A live-broadcast cabinet meeting took an unexpected turn on Wednesday when President Donald Trump appeared to mistakenly refer to Iran as Venezuela while discussing the U.S. conflict in the Middle East, an error that has amplified concerns about the 79-year-old president’s mental acuity.
The incident unfolded as Trump spoke about the lack of a peace agreement with Iran. “I don’t go into war, I go into conflict,” he said, before launching into remarks that left observers confused. “Despite the conflict with Venezuela who no longer has a navy, no longer has an air force, no longer has a lot of people that were leading the country into very bad places,” Trump stated, clearly describing damage the United States has caused to Iran — damage he has frequently highlighted in recent weeks.
Trump offered no correction and showed no recognition of the error. Shortly after, he returned to using Iran’s actual name and told reporters that Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth would “finish them off.” The moment quickly spread across social media, where users called it “alarming” and added it to a mounting list of public missteps.
A Pattern, Not an Isolated Slip
The Venezuela mix-up arrived only a week after Trump conflated Iran with Taiwan during another public appearance. He has also been caught dozing off during cabinet meetings on several occasions, prompting medical commentators to question whether chronic sleep deprivation may be compounding age-related decline.
A recent visit to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for a health check-up — his third medical appointment in 13 months — produced a self-assessment from Trump declaring himself in perfect shape via Truth Social, writing that “Everything checked out PERFECTLY” after what he described as a six-month physical. That declaration has done little to quiet the speculation.
Medical Speculation Intensifies
Over recent weeks, commentators tracking Trump’s erratic behavior during the U.S. conflict with Iran have floated a range of possible explanations, including malignant narcissism, Alzheimer’s disease and frontotemporal dementia. The frontotemporal dementia theory, in particular, has gained traction among Trump critics, who argue it accounts for his escalating threats, profanities and tendency to ramble.
Frontotemporal dementia affects judgment, empathy, language skills and impulse control. Unlike Alzheimer’s, it rarely begins with memory loss. Its core features include disinhibition, apathy, loss of empathy, compulsive behavior, hyperorality and loss of executive functions — the cognitive abilities underpinning planning and decision-making.
The condition is rare. Each year, just two or three out of 100,000 people are diagnosed worldwide, with roughly nine out of 100,000 living with it at any time. Clinicians caution against diagnosing any public figure from afar, noting that even a “possible” diagnosis requires three of six core features, neurological examination, brain imaging and clear evidence of progression.
More than three thousand medical professionals have signed a petition warning about Trump’s mental state.
Experts Weigh in on Speech Pattern Changes
Harry Segal, a senior lecturer in Cornell’s Psychology Department and at Weill Cornell Medicine, has tracked what he calls accelerating decline. He pointed to Trump’s answer about childcare to the Economic Club of New York that was so incoherent even his supporters voiced concern, and to a rally last year when the president got cognitively lost talking about the “eight circles” that Joe Biden had supposedly filled with journalists — a reference no staffer could explain.
Segal also flagged Trump’s impromptu DJ set during a town hall event in Philadelphia in October 2024, when the candidate swayed silently to music on stage for nearly 40 minutes. He called the episode another sign of accelerating cognitive decline, citing Trump’s refusal of a second presidential debate and his abrupt cancellation of a 60 Minutes interview as evidence the president is avoiding settings that require coherent, spontaneous responses.
Clinical psychologist Dr. Ben Michaelis, who analyzed Trump’s speech complexity for STAT News in 2019, told PBS NewsHour that the shift since 2016 is less about vocabulary than about thought structure — Trump is moving away from linearity toward tangential, then circumstantial speech. Dr. John Gartner, founder of Duty to Warn and a contributor to Bandy X. Lee’s anthology “The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump,” has been more blunt, arguing in recent interviews that mainstream press coverage has “sanewashed” the president’s condition.
Competing Views on the Evidence
Not every specialist shares the alarm. Dr. Jamie Reilly sees Trump’s speech patterns and behavior differently, arguing they do not necessarily suggest cognitive decline. Trump himself has consistently dismissed the speculation, framing his digressions — Venezuelans and mental hospitals, sharks and batteries, the late, great Hannibal Lector — as a deliberate weaving together of disparate topics that his supporters understand.
Yet the political stakes keep rising. Vice President JD Vance has remained largely quiet on the matter, even as the cabinet meeting clip continues to circulate. With no peace deal with Iran in sight, and Trump’s confusion playing out on a live feed from the Oval Office itself, the question of who, exactly, is steering U.S. foreign policy at its most volatile moment has moved from cable-news commentary to the center of the national conversation.
