Donald Trump once again placed the world on edge by turning diplomacy into a threat and threats into theatre. In a single statement, the US president claimed Iran had reached out to negotiate a nuclear deal and that preparations for a meeting were under way, only to warn that military action could come first. He spoke of “powerful options” and red lines crossed, suggesting force was not only possible but imminent. The contradiction was not subtle. It was deliberate. The signal sent to Tehran, and to the wider world, was that dialogue existed only at the pleasure of American power and could be withdrawn at any moment. This approach was not merely confusing; it was dangerous.
By pairing the language of negotiation with the menace of pre-emptive strikes, Trump reinforced the idea that diplomacy was being used as leverage rather than as a genuine route to de-escalation. Such brinkmanship has a long and unhappy history in the Middle East, where miscalculation has often proved more destructive than intention. When threats are made casually and publicly, the space for compromise narrows and the risk of unintended conflict grows. Iran’s response was notably restrained by comparison. Its foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, adopted a tone of firmness rather than bluster, saying Tehran was prepared for both war and negotiations but would not submit to threats, coercion or pressure. He acknowledged that violence had intensified in recent weeks, with deaths among both protesters and security forces, yet insisted the situation was now under control.
According to Araghchi, protests that began with legitimate economic grievances had been distorted by foreign interference and militant involvement, pushing parts of the unrest into violent territory. Tehran’s narrative emphasized external manipulation. Araghchi accused unnamed actors of arming some protesters to provoke chaos and create a pretext for intervention. He pointed to attacks on mosques, hospitals and public transport, and to assaults on police stations, blaming Islamic State and other militant groups. His claim that only a minority of demonstrators had resorted to violence was designed to draw a line between genuine dissent and organized destabilization. Whether or not one accepts Tehran’s figures, the message was clear: Iran would not allow internal unrest to be turned into an excuse for foreign aggression.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei reinforced that stance with language steeped in history and warning. Responding directly to Trump’s rhetoric, he invoked the fate of rulers who had believed themselves masters of the world. Pharaoh, Nimrod and Reza Shah, he said, all met ruin after being consumed by arrogance. The comparison was stark and intended as a reminder that power exercised without restraint often collapses under its own weight. For Iran’s leadership, Trump’s threats were less a show of strength than a symptom of hubris. Beyond Iran’s borders, the confrontation took on a wider and more volatile character. Protests by members of the Iranian diaspora erupted in several cities, including Los Angeles, where demonstrators were injured after being struck by a truck.
Inside Iran, state television broadcast images of a large pro-government rally in Tehran’s Revolution Square, an attempt to demonstrate popular backing for the Islamic Republic after weeks of unrest. Iranian officials argued that these parallel scenes, at home and abroad, illustrated a coordinated campaign to pressure the country from multiple directions. Israel made little attempt to hide its position. Its foreign minister, Gideon Saar, publicly voiced support for Iranian protesters, saying Israel’s quarrel was not with the Iranian people but with a regime he described as a source of terrorism and extremism. Israeli media reports went further, claiming Trump had decided to assist protesters after recent deaths. In Washington, US outlets reported that the president had been briefed on military options, including scenarios targeting Iranian security forces, and that he intended to speak to Elon Musk about restoring internet access in Iran.
Such a move, framed as support for free communication, was widely interpreted in Tehran as open interference. Iran responded by summoning the ambassadors of several European states, including Britain, France, Italy and Germany, showing them footage of armed rioters and lodging formal protests. Russia’s security council condemned any foreign interference in Iran’s internal affairs, while Turkey warned that such actions would only deepen regional instability. France’s president, Emmanuel Macron, struck a more ambivalent note, criticizing state violence against protesters while urging respect for fundamental freedoms. The diplomatic landscape was fractured, reflecting broader divisions over how to respond to Iran without pushing the region towards war.
Despite the rhetoric, both Washington and Tehran confirmed that communication channels remained open. Messages were reportedly exchanged between Araghchi and US representatives, directly and through intermediaries. Yet the mixed signals from the White House undermined any confidence that these contacts were part of a coherent strategy. Trump’s pattern of behavior, from threats against Venezuela to repeated interventions in the internal affairs of countries as varied as Colombia, Cuba and even Greenland, suggested a worldview driven less by careful calculation than by impulse and dominance. The danger lay not only in what Trump threatened to do, but in how casually those threats were made.
When military action is spoken of as an opening move rather than a last resort, the threshold for conflict is dangerously lowered. At a time when global tensions are already high, such language risks normalizing the idea of force as a default tool of policy. History offered ample warnings. Wars rarely begin with clear intentions and clean outcomes. They start with misjudgements, inflated confidence and leaders convinced that power alone can bend events to their will. In this context, restraint was not weakness but responsibility. Global leadership demanded an understanding that stability is preserved through patience and dialogue, not through intimidation.
The crisis surrounding Iran was not inevitable. It was being shaped, statement by statement, decision by decision. The choice before Washington was stark. It could pursue diplomacy seriously, acknowledging that threats undermine trust and that negotiation requires consistency. Or it could continue down a path of coercion and spectacle, risking another conflict whose consequences would reach far beyond the region. At a moment of profound fragility in international affairs, the world did not need another gamble with peace. It needed leaders capable of recognizing that power, when exercised without wisdom, becomes a liability. Failure to learn that lesson threatened not only Iran or the Middle East, but an already unstable global order edging ever closer to crisis.

