They cite the “Dark Triad” of personality traits: narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy.
Jeffrey D. Sach, sBandy X. Lee, James Gilligan, Prudence L. Gourguechon and James R. Merikangas in Common Dreams
Editor’s note: The following letter was sent to the bipartisan leadership of Congress on Monday, April 13, 2026 in regard to recent rhetoric and actions taken by US President Donald J. Trump.
Senator John Thune
Senate Majority Leader, US Senate
Senator Charles E. Schumer
Senate Minority Leader, US Senate
Representative Mike
Johnson
Speaker of the House, US House of Representatives
Representative Hakeem Jeffries
House Minority Leader, US
House of Representatives
Dear Senate Majority Leader Thune, Senate Minority Leader Schumer, Speaker
Johnson, and House Minority Leader Jeffries:
We write to you today with a sense of urgency that we do not use lightly. The
behavior and rhetoric of President Donald Trump have
crossed a threshold that demands the immediate and bipartisan attention of
Congress. This is not a partisan assessment. It is a judgment grounded in
observable fact, consistent professional assessment, and the constitutional
responsibilities that your offices carry.
What makes this more than an academic matter is what
predictably happens when this personality structure collides with immovable
obstacles. The clinical literature is clear: individuals with Dark Triad
profiles, when confronted with situations they cannot control or escape, do not
recalibrate. They escalate. The psychological imperative to relieve
narcissistic collapse overrides strategic calculation, concern for
consequences, and ordinary self-restraint. Rage surges to domination.
Impulsivity overrides caution. The urgent need to extinguish psychological pain
eclipses every other consideration.
We are watching this dynamic unfold in real time.
The President’s recent public communications have been, by
any normal standard of political discourse, alarming. His posts demanding that
Iran “open the fuckin’ strait, you crazy bastards” and his threat to bomb Iran
“back to the stone ages,” adding that “a whole civilization will die tonight,
never to be brought back again,” are not the rhetoric of calculated
geopolitical pressure. They are the expressions of a man in profound
psychological distress who is reaching for the most extreme retaliatory threats
available to him. That these statements were addressed to an adversary in the
context of an active military confrontation makes them not merely shocking but
profoundly dangerous.
President Trump has now ordered a US naval blockade of Iran
— an action that has sent world oil prices soaring and
placed the United
States in direct opposition to the international community. His
ongoing actions carry the potential to trigger a global economic catastrophe,
draw in regional and great powers, and ignite a wider conflict with
consequences that no one can bound. These orders are being issued without
adequate deliberation, without congressional authorization, and in a context in
which the President’s judgment is, by every visible measure, severely
compromised.
We urge three specific actions.
First, Congress must immediately retake its constitutional authority over war. The bombing of Iran and the initiation of a naval blockade — acts of war under both US and international law — cannot be authorized by presidential fiat. Article I of the Constitution vests in Congress the sole power to declare war and to regulate commerce with foreign nations. The Framers intended Congress to deliberate upon and be accountable for precisely such consequential actions. Congress must assume its constitutional authority now, before further escalation renders the question moot.
Second, congressional leadership — on a bipartisan basis
— must convene urgent consultations with senior administration
officials, including the Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs, the Secretary of State, and the Director of National Intelligence. The
purpose is not routine oversight. It is to create a circuit breaker capable of
preventing escalation toward catastrophe, including the potential use of nuclear weapons.
Those officials have their own constitutional and statutory obligations.
Congress should insist on those obligations and provide a forum in which they
can be exercised.
Third, Congress should formally initiate consultation
with the Vice President and Cabinet regarding the President’s fitness for
office under Section 4 of the Twenty-Fifth Amendment. We do not
prejudge the outcome. We are not calling for the President’s immediate removal.
We are calling for the process that the Constitution itself provides for this
contingency: when a President’s capacity to discharge the duties of office is
in question and poses a potential imminent danger to the nation. The Amendment
exists because those who drafted it recognized that the question of
presidential incapacity would occasionally arise, and that it required a
constitutional answer rather than a political improvisation.
We recognize the gravity of what we are asking. We ask it
because the gravity of the situation demands it.
A President who publicly threatens to destroy a foreign
civilization, who launches a bombing campaign and then imposes a naval blockade
without congressional authorization, and who shows every behavioral sign of a
personality in acute crisis is not merely a political problem. He is a
constitutional emergency. The mechanisms for addressing such an emergency
exist. They were placed in the Constitution and its amendments for moments
precisely like this one.
The war with Iran will not wait. The escalation dynamics of
this active military confrontation will not wait. The psychological conditions
driving the President’s decisions will not improve under pressure — they will
worsen.
We urge you to act without delay. The Constitution gives you
the tools. Your oath of office assigns you the responsibility.
Respectfully,
James Gilligan, M.D.
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, New York University School of Medicine
Adjunct Professor of Law, New York University School of Law
Former Faculty of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School
Former President, International Association of Forensic Psychotherapy
Prudence L. Gourguechon, M.D.
Former President, American Psychoanalytic Association
Former Vice President, World Mental Health Coalition
Bandy X. Lee, M.D., M.Div.
President, World Mental Health Coalition
Co-Founder, Preventing Violence Now
Former Faculty of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Former Faculty of Law and Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine
James R. Merikangas, M.D.
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, George Washington University
Research Consultant, National Institute of Mental Health
Co-Founder, American Neuropsychiatric Association
Former President, American Academy of Clinical Psychiatrists
Jeffrey D. Sachs, Ph.D.
University Professor, Columbia University

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