Stephen Turner’s convenient beliefs are operating at full columnist speed in David Ignatius’s Washington Post office, his secure email inbox, and the quiet dinners with intelligence-community sources right now. With the U.S.-Israeli campaign in its second month, Khamenei martyred, nuclear sites cratered, and the region still smoldering, these beliefs let America’s premier spy-columnist keep the bylines flowing, maintain his unmatched access to Langley, Foggy Bottom, and Riyadh, preserve his reputation as the calm, plugged-in adult in a room full of cable hysterics, and position every column as the indispensable “what this really means” synthesis—without ever admitting that some of his long-running narratives about Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the intelligence community have taken a few direct hits from events.
Here are the 10 most useful ones circulating in Ignatius’s head today:
My decades of deep sourcing inside the U.S. intelligence community give me a uniquely accurate, behind-the-scenes view that no other columnist can match.
Every anonymous “senior official” quote becomes proof that the column is the real first draft of history.
The current war is the tragic but predictable result of abandoning the careful, calibrated diplomacy I have advocated for years.
Lets every new column gently remind readers that “if only they had listened to the grown-ups.”
True understanding of the Middle East requires the kind of historical nuance and personal relationships I have cultivated—not the simplistic hawk/dove shouting on television.
Frames his measured tone as intellectual superiority rather than fence-sitting.
My access to Saudi, Israeli, and Gulf officials remains rock-solid because they trust me to present their thinking responsibly.
Protects the invitation pipeline even when the column occasionally criticizes them.
The intelligence community’s quiet professionals are still the adults in the room; the war only proves how much damage is done when politicians ignore their warnings.
Classic coalition-saver that keeps the Langley lunches productive.
Public fatigue with endless wars is real, but my columns help channel it toward smart, limited engagement rather than isolationism or reckless escalation.
Positions Ignatius as the responsible voice guiding the national conversation.
The regime in Tehran has always been more rational and resilient than the regime-change crowd ever admitted; events keep proving the point.
Keeps the “nuanced Iran” brand intact even after the strikes.
My willingness to publish uncomfortable truths from both sides proves I remain independent and non-partisan—unlike the partisan echo chambers.
Lets him take occasional shots at the White House or Jerusalem while staying welcome everywhere.
Long-form, source-driven columns like mine are more essential than ever in the age of AI slop, Substack hot takes, and 24-hour cable noise.
Shields the Post’s investment in his platform and reassures readers they’re getting the real thing.
History will ultimately vindicate the careful, intelligence-informed analysis I have provided for decades; I am simply doing the job of serious foreign-policy journalism while others chase clicks or ideology.
The ultimate meta-belief. It lets him sleep soundly (or at least file the next column on deadline) knowing that every “Sources say…” lede, every carefully hedged prediction, and every reader thank-you note is simply responsible stewardship in an age of disruption.
These aren’t conspiracy theories—they’re adaptive survival tools for a veteran columnist whose access, reputation, and daily word count depend on never fully endorsing (or fully rejecting) any side while always sounding a little wiser than the room. Even as Iranian missiles keep the story moving and the war refuses to end on the predicted timeline, these beliefs keep the sources calling, the editors happy, and the brand insulated from both “too establishment” and “not tough enough” critiques. Question too many of them out loud and you risk becoming the columnist who loses the next off-the-record dinner invite.
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