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- Jones called the Iran war a "fiasco" Wednesday and declared the ceasefire "falling apart" — hours after Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz in response to Israeli Lebanon strikes
- Days earlier Jones asked on live air: "How do we 25th Amendment his ass?" — after Trump threatened to destroy Iranian civilian infrastructure
- Jones had been one of Trump's most visible base validators; last week he said it was time to "cut bait" and told viewers he was watching the administration "sink and die"
WASHINGTON (TDR) — Alex Jones, who spent the better part of a decade as one of Donald Trump's most prominent base amplifiers, declared the Iran war a "fiasco" Wednesday — capping a week in which he called for the president's removal, tearfully demanded a MAGA "intervention," and concluded the ceasefire announced Tuesday night was already unraveling.
The big picture: The ceasefire gave Trump's MAGA base a brief off-ramp from a war that had been fracturing the coalition since day one. Jones' Wednesday remarks suggest that off-ramp closed fast — and that for at least one corner of the right, the wobbling deal has only confirmed what Jones had been saying since the first strikes on February 28.
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- Jones cited Iran's re-closure of the Strait of Hormuz as real-time evidence the deal was collapsing, telling conservative author Michael Savage: "As I predicted this morning, it's all off"
- Trump approval ratings have declined during the war — a trend Jones mentioned explicitly Wednesday as context for his "fiasco" assessment
Driving the news: Jones' Wednesday remarks to Savage were blunt and specific — not partisan hedging, but a direct verdict on the ceasefire's first 24 hours.
- Jones — "Now they've closed this again. As I predicted this morning, it's all off, and just — this is a fiasco. It's like watching a Three Stooges movie, but they got nuclear weapons."
- He framed the war as strategically unwinnable: "The problem is we keep staying in there, in my view, it only gets worse. And they've got thousands of people that can be the mullah. Each one you get worse than the next. And Trump keeps saying, oh, I've got people I can work with now. And then, of course, he can't."
What they're saying: Jones' break with Trump is the loudest, but it is not isolated — and the voices joining him span from the conspiratorial right to the Republican Senate floor.
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- Last Monday, after Trump threatened to destroy Iranian power plants and bridges, Jones asked live on The Alex Jones Show: "How do we 25th Amendment his ass?" His guest, attorney Robert Barnes, suggested officials should "tackle Trump and let him pretend he's president" while Vance takes over — adding, "It's that bad."
- Jones on X the same day — "Trump literally sounds like an unhinged super villain from a Marvel comic movie. This IS NOT WHAT WE VOTED FOR!!!"
- Tucker Carlson called the infrastructure threats "a war crime, a moral crime"; Marjorie Taylor Greene posted "25TH AMENDMENT!!! This is evil and madness"; Candace Owens called Trump "a genocidal lunatic" — all from the right
Yes, but: The 25th Amendment calls were always more venting than viable — and with Vance, Hegseth, and the Cabinet firmly behind Trump, the mechanism for removal was never in play.
- Section 4 of the 25th Amendment has never been invoked and would require Vance and a Cabinet majority to declare Trump incapacitated — neither of whom have shown any sign of doing so
- More than 50 House Democrats also called for Trump's removal via impeachment or the 25th Amendment — but with Republicans controlling both chambers, it was a political statement, not a procedural threat
Between the lines: Jones is a leading indicator, not a policy lever — but his arc matters precisely because he doesn't have a political calculation behind it. When Jones goes from "Trump is my guy" to "how do we remove him" to "fiasco" inside seven days, it maps something real about the MAGA base's emotional temperature. A ceasefire that Iran is already threatening to abandon, over a Lebanon front the White House admits was never in the deal, is not the clean win that quiets that temperature.
- Jones used the word "genocide" for Trump's Iran threats — the same framing as Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, an opponent Jones has spent years vilifying; the Iran war putting them in rhetorical agreement is its own data point
- Last week Jones told Nick Fuentes he had "fought and bled" for Trump, calling the moment "sad to see something you fought for die" — language of personal betrayal, not policy disagreement
What's next:
- Jones has not said whether a stabilized ceasefire would restore his support for Trump; his Wednesday framing suggests the bar has moved
- Islamabad talks open Friday; if the ceasefire holds, pressure on Trump's right flank eases — if it collapses, Jones will not be the last voice calling it a fiasco
When the man who spent a decade calling Trump a once-in-a-generation leader starts asking how to remove him from office — and then watches the ceasefire he was waiting for wobble in real time — what does that say about the political cost of a war that hasn't officially ended?
Sources
This report was compiled using information from Raw Story, The Daily Beast, Rolling Stone, CNN, CNBC, Axios, Newsweek, and HuffPost.
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