Indian Embassy in Tehran advises nationals to stay indoors for next 48 hours, avoid sensitive areas
Pathway 1 — Deal: Iran agrees to become “a normal country” — ending funding of terrorism and rejoining the global system of commerce and trade.
Pathway 2 — No Deal: If Iran refuses to come to the table, “the economic situation in Iran will continue to be very, very bad.”
On Iran’s attempts to disrupt global energy markets, US Vice President J D Vance said Tehran is trying to “exact as much economic pain on the world as possible” — but warned the US has the capacity to inflict “much greater pain.”
Nuclear Strike or Negotiating Theatre? The Question the World Is Asking
Trump -- 'extremely sick person'
Chuck Schumer, the top Senate Democrat, has called Donald Trump an “extremely sick person” in response to the president’s recent post on Truth Social – in which he said “a whole civilization will tonight” if Iran fails to meet his 8pm ET deadline to reopen the strait of Hormuz.
“Each Republican who refuses to join us in voting against this wanton war of choice owns every consequence of whatever the hell this is,” Schumer added.
Other Democrats have slammed Trump’s most recent comments, hours before he promises to follow through on his threat to target civilian infrastructure and power plants in Iran.
Chris Murphy, a Democratic senator who sits on the foreign relations committee, said that Trump’s plan is to “murder thousands of innocent Iranians and hope for a civil war that somehow ends up with the strait of Hormuz reopening”. Murphy also highlightedd the global energy crisis that has spiralled since the war began and oil prices spiked.
Trump’s language — “a whole civilization will die” — has triggered uncomfortable questions globally:
Is the world’s most powerful leader signalling a nuclear or catastrophic military strike, or is this the same high-octane psychological pressure tactic he has deployed from Pyongyang to Beijing to Moscow?
The answer matters enormously. When a sitting US President uses the language of civilizational extinction, even if intended as leverage, the geopolitical, financial and humanitarian stakes are immediate and global.
Markets are watching. Allies are watching. And Tehran is watching.
A Lesson From History: Military Force Alone Does Not Win Wars
Sound military strategy is never purely about firepower. Non-military factors — timing, terrain, diplomacy, domestic politics, and economic realities — shape outcomes just as decisively as troop strength.
History offers a sharp lesson. In 1971, India’s Bangladesh Liberation War could have ended very differently had India rushed into East Pakistan in April or May. The monsoon flooding of June would have paralysed the Indian Army’s advance.
It was Field Marshal Sam Manekshaw who had the strategic wisdom — and the professional courage — to say no to Prime Minister Indira Gandhi when she pushed for an early offensive.
And crucially, Indira Gandhi had the rare political wisdom to listen.
The result: a swift, decisive victory in December 1971 — one of the most celebrated military campaigns in modern history.
Fast forward to May 2025: Prime Minister Narendra Modi made a similar call, choosing not to extend Operation Sindoor beyond its defined objectives. Restraint, at the right moment, is not weakness — it is strategic mastery.
The question tonight is whether Washington — and Tehran — have leaders capable of the same wisdom.
ZZZ
United States President Donald Trump issued a stark, civilization-level warning to Iran late Tuesday, posting on Truth Social: “A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again. I don’t want that to happen, but it probably will. However, now that we have Complete and Total Regime Change, where different, smarter, and less radicalized minds prevail, maybe something revolutionarily wonderful can happen, WHO KNOWS?”
“We will find out tonight, one of the most important moments in the long and complex history of the World. 47 years of extortion, corruption, and death, will finally end. God Bless the Great People of Iran.” The post immediately triggered global alarm — with analysts, diplomats and world leaders scrambling to decode whether Trump was signalling a catastrophic military escalation, a nuclear threat, or deploying his signature pressure-negotiation playbook against Tehran.
Trump’s warning carries a specific condition: Iran must reach a deal — one “acceptable to me” — that guarantees free passage of oil through the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most strategically critical waterways through which roughly 20% of global oil supply passes.
The US has set a hard deadline of 20:00 EDT (00:00 GMT / 01:00 BST Wednesday) for Iran to respond.
US Strikes Kharg Island — Iran’s Key Oil Export Terminal
Even as diplomatic channels remain open, the US has already acted militarily. American forces carried out fresh strikes on military targets on Kharg Island, Iran’s most critical oil export hub.
US Vice President JD Vance confirmed the strikes, stating he was aware of intentions to “strike some military targets” on the island and believes the US has “done so.”
Vance stressed the strikes do not represent a change in overall strategy, reiterating Trump’s earlier threat of “complete demolition” of Iranian infrastructure if Tehran fails to meet tonight’s deadline.
Meanwhile, Iranian state media reports two people were killed in a strike on a bridge in Kashan — hours after Israel had separately warned Iranian civilians not to travel by train “for the sake of your security.”
Vance Outlines Two Pathways — Deal or Economic Collapse
Speaking to reporters, Vance said the US has “fundamentally” completed its military objectives in Iran, and that how the conflict ends now rests with Tehran.
Iran Rejects Ceasefire — Trump May Be Forced to Extend Deadline for Fourth Time
As the midnight GMT deadline approaches, there is little indication that Tehran is prepared to accept Trump’s ultimatum.
Iran has rejected a temporary ceasefire and responded instead with its own set of demands — which a senior US official bluntly described as “maximalist.”
The standoff places Trump in an increasingly uncomfortable position. If no agreement materialises before the deadline, the US President faces an outcome he has repeatedly sought to avoid: extending the deadline yet again.
This would mark the fourth extension in three weeks — a pattern that risks undermining the credibility of Washington’s threats and emboldening Tehran to hold its ground further. No hint of a move toward peace. No breakthrough. No back-channel signal of surrender.
ends


