President Donald Trump been presented with expanded military options against Iran, including potential commando raids on nuclear sites, strikes targeting leadership to enable regime change, and renewed attacks on ballistic missile forces, The New York Times reported on Thursday.
The options go beyond proposals put forward two weeks ago. The report said no action has been authorized.
President Donald Trump said the United States has held and is planning further discussions with Iran, as Washington deploys significant military assets to the region.
Asked whether he has been in talks with Iran or plans to speak with the country, Trump said: “I have had, and I am planning on it. We have a lot of very big, powerful ships sailing to Iran right now. It would be great if we didn’t have to use them.”
“Well, two things. Number one, no nuclear, and number two, stop killing protesters. They are killing them by the thousands. I stopped 837 hangings two weeks ago. But they are going to have to do something,” Trump said when asked about the message he was sending to Iran.
The United States declared a national emergency over what Washington described as threats posed by the Government of Cuba on Thursday, including its support for hostile states such as Iran, Russia and China and armed groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah.
"The Government of Cuba has taken extraordinary actions that harm and threaten the United States. The regime aligns itself with — and provides support for — numerous hostile countries, transnational terrorist groups, and malign actors adverse to the United States, including the Government of the Russian Federation (Russia), the People’s Republic of China (PRC), the Government of Iran, Hamas, and Hezbollah," the statement said.
In the executive order, Trump said Cuba’s policies and practices constitute an “unusual and extraordinary threat” to US national security and foreign policy.
The United States’ ambassador to the United Nations, Mike Waltz, said on Thursday that Iranian officials and their families should no longer be able to live in the United States while, he said, people in Iran face repression.
"The families of Iranian regime elites live lives of luxury in the U.S. while their people are massacred. Not any more!" Waltz posted on X.
The remarks followed a State Department announcement earlier that Washington had taken action to revoke the privilege of Iranian senior officials and their family members to be in the country, though no details were provided on how many people are affected or how the measure would be implemented.
Britain’s government is preparing legislation that would allow ministers to ban Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), The Times reported on Thursday, as pressure grows to respond to the group’s role in suppressing anti-government protests.
According to the report, the proposed law would enable the proscription of hostile state-linked organizations, including the IRGC.
The Times said the initiative follows growing international pressure on Iran, including recent European Union action against the IRGC, which has drawn an angry response from Tehran.
"Britain’s Home Office confirmed it is preparing legislation but said the bill would not be fast-tracked, despite the IRGC’s role in the recent crackdown on protesters in Iran," the report said.
World Health Organization Director‑General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Thursday that recent unrest in Iran has disrupted medical care, with health personnel and facilities reportedly attacked or prevented from providing services. He made the comments in a post on X.
World Health Organization chief also confirmed that "the Khomeini Hospital, in the western city of Ilam, came under attack earlier in January," he said. "Violence was reported inside and around the facility following the transfer of injured people to the hospital. Medical services and supplies were disrupted and affected."
"We have also confirmed that multiple health facilities were damaged across Iran in recent weeks, including 10 prehospital emergency posts, where more than 50 paramedics were injured and over 200 ambulances damaged. Tear gas was also reportedly used at Sina Hospital in Tehran," Tedros said.






