump's Tariff Policies and US-Iran Tensions: Strategic Motivations, Geopolitical Game, and Risk Assessment Research Report

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Summary
The global temporary import tariffs (10%-15%) launched by the Trump administration in February 2026, coinciding with escalating US-Iran military tensions (large-scale US troop deployments in the Middle East, ongoing Iran nuclear negotiations), have been interpreted by some as a “conspiracy” of “tariffs as a cover-up for war.” This report objectively dissects the background, correlation, and true motives based on publicly available facts, official statements, media reports, and institutional analysis. Preliminary conclusion: Existing evidence indicates that both are independent components of Trump’s “America First” policy—tariffs aimed at reshaping trade balance and domestic manufacturing, while Iran tensions stem from nuclear proliferation, regional proxy conflicts, and domestic protests, with no conclusive evidence of coordinated “hidden conspiracy.” The overlap in timing more reflects Trump’s style (multi-pronged pressure) and external event-driven factors rather than a deliberate cover-up. Excessive conspiracy theories overlook the policy continuity and verifiable legal/diplomatic processes.

  1. Background and latest developments of Trump’s tariff policy
    Since 2016, Trump has used tariffs as a core trade tool to reduce the US trade deficit, protect manufacturing jobs, and counter the “China threat.” Early in his second term (2025-2026), his tariff measures faced legal setbacks:
  • Supreme Court ruling: Around February 20, 2026, a 6-3 decision declared the broad tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) illegal (beyond presidential emergency powers).
  • Rapid shift: Trump immediately invoked Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, signing an order on February 20, announcing a temporary 10% ad valorem tariff on global imports starting February 24 (for 150 days, extendable), with plans to raise to the legal maximum of 15%. Exemptions included key minerals, energy, pharmaceuticals, agricultural products, and some automotive and aerospace goods.
  • Official rationale: The White House fact sheet stated the move aimed to “address fundamental international balance of payments issues,” protect American workers, farmers, and manufacturers, and potentially replace some income taxes long-term. Trump reiterated in the State of the Union that “tariffs paid by foreign countries will ease the burden on the American people.”
  • Market response: Investors remained relatively calm (“TACO trade”—Trump Always Chickens Out), but businesses demanded refunds for previously “illegal tariffs,” and Democratic lawmakers pushed legislation for refunds.
    This policy continues the logic of the first term’s “Section 232” (national security tariffs) and “Section 301” (China tariffs), not a sudden “trick.”
  1. Latest developments in US-Iran tensions
    In 2026, US-Iran relations are high-risk but driven mainly by “maximum pressure + diplomacy”:
  • Military buildup: The US deployed two aircraft carrier strike groups and large-scale fighter formations (largest since the 2003 Iraq War) in the Middle East. Trump threatened “limited strikes,” and the military (Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Caine) publicly expressed concerns about “long-term conflict.”
  • Triggering factors:
    • Iran’s nuclear program: Trump claimed Iran was “rebuilding nuclear facilities” (after the June 2025 US-Israel joint strike), demanding Iran publicly commit to “never possessing nuclear weapons.”
    • Domestic protests: Nationwide protests and suppression erupted in Iran in January 2026; Trump initially cited this as a reason for intervention, later shifting focus to nuclear issues.
    • Regional proxies and missiles: Iran supports Houthis, Hezbollah, etc.; procures Russian and Chinese MANPADS and anti-ship missiles, threatening to block the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Diplomatic track: On February 26, Iran and the US are scheduled for a new round of indirect nuclear talks in Geneva (following previous indirect talks in Oman). Iran’s foreign minister mentioned a “fair agreement” might be possible; the US stated “diplomacy is the priority, but military options are not ruled out.”
  • Iran’s response: Conducting military exercises (Hormuz Strait coastal fire, drones), procuring weapons from Russia and China, warning that any attack would trigger regional war.
    There is no public evidence that the situation has entered a “war” phase; more likely, it involves mutual deterrence and bargaining chips.
  1. Analysis of the connection: Is there a “cover-up conspiracy”?
    Timing overlap exists: tariffs took effect (February 24) close to Iran’s military buildup and negotiations (late February). However, the following facts do not support the conspiracy theory that “tariffs are a trick to cover Iran war”:
  2. Policy independence:
  • Tariffs are rooted in Trump’s long-term trade views (reducing deficits, bringing manufacturing home), with no direct economic link to Iran. Iran’s oil exports are already sanctioned; tariffs mainly target China, Mexico, Canada, etc.
  • Iran tensions stem from the aftermath of the 2025 Iran war, nuclear issues, and long-term domestic unrest, not a sudden February 2026 event.
  1. No evidence of coordination:
  • Searches of public sources (White House documents, media reports, think tank analyses) reveal no internal documents or leaks indicating planned linkage between tariffs and Iran actions.
  • Trump’s style is transparent: tariffs emphasized repeatedly in State of the Union and Truth Social; Iran issues also involve public threats and diplomacy.
  • Military leaks expressing concern about long-term conflict seem more like pressure on the president than a cover-up.
  1. Common counterarguments to conspiracy theories:
  • “Diverting domestic economic pressure”: tariffs tend to raise inflation and hurt importers, potentially increasing dissatisfaction short-term.
  • “Serving military-industrial complex/Israel/oil interests”: Iran strikes could raise oil prices (hurting the global economy), and Trump’s first term already demonstrated a transactional diplomacy approach (maximum pressure followed by negotiations).
  • “Deep state/globalist conspiracy”: lacks verifiable chain; in fact, Trump often clashed with traditional institutions (military, establishment).
  1. Reasonable explanation: Trump’s multi-pronged approach—pushing trade protectionism and hardening stance in the Middle East—aligns with campaign promises (border security, manufacturing). External events (Iran protests, intelligence reports) naturally amplified tensions.

  2. True strategic motives and potential impacts
    Motivations:

  • Tariffs: economic nationalism (reducing deficits, protecting jobs), bargaining leverage (forcing concessions), long-term vision (tariffs replacing income taxes).
  • Iran: prevent nuclear proliferation (core national security red line), weaken regional proxies, respond to Israel’s allies, leverage internal unrest.
  • Interaction effects: Global supply chain tensions caused by tariffs could indirectly raise energy prices, reinforcing Iran’s blockade threats, creating a feedback loop. But this is policy spillover, not premeditated planning.
    Risks and impacts:
  • Economy: global tariffs may provoke retaliation, supply chain disruptions, inflation; Iran conflict escalation could spike oil prices (+$20-$50 per barrel).
  • Geopolitics: disruption of the Strait of Hormuz would severely impact global energy; proxy attacks on US bases are high risk; China and Russia may increase support for Iran.
  • Domestic politics: short-term “rally-around-the-flag” effect, but long-term war fatigue or legal challenges (tariff refunds, war authorizations) could be burdensome.
  • Global: accelerating de-dollarization and multipolarization trends.
  1. Conclusion and outlook
    Trump’s tariffs and US-Iran tensions are not a “conspiracy cover-up” but reflect his characteristic “transactional art” applied in economic and security domains. Tariffs aim to reshape global trade rules; Iran pressure seeks to curb nuclear threats and regional influence. Their overlap illustrates Trump’s prioritization rather than a carefully planned smokescreen.
    Looking ahead: the Geneva negotiations will be a key turning point—if a framework agreement is reached, military risks may decrease; otherwise, limited strikes could increase. Investors and policymakers should focus on verifiable data rather than unsubstantiated conspiracy narratives. History shows similar high-pressure policies often end in negotiations (2018-2020 US-Iran, North Korea), but misjudgment risks always exist.

Data sources: White House fact sheets, Supreme Court rulings, Reuters, NYT, Understanding War, CFR, Wikipedia event timelines, etc. (as of February 26, 2026).
Disclaimer: This report is an independent factual analysis and does not constitute policy advice or predictions. Geopolitical situations are constantly changing; please refer to official channels.

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