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Trump to Iran: 'One Night Is Enough' – Bridges and Power Plants on the Midnight Menu
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Trump to Iran: 'One Night Is Enough' – Bridges and Power Plants on the Midnight Menu

By our Markets Desk3 min read

President Trump's latest rhetoric toward Iran is giving global markets a serious case of the jitters. During a pointed address referencing midnight on Tuesday, the US leader laid out what sounded like a very specific shopping list: bridges and energy infrastructure, all to be destroyed within a jaw-dropping four-hour window. Nothing says "peaceful negotiation" like a midnight deadline straight out of a degen's liquidation checklist.

"All the bridges in Iran will be destroyed, all the power plants will be disabled," Trump declared, while simultaneously expressing hope he wouldn't actually have to follow through. Classic mixed signals – like saying "I definitely won't rugpull, but here's my exit strategy just in case." He also dropped the line that definitely got everyone's attention: "If necessary, the entire country could be neutralized overnight. Probably."

On the diplomatic front, Trump insisted negotiations with Iran were proceeding in "good faith" – though he quickly added that Tehran's proposals weren't quite cutting it. The deadline? Not being extended. Tuesday was the final answer, no extensions, no do-overs. Think of it like a liquidity window slamming shut – no second chances, no grace period, just vibes and geopolitical pressure.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth confirmed the military machinery is revving up, with the most intense operations expected today and ramping up even further tomorrow. US officials say preparations are particularly focused on Iran's energy infrastructure. It's like someone is quietly building a position in conflict futures while publicly claiming they're just "monitoring the situation."

Meanwhile, Iran fired back – literally. State television reported a missile launch toward Israel. Nothing says "we're taking this seriously" like an actual projectile entering the group chat.

In other news disrupting the geopolitical vibe: Wells Fargo no longer expects the Fed to cut rates this year. Ouch. Rate cuts are the one thing that could make this whole situation feel slightly less like staring into an abyss.

Israeli PM Netanyahu reportedly urged Trump to oppose a ceasefire during their Sunday chat. And in true Trump fashion, he dismissed concerns about war crime accusations, calling an Iranian nuclear weapon "the real war crime." When asked about Americans wanting troops home, Trump acknowledged the sentiment but remained confident about Iran's eventual willingness to negotiate: "They don't want to back down right now, but they will." Classic confirmation bias – the market always eventually gives in, right? Right?

Not investment advice. Obviously. But probably good advice to keep some cash on the sidelines regardless.

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Publishergascope.com
Published
UpdatedApr 7, 2026, 01:39 UTC

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