Senior Iranian officials have threatened to strengthen the country’s nuclear program because the Trump administration could strike the regime if Tehran does not participate in the negotiations.
“The president should make the regime sweat, pure and simple,” said Behnam Ben Taleblu, an expert in Iran and senior fellow at the Democratic Defense Foundation.
“This can be done by strictly enforcing the greatest pressure sanctions, and a targeted campaign against the region’s regime’s assets – Yemen is now a good example. Washington also needs to add a key third element to its original economic and military pressure policy. The greatest support for the Iranian people.”
Iran’s Khamenei warns “strong strike” when Trump threatens to bomb, keep silent about our anger

An Iranian military truck carries ground-facing missiles in a portrait of Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on April 18, 2018, on the occasion of the annual Army date in Tehran, Iran. (Atta Kenare/AFP via Getty Images)
Lisa Daftari, an expert from the Middle East and editor-in-chief of Foreign Table, told Fox News that while diplomacy often requires negotiations, any offer to the Iranian regime, even symbolically putting it into danger for decades to intimidate its own people and funds like Hamas, Hamas, could potentially Hottis and Hezbollah.
“This regime has flourished in rebellion rather than dialogue. This has not changed. Over the past four decades, the Mullahs have only learned one language: possible.”
President Donald Trump told Air Force One reporter Thursday that it would be better if the United States had direct negotiations with Iran.
“I think it’s faster, and you can understand the other side better than going through an intermediary,” Trump said. “They want to use intermediaries. I don’t think it must be right. I think they’re worried. I think they feel vulnerable and I don’t want them to feel that way.”
Trump is also Threat to bomb Iran and imposes secondary sanctions on Iranian oil if it does not have a bargaining list with its nuclear program. Although the president said he would rather reach a deal, Trump did not rule out military options.

Iranians protested the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini after being detained in moral police in Tehran, Iran on September 20, 2022. (AP Photos/Middle East Images, Files)
“This will bomb people like this they have never met before,” President Trump told NBC News last weekend.
The United States has expanded its deterrence efforts in the region, deploying other squadrons of fighter jets, bombers and predator drones to enhance defensive air support capabilities. The United States also sent Carl Vinson Carrier Strike to the area to join Harry S.
Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei responded with his own threat and said Iran would respond “decisively and immediately” to any threats issued by the United States Iran, which is still proposing the idea of indirect negotiations, and the government is reportedly considering it.
Waltz tells Iran to abandon its nuclear program, or “will have consequences”

A military truck carries a missile during the annual military parade, passing through a portrait of Iran’s supreme leader Ali Ali Khamenei. (Atta Kenare/AFP/GetTyimages)
“The confrontation of indirect negotiations in Tehran is the regime’s way of rejecting Trump while leaving the door open to talk and can be used as a shield against potential preemptive attacks,” Talibru said.
The president sent a letter to Khamenei expressing his interest in reaching an agreement on the nuclear issue. Reports show that the Trump administration is considering indirect negotiations with Iran to curb its expansion as it increases military presence in the region Nuclear Program And avoid direct confrontation.
Experts and observers in the region have warned that Iran has used negotiations as a strategy for delays in the past and warned the Trump administration not to participate in talks that could further incite Iran.
“The Trump administration is putting all pressure on the Iranian regime, given that the regime has become weak over the past few years. Indirect negotiations are the strategy for the regime to buy time and therefore can fight on another day.
Nader’s advice to Trump is to support the Iranian people and thinks the regime is much weaker than it seems.
Alex Vatanka, a senior researcher at the Middle East Academy, told Fox News Digital Digital.
“Trump is dominant. Republicans in Congress are afraid of him. At least there is nothing to stop him at this moment. But power is fickle. The longer he is in the White House, the more vulnerable he is. Iran should not wait for that,” Vatanka added.

Husserl military spokesman Yahya Sarea attended a rally held by protesters, mainly Houthi supporters, to mark the Gaza Strip in Canada on November 22, 2024 in Sanaa, Yemen. (Reuters/Abdullah)
In an interview with Mark Dubowitz of the Defence Democratic National Podcast Foundation,Iran collapses.” In the end, Israel will attack Iran’s nuclear facilities with or without the United States because there is no other option, Rapid said.
Ali Larijani, the advisor to the supreme leader, said in an interview that although Iran did not seek nuclear weapons, Tehran had no choice but to build nuclear weapons if the United States or Israel strikes Iran.
this International Atomic Energy Agency Iran accelerated its nuclear program and enriched uranium at weapons-level levels, according to a February report.
Danielle Pletka, a senior fellow in diplomatic and defense policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), told Fox News Numbers that having additional military assets in the Middle East is a reasonable policy given the threats faced by the United States and its allies.
For Pletka, the question is, what is the Trump administration looking for?
Pretka told Fox News numbers: “A deal that the Iranians haven’t completely gotten rid of their nuclear weapons program? If so, the president sets the United States as the risk that Barack Obama poses to our allies and ourselves – just to delay the Iranian nuclear program to a later date.”

Iran’s supreme leader Presidents Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and Presidents Donald Trump. (Iran’s Supreme Leader/WANA (Western Asia News Agency)/By Reuters/Elizabeth Franz/Handout of archive photos)
Pletka says it’s strange President Trump A similar deal appears to be envisaged for a Joint Comprehensive Action Plan (JCPOA), which has attracted a lot of criticism on Capitol Hill.
Trump initially withdrew his first term in 2018 from the JCPOA (also known as the Iran nuclear deal) and reinjected severe economic sanctions. The Biden administration initially considered re-engagement with Iran in nuclear issues when it took office, but Iran’s domestic politics and its role in supporting terrorist organizations in the region are not complicated.
Another risk the president takes is seen as a paper tiger, according to AEI’s Pletka.
“He threatened the bombing that Hamas had never delivered. Now he was threatening Iran through military operations. But is he really saying that this is? Or is he just blowing hot air?” she said.
“There is a lot of uncertainty in the president’s intentions, and uncertainty is an opportunity for Iranians to take advantage of it,” Pretka said.
Watanka of the Middle East Institute said he believes Trump can claim a potential victory that he can sell at home, and said he is better than President Obama’s deal with the JCPOA, which is different from the expiration date in the JCPOA if Iran agrees to keep its richness permanently low.