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Thursday, June 11, 2026

Trump reveals details of high-stakes phone call after strikes on Iran

President Donald Trump has claimed Iranian officials called him directly after the United States launched a new round of ‘self-defense’ strikes on the country Wednesday.

He claimed to Fox News that the top officials in Tehran begged him to halt the US bombing attacks, which began at 5.15pm ET.

US Central Command said the strikes came at the ‘Commander-in-Chief’s direction’ and were ‘in response to Iran’s unwarranted and continued aggression.’

The ‘precision munitions’ struck ‘military surveillance capabilities, communication systems, and air defense sites,’ CENTCOM said.

More strikes may also be forthcoming, Trump warned.

‘We will bomb the Iranians again tomorrow night if they refuse to sign the proposed deal,’ he told Fox, adding that the bombing would stop soon but if Tehran did not sign a peace deal, ‘we’ll bomb the s**t out of them.’

Trump has grown increasingly frustrated with the stalled efforts to negotiate a peace deal and was hoping the bombing efforts would push Iran to strike a deal.

He even told his aides after approving the strikes on Tuesday to deliver a message to Tehran via the mediators in Qatar, that the attacks were in response to Iranian forces downing an Apache helicopter with two crew members on board – and were not meant to be the start of another all-out war.

Yet, he said, military pressure would only increase until Iran ceded to his demands. 

The strikes on Wednesday came at President Donald Trump's direction

The strikes on Wednesday came at President Donald Trump’s direction

The attack on Iran was described as 'self-defense strikes' after the country struck US assets

The attack on Iran was described as ‘self-defense strikes’ after the country struck US assets

Iranian missiles launched earlier in the day on Wednesday

Iranian missiles launched earlier in the day on Wednesday

The US fired nearly 50 Tomahawk missiles at the country on Wednesday night.

Iranian state media has reported that explosions were heard around Minab and Sirik in the southern part of the country, near the Strait of Hormuz. 

Air defense systems in Asaluyah were also activated – though no attacks have occurred thus far in the key energy hub that houses refineries and petrochemical complexes, CNN reported.

As the strikes then continued, Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya military command headquarters warned that the Strait of Hormuz would be closed to all marine traffic – and all ships seen passing through the waterway would be struck down.

‘Following the continued provocations of the criminal United States and in light of the beginning of attacks by that country’s invading military against certain areas in southern Hormozgan Province, the Strait of Hormuz is, from this moment, declared closed to all vessels, including oil tankers and commercial ships, due to insecurity in the region, and any transit will be targeted,’ the military command said in a statement.

Two ‘non-compliant’ oil tankers have already been struck down in accordance with the closure, the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Navy claimed on social media.

US Central Command, however, has disputed the claims that the strait is closed.

‘Commercial ships are continuing to transit in and out of the Strait of Hormuz tonight,’ it posted on social media. 

An Iranian missile was launched as Iran's Revolutionary Guards said it had carried out attacks on a US base in Jordan and 21 other targets across the Gulf

An Iranian missile was launched as Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said it had carried out attacks on a US base in Jordan and 21 other targets across the Gulf

The Iranian regime has claimed it struck down two 'non-compliant' oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz

The Iranian regime has claimed it struck down two ‘non-compliant’ oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz

The Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 20 percent of the world’s oil supply traverses, has become a major sticking point in the negotiations with Iran.

Trump has said a US naval blockade has halted Iranian business and prevented it from paying military wages, while still allowing other countries to export ‘lots of oil.’

He also claimed that because many of Iran’s radars have been destroyed, officials there could not detect the vessels as they transit the waterway. 

And in a post on social media, Trump said a ‘secret mission’ has ‘resulted in more than 100 million barrels of oil’ making its way through the Strait and ‘into the open market.’

Trump’s renewed US strikes on Wednesday came just hours after the president met with his advisers in the Situation Room to discuss options for a massive bombing raid.

He was considering an operation ‘that is big in scale but short in duration,’ sources told Axios. 

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told reporters following the meeting that the US would be striking ‘key facilities’ inside Iran.

‘CENTCOM will be busy tonight because we are going to hit Iran hard,’ Hegseth said, while noting that the strikes were meant to push Iran toward diplomacy. 

‘They are going to have tap, tap, tap bombs dropping on key facilities in Iran from the US. It is not to restart the war but to set the terms for a deal.’

Trump also warned: ‘We hit them hard yesterday, and we’re going to hit them hard again today.’

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told reporters, 'CENTCOM will be busy tonight because we are going to hit Iran hard'

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told reporters, ‘CENTCOM will be busy tonight because we are going to hit Iran hard’

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But Tehran had threatened to broaden the conflict to other countries if the strike took place on Wednesday.

Ebrahim Azizi, head of the national security commission in Iran’s parliament, promised retaliation on X, writing: ‘This time, the war won’t be limited to the region.’ 

Ambassador Amir Saeid Iravani also told the United Nations Security Council on Wednesday that his country ‘has never negotiated under threats and pressure, and never will submit to pressure or question.’ 

Meanwhile, Qatari mediators were holding talks with Iranian officials in another effort to bring about a deal. 

Trump has been insistent that any deal to end the war in Iran sees the country give up its stockpile of highly enriched uranium, which is just one short technical step from weapons-grade levels.

Iran, though, is refusing to give up the uranium – which it claims is being used for peaceful purposes – and is demanding relief from US-imposed sanctions.

Iranian officials also want frozen assets to be released even before a final agreement is in place, something Trump has rejected. 

Additionally, Iran has insisted that any deal to end the war must also end the fighting between its ally Hezbollah and Israel – but Israel has instead intensified its military campaign against the Lebanon-based militant group.

People run in front of burned cars that were attacked in an Israeli airstrike in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon, Wednesday, June 10

People run in front of burned cars that were attacked in an Israeli airstrike in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon, Wednesday, June 10

Amid the standstill, Trump accused Iranian forces of downing a US helicopter on Monday with two crew members on board, who were later rescued.

The US responded by striking command and control, defense and surveillance stations late Tuesday, while Iran said it attacked American bases in Jordan and Bahrain on Wednesday. 

Trump has also threatened to target Iranian bridges and power plants, a step he had originally threatened just before the ceasefire but never followed through on.

‘I am not going to say that to you. But I can do that,’ Trump said when asked by an AFP journalist about a Fox News report that he was considering such plans. 

But the president has also said that despite the fighting he was hoping for ‘peace for the world’ for his 80th birthday on Sunday, when he is hosting a cage fight on the White House lawn.

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