Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said it is ready to confront adversaries, highlighting lessons it says were learned from past conflicts.
“Any new miscalculation and aggression by the enemy will bring another deadly and instructive response,” the Guards said in its Sunday statement.
The Islamic Republic would hold the initiative in any confrontation and impose heavy costs on its opponents, the IRGC added.
US president Donald Trump on Saturday night said he destroyed Iran’s stockpiles of enriched uranium by ordering a long-range bombing raid, praising American pilots for carrying out the operation.
B-2 stealth bombers flew a 37-hour mission supported by 52 refueling tankers and hit every target, Trump said at a dinner hosted by the conservative American Cornerstone Institute.
“I also obliterated Iran’s nuclear hopes by totally annihilating their enriched uranium,” he added, saying that the airmen told him they had practiced the strike for 22 years but he was the only president who allowed them to execute it.


US president Donald Trump on Saturday night boasted of ordering the bombing run that he said destroyed Iran’s enriched uranium stockpiles, praising American pilots for carrying out the long-planned mission.
“I also obliterated Iran's nuclear hopes by totally annihilating their enriched uranium,” Trump told a dinner hosted by the conservative American Cornerstone Institute. He described the B-2 stealth bombers that executed the raid as “beautiful” and said the pilots flew for 37 hours with the support of 52 refueling tankers.
“Every single one of those bombs hit its targets. It was absolutely amazing and they were the heroes,” he said.
Trump recounted meeting the pilots and mechanics after the mission, comparing them to film star Tom Cruise. According to his account, the airmen said they had practiced the strike for more than two decades and told him he was “the only president that had the courage to let us go and do our thing.”
His remarks come as the dispute over uranium enrichment remains the central obstacle in nuclear talks. Iranian officials insist their country’s right to enrich uranium on its own soil is non-negotiable under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, framing it as a matter of sovereignty. The United States argues that enrichment inside Iran poses an unacceptable proliferation risk and maintains Tehran can meet civilian nuclear needs through international supply.
Negotiations have stalled over this gap, with Tehran refusing to sign any accord without recognition of its enrichment rights, while Washington and European allies see such recognition as legitimizing a path to weaponization.
The deadlock has deepened after US strikes in June shut down Iran’s nuclear facilities, halting production and leaving the fate of hundreds of kilograms of enriched uranium unclear.
The European push to trigger the UN snapback mechanism this month means sanctions suspended under the 2015 deal will now return, further isolating Tehran.
An Iranian lawmaker lashed out at Western powers after the reimposition of UN sanctions, framing the move as part of a wider campaign to weaken the country.
“The US and three European states have illegally reimposed sanctions. For years they have shown enmity through sanctions and war. Their aim is Iran’s surrender and disintegration. The only path forward is resistance and strength,” said Mahmoud Nabavian, a member of parliament, in response to the snapback triggered by the United States, Britain, France and Germany.
His remarks came after Iran’s Supreme National Security Council said it would suspend cooperation with the UN nuclear watchdog if sanctions are revived.
An Iranian lawmaker on Saturday called for the Islamic Republic’s withdrawal from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and development of a nuclear weapon in response to the imminent snapback of UN sanctions.
"If we are to be sanctioned again by the United Nations over the false accusation of seeking nuclear weapons, why should we be deprived of possessing them in this lawless jungle where brute force is the only rule?!” said Mohammad-Mannan Raeisi, deputy head of the parliament’s Construction Commission.
He added: “Iran’s continued presence in the NPT, while once again being sanctioned by the United Nations over the false accusation of nuclear weapons, is the worst of both worlds.”
The UN Security Council’s decision not to lift sanctions on Iran has heightened the stakes for Tehran, with hardliners pushing for nuclear escalation, reformists urging engagement, and a public already strained by inflation.
Hardliners and ultra-hardliners in Tehran, who have long dismissed the 2015 nuclear deal (JCPOA) as a “total failure,” downplayed the impact of the UN’s decision and called for withdrawal from the NPT.
Meanwhile, reformists are calling for urgent diplomacy.






