Sen. Lindsey Grahamâs push for a more aggressive posture in the U.S.-Israel war with Iran is infuriating war skeptics within the MAGA base, who are questioning why the veteran South Carolina Republican has significant influence over U.S. foreign policy.
Graham â who has been calling for military action against the Iranian regime for years â threatened âconsequencesâ for Gulf countries that have refrained from striking Iran despite enduring repeated attacks, and even floated negotiations with foreign governments.
âIâm willing to do a mutual defense agreement with [Saudi Arabia] and give you protection in perpetuity,â he said in a Fox News interview on Monday. âIf you were attacked by Iran, we would go to war for you.â
Graham, a close ally of President Donald Trump on foreign policy, also suggested the United States should relocate its military bases from Spain after Prime Minister Pedro SĂĄnchez refused to involve the country in what he called an âillegal warâ in the Middle East.
The aggressive remarks drew scathing rebukes from prominent MAGA commentators and activists who have been skeptical of the war, arguing that Graham is overstepping his authority.
âWhen did Lindsey Graham become our president?â Megyn Kelly, the onetime Fox News host turned independent podcaster, wrote on X. She warned about Grahamâs influence on Trump and described his rhetoric as dangerous.
âLetâs get real. The problem with Lindsay Graham isnât (just) that heâs a homicidal maniac, itâs that Trump likes and is listening to him, and Trumpâs favorite channel is parading him around like a Hefner bunny in stockings on every show,â she said, referring to her former network home.
A spokesperson for Graham did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the criticism. When asked for comment, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the president has a good and candid relationship with Graham.
âRepublicans are unanimously supportive of President Trumpâs bold decision to launch combat operations and end the threat posed by the Iranian terrorist regime,â she said in a statement.
Graham successfully lobbied Trump to take military action against Iran and has maintained a strong relationship with the president, who he described as âRonald Reagan plus plus plus.â But his calls for a more aggressive military posture in Iran and strong allegiance to Israel prompted critics on the right to quickly pile on.
Conservative commentator Matt Walsh echoed similar criticisms to Kelly, writing on X: âWhere does he think he derives the authority to unilaterally offer permanent âdefense agreementsâ to foreign countries?â
And former Rep. Matt Gaetz, Trumpâs one-time pick to be attorney general and now a One America News host, was critical of a Fox News interview where Graham repeatedly praised Israel and its military leadership. âMoving âall our stuff to Israelâ is not America First,â Gaetz wrote.
The backlash highlights a divide inside Trumpâs political base over opposition to further U.S. involvement in foreign conflicts, with anti-interventionists voices becoming increasingly critical as the war in the Middle East escalates.
Over half of U.S. voters opposed the military action in Iran and a majority believe the conflict could last for months or more, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released Monday.
But Republicans have overwhelmingly supported Trumpâs moves, putting the skeptics broadly in the partyâs minority. Eighty-five percent of Republicans surveyed said they supported the military action in Iran, with just 11 percent opposed.
The White House has publicly refused to rule out the potential for boots on the ground in Iran, as the administration sends mixed messages for how long the war could last.
And some of Grahamâs critics argue that he is unnecessarily raising the prospect of Americans being deployed.
âThere are some in the Senate that advocate for war everywhere. Lindsey Graham is one of them. He does NOT tell the President what to do, nor does he control Congress,â Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) posted on X. âI have spoken with the administration a number of times, as well as other members of Congress over the last week or so, and nothing has changed regarding boots on the ground. NO BOOTS on the ground.â