U.S. President Donald Trump warned on Tuesday that if Iran tried to assassinate him, Iran would be killed if he had instructed his adviser to take action.

While signing the Presidential order to put the most pressure on Tehran, he said, “If they did it, they would be killed … nothing remained.”
If Trump is assassinated, Vice President JD Vance does not need to follow Trump’s instructions, assuming a presidential position. Federal authorities have been tracking Iran’s threat to Trump and other officials for many years.
Donald Trump commanded the 2020 strike that killed Casem Soley Mani, the leader of the Quds army of the Islamic Revolution Corps in Iran.
According to US officials, Iran’s threat to Trump has led to an increase in security a few days before the July campaign rally in Pennsylvania. However, the officials at the time did not believe Iran was involved in the attempt of assassination.
In November, the Ministry of Justice announced that it had prevented Iran’s conspiracy to kill Trump before the presidential election.
In September, the department accused him of conducting a 51 -year -old Furhad Square and monitored and eventually assassinated Trump. Shakei remains large in Iran.
Iranian officials rejected the claim and argued that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ Spokesman, Esmail Bug High, was a group related to Israel to comply with Iran.
According to the complaint, the investigator learned a plan from a shaken, which has been accused of Iranian government assets. He had previously served in prison in the United States for robbery, but was said to have maintained a network of a criminal fellow adopted by Tehran for monitoring and murder.
The Afghanist Shakari, who lives in Iran, tells the FBI that the contact of the Iranian Liar Revolutionary Security Corps paused to him in September last year and ordered him to make a plan within 7 days. Ta. In Manhattan.
Recently, Trump has canceled the security protection of former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, his top assistant, Brian Hook, and the former national security advisor, John Bolton’s government. All three were faced Iran’s threats during Trump’s first administration with a hard -line attitude toward the Islamic Republic.
With AP input