Iran, De Facto and President Trump
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Trump says Iran will be 'hit very hard'
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Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Saturday that its temporary leadership council had approved the suspension of attacks against neighboring countries unless an attack on Iran came from those countries.
In a phone interview with CBS News, President Trump dismissed threats from Iran's top national-security official, who posted on social media that Mr. Trump must "pay the price" for the strikes on Iran.
By Maya Gebeily, Nandita Bose, Parisa Hafezi and Maha El Dahan BEIRUT/MIAMI/TEL AVIV/DUBAI, March 8 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump said he is not interested in negotiating with Iran and raised the possibility that the Iran war would only end once Tehran no longer has a functioning military or any remaining leadership in power.
Maps, satellite images and videos show how the US-Israeli war with Iran has expanded. Strikes have been reported in more than a dozen countries in a week.
Trump joined grieving families at Dover Air Force Base for a dignified transfer as the remains of the first troops killed in the Iran war returned to the U.S.
President Trump on Saturday told reporters, without citing evidence, that he believes a deadly strike on a girls' primary school in southern Iran last weekend was "done by Iran."
The bulletin from the FBI, Department of Homeland Security, and National Counterterrorism Center is meant for state and local law enforcement agencies.
Israel has attacked oil facilities in Tehran overnight, causing large explosions, in an expansion of its strikes to energy infrastructure. Iran told residents of Tehran that there is no fuel shortage following the Israeli attacks.
Saudi Arabia told Tehran continued attacks on the kingdom could push Riyadh to respond in kind, four sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.