By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Bloody Crackdown could spell the
end
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,” Trump wrote on social media on Saturday.
“The USA stands ready to help!!!”
President Donald
Trump is weighing a series of potential military options in Iran following
deadly protests in the country, as he considers following through on his recent
threats to strike the Iranian regime should it use lethal force against
civilians.
Trump was briefed in
recent days on different plans for intervention, as violence in the country has
led to dozens of deaths and arrests.

Several options
presented to the president have centered on targeting Tehran’s security
services being used to tamp down the protests, the US officials said.
However, there are
concerns inside the administration that military strikes could backfire and
undermine the protests. The concerns, the officials said, are that strikes
could have the unintended effect of rallying the Iranian people to support the
government or lead Iran to retaliate with military force of its own.
Trump is also
considering several options intended to target Iran’s regime that stop short of
military strikes, officials said, as he looks to follow through on a vow to
help protesters in the country.
The options include
cyber operations going after the Iranian military or regime targets, a step
that could disrupt efforts to crack down on protests, an official said.
The options also
include new sanctions against regime figures or sectors of Iran’s economy, like
energy or banking.
The administration
has also explored providing technology like Starlink to bolster internet
connectivity in Iran, helping protesters skirt an information blackout.
Then-President Joe Biden offered similar connectivity assistance during the
last flare-up of street protests in 2022.
A
number of different agencies
have been involved in helping prepare options for the president, officials
said. More formal briefings are expected in the coming week, including on
Tuesday, when Trump is expected to convene senior national security officials
to discuss how to proceed.
Tehran will treat US
military and commercial bases as targets for retaliation if Washington
intervenes militarily in unrest-hit Iran, its hardline parliamentary speaker
has warned.
“If the US takes
military action towards Iran or the occupied territories, the US military and
shipping centers will be considered legitimate targets,” Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf
said.
“We do not limit
ourselves to only reacting after an action has been taken,” he added.
The president has not
yet made a final decision on intervention, the officials said, but he is
seriously considering action as the death toll in Iran continues to rise. The
options that the president is considering do not involve putting boots on the
ground in Iran, a senior White House official said.
At least 10,675
people have been arrested, including 169 children, over the past 15 days during
anti-regime demonstrations in Iran, according to a detailed tally provided to
CNN by Skylar Thompson, deputy director of Human Rights Activists in Iran (also
known as HRA).
HRA’s news arm is
called Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA).
At least 490
protesters have been killed over the same period, according to the group’s
latest tally, updated Sunday.

Data as of Jan. 10,
2026.
“Iran is looking at
FREEDOM, perhaps like never before,” Trump posted to social media on Saturday.
“The USA stands ready to help!!!”
On Friday, Trump told
reporters that if Tehran engaged in deadly violence against protestors, the US
would “get involved.”
“I’ve made the
statement very strongly that if they start killing people like they have in the
past, we will get involved,” Trump said during a meeting with oil executives.
“And that doesn’t mean boots on the ground, but it means hitting them very,
very hard where it hurts.”
Secretary of State
Marco Rubio and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke Saturday about
the ongoing protests, two sources familiar with the call said. The leaders also
discussed the situation in Syria and Gaza, they said.
The Israel Defense
Forces (IDF) said Sunday it is “monitoring developments” in Iran as the country
enters its third week of anti-government protests.
“The protests are an
internal Iranian matter. Nevertheless, the IDF is prepared defensively and is
continuously improving its capabilities and operational readiness,” an IDF
spokesperson said in a statement.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu
is set to convene a limited security consultation Sunday evening, with
developments in Iran and Lebanon high on the agenda, according to an Israeli
source.
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