Trump projects confidence, claims Iran is 'begging' for deal, but war exit remains murky
Trump projects confidence, claims Iran is âbeggingâ for deal, but war exit remains murky
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- Trump claims Iran is âobliteratedâ and seeking a deal, but Iranian forces continue launching attacks and threatening vital oil routes.
- Republicans on Capitol Hill emerged from war briefings frustrated by lack of clarity on an exit strategy and ground troop deployment plans.
President Trump on Thursday continued projecting confidence in the U.S. war effort in Iran, suggesting online and during a high-level Cabinet meeting that Iran has been âobliterated,â that its leaders were âbeggingâ for a deal, and that the U.S. is âroaming freeâ over Iran and âNEEDS NOTHINGâ from its European allies.
His description of the war as all but finished â he actually said âweâve wonâ â stood in contrast to the facts on the ground, where Iran continued to launch attacks and threaten oil tanker traffic in the vital Strait of Hormuz, and the U.S. continued sending troops and warships to what is already the largest U.S. military buildup in the Middle East in decades.
Trumpâs framing of the conflict also contrasted with that of Iranian officials, who have remained publicly defiant, downplayed negotiations and outwardly rejected several of Trumpâs conditions for ending the war â as Trump himself acknowledged, accusing them of saying one thing in private and another in public.
âThey better get serious soon, before it is too late,â the president wrote on social media, âbecause once that happens, there is NO TURNING BACK, and it wonât be pretty.â
âThey are begging to make a deal, not me,â Trump reiterated later Thursday, while hosting his first Cabinet meeting since the war began. âAnybody that sees what is happening understands why they are begging to make a deal.â
Trump asserted that Iranâs military capabilities have been destroyed, and that the American mission is âahead of schedule.â He said American forces were operating without opposition over Iran, and âthereâs not a damn thing they can do about itâ because theyâve been âbeat to sâ.â
Trumpâs outward confidence, a defining feature of the war campaign that has been consistently echoed by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and other administration loyalists, continued despite growing concerns this week in Congress â and not only from Democrats.
Several Republicans emerged from a classified war briefing Wednesday clearly frustrated with the administration for not providing a clearer picture of the path out of the now monthlong war, or clear answers on whether it planned to deploy ground troops.
Russia on Tuesday fired almost 1,000 drones and 34 missiles at Ukraine, which, the following day, launched almost 400 drones at Russian regions.
âWe want to know more about whatâs going on,â said Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Ala.), chairman of the House Armed Services Committee. âWeâre just not getting enough answers.â
âI can see why he might have said that,â said Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Democrats have hammered the president â contrasting the war and its massive budget with rising fuel costs for average Americans and lamenting the deaths of U.S. service members.
âThirteen American lives lost and tens of billions of taxpayer dollars spent in just three weeks since Donald Trump plunged us into war without congressional authorization. There is still no plan, no clear justification, and no end in sight,â Sen. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.) said. âAmericans called for lower prices, not endless wars.â
For weeks, Trump, Hegseth and other war leaders such as Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have focused on U.S. wins in the conflict â tallying up Iranâs sunken ships and grounded planes, assassinated leaders and undermined missile capabilities.
In recent days, Trump has suggested that, because of those wins, Iran is buckling. He has said the U.S. is pushing a 15-point plan that will forever block Iran from developing a nuclear weapon or threatening the U.S. or its allies. And he and others in his administration have accused the media of ignoring battlefield wins to harp on losses instead.
Israel, Americaâs major partner in the conflict, has projected similar confidence while showing no signs of slowing its attacks on Iran. On Thursday it announced it had killed several senior Iranian naval commanders, including Commodore Alireza Tangsiri, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corpsâ navy.
Israelâs Defense Minister Israel Katz said the deaths should send a âclear messageâ that Israel will continue to hunt down top Iranian military officials. Iran did not immediately acknowledge Tangsiriâs death.
The head of U.S. Central Command, Adm. Brad Cooper, praised Tangsiriâs killing, said U.S. strikes would continue, and called on Iranian fighters to âimmediately abandon their post and return home to avoid further risk of unnecessary injury or death.â
Meanwhile, death, destruction and environmental and economic damage from the war spread far beyond Iran, where officials recently increased their estimated death toll to nearly 2,000.
Israel was fighting off a barrage of incoming missiles Thursday, with booms heard in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem and an impact reported in the central town of Kafr Qassem. Israel was also continuing its offensive against Hezbollah in Lebanon, where the death toll had risen to 1,116, Lebanonâs Health Ministry said Thursday.
Iraqi Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Tahsin al Khafaj on Thursday said 23 people had been wounded in a Wednesday strike on a military clinic in western Iraqâs Anbar province.
Thousands of additional U.S. troops are on their way to the region, while many of the tens of thousands already stationed there have been displaced into hotels and other temporary housing â diminishing their war-fighting capabilities â by ongoing Iranian attacks that have left the 13 regional military bases they normally live on âall but uninhabitable,â the New York Times reported.
Iran announced Thursday that it had launched drone and missile attacks on a U.S. military base in Kuwait and a separate air base used by American forces in Saudi Arabia.
Jasem Mohamed al-Budaiwi, the secretary-general of the Gulf Cooperation Council, accused Iran of charging fees for ships to safely transit the Strait of Hormuz, continuing the economic toll on global oil supplies. Environmental experts warned of massive pollution from burning oil and gas fields.
Franceâs Defense Ministry said Thursday that nearly three dozen countries had joined military talks about how to reopen the strait âonce the intensity of hostilities has sufficiently decreased.â
Russia, emboldened by the Iran war, which has drawn resources away from Ukraine and led the U.S. to ease sanctions on Russian oil, has launched a renewed spring offensive against Ukraine.
The distance between U.S. and Iranian messaging about the war and their negotiations to end it â which foreign officials have said are occurring through intermediaries â has contributed to the tensions and the reluctance of allies to get involved, with some citing similar frustrations as Republicans in Congress this week.
Many allies have largely stayed out of the conflict despite Trump vacillating between demanding their help and insisting it isnât necessary.
In one of his posts to social media Thursday morning, Trump blasted allies in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, or NATO, for having âDONE ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO HELPâ in the conflict, and said the U.S. would ânever forget.â
Asked during his Cabinet meeting about his desire to end the war soon, Trump said he was âthe opposite of desperateâ â âI donât care,â he said â and that there âare other targets that we want to hit before we leave.â
Trump said that when the âright dealâ is made with Iran, the Strait of Hormuz will reopen â while insisting that Iran no longer has any âmine droppersâ that would threaten merchant vessels passing through the key oil route.
Steve Witkoff, one of Trumpâs top advisors leading the negotiations in the Middle East, said the Iranians were looking for an âofframp,â that Pakistan is serving as a mediator between Washington and Tehran, and that the 15-point plan Trump had mentioned âforms the framework for a peace deal.â
The National Park Service has reportedly blacklisted SFGate over critical coverage. L.A. Times reporters have also noticed changes in how the agency communicates.
âThese are sensitive, diplomatic discussions and you have directed us to maintain confidentiality on the specific terms and not negotiate through the news media, as others do,â Witkoff said. âWe will see where things lead and if we can convince Iran that this is the inflection point, with no good alternatives for them other than more death and destruction.â
Trump has declined to say whom Washington is negotiating with in Iran, but described them as âvery smart,â ânot fools,â and âvery lousy fighters, but great negotiators.â
He also said he knows they are âthe right peopleâ for the U.S. to be dealing with because they had given him a âpresentâ â and proved they are in control â by allowing âeight big boats of oilâ travel through the strait this week.
Asked if he intended to send U.S. troops into Iran to take its enriched uranium, he called it a âridiculous questionâ that he wouldnât answer.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he is confident that more merchant vessels will soon be able to safely pass through the Strait of Hormuz, and energy prices will drop when the war ends.
âMany people, especially the Democrats, underestimate the will of the American people for short-term volatility for 50 years of safety that we are going to have on the other side of this,â Bessent said.
Hegseth repeatedly slammed the media for framing the war effort as floundering or unfocused, saying Iranâs âair defenses are gone,â its leaders hiding in âunderground bunkers,â and its fighters losing morale.
He said Iranian officials in private are admitting âvery heavy losses,â and that the U.S. and the world are benefiting from having Trump, whom he called the âultimate deal maker,â working toward a peace deal.
In the meantime, he said, the U.S. military will âcontinue negotiating with bombs.â
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