Trump says will 'see what happens' if no deal reached with Iran


US President Donal Trump said on Friday "we're now sending actually a larger number of ships to Iran. And hopefully we'll make a deal. If we do make a deal, that's good."
"If we don't make a deal, we'll see what happens. But this is going to be exciting."
"We'll see how it all works out. They (US warships) have to float someplace. They might as well float near Iran. But it's a rough situation going in," he said.
"I can say this, they do want to make a deal."

"Like rats on a sinking ship, the regime is frantically wiring funds stolen from Iranian families to banks and financial institutions around the world," US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Friday. "Rest assured, Treasury will act."
"President Trump stands with the people of Iran and has ordered Treasury to sanction members of the regime,"
"Treasury will continue to target Iranian networks and corrupt elites that enrich themselves at the expense of the Iranian people. This includes the regime's attempts to exploit digital assets to evade sanctions and finance cybercriminal operations."
Bessent said "rather than build a prosperous Iran, the regime has chosen to squander what remains of the nation's oil revenues on nuclear weapons development, missiles, and terrorist proxies around the world."

Tehran’s violent mid-January crackdown was accompanied by a quieter but sweeping campaign to silence the press and control information about the killings.
Following the bloodshed of January 8 and 9, Iranian authorities imposed the harshest media restrictions in decades, shutting down newspapers and severely limiting internet access in an effort to conceal the scale of repression.
After about a week, officials appeared to conclude that a total blackout was counterproductive: the absence of newspapers made it harder to project an image of normal life. Editors were summoned back to newsrooms, even though most journalists still lacked internet access.
With little they could do, many reporters went home, a journalist at the moderate daily Shargh later recalled in an Instagram post. Hours later, they were called back. “You must publish a newspaper tomorrow morning,” authorities told editors, “even if it is only one page.”
The papers that followed were thin and tightly controlled. Many carried only a handful of short items drawn from state-approved agencies, alongside recycled material from months or even years earlier.
At the same time, the government shifted its internet controls from broad blacklisting to a strict whitelisting system, allowing access only to approved users and outlets.
For nearly two weeks, outlets affiliated with the Revolutionary Guards — primarily Tasnim and Fars — dominated the limited online output, carrying statements from commanders and hardline officials and promoting the narrative that the unrest was “foreign-backed terrorism.”
When Fars opened its comment sections earlier this week, readers flooded the site with angry and often derogatory remarks aimed at the government. Moderators removed posts and blocked users, but commenters returned under new identities.
Critical comments often remained visible for minutes before deletion. Within days, Fars shut down comments entirely.
Khabar Online, one of the first websites permitted to resume limited updates as part of efforts to “normalize” the situation, encountered a similar problem. Reader comments quickly overwhelmed official narratives, prompting tighter controls.
By January 27, several newspapers and websites had cautiously resumed publication, avoiding any reference to the true death toll.
One exception was Etemad, whose managing editor, Elias Hazrati—also head of President Masoud Pezeshkian’s advisory public-relations board—published casualty figures approved by authorities, widely seen as a fraction of the real numbers.
Internet access has since been partially restored, but remains unpredictable. Some businesses are granted just 30 minutes of access per day at designated government offices after signing pledges not to cross official “red lines.” Their online activity is monitored.
Messaging platforms such as WhatsApp and Telegram function intermittently through VPNs. Even when messages are sent, replies often fail to arrive. Platforms commonly used for political communication, especially X, remain largely inaccessible.
Authorities say YouTube access has been restored at universities, and some pre-protest interviews have reappeared online.
The YouTube-based news program Hasht-e Shab (8 PM) resumed after a three-week suspension. In its first broadcast, it reported that the brother of one staff member had been shot dead during the protests.
With senior officials avoiding public appearances, the program interviewed its own managing editor, Ali Mazinani, who said internet access had become “critical” even for media outlets, particularly as Iran faces heightened external threats.
He said journalists are now barred from government offices they once covered and criticized the lack of transparency surrounding the crackdown and casualty figures.
The restrictions appear to have achieved their aim, narrowing what can be reported and publicly discussed about the crackdown—for now.

The US Treasury on Friday imposed fresh Iran-related sanctions, targeting six Iranian officials responsible for the Islamic Republic's brutal crackdown on its own people.
Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni and the head of the IRGC Intelligence Organization Majid Khademi are among those blacklisted by the United States over their roles in the massacre.
Hamid Damghani, commander of the IRGC in Gilan; Mehdi Hajian, commander of the Law Enforcement Forces in Kermanshah province; Hossein Zarei Kamali, commander of the Ansar al-Hussein IRGC unit in Hamedan; and Ghorban Mohammad Vali-Zadeh, commander of the Seyyed al-Shohada IRGC in Tehran are other individuals added to the Treasury's blacklist.
The sanctions also targeted Iranian tycoon Babak Zanjani, "a criminal Iranian investor who previously embezzled billions of dollars in Iranian oil revenue that rightfully belonged to the Iranian people and was never fully recovered."
"Freed from imprisonment in order to launder money for the regime, Zanjani has provided financial backing for major projects that support the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and the Iranian regime more broadly," the Treasury said.
The Treasury also designated two digital asset exchanges linked to Zanjani that have "processed large volumes of funds associated with IRGC-linked counterparties."
An Iranian protester climbed London’s King’s Cross station on Friday and unfurled a banner calling on Prime Minister Keir Starmer to take action against Iran’s government.
The protester climbed the main building beneath the clock tower and displayed a banner reading: “Prime Minister of the UK, the Islamic Republic killed over 44,000 people in just two days. This regime has no legitimacy, expel its diplomats. Uphold democracy.”
Abdollah Hajji Sadeghi, a representative of Iran’s supreme leader in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said on Friday that the United States was merely bluffing and lacked the will to attack Iran, despite a heightened US military presence in the region.
“The United States only bluffs because it knows any miscalculation would have heavy costs,” Hajji Sadeghi said, according to state media.
He said “today, fingers are on the trigger,” adding that Iran would leave “no point safe for the enemy.”






