David Petraeus plays two very different roles, sometimes in the same interview, and the press rarely calls him on it.
When he talks about military operations, targeting, troop movement, and operational sequencing, he speaks from genuine experience. He commanded U.S. forces in Iraq, ran CENTCOM, and led the CIA. He has been on the ground in these theaters and understands how carrier-based air operations work, what mine-sweeping campaigns look like, and how degrading an adversary’s missile stockpiles and drone capability plays out over time. RealClearPolitics That is his lane, and he knows it well.
But he slides out of that lane whenever the subject turns to legislative strategy or geopolitical coercion. He recently went on Fox News and told the audience that Trump should ask Congress to pass a Russia sanctions bill, that Lindsey Graham has over 90 senators behind it, and that slapping sanctions on Russia right now would send a powerful signal. Fox News That is not military advice. That is a policy recommendation rooted in a political reading of Senate arithmetic and diplomatic leverage. He has no special authority there. A retired general’s view on what Congress should pass carries no more weight than a well-read foreign policy analyst’s, and arguably less than a diplomat’s or an economist who studies sanctions regimes.
The two-game problem is real. In one breath, Petraeus positions himself as a humble options-presenter: the general who tells the president what is possible but does not push for specific outcomes. In another breath, he tells the public that Congress should pass a specific bill, that Europe should have been involved in Iran strikes from the beginning, and that the administration should take specific diplomatic steps. He told Euronews that European involvement in a defensive capacity in Iran “would have been wise from the beginning” Euronews, which is not a military assessment but a strategic and political judgment about alliance management.
The humility pose serves him. It keeps him credible with military audiences and insulates him from the charge of being a partisan hack. But the policy pronouncements serve his other role, which is that he now runs Middle East operations for KKR, one of the largest private equity firms in the world. Maria Bartiromo introduced him on Fox as “currently head of Mideast operations for KKR.” RealClearPolitics KKR has enormous financial exposure to energy markets, Gulf state stability, and geopolitical risk. When Petraeus pushes for sanctions on Russia or argues that European air power should have been used in Iran, he is not speaking from a disinterested corner. He is a private equity executive with a four-star credential, and the media keeps treating him as if the credential is all that matters.
That credential is real but limited in scope. His expertise covers military operations and intelligence collection, not economics, not legislative strategy, not European alliance politics, not post-conflict governance. When reporters ask him how a post-Khomeini Iran gets structured politically, he is guessing like everyone else. The uniform launders the speculation.
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