
President Donald Trump said Thursday that U.S. forces have severely damaged Iran’s military capabilities and leadership structure, but made clear that the confrontation will not be considered resolved unless there are firm guarantees that Tehran will never obtain nuclear weapons.
Speaking in a lengthy interview with Newsmax host Greta Van Susteren, Trump expressed confidence in the impact of American operations while indicating that he is seeking a more definitive conclusion to the conflict.
“We’ve already won, but I want to win by a bigger margin,” Trump said. “We have destroyed their navy, destroyed their air force, destroyed all of their – if you look at their anti-aircraft equipment, their radar equipment, their leadership. Their leadership is destroyed. We’ve destroyed everything.”
The president described Iran as having been left in a severely weakened state, both militarily and financially, suggesting that any recovery would be slow and uncertain. “If we leave right now, it would take them 20 years to rebuild, if they ever could rebuild,” he said.
Even so, Trump emphasized that battlefield success alone does not achieve the broader objective. “But it’s actually not good enough,” he said. “We have to have guarantees they will never have a nuclear weapon.”
He also expressed certainty that Iran would use such weapons if it had the capability. “I will tell you that Iran would use the nuclear weapon if they had it,” he said. “I deal with these people. I know people. They will use their nuclear weapon, and we’re not going to give them a chance to do it.”
Trump dismissed earlier proposals that would have allowed Iran access to nuclear materials for civilian use, saying he would not agree to such arrangements. “I wouldn’t have approved that. I wouldn’t have. I’m not giving them anything,” Trump said. “They’re going to either have a nuclear weapon, or they’re not. And if they do, they’re in big trouble.”
Turning to Iran’s economic situation, Trump said the country is facing severe instability. “Right now, their economy is collapsing, inflation is at close to 100%,” he said. “They can’t do any oil because we have a blockade that’s 100% effective.”
He added that he believes his administration’s strategy has received strong backing internationally, while criticizing prior leaders and other nations for failing to act earlier. “I actually think it’s very popular what I’m doing,” Trump said. “The world is thanking me, because I shouldn’t be the one that’s doing it. Other presidents should have done it long before me, and other countries should have done it.”
Earlier Thursday, speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, Trump said Iran is “dying to make a deal,” and suggested an agreement could be reached soon.
When asked about ongoing negotiations, Trump said, “Nobody knows what the talks are except myself and a couple of other people.”
“I mean, Iran is dying to make a deal. I can only tell you that. I don’t want to get into it, but they got – they cannot be nuclear other than that. But they are,” he added.
Trump underscored what he described as the broader stakes involved, saying, “The bottom line is for this world, for our country, but certainly for Israel, the Middle East and Europe, much closer, you cannot let Iran have a nuclear weapon.”
The president had canceled a planned visit by his envoys to Islamabad over the weekend, where talks with Iranian officials had been expected. He said Wednesday that efforts to reach a resolution are continuing through phone discussions rather than face-to-face meetings.
His remarks came after he rejected a recent Iranian proposal, telling Axios that the United States will keep its naval blockade in place until Tehran agrees to conditions addressing Washington’s concerns over its nuclear program.
The proposal from Iran reportedly included reopening the Strait of Hormuz while delaying negotiations over its nuclear activities, an approach the administration declined to accept.
{Matzav.com}