
Donald Trump once said he had left strict instructions in case Iran ever tried to harm him.
That warning, made more than a year ago, is drawing attention again because of the current tensions in the Middle East. What once sounded like a dramatic statement is now being viewed in a much more serious way.
In February 2025, Trump made one of his strongest remarks on Iran. He was not speaking about domestic politics, but about what would happen if Iran ever attempted to kill him.
Now, with conflict involving Iran back in focus, those words are being revisited.
The article claims that on February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched a major coordinated attack on Iran, targeting senior officials, military leaders, and strategic sites. It also says Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed. According to the same report, tensions had already been building for years.
![]()
After the October 7, 2023 Hamas atta:ck on Israel, Israel increased pressure on Iranian-backed groups in the region, including Hamas and Hezbollah.
The article also says Israel and Iran exchanged direct strikes in 2024 and fought a short war in 2025 that included US airstrikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities.
Inside Iran, the situation reportedly worsened in late 2025, with mass anti-government protests spreading across more than 100 cities. The government responded with violent crackdowns. Trump later used that unrest as part of his justification for military action, telling the Iranian people in a video message, “The country will be yours to take.”
Public opinion in the United States appears divided, though the article says most Americans do not support military action. Citing a CNN poll, it says 59% disapproved of the first strikes, while 41% approved. Many also feared the conflict could turn into a longer war, and only a small minority supported sending US ground troops into Iran.
The same report says many Americans do not fully trust Trump’s handling of the crisis. A majority believed he should seek congressional approval before any further military action, and only a small percentage felt enough diplomatic effort had been made before the strikes.
Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly described the attack as both defensive and preventive, saying the goal was to stop Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. But critics argued the timing was questionable because negotiations were still underway.
The article says Iran had been discussing limits on its nuclear program, including giving up enriched uranium and accepting international inspections.
Critics argued that military action interrupted diplomacy and increased the risk of a wider wa:r.

As for how long the conflict could last, Trump reportedly said he expected it to last around four weeks and believed events were moving ahead of schedule. Still, analysts war:ned that Iran or its allied networks could retaliate against American targets in the region or beyond.
The article also claims Iran launched retaliatory strikes within days, ki:lling at least 18 people, including four US service members.
The most striking part of the report is Trump’s earlier statement about an assassination attempt. In February 2025, he said that if Iran ever tried to kill him, the response would be total destruction.
According to the article, Trump said: if Iran did that, “they would be obliterated,” and that he had already “left instructions” to make sure of it.
At the time, those comments received limited attention. But after the reported escalation in conflict, they resurfaced and are now being seen as a sign of the hardline approach behind Trump’s strategy toward Iran.
Whether those instructions would ever be used is unknown. But the message itself was clear: Trump wanted both Washington and Tehran to understand that he had already drawn that line.