Trump Is
Briefed on Options for Striking Iran as Protests Continue
The
president has said he will be “hitting them very hard” if Iranian leaders kill
protesters amid widespread demonstrations calling for wholesale changes in the
country.
Tyler
Pager Eric
Schmitt Edward
Wong
By Tyler
PagerEric Schmitt and Edward Wong
Jan. 10,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/10/us/politics/trump-iran-strikes.html
President
Trump has been briefed in recent days on new options for military strikes in
Iran as he considers following through on his threat to attack the country for
cracking down on protesters, according to multiple U.S. officials familiar with
the matter.
Mr. Trump
has not made a final decision, but the officials said he was seriously
considering authorizing a strike in response to the Iranian regime’s efforts to
suppress demonstrations set off by widespread economic grievances. The
president has been presented with a range of options, including strikes on
nonmilitary sites in Tehran, the people said, speaking on the condition of
anonymity to discuss confidential conversations.
Asked
about planning for potential strikes, the White House referred to Mr. Trump’s
public comments and social media posts in recent days.
“Iran is
looking at FREEDOM, perhaps like never before,” Mr. Trump wrote on social media
on Saturday. “The USA stands ready to help!!!”
The
demonstrations in Iran began in late December in response to a currency crisis,
but they have since spread and grown in size as many Iranians have called for
wholesale changes to the country’s authoritarian government. Iranian officials
have threatened to crack down on the demonstrations, and dozens of protesters
have been killed, according to human rights groups.
Iran’s
supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said on Friday that the government
would “not back down” in the face of large-scale protests.
Mr. Trump
has repeatedly threatened to use lethal force against the Iranian government
for its efforts to suppress demonstrations, and on Friday, he said that Iran
“is in big trouble.”
“I’ve
made the statement very strongly that if they start killing people like they
have in the past, we will get involved,” Mr. Trump told reporters on Friday,
while meeting with oil executives. “We’ll be hitting them very hard where it
hurts. And that doesn’t mean boots on the ground, but it means hitting them
very, very hard where it hurts. So we don’t want that to happen.”
Secretary
of State Marco Rubio spoke by phone on Saturday morning with Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, according to three people with knowledge of the
call. The two leaders discussed the protests in Iran, along with the situation
in Syria and a peace deal in Gaza, the three people said.
Early on
Saturday, Mr. Rubio wrote on a personal social media account that the United
States “supports the brave people of Iran.”
Since Mr.
Trump ordered the U.S. military to attack Venezuela on Jan. 3 and seize Nicolás
Maduro, the country’s leader, and his wife, Cilia Flores, the administration
has emphasized in numerous public statements that Mr. Trump is ready to take
bold action in other contexts and to make good on his promises to carry out
threats.
On
Friday, the State Department posted a video with scenes of the nighttime attack
on Venezuela on an official social media account, accompanied by the lines: “Do
not play games with President Trump. When he says he’ll do something, he means
it.”
Senior
U.S. officials said on Saturday that at least some of the options presented to
Mr. Trump for the situation in Iran would be tied directly to elements of the
country’s security services that are using violence to put down the growing
protests.
At the
same time, though, U.S. officials said they had to be careful that any military
strikes did not have the opposite effect — galvanizing the Iranian public to
support the government — or trigger a set of retaliatory strikes that could
threaten U.S. military and diplomatic personnel in the region.
A senior
U.S military official said that commanders in the region would want more time
before any potential attack to consolidate U.S. military positions and prepare
defenses for any possible retaliatory strikes by Iran.
U.S.
officials said any military action would have to balance how to fulfill Mr.
Trump’s promise to punish the government in Tehran if it cracked down on the
protesters with not making the situation worse.
Mr. Trump
is considering attacking Iran again little more than six months after he
ordered strikes against three of its nuclear sites last June.
In that
attack, which the military called Midnight Hammer, six B-2 bombers dropped 12
bunker-buster bombs on a mountain facility at Fordo, and Navy submarines fired
30 cruise missiles at the nuclear facilities in Natanz and Isfahan. One B-2
also dropped two bunker-buster bombs on Natanz.
Iran
responded with missile barrages of its own, as well as offers to resume
negotiations over its nuclear development program, which Iranian leaders say is
purely for civilian use.
Late last
month, Mr. Trump met with Mr. Netanyahu at Mar-a-Lago, his private club in
Florida, and discussed Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs. Mr.
Netanyahu has repeatedly said he would not allow Iran to continue building up
either of those capabilities.
Mr. Trump
told reporters after the meeting that he had heard Iran was “behaving badly”
and that he would support Israeli strikes on the country if Iranian officials
persisted in expanding the nuclear and missile programs.
Mr. Trump
has ordered airstrikes across the globe since the start of his second term
nearly a year ago. In addition to the attack on Iran in June and the one on
Jan. 3 in Venezuela, the U.S. military has dropped bombs or fired missiles in
Syria, Yemen, Somalia and Nigeria.
In his
first term, in 2020, Mr. Trump ordered a drone strike in Baghdad, Iraq, that
killed Maj. Gen. Qassim Suleimani, a commander of Iran’s Quds Force, an elite
unit inside the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Tyler
Pager is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump
and his administration.
Eric
Schmitt is a national security correspondent for The Times. He has reported on
U.S. military affairs and counterterrorism for more than three decades.
Edward
Wong reports on global affairs, U.S. foreign policy and the State Department
for The Times.


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