US President Donald Trump will be briefed by senior officials in his administration later this week on possible responses to the deadly violence in Iran, where hundreds of protesters have reportedly been killed and thousands more detained over the past two weeks, The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday, citing US officials.
Trump has repeatedly threatened to retaliate against Iran’s leaders if protesters are killed, and on Saturday said that the US was “ready to help” Iranians achieve freedom.
The protests in Iran, now in their 15th day, began as economic demonstrations but escalated rapidly into calls for the collapse of the Islamic Republic and regime change. Tehran has responded forcefully to the demonstrations, and activists said on Sunday that at least 538 people had been killed since December 28.
The US president’s meeting, planned for Tuesday, will be a discussion about possible next steps, including military strikes, deploying secretive cyber weapons against Iranian military and civilian sites, placing more sanctions on Iran’s government and boosting anti-government sources online, the Journal reported.
The New York Times and the Journal reported Saturday that Trump had been presented with military options for a strike, but hadn’t made a final decision.
Even if the US does choose to proceed with military action, the UK’s Sunday Times suggested that this would not happen in the immediate future.
According to the newspaper, the US military has informed Trump that it is not yet ready to launch strikes and needs more time to prepare. Officials in the Middle East have communicated that they need additional time to bolster both personnel and defenses in the region before they can proceed with strikes, the report said.
The Qatari Al Araby Television Network reported, however, that Israel believes the US will strike Iran sooner rather than later.
As Washington weighs its options, Tehran has continued to pin blame on Israel and the US for the unrelenting protests, with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian accusing the two countries of trying to “sow chaos and disorder” in the Islamic Republic.
“Protesting is the people’s right,” he said in an interview with state TV on Sunday, while warning that protesters “should not be allowed to disrupt society.”
“The people should believe that we (the government) want to establish justice,” he told state broadcaster IRIB. “If people have a concern we will hear them, it is our duty to hear them and solve their problems. However, our highest duty is not to allow rioters to come and disrupt society.”
He accused Israel and the US of “trying to escalate this unrest with regard to the economic discussion and solutions we are working on.”
“They have taken some people here inside and abroad and trained them. They brought terrorists in from abroad into the country,” he claimed.
Against the backdrop of Pezeshkian’s warnings about “rioters,” the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency said that more than 10,600 people across Iran had been detained.
It said that 490 protesters had been killed, in addition to 48 members of Iran’s security forces, and warned that the death toll was likely to continue to rise.
With the internet down in Iran and phone lines cut off, gauging the demonstrations from abroad has grown more difficult.
The activist group, which relies on activists in Iran crosschecking information, has offered accurate tolls in previous rounds of unrest in the Islamic Republic.
The Iranian government has not offered any overall casualty figures for the demonstrations, but has praised security forces for their actions against protesters.
Iran’s parliament speaker warned Sunday that the US military and Israel would be “legitimate targets” if the US were to strike Iran. Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf made the comments during an address in parliament, which was broadcast live on state television.
“In the event of an attack on Iran, both the occupied territory and all American military centers, bases and ships in the region will be our legitimate targets,” Qalibaf said. “We do not consider ourselves limited to reacting after the action and will act based on any objective signs of a threat.”
Lawmakers rushed the dais in the Iranian parliament, shouting: “Death to America!”
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