President Donald Trump provided an update on Iran and answered questions from reporters before he left Florida on Monday.
Watch Trump’s news conference in our video player above.
The news conference came amid rising concerns about high oil and gasoline prices because of the war.
Trump told reporters at that the war with Iran began because that country was starting work on a new site for developing material for nuclear weapons.
Trump said the new site was meant to replace facilities bombed last year by the U.S.
“But they were starting work at another site, a different site, different kind of a site — and that was protected by granite,” Trump said.
The president added that Iran wanted to use the “exponentially growing ballistic missile threat to make it virtually impossible to prevent them from obtaining a nuclear weapon,” claiming that Iran would have otherwise been able to take over the Middle East.
Though the president has long professed an “America First” policy prioritizing the U.S., Trump suggested at his news conference that the war was for the benefit of other nations, especially those dependent on oil that’s shipped through the Strait of Hormuz.
“I mean, we’re doing this for the other parts of the world, including countries like China,” Trump said.
The president was asked about his comments earlier Monday in which he told a reporter that the war was “very complete,” while the Pentagon on Monday said on social media: “We have Only Just Begun to Fight.”
Trump was asked whether it was the end or the beginning and said, “It’s the beginning of building a new country,” a comment that seemed to suggest the U.S. might be engaged in the building of a new Iran.
Trump says he’s ‘disappointed’ by Iran’s choice of a new leader
The president told reporters that he thought the pick of Mojtaba Khamenei to succeed his father as Iran’s supreme leader would lead to “more of the same” for a country that he seeks to change.
Trump said it “would be inappropriate” to say whether Iran’s new leader would be targeted for a lethal assault as was his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Trump said he liked “the idea” of a leader drawn from an “internal” group of candidates, saying that this process “works well” with Venezuela’s new leader, Delcy Rodriguez, following the capture by U.S. forces of Nicolas Maduro to face drug trafficking charges in the U.S.
Trump also elevated his expectations by saying he would like a candidate in Iran who was “internal and eternal.”
Trump says Vance ‘maybe less enthusiastic’ about striking Iran than he is
Trump said he and Vice President JD Vance “get along very well” on issues related to Iran, but the president noted that his No. 2 was “maybe less enthusiastic about going” than he was.
Vance, Trump also noted, is “philosophically a little bit different than me.”
Vance has largely opposed U.S. intervention abroad. While still in the U.S. Senate and before Trump tapped him as his running mate, Vance cited Trump’s lack of foreign military entanglement as part of why he backed him for president in the 2024 campaign.
Trump says Iran would have ‘taken over’ the Middle East if he hadn’t acted
“If I didn’t hit them first, they were going to hit our allies first. I believe upon information and belief,” the president told reporters, before adding, “They were going to take over the Middle East.”
“Upon information and belief” is a phrase often used in legal settings, including in affidavits.
It is usually meant to denote declarations that a statement is based on secondhand information, but is also believed to be true by the speaker.
Trump was indicted in four criminal cases, and also faced civil charges related to his business practices, before returning to the White House. He’s no stranger to being in court or talking to lawyers.
Trump claims Iran has access to Tomahawk missiles when asked about school strike
The president erroneously claimed that Iran has access to the American Tomahawk cruise missile, the weapon likely used to strike a girls’ school in Iran, killing 165 people.
Asked if the U.S. would accept responsibility for the strike, Trump argued that the cruise missile, which is made by the American defense contractor Raytheon, is “sold and used by other countries” and that Iran “also has some Tomahawks.”
“Whether it’s Iran or somebody else … a Tomahawk is very generic,” he said.
While Raytheon sells the missile to allied countries like Japan and Australia, there is no evidence to suggest that Iran has gotten its hands on the cruise missile.
When asked why he was the only person in his administration making the claim, Trump replied: “Because I just don’t know enough about it.” He added that “whatever the report shows, I’m willing to live with that report.”



