Trump says he is negotiating with "a new Iranian regime" and threatens to destroy its oil infrastructure

Tehran states that it is "waiting for American soldiers to enter land so that they can shoot them".

Donald Trump aboard Air Force One this Sunday.
ARA
30/03/2026
3 min

BarcelonaDonald Trump insists that he is holding "serious" talks with a "more reasonable" new Iranian "regime." He stated this in a message on his social network, Truth Social, in which he once again threatened Iran with attacks on electrical, oil, and civilian facilities. "Great progress has been made, but if for some reason an agreement is not reached soon [...] and if the Strait of Hormuz is not immediately "open for business," we will conclude our charming "stay" in Iran by blowing up and completely destroying all of its power plants, oil wells, and Kharg Island (and possibly all desalination plants!), which by the way we have not yet "touched," the message stated.

Hours earlier, Donald Trump had made his intentions clear to Iran in an interview with the British newspaper Financial Times. The US president asserted that he would like to "take control of the oil" of the Islamic Republic, as he did in Venezuela, where Washington intends to control the oil industry "indefinitely." "If I have to be honest, what I would most like is to take Iran's oil. But some stupid people in the United States reply: "Why do you do it?". But they are stupid," Trump stated in the interview.

The Republican also leaves the door open to the possibility of taking Kharg Island, through which the vast majority of Iranian crude is exported. To do so, he acknowledged, the United States would need to have a prolonged presence on the ground.

In this regard, the Pentagon has been sending trained soldiers to the region for days. According to the latest estimates from the New York Times, the United States already has more than 50,000 troops deployed in the Middle East, about 10,000 more than usual. The last to arrive were 3,500 soldiers, who arrived this Friday. Among them were about 2,200 Marines who came on an Amphibious ship. This convoy joins another 2,200 Marines who are on their way and thousands of soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division, who have also been ordered to relocate.

"Perhaps we take the island of Kharg, or perhaps not. We have many options," Turmp stated in the interview. "It would also mean we would have to stay there [on the island] for a while." In any case, experts assure that an assault on the island would carry many risks for the American administration, as soldier casualties could further question its management of the conflict.

These threats come after the American president stated on Sunday that Washington and Iran had held "direct and indirect" talks in which the new Iranian leaders had been "very reasonable." After Pakistan assured it would host "meaningful talks" in the coming days with the aim of ending the war, Trump sowed doubt again: "I think we will make a deal with them, I'm pretty sure, but we might not," he told reporters on Sunday evening while traveling aboard Air Force One to Washington.

Therefore, the president of the Iranian parliament has criticized the contradictory stance of the White House, which, he says, while sending messages about negotiations, simultaneously plans a ground invasion. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf stated that Tehran is "waiting for American soldiers to enter the land so we can shoot them".

More crossfire

Concurrently on the military front, four weeks of American and Israeli bombings do not seem to exhaust Tehran's missile batteries, which has promised to "punish the aggressor" for the constant attacks. This Monday, Iranian forces fired several waves of rockets at Israel. Some hit the Haifa oil refinery, Israel's most important northern city, for the second time during the war, according to various local media, which report that the attack left no casualties.

For its part, the Israeli army continued bombing Tehran early this morning, in attacks that allegedly targeted military infrastructure. Tel Aviv also claims to have intercepted two drones from Yemen, two days after the Houthis, allies of Iran, entered the war in the region with an attack on Israel.

Israeli fire also reached Beirut, where the aerial offensive continues while ground troops are deployed in southern Lebanon. The army claims to have attacked "terrorist" infrastructure belonging to Hezbollah in the south of the Lebanese capital, and that the Shiite militia has also launched projectiles against Israel. In total, more than a million people have been displaced in Lebanon since the start of the conflict, and the death toll exceeds 1,100.

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