US President Donald Trump said he would hold another meeting Wednesday to discuss the conflict in West Asia but remained coy about whether the US plans to join Israel’s offensive aimed at destroying Iran’s nuclear enrichment programme.
Trump told presspersons he would meet his advisers in the White House Situation Room and again chastised Tehran for being “late” to negotiate with him, but said he had not made a final decision on whether to launch strikes. Trump approved an attack plan targeting Iran on Tuesday, but withheld the final authorisation to see if officials in Tehran would meet his demands to abandon its nuclear programme, the Wall Street Journal reported.
“I have ideas as to what to do,” the president told reporters in the Oval Office. “I like to make the final decision one second before it’s due because things change, especially with war.”
Asked earlier in the day if he was moving closer to bombing Iran, Trump said “I may do it. I may not do it.”
The position the US has conveyed privately to allies has generally matched Trump’s public rhetoric, threatening to join strikes if Iran does not surrender, according to two officials from Western governments. Potential action could come within the next 24 hours, even as soon as Wednesday evening, the officials said on condition of anonymity.
Trump said he has not closed the door on a meeting between US and Iranian officials, but repeatedly offered justifications if he decided to enter the conflict. He said Iran was “a few weeks away” from having a nuclear weapon, a timeline that is more definitive than some US intelligence agencies’ findings.
“They should have made that deal,” Trump said of Iran’s leaders. “In the end, they decided not to do it. And now they wish they did it.”
Iran had been in negotiations with the US over its nuclear programme for weeks, and had a further meeting scheduled, when Israel attacked Friday. The two West Asian nations have since traded missile strikes and escalating rhetoric — Israeli leaders threatening to topple the Islamic Republic, and their Iranian counterparts vowing defiance and retaliation — while the Trump administration weighs how deeply to get involved in its ally’s war.
Trump’s ambiguous comments add a new layer of tension to the deepening Israel-Iran clash. The president, who has campaigned for a decade in opposition to American wars in West Asia, also faces a tense divide among his supporters over whether the US should enter the fray. America has so far limited its participation to helping Israel defend itself against Iranian missile and drone launches.
Trump said he encouraged Benjamin Netanyahu in a call Tuesday to “keep going” with his offensive operations, adding that he gave the Israeli premier no indication that US forces would participate in the attacks.
But the US is seen as being able to provide military firepower necessary to destroy Iran’s underground enrichment facility at Fordow, which analysts say Israel is unable to do alone. Iran has warned it can hit American bases across the region, where tens of thousands of troops are stationed, if the US joins the Israeli attack.
Trump didn’t close the door to a resumption of nuclear talks — he said Iran had sought a meeting, a claim Tehran disputed — but downplayed the likelihood they would bear fruit. “I said it’s very late to be talking,” the president said. “There’s a big difference between now and a week ago.”
The comments were Trump’s first substantive remarks since meeting Tuesday with his National Security Council, where the US’s options were discussed. He spoke to reporters on the South Lawn of the White House, where workers were installing a giant flagpole outside the executive mansion’s diplomatic entrance. Hours earlier he’d demanded “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER” from Iran in a social media post.
Since Israel’s strikes started, Iran has fired 400 ballistic missiles and hundreds of drones at Israel, killing 24 people and injuring more than 800, according to the Israeli government. At least 224 Iranians have been killed by Israel’s attacks.
Israeli jets hit more than 20 military targets in Tehran in the past few hours, including nuclear and missile production sites, Israel’s military said in a statement Wednesday. Internet access in Iran appeared to be crippled on Wednesday and into early Thursday, as the government said it was enforcing “temporary” restrictions in response to attacks targeting the country’s digital infrastructure. Authorities didn’t disclose specifics on the scope of the restrictions, but many Iranians appeared to be cut off from major social media platforms for hours starting Wednesday evening.
Iran has hit targets including a key oil refinery in the port of Haifa that was forced to shut down.
“The Americans should know that the Iranian nation is not one to surrender,” Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a statement published on his official website Wednesday. “Any military incursion by the United States will undoubtedly result in irreparable damage.”
Out of Patience
“Good luck,” Trump said when asked for his response. “We cannot let Iran get a nuclear weapon. I’ve been saying it for a long time. I mean it more now than I ever mentioned.”
Dennis Ross, who served as President Bill Clinton’s Middle East envoy and just returned from a trip to the region, said the Iranian regime is likely looking for an off-ramp from the current conflict despite the bellicose comments from Khamenei.
Its top priority is survival, followed by avoiding a direct conflict with the US, said Ross, who’s now a fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “When they feel profoundly threatened, they will make concessions. They certainly feel vulnerable and threatened right now.”
Iran’s missile and drone launches against Israel appeared to be subsiding Wednesday evening, although the reason wasn’t immediately clear. While the Israeli army earlier said it had destroyed around one-third of Iran’s missile launchers, Tehran still possesses thousands of ballistic missiles that can reach Israel, National Security Adviser Tzachi Hanegbi said Monday.
US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee announced Wednesday that the embassy is organising evacuations of Americans in Israel who want to leave. Embassy personnel have already begun to depart the country, a spokesperson said. The announcements came a day after the US embassy in Jerusalem said it would be closed Wednesday through Friday.
Trump said the Iranian government had contacted the US about the conflict and even proposed a White House meeting to settle the matter, yet he said his patience with the Islamic Republic had “already run out.” Iran’s mission to the United Nations denied that claim in an X post Wednesday, saying “No Iranian official has ever asked to grovel at the gates of the White House.”
The question of whether to strike Iran has the potential to cause domestic political headaches for Trump, whose base is split between isolationists and traditional conservative interventionists. Supporters of both political parties oppose the US joining Israel’s attack on Iran by clear majorities, a YouGov survey found.
Trump said his bottom line remains that “Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon” and “it’s not a question of anything else.” During his first term, Trump withdrew from an agreement aimed at curtailing Iran’s atomic program, which the US and other world powers had spent years negotiating.
Republican hawks have been supportive of military action against Iran, but Trump has faced pressure from some of his isolationist supporters to take a more measured approach. “We have all been very vocal for days now urging, ‘Let’s be America First. Let’s stay out,” Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene said Tuesday on CNN.
During a breakfast Wednesday hosted by the Christian Science Monitor, longtime Trump ally Steve Bannon said Trump’s supporters want him to focus on issues most important to his base, like cracking down on immigration. But Bannon said that if the president has more information that backs the case for intervention “and makes that case to the American people, the MAGA movement will support President Trump.”
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, appearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Wednesday, declined to answer directly whether Trump had asked the Pentagon to provide options for striking Iran.
Hegseth said that “maximum force protection at all times is being maintained” for US troops stationed in the region, and said that “the president has options and is informed of what those options might be, and what the ramifications of those options might be.”
The US has continued building its military presence in the region. The USS Ford carrier strike group is set to depart next week on a regularly scheduled deployment, initially in the European theater, according to a US official.
Meanwhile, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency said the location of Iran’s near-bomb-grade stockpile of enriched uranium cannot currently be verified.
IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi said Wednesday the whereabouts of the material are now unclear, given Tehran warned him the stockpile could be moved in the event of an Israeli attack. The agency continues to see no indication of significant damage to Iran’s Fordow nuclear site, he added.
Foreign ministers from the UK, France and Germany are planning to hold nuclear talks with their Iranian counterpart on Friday in Geneva, according to a person familiar with the matter. Reuters reported earlier on the meeting.
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