President Donald Trump warned that the United States could strike Iran even harder if needed.
“They will not have a nuclear weapon and they want to make a deal so badly,” Trump said. “We'll see what happens.”
“We may have to hit them even harder, but maybe not,” he added. “But we're not going to let Iran have a nuclear weapon and blow up… Israel and the entire Middle East.”
US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that Iran’s navy and air force were gone and that the only question was whether the United States would finish the job or Iran would sign an agreement.
“Everything’s gone. Their navy’s gone. Their air force is gone. Just about everything,” Trump said in a commencement address at the US Coast Guard Academy in New London, Connecticut.
“The only question is, do we go and finish it up? Are they going to be signing a document? Let’s see what happens,” he added.
Oil prices fell more than 5% on Wednesday as President Donald Trump attempted to reassure markets with optimistic comments about negotiations with Iran.
Brent crude dropped to $105.70 as traders reacted to signs that Washington and Tehran may be moving closer to a deal that could avert another round of attacks and ease fears of prolonged supply disruption in the Middle East.
Trump said negotiations with Iran were in the “final stages” but warned that the United States could launch further attacks unless Tehran agrees to a peace deal.
Iran International’s documentary A Friendship: From Mashhad’s Vakilabad Prison to San Diego, directed by Ardavan Roozbeh, has won a Silver Telly Award in the General Political & Commentary category for television productions.
The annual Telly Awards, established in 1979, recognize excellence in television, video and digital content.
Organizers say this year’s competition drew around 13,000 entries from across the world, judged by industry professionals from companies including Netflix and HBO.
The documentary tells the story of an unlikely friendship between Michael White, an American Navy veteran detained in Iran, and Mehdi VatanKhah, an Iranian political prisoner, who met inside Mashhad’s Vakilabad prison.
White was arrested during a trip to Iran in 2018 and later said he faced intense interrogations, psychological pressure and attempts to force him into confessing to espionage for the United States and Israel.
Ardavan Roozbeh interviews Michael White
Beyond the personal story, the film examines the Islamic Republic’s detention of foreign and dual nationals, a practice critics and human rights groups have long described as hostage diplomacy aimed at extracting political concessions from Western governments.
The documentary also portrays the broader structure of repression in Iran, including the treatment of political prisoners, journalists and dissidents.
After returning to the United States, White campaigned to help VatanKhah leave Iran. VatanKhah later emigrated to the United States and now lives in San Diego.
The production previously won awards for cinematography and editing at the New York Short Documentary Film Festival for Aydin Roozbeh’s work on the film.
Work is underway to finalize the text of an agreement between Washington and Tehran, and its completion may be announced within hours, Al Arabiya reported on Wednesday, citing sources.
The report said Pakistan’s army chief may visit Iran on Thursday to announce the final version of the agreement.
The report added that a new round of negotiations would be held in Islamabad after the Hajj season.
The comment section under an Iran post can look like a national mood but under a blackout well into its third month, it is often something narrower: a space shaped by whitelisted access, economic privilege, cyber operations and fear.
Iran’s streets and comment sections increasingly project the same official mood: unity, defiance and loyalty. Nighttime rallies supply the images – flags, portraits, organized crowds. Online, many Iran-related posts draw a parallel chorus of praise for the Islamic Republic, celebration of its military posture and attacks on critics, often alongside tributes to slain Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and his still-unseen successor, Mojtaba Khamenei.
What the screen does not show is the pool of people removed before the argument even begins.
As Iran’s internet blackout pushes deeper into its third month, the question is no longer only what people are saying online.
It is who still has the connection, the permission, the protection or the incentive to say it.
A government-organized public wedding ceremony in Tehran, May 18, 2026
A public square with missing people
The latest crisis did not begin with one switch. During the January uprising, internet access was cut on January 8 and remained fully restricted until January 28. After US-Israeli strikes began on February 28, authorities imposed a new shutdown that has now moved toward its third month.
A normal comment section, however flawed, allows some collision between competing voices. A blackout changes the sample.
Many ordinary users are pushed onto restricted domestic services. Others ration expensive workarounds. Some businesses cannot reach customers. Students lose access to material. Families abroad struggle to maintain daily contact. At the same time, state-aligned users, approved institutions and privileged accounts remain visible on global platforms.
The asymmetry has not been hidden. In March, Iran’s government said it was providing special internet access to select users capable of promoting its messaging online. A government spokeswoman did not use the term “white SIM cards,” but said connectivity was being offered to “those who can better deliver the message.”
That is the controlled sample: not a country speaking freely, but a narrower population still able to speak outward.
Narrative laundering
The most revealing development is not only who receives access. It is what some people are asked to do to regain it.
Some Iranians whose SIM cards or internet access had been blocked over alleged online activity against the Islamic Republic said they were told to submit handwritten pledges, provide guarantors and publish pro-government content to restore access.
The notices asked for home and work addresses, bank account information, images of bank cards and links to social media accounts. They also instructed recipients not to publish content deemed harmful to the country’s “psychological, social or political security.”
Some were told to publish at least 20 posts supporting the Islamic Republic and send screenshots as proof.
The posts were not to be uploaded all at once. They had to be spaced out so the activity would appear natural.
Others were ordered to attend nighttime government rallies, photograph themselves carrying flags or images of the Supreme Leader, and provide identification documents from guarantors who would accept responsibility for any future “criminal activity.”
The detail about timing is small, but it carries the whole design. The aim is not merely loyalty. It is loyalty made to look organic.
This is where the street and the screen meet. Organized rallies produce images of public unity. Selective internet access and coerced posting can carry the same choreography into comment sections, reply chains and social platforms.
The state does not need every supportive post to be fake. It needs a system in which supportive voices are easier to see, dissenting voices are harder to hear, and some frightened users learn that getting back online may require a public performance of loyalty.
The access ladder
Iran’s internet is no longer simply available or unavailable. It has been sorted.
At the top are so-called white SIM cards, widely understood as privileged lines that allow largely unrestricted access for trusted insiders and state-aligned users. Below them are paid and limited services such as “Internet Pro,” presented by officials as a business necessity but described by many Iranians as a class-based system of digital inequality.
Reporting on material circulating among users described a four-level structure: white SIM cards, paid Internet Pro, costly VPN access and, for the majority, a restricted domestic network.
The economic filter is severe. Average monthly income in Iran is at around $100 to $200, while the minimum wage is typically below $100. Even official Internet Pro packages and VPN routes can be unaffordable, and black-market access has reportedly pushed prices far higher.
Access also carries political exposure. For those who can afford a connection, the risk is not only cost but traceability. A user may be able to post, but with the knowledge that the same system can block a SIM card, summon a guarantor, demand a pledge or turn an online comment into a legal file.
The older machine
Iranian state-linked online influence operations long predate the current blackout. Microsoft has reported that Iranian cyber-enabled influence activity has been a consistent feature of at least the last three US election cycles.
In January, the Foundation for Defense of Democracies identified what it described as a likely regime-linked influence operation on X during protests, using coordinated accounts to delegitimize dissent, intimidate protesters and reinforce official narratives.
The report said the network included at least 289 accounts posting identical Persian-language content, with behavior suggesting a hybrid of automation and human operation.
But the current phase adds a more intimate layer. Foreign influence operations impersonate a public from a distance. Domestic coercion can pressure the public itself.
The old shorthand of “bots” misses the range of actors now shaping the visible online picture: automated accounts, organized cyber operators, loyalists with privileged access, state-linked media networks, paid voices, and users pushed to perform approval to recover ordinary tools of daily life.
The silence around the noise
The missing side of Iran’s online debate is not abstract.
It is the online seller without customers, the student without class materials, the programmer without contracts, the family unable to make a routine call abroad, and the person with disabilities cut off from services or communities that made daily life more manageable.
Against that background, pro-government comment floods do not prove a national mood. They show that some people still have access, some have protection, some have instructions, and many others have been priced out, cut off or made cautious by fear.
There are genuine supporters of the Islamic Republic. But a system that restricts millions, grants selective access, monitors users, blocks SIM cards and tells some people to space out loyalty posts cannot produce a clean reading of public opinion.
When a government cuts off the people and leaves the microphone to loyalists, the comment section stops being a public square.
It becomes part of the stage.
The real story is not only in the roar under the post. It is in the conditions that made so many others unable to answer back – and in the citizens told that to return to the internet, they must first praise the power that cut them off.