President Trump stated that the US uses Saudi Arabian airports for strikes against Iran and that Riyadh cannot prevent this if Washington chooses otherwise, according to a single source. In response, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) said it will 'make the lives of Saudi Arabia miserable in the coming months and years.' Neither claim has been independently verified.
President Donald Trump said that the United States uses Saudi Arabian airports to conduct strikes against Iran, and that Saudi Arabia cannot prevent such use, according to a single source post. The report, attributed to a channel named 'Rak Neto', quotes Trump as saying: 'We use Saudi Arabia's airports for strikes on Iran, and they cannot prevent us if we do not want them to.' The quote's origin and veracity have not been independently confirmed.
In direct response, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) was reported as saying they will 'make the lives of Saudi Arabia miserable in the coming months and years.' The statement, if genuine, marks a significant escalation in Iranian threats toward a Gulf state seen as a US ally.
The Zioneer has previously tracked an escalating war of words between Washington and Tehran, including IRGC warnings against Gulf states hosting US bases and threats of retaliation for American strikes. This new report, if accurate, deepens the crisis by drawing a specific Gulf nation — Saudi Arabia — into the direct line of fire in the US-Iran confrontation. Both claims are sourced from a single unverified the source and should be treated with caution until corroborated.
- DevelopingIRGC reportedly fires missiles at Saudi capital Riyadh
- ConfirmedIRGC threatens imminent retaliation after US strikes near Strait of Hormuz
- StrongTrump Threatens 'Very Hard' Strikes on Iran Tonight, Outlines Plan for Kharg Island Seizure
- DevelopingIRGC warns it may shift from defensive posture, attack to lift naval blockade
Source and signal
A single-sourced dispatch is never rated Confirmed or Strong. Its Signal strengthens only when a second, independent source corroborates it.
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