Lagatar24 Desk
Tehran: Tensions between the United States and Iran escalated after Iranian state television aired footage containing an explicit threat against former US President Donald Trump, even as reports suggested Washington had temporarily stepped back from plans for military action against Tehran.
Threatening Footage Broadcast on State Television
According to reports, Iranian state-run television broadcast visuals showing a poster depicting Donald Trump alongside a threatening message written in Persian, stating that this time the shot would not miss and would pass through his head. The image referenced the 2024 assassination attempt on Trump during an election rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, where he narrowly survived a gun attack. The footage was reportedly aired during coverage of a funeral procession for Iranian security personnel killed during recent protests.
Context of Protests and Anti-US Sentiment
The funeral ceremony, broadcast on the Islamic Republic of Iran News Network, showed participants holding banners with anti-American slogans and images of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. One individual was seen prominently displaying the poster threatening Trump, intensifying concerns about official endorsement or tolerance of such messaging amid ongoing unrest in Iran.
Diplomatic Efforts to Avert Military Action
Meanwhile, sources indicated that President Trump had paused plans for a military strike on Iran following diplomatic intervention by Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Oman. Gulf officials reportedly engaged Washington after the US warned Tehran over its crackdown on protesters. Iran, in response, had threatened retaliation against US military bases and vessels in the Gulf region, prompting precautionary relocation of American personnel from Qatar’s Al Udeid Air Base.
Fragile Calm Under Strain
Gulf mediators later conveyed assurances that Iran would not carry out mass executions of protesters, which reportedly influenced Trump’s decision to hold back. However, the broadcast of threatening footage on Iranian state television is seen as a provocative development that could undermine diplomatic efforts and further inflame already volatile US-Iran relations.






