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FeaturedWorld News

Trump: Whole civilisation will die if deal with Iran isn’t reached

nt
Last updated: April 8, 2026 1:30 am
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Smoke rises from the site of a US-Israeli strike on the Iranian capital Tehran on April 7, 2026. UN chief Antonio Guterres expressed alarm on April 7, 2026, at the US president's dire warning that "a whole civilization will die" in Iran if the country does not meet an ultimatum to accept US war demands. On February 28, Israel and the United States launched strikes on Iran, killing its supreme leader and triggering a war that spread across the Middle East. (Photo by ATTA KENARE / AFP) /
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Tehran

US President Donald Trump threatened on Tuesday that a “whole civilisation will die tonight” if Iran fails to meet his latest deadline to strike a deal that includes reopening the Strait of Hormuz, while the Islamic Republic urged young people to form human chains around power plants and other potential targets.

Even before the deadline, airstrikes hit two bridges and a train station, and the US hit military infrastructure on Kharg island. It was the second time American forces struck the island, a key hub for Iranian oil production.

Intense airstrikes pounded Tehran, including in residential neighbourhoods. In the past, such strikes have targeted Iranian government and security officials.

The Israeli military said it attacked an Iranian petrochemical site in Shiraz, the second day in a row it hit such a facility. The military later said it also struck bridges in Tehran, Karaj, Tabriz, Kashan and Qom that were being used by Iranian forces to transport weapons and military equipment. Since the war began, Trump has repeatedly imposed deadlines linked to threats, only to extend them. But the President insisted this one is final and will expire at 8 pm in Washington without a major diplomatic breakthrough.

He has also offered contradictory statements about what might actually happen.

Trump has made reopening the strait – through which a fifth of the world’s oil transits in peacetime – part of avoiding wider attacks and suggested that the waterway is not as vital to US oil interests as it to other countries.

He has also said he would be willing to deploy ground troops to seize Iranian oil, while maintaining that major combat operations in that country could soon conclude.

That means the next moves by the US are largely a mystery, even as rhetoric on both sides has reached a fever pitch.

Iran’s President said 14 million people, including himself, have volunteered to fight. That’s despite Trump threatening that US forces could wipe out all bridges in Iran in a matter of hours and reduce all power plants to smoking rubble in roughly the same time frame. He also suggested the entire country could be wiped off the map.

It was not clear if the latest airstrikes were linked to Trump’s threats to widen the civilian target list. At least two of the targets were connected to Iran’s rail network, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israeli warplanes struck bridges and railways in Iran.

Tehran fired on Israel and Saudi Arabia, prompting the temporary closure of a major bridge.

While Iran cannot match the sophistication of US and Israeli weaponry or their dominance in the air, its chokehold on the strait is roiling the world economy and raising the pressure on Trump both at home and abroad to find a way out of the standoff.

Officials involved in diplomatic efforts said talks were ongoing, but Iran has rejected the latest American proposal.

“A whole civilisation will die tonight, never to be brought back again,” if a deal isn’t reached, Trump said in an online post on Tuesday morning. But he also seemed to keep open the possibility of an off-ramp, saying that “maybe something revolutionarily wonderful can happen.”

Earlier, Iranian official Alireza Rahimi issued a video message calling on “all young people, athletes, artists, students and university students and their professors” to form human chains around power plants.

Iranians have formed human chains in the past around nuclear sites at times of heightened tensions with the West. Some images of people surrounding power plants were posted on Tuesday by local Iranian media, though how widespread the practice was is unknown.

President Masoud Pezeshkian posted on X that 14 million Iranians had answered campaigns urging people to volunteer to fight – and said he would join them – while a Revolutionary Guard general urged parents to send their children to man checkpoints.

 

 

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The Navhind Times, the first and largest circulated English Daily from Goa, has earned the trust, respect and loyalty of the Goans by virtue of its objective reporting, commentaries, features and breaking goa news. It was launched by the House of Dempos, a pioneer in the industrial development of Goa, on February 18, 1963 soon after Goa was liberated from the Portuguese rule.

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