Trump's Warning: "Iran Will Fall Into American Hands"
Part One: The President's Ultimatum
US President Donald Trump has issued another stark warning. One day or another, he says, Iran will fall into the hands of the United States.
Trump repeated this threat in an interview with CNN, published on Sunday night, April twelfth. His words came just hours after his vice president—Javad Zarif, who led the US delegation to negotiate with Iran's leadership in Islamabad—returned empty-handed. Despite twenty-one hours of negotiations, no agreement was reached. No progress was visible.
And so, the president turned from diplomacy to confrontation.
Part Two: "Any Day, Any Time"
Trump stated plainly that the United States can take Iran any day, at any time. He declared that America will control all of Iran's energy resources. This, he said, is the biggest American plan if the situation reaches that stage.
Then the president spoke personally. "I hate people who are not honest with each other," he said. "Who do not accept honesty. The United States cannot accept that."
Trump also claimed that Iran's strategic infrastructure across the country has been dismantled. He said that even if Iran begins rebuilding today, it will take ten years before it can restore its former strength. He even thanked previous American leaders—ironically, perhaps sarcastically—for allowing Iran to become the most dangerous country in the world.
Part Three: The Bridge and the Strait
Trump reminded listeners that the United States has already destroyed Iran's biggest bridge. "What can the United States do?" he asked. "We must know that the United States can do anything against Iran."
Then he turned to the negotiations themselves. "Talks with Iran are only a cancellation," he said. "They are only buying time for Iran. They show no desire to end hostilities with the United States."
He accused Iran of still believing it has the right to produce weapons like the Greeks. He accused it of still claiming the right to seize the Strait of Hormuz as its national waters. "This is completely wrong," Trump said. "None of this can violate the principles of law."
Part Four: The Strait Is Besieged
Trump then described the current military reality. The Strait of Hormuz, he said, is now besieged by American forces. The United States wants to make the strait a free passage for ships—safe from the risk of capture by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards.
On his social media, Trump wrote directly to Tehran. "Iran must know," he said, "that it is not capable of resisting another invasion by the American military. The tyrant does not have the power to illegally seize the Strait of Hormuz."
He added that the option of stepping in and capturing any target inside Iranian territory is still on the table.
Part Five: The Naval Plan
According to sources from the US Department of Defense, even under the current fourteen-day ceasefire, the United States—which has already been o
Comments