WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 The president who and once turned to the as he struggled to find a resolution to his war of choice in Iran.
President Donald Trump’s latest threat over the Iran war hit a new extreme Tuesday as he warned, 鈥淎 whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again,鈥 if Iran failed to make a deal that includes reopening the vital Strait of Hormuz.
The Republican president’s comments were swiftly met with condemnation from Democrats, who have since broken with Trump, and the first American pope. Some fellow Republicans suggested his comments were a negotiating tactic.
It followed his threats in recent days that he would be 鈥渂lasting Iran into oblivion鈥 and 鈥渂ack to the Stone Ages!!!鈥 He said he would blow up bridges and civilian power plants, which experts in military law said could constitute a war crime. And on Easter morning, : 鈥淥pen the F鈥斺-in鈥 Strait, you crazy bastards, or you鈥檒l be living in Hell.鈥
Just over an hour before his 8 p.m. deadline, Trump announced he was pulling back from his threats of widespread strikes, subject to Iran agreeing to a two-week ceasefire and to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Iran’s Supreme National Security Council said it had accepted a two-week ceasefire in the war.
But Trump鈥檚 intensifying warnings of widespread and seemingly indiscriminate destruction were a sea change from his January pledge to the people of Iran that 鈥淗ELP IS ON ITS WAY鈥 after a brutal crackdown on protests. They were the antithesis of the peacemaking image he spent much of the last year trying to cultivate as he sought a Nobel Peace Prize.
And, most urgently, they raised questions about whether the president was threatening actions that could be considered war crimes, whether he is considering using a nuclear weapon or whether it is all bluster.
The president鈥檚 extraordinary threat to wipe out Iran’s 鈥渃ivilization鈥 Tuesday morning came as the conflict with Iran reached a precipice. Iran rejected the Americans鈥 latest ceasefire proposal, and the Middle Eastern country鈥檚 president said 14 million people, including himself, have volunteered to fight. Meanwhile, there were international calls for restraint, and officials involved in diplomatic efforts said talks were ongoing.
Experts said that Trump’s threats to blow up bridges and power plants depending on whether the power plants were legitimate military targets, whether any attacks were proportional compared with what Iran has done and whether civilian casualties were minimized.
Trump on Monday defended his profane language, saying he used it only to make a point, and said he鈥檚 鈥渘ot at all鈥 concerned that his threats could amount to a war crime.
In response to the criticism Trump鈥檚 comments received, White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly said in a statement: 鈥淎s President Trump has said, Iran can never have a nuclear weapon, and the Iranian people welcome the sound of bombs because it means their oppressors are losing. The President will always stand with innocent civilians while annihilating the terrorists responsible for threatening our country and the entire world with a nuclear weapon. Greater destruction can be avoided if the regime understands the seriousness of this moment and makes a deal with the United States.鈥
Trump’s comments drew condemnation and hopes that it was bluster
Sen. Todd Young, an Indiana Republican and a Marine Corps veteran, said that what Trump is 鈥渃learly trying to accomplish鈥 is to 鈥渂ring this whole effort to a close and that鈥檚 the best way to preserve lives and property and reduce suffering.鈥
鈥淭he president clearly, to me, wants to increase the amount of leverage he has immediately so that we can bring this conflict to a close and avoid further bloodshed or suffering from the Iranians, from the Americans or from any other people.鈥
Sen. Ron Johnson, a Wisconsin Republican and a stalwart Trump ally, said Monday before the president’s annihilation warning that he hoped Trump’s threats to bomb power plants and bridges were bombast.
鈥淚 am hoping and praying that President Trump is, this really is bluster. I do not want to see us start blowing up civilian infrastructure. I do not want to see that,鈥 Johnson said on a podcast. 鈥淲e are not at war with the Iranian people. We are trying to liberate them.鈥
Democratic leaders in the House said in a joint statement that Trump’s 鈥渟tatement threatening to eradicate an entire civilization shocks the conscience.鈥 Their Senate counterparts said it was 鈥渁 betrayal of the values this nation was founded on, and a moral failure.鈥
Pope Leo XIV said any attacks on civilian infrastructure violate international law and called the president鈥檚 comments 鈥渢ruly unacceptable.鈥
Former Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, once a stalwart MAGA supporter who has since turned critic of the president, suggested invoking the 25th Amendment, under which the vice president and a majority of Cabinet members declare a president unfit for office and remove him.
鈥淣ot a single bomb has dropped on America. We cannot kill an entire civilization. This is evil and madness,鈥 she wrote on X.
Sen. Lisa Murkowski, an Alaska Republican who often breaks with the president, called Trump’s latest threat 鈥渁n affront to the ideals our nation has sought to uphold and promote around the world for nearly 250 years.鈥
Trump’s history of inflammatory threats
Roseanne McManus, a professor of political science at Penn State University whose research has focused on international security and how countries signal their intentions in ongoing or potential conflict, said presidential threats of force traditionally had some restraint and subtlety.
But Trump, dating back to his first term, has broken with those norms, she said. That was most notable when he warned North Korea in 2017 that it would see 鈥渇ire and fury like the world has never seen鈥 if it made more threats against the U.S., raising fears of a nuclear escalation. He later said he and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un 鈥渇ell in love,鈥 and the threats largely stopped.
Since returning to the White House last year, he has made more incendiary threats and moves.
Last summer, he joined Israel in striking Iran’s nuclear sites, a move that came before a self-imposed timeline for action ran out. Earlier this year, he launched a brazen strike that captured Venezuela’s authoritarian president, and brought him to the U.S. for trial.
He has also suggested using military force to take control of Greenland and has said he believes he鈥檒l have 鈥渢he honor of taking Cuba鈥 soon, but he has so far not followed through on those threats.
Trump has referred to his unpredictability as an asset, McManus said, and has seemed to lean into the 鈥淢adman Theory,鈥 attributed to former President Richard Nixon, that aims to deter adversaries by convincing them he鈥檚 unpredictable enough to carry out an extreme action.
His actions over the last year, along with increasingly frequent over-the-top threats in recent days to Iran, seem to show that 鈥渉e鈥檚 been leaning into the strategy to a greater extent in his second term.鈥
鈥淚 think the fact that Trump is willing to shatter these norms with his rhetoric could suggest that he is not restrained by the same sorts of things that would restrain a normal leader,鈥 she said.
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Associated Press writers Steven Sloan and Stephen Groves in Washington and Nicole Winfield in Rome contributed to this report.
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