Source: BBC
US President Donald Trump has threatened to take out Iran “in one night” if it fails to make a deal before the deadline he set for Tehran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global supply route.
Trump’s deadline for an “acceptable” deal – one that includes the free flow of energy through the Gulf – is set for 20:00 Washington DC time on Tuesday (00:00 GMT on Wednesday).
Trump said at a White House news conference that he believed “reasonable” leaders in Iran were negotiating in “good faith”, but the outcome remained uncertain.
Iran has rejected proposals for a temporary ceasefire, instead calling for a permanent end to the conflict and the lifting of sanctions.
Trump’s news conference – alongside Gen Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth – comes days after US forces successfully recovered two crew members of an F-15 fighter jet that was downed in southern Iran.
While much of Trump’s remarks highlighted what he described as the “heroic” rescue of the crew, he once again repeated his warning that the US could launch attacks on Iran’s energy and transportation infrastructure if the Strait of Hormuz was not reopened by Tuesday’s deadline.
“The entire country can be taken out in one night – and that night might be tomorrow night,” he said on Monday.
Once the deadline passes, Trump added, Iran would be sent back to the “Stone Ages”.
“They’re going to have no bridges,” he said. “They’re going to have no power plants.”
Despite Iran’s earlier rejection of US demands, Trump continued to express optimism that Iran was negotiating in good faith after successive layers of Iranian leadership were killed in US and Israeli strikes.
“We’re going to find out,” he said.
Meaningful progress in any negotiation is unlikely to take place without a ceasefire first, according to a regional official familiar with the discussions.
The official – who asked to remain anonymous due to the sensitivity of talks – said that talks were complicated because of difficulties in getting messages to and from Iranian officials amid an ongoing communications blackout.
“To convey messages to Iran, getting a response in a reasonable time is not possible,” the official said. “The average time of response has been a day or so.”
Pakistan, Turkey and Egypt have all been involved in efforts to mediate.
Trump provided few other details as to the administration’s plans going forward, saying only that he had “the best plan” but that he would not divulge it to the media.
Legal experts have warned that deliberate, sustained assaults on Iranian infrastructure could constitute a war crime.
“Obliterating all power plants, threatening coercive actions against the civilian population to try to bring a government to the negotiating table – those kinds of things are all flatly illegal,” Tess Bridgeman, former Obama-era National Security Council legal adviser, told CBS, the BBC’s US partner.
Earlier in the day, Trump said he was not “worried” about that possibility, and in the news conference insisted that Iran’s population would be “willing to suffer to have freedom” – even if toppling Iran’s government was not his intention.
The president also renewed his criticism of key US allies – including the UK, Nato and South Korea – that he said had failed to come to the help of the US during the conflict.
“That’s a mark on Nato that will never disappear,” he said, adding that the US did not “need” the UK.
US forces have conducted over 13,000 strikes across Iran since the war began, according to an update from the US military’s Central Command on Monday.




































