The United States will be โout of Iran pretty quicklyโ and could return for โspot hitsโ if needed, President Donald Trump told Reuters on Wednesday, hours before he was scheduled to โmake a primetime address to the nation about the war.
With the conflict in its fifth week and Trump under pressure for an off-ramp amid rising gasoline prices, โthe president scheduled a 9 p.m. EDT (0100 GMT) speech to discuss the way forward. His address will end a day that began with Trump making a historic visit to the Supreme Court.
Trump, in a phone interview with Reuters, said one element of his speech would be to express his disgust with NATO for what he considers the allianceโs lack of support for U.S. objectives in Iran.
A transatlantic rift in Trumpโs second term deepened after European allies rebuffed โhis request to help maintain safe passage for oil traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.
He said he was โabsolutelyโ considering withdrawing the United States from NATO, a treaty organization ratified by โthe U.S. Senate in 1949. Trump has flirted with a withdrawal in the past and has successfully pressured NATO members to increase their defense โ spending.
โThey havenโt been friends when we needed them,โ Trump said. โWeโve never asked them for much โฆ itโs a one-way street.โ
Trump and his top officials have offered a variety of timelines for ending โthe war. He said on Tuesday that the U.S. could end its military campaign against Iran within two to three weeks.
In the Reuters interview, he declined to provide a timeline.
โI canโt tell you โexactly โฆ weโre going to be out pretty quickly,โ he said, adding that once a U.S. exit is achieved, โweโll come back to do spot hitsโ on Iranian targets as needed.
โWE GOT REGIME CHANGEโ
The war has spread across the Middle East, killing thousands of people and causing soaring energy prices that have fueled global inflation fears.
Two-thirds of Americans believe that the U.S. should work to end its involvement in the Iran war quickly, even if that means โnot achieving the goals set out by the Trump administration, found a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted from Friday to Sunday.
Trump said he hoped for a deal with Iran after the first wave of โairstrikes killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Several other senior Iranian figures have also been killed.
Mojtaba Khamenei has replaced his father as Iranโs supreme leader; the U.S. has said it believes he is wounded and โlikely disfigured. โ The countryโs president and foreign minister remain the same as before the conflict.
Trump said Iranโs leadership was now โtotally different people.โ
โI didnโt need regime change, but we got it because of the casualties of war. We got it. So we have regime change and the big thing we have is theyโre not going to have a nuclear weapon,โ said Trump, adding: โNor do they want one.โ
The White House has said that behind-the-scenes negotiations are ongoing with Iran, a point that Tehran denies. A source briefed on the matter said Vice President JD Vance was talking to intermediaries from Pakistan about the conflict โas recently as Tuesday.
At Trumpโs direction, Vance signaled โprivately that Trump was open to a โ ceasefire as long as certain U.S. demands were met, the source told Reuters on Wednesday.
โWe have had full regime change,โ Trump said. โIโm dealing with a very good chance that weโll make a deal because they donโt want to be blasted anymore.โ
NUCLEAR WEAPONS
Trump has said a primary aim of launching โthe war was to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon.
Almost half of Iranโs uranium enriched to up to 60% purity, a short โstep from weapons-grade, was โ stored in a tunnel complex at Isfahan and is probably still there, the U.N. nuclear watchdog chief Rafael Grossi said earlier this month.
The tunnel complex is the only target that appears not to have been badly damaged in attacks last June by Israel and the U.S. on Iranโs nuclear facilities.
Trump said the objective of preventing a nuclear weapon has been achieved, however.
Of the enriched uranium, Trump said: โThatโs so far โ underground, I โdonโt care about that.โ
โWeโll always be watching it by satellite,โ he added.
He said Iran was โincapableโ of developing a weapon โnow.
