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No More Games

Aligning the Targets: Trump and Netanyahu Coordinate Next Steps for the War

President Trump told Channel 12 news that the United States is prepared to launch strikes more severe than anything previously seen if Iran fails to improve its nuclear proposal.

Trump and Netanyahu
Trump and Netanyahu (Sebastian Scheiner/AP)

President Donald Trump issued an explicit warning to the Iranian regime on Sunday evening, asserting that a failure to present a superior nuclear proposal will result in immediate and devastating military consequences. In an exclusive conversation with Israel's Channel 12 news, the President stated that if Tehran does not modify its position within days, the United States will launch an offensive far more severe than the initial "Mighty Fury" campaign. Trump clarified that while he remains open to a diplomatic settlement, the current terms offered by the regime are completely unacceptable.

"We will hit them harder than anything we have done to them up until now," Trump stated during the interview, emphasizing that the Iranian leadership is currently "not in the place where we want them to be." The President revealed that he expects to receive an updated document from the Iranian negotiating team in the coming days, which has been routed through Pakistani and Qatari intermediaries. However, he refused to provide a specific deadline for how much longer he will allow the current diplomatic track to continue before returning to active combat.

The President's remarks follow a detailed telephone consultation with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier in the day. Trump described the exchange as an excellent conversation focused almost entirely on the status of the war and the shared strategic goals of the two nations. He reiterated his public warning that the clock is ticking for the Ayatollahs, noting that the regime is facing a catastrophic miscalculation if it believes the United States will compromise on its core requirement of a total nuclear freeze.

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U.S. military planners have reportedly finalized target arrays for a potential new offensive, which would focus on the remaining 25 percent of strategic assets that were spared during the initial air war. This includes deeply buried enrichment facilities and national infrastructure nodes that are vital to the regime's survival. Trump dismissed concerns that domestic political pressures or rising energy markets would limit his freedom of action, insisting that the removal of the nuclear threat remains his absolute and non-negotiable priority.

The rhetoric from Washington indicates a complete rejection of Iran's attempt to decouple the ceasefire from the permanent surrender of its enriched uranium stockpile. The administration has made it clear that it will not participate in what Trump labeled "games," requiring a verified written commitment before any economic relief or sanction removal is considered. The President's blunt language during the Israeli broadcast was intended to send a final signal to both the leadership in Tehran and its global allies that the window for negotiation is rapidly closing.

As the Knesset prepares for a critical vote on its own dissolution this week, the external security crisis continues to dominate the national agenda. Netanyahu is expected to use the President's firm statements to advocate for coalition stability during tonight's emergency Cabinet session. With the U.S. Navy maintaining an airtight blockade and the President promising an unprecedented military response, the coming week will determine whether the diplomatic deadlock is broken or if the region enters a new and more violent phase of the war.

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