Politics

Real-Life Indiana Jones Torches Trump’s White House Teardown With Scathing ISIS Comparison

CULTURAL VANDALISM

An archaeologist who spent years documenting the recovery of ancient artifacts looted by ISIS in Syria and Iraq is shocked by Trump’s wanton destruction.

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Donald Trump, an image showing the destruction of the white house, Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, and the ruins of a Triumphant Arc destroyed by ISIS
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast/Getty

A real-life Indiana Jones likened Donald Trump’s “authoritarian” White House destruction to the cultural vandalism once committed by ISIS.

Trump began tearing into the East Wing this week to clear space for his gaudy $300 million, 90,000-square-foot ballroom, despite having vowed to leave the historic structure untouched.

The white house before and after the east wing had been demolished
Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast/Planet Labs PBC

“You can start tonight, you have no approvals,” the 79-year-old previously boasted of the project, ordering large sections of the Roosevelt-era building to be torn down, while calling the sound of wrecking “music to my ears.”

Part of the East Wing of the White House is demolished by work crews during construction to build a new ballroom
The East Wing of the White House has been demolished during construction to build a new ballroom, without the consent of anyone but Donald Trump, which has caused outrage. The Washington Post/Salwan Georges/The Washington Post via Getty Images

With the part of the Executive Mansion which has hosted key historic moments and popular public tours now set to vanish for good, archaeologist Matthew Vincent—who is originally from Seattle, Washington, and is program director at the American Center of Research (ACOR) in Jordan—told the Daily Beast that Trump was showing a “horrific” disregard for U.S. heritage.

Vincent has spent two decades documenting the recovery of ancient artifacts, some of which were looted by ISIS in Syria and Iraq—like a real-life version of movie character Indiana Jones, a globe-trotting American archaeologist-professor who hunts down lost antiquities before tyrants and thieves can exploit them.

He said the president’s obsession with rebuilding the residence in his own image echoes the tyrannical destruction he’s witnessed overseas.

Matthew Vincent is a real life Indiana Jones, involved in protecting cultural heritage in the Middle-East.
Matthew Vincent is a real-life Indiana Jones, involved in protecting cultural heritage in the Middle East. Matthew Vincent

“The first reaction I had was, what the f---? It’s not OK. The White House doesn’t belong to Donald Trump—it’s a federal building, a taxpayer building, belonging to the American people,” said Vincent.

“What he’s doing is horrific and done without any oversight or acknowledgment from the bodies that should oversee this—and certainly not with the American people.”

A general view taken on March 31, 2016 shows a photographer holding his picture of the Arc du Triomphe (Triumph's Arch) taken on March 14, 2014 in front of the remains of the historic monument after it was destroyed by Islamic State (IS) group jihadists in October 2015
A photographer holds his picture of the Arc du Triomphe (Triumph’s Arch) taken on March 14, 2014 in front of the remains of the historic monument after the UNESCO-listed site was destroyed by Islamic State (IS) group jihadists in October 2015 in the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra. Vincent has compared such acts to what Trump is doing with the White House. JOSEPH EID/JOSEPH EID/AFP via Getty Images

“Behind this is an ideology—to disregard the past and those who came before it: ‘If we don’t like something, we erase it. Party lines matter more than history. We’ll erase the past to paint one side of a story’—and that’s just what ISIS did,” Vincent said.

In the mid-2010s, ISIS carried out a campaign of cultural vandalism to impose its ideology, intimidate populations, and rewrite history. Militants dynamited ancient cities and shrines, smashed artifacts in the Mosul Museum in Iraq, and bulldozed tombs and libraries they branded “idolatrous.”

An aerial view of 45-meter-high Al-Hadba Minaret and the historic Grand Nuri Mosque
An aerial view of 45-meter-high Al-Hadba Minaret and the historic Grand Nuri Mosque, which is under restoration after being blown up by the terrorist organization ISIS in 2017 in Mosul, Iraq on February 13, 2025. The restoration of Al-Hadba minaret, which was built in the 12th century by the Seljuk ruler Nur al-Din Zengi was recently completed. Anadolu/Ismael Adnan Yaqoob/Anadolu via Getty Images

The destruction by ISIS militants, says Vincent, served multiple goals, including ideological purification, terroristic spectacle for propaganda, erasure of pre-Islamic and minority heritage, as well as profit—since looters working alongside the group trafficked portable antiquities on the black market while larger, immovable monuments were filmed being obliterated.

The result was a deliberate assault on cultural memory with the intention of narrowing the story a society can tell about itself, Vincent explained, warning that tearing out storied spaces in the White House in order to install a gaudy showpiece echoes that playbook used by ISIS extremists to rewrite the past.

This July 5, 2014 photo shows an image grab taken from a propaganda video released by al-Furqan Media allegedly showing the leader of the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, aka Caliph Ibrahim, adressing Muslim worshippers at a mosque in the militant-held northern Iraqi city of Mosul. Baghdadi, who on June 29 proclaimed a "caliphate" straddling Syria and Iraq, purportedly ordered all Muslims to obey him in the video released on social media. In early 2014 the self-styled Islamic State entered the northern Syrian city of Raqqa, declaring it their capital and beginning a reign of terror marked by grisly public executions. Armed sharia police patrolled the streets as "enemies" of the regime were crucified or decapitated, their severed heads impaled on spikes in the city square. (Photo by AFP) (Photo by -/AFP via Getty Images)
The leader of ISIS, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, aka Caliph Ibrahim, preached hate for history, ordering the destruction of buildings as enthusiastically as he demanded beheadings and crucifixions. -/AFP/Getty Images

“It’s two sides of the same coin,” he said. “Ideologically driven people are burning down the past to present one side of the picture and remove the story of the other side.”

Vincent argues that dismantling such iconic settings—which he said started with the paving over of the Rose Garden in favour of a Mar-a-Lago-style terrace—erases the public’s memory.

Renovation work continues in the Rose Garden at the White House
The White House Rose Garden being torn up in June, which has now been turned into a Mar-A-Lago-style patio. Chip Somodevilla/Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
The Rose Garden this week—the yellow-and-white striped umbrellas are similar to those found at the poolside of Trump’s Florida resort.
The Rose Garden this week—the yellow-and-white striped umbrellas are similar to those found at the poolside of Trump’s Florida resort. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

“Never again will we hear a reporter say they are in the Rose Garden. It will always now be what Trump wanted to paint—without permission from the American people,” Vincent said.

Despite the outrage, the administration has waved off critics, with White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt dismissing anger as performative, and trying to cast the ballroom as a routine upgrade.

A White House official told the Daily Beast last week that the administration has already received nearly $200 million in pledges for the project, which is not using any tax dollars.
An architect’s plan of the proposed ballroom—the expected cost of the structure has rapidly increased to $300 million. McCrery Architects PLLC
Trump is reducing the East Wing to rubble to make way for his ballroom.
Trump is reducing the East Wing to rubble to make way for his ballroom. Eric Lee/Getty Images

But D.C. preservation experts say bypassing guardrails undermines the capital’s planning regime, with the White House pushing ahead while skirting review requirements.

Vincent, who has worked in Jordanian archaeology since 2004 and now co-leads ACOR’s National Inventory Project, said Americans should be doing all they can to protest against what Trump is doing without their consent.

“The checks and balances that have been part of the government are gone now, and it reveals a much deeper problem in the U.S. and the ideologies there,” said Vincent.

“The way of working in the U.S. isn’t that people will storm the Capitol to save the East Wing, but they should be clamoring for Trump’s impeachment and removal from office. It is not OK.

“Sadly enough, this is probably the least of it—look at ICE and how immigrants are being treated. Their open-handed ability to arrest without due process—this is not the United States we know and love.”

The Daily Beast has contacted the White House for comment.