Trump Says US ‘Armada’ Heading Toward Iran

US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters while in flight on Air Force One, traveling from Shannon, Ireland en route to the Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on January 22, 2026. (AFP)
US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters while in flight on Air Force One, traveling from Shannon, Ireland en route to the Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on January 22, 2026. (AFP)
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Trump Says US ‘Armada’ Heading Toward Iran

US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters while in flight on Air Force One, traveling from Shannon, Ireland en route to the Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on January 22, 2026. (AFP)
US President Donald Trump speaks to reporters while in flight on Air Force One, traveling from Shannon, Ireland en route to the Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on January 22, 2026. (AFP)

President Donald Trump said on Thursday that the United States has an "armada" heading toward Iran but hoped ​he would not have to use it, as he renewed warnings to Tehran against killing protesters or restarting its nuclear program.

US officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, say the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and several guided-missile destroyers will arrive in the Middle East in the coming days.

One official said additional air-defense systems were also being eyed for the Middle East, which could be critical to guard against any Iranian strike on US bases in the region.

The deployments expand the options available to Trump, both to better defend US forces throughout the region at a moment of tensions and to take any additional military action after striking Iranian nuclear sites in June.

"We have ‌a lot of ‌ships going that direction, just in case ...I'd rather not see anything ‌happen, ⁠but ​we're watching ‌them very closely," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on his way back to the United States after speaking to world leaders in Davos, Switzerland.

At another point, he said: "We have an armada ... heading in that direction, and maybe we won't have to use it."

The warships started moving from the Asia-Pacific last week as tensions between Iran and the United States soared following a severe crackdown on protests across Iran in recent months.

Trump had repeatedly threatened to intervene against Iran over the recent killings of protesters there, but protests dwindled last week. The president backed away from his toughest rhetoric last ⁠week, claiming he had stopped executions of prisoners.

He repeated that claim on Thursday, saying Iran canceled nearly 840 hangings after his threats.

"I said: 'If you hang ‌those people, you're going to be hit harder than you've ever been ‍hit. It'll make what we did to your Iran ‍nuclear (program) look like peanuts,'" Trump said.

"At an hour before this horrible thing was going to take place, ‍they canceled it," he said, calling it "a good sign."

The US military has in the past periodically surged forces to the Middle East at times of heightened tensions, moves that were often defensive.

However, the US military staged a major buildup last year ahead of its June strikes against Iran's nuclear program.

Trump has said the United States would act if Tehran resumed its nuclear ​program after the June strikes on key sites.

"If they try to do it again, they have to go to another area. We'll hit them there too, just as easily," he ⁠said on Thursday.

Iran must report to the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, on what happened to sites struck by the United States and the nuclear material thought to be there. That includes an estimated 440.9 kg of uranium enriched up to 60% purity which, if enriched sufficiently, could be enough for 10 nuclear bombs, according to an IAEA yardstick.

The agency has not verified Iran's stock of highly enriched uranium for at least seven months, which the watchdog advises should be done monthly.

IRAN PROTESTS SPREAD

It is unclear whether protests in Iran could also surge again. The protests began on December 28 as modest demonstrations in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar over economic hardship and quickly spread nationwide.

The US-based HRANA rights group said it has so far verified 4,519 unrest-linked deaths, including 4,251 protesters, and has 9,049 additional deaths under review.

An Iranian official told Reuters the confirmed death toll until Sunday was more than 5,000, including 500 members of the security forces.

Asked ‌how many protesters were killed, Trump said: "Nobody knows... I mean, it's a lot, no matter what."



Iran Lambasts Zelensky after Davos 'Bully' Warning

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivers a speech at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, January 22, 2026 (AP)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivers a speech at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, January 22, 2026 (AP)
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Iran Lambasts Zelensky after Davos 'Bully' Warning

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivers a speech at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, January 22, 2026 (AP)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy delivers a speech at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, January 22, 2026 (AP)

Iran's foreign minister on Friday launched a furious tirade against Volodymyr Zelensky after the Ukrainian president commented in Davos that the deadly crackdown on protests in Iran showed that if authorities "kill enough people" they stay in power.

Zelensky, whose country has been fighting the full-scale Russian invasion for almost four years, said in a speech at the World Economic Forum on Thursday that if Iran's clerical leadership was able to remain in power, it was a "clear signal to every bully".

Russian President Vladimir Putin is an ally of Iran’s leadership under Ali Khamenei and last week held telephone talks with President Masoud Pezeshkian, with both sides agreeing to ramp up bilateral ties.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi responded to Zelensky's comments with a broadside of accusations and claims in an English-language post on X, saying the Ukrainian leader had been "rinsing American and European taxpayers to fill the pockets of his corrupt generals".

"The world has had enough of Confused Clowns, Mr Zelensky," he said, in apparent reference to the Ukrainian leader's previous career as a wildly-successful comedian and comic actor.

"Unlike your foreign-backed and mercenary-infested military, we Iranians know how to defend ourselves and have no need to beg foreigners for help," he added.

Foreigners are fighting in the Ukrainian army but make up only a tiny percentage of the armed forces.

- 'Drowned in blood' -

Kyiv and the West accuse Iran of providing drones and ballistic missiles to Russia for use in Ukraine. Tehran has repeatedly denied sending any weapons to Russia.

In his speech in Davos, Zelensky appeared to cite the response to the protests as another example of Western inaction in the face of aggression.

"There was so much talk about the protests in Iran -- but they drowned in blood. The world has not helped enough the Iranian people, it has stood aside," he said, speaking in English.

Zelensky noted that the start of the protests coincided with the Christmas and New Year holidays in Europe.

"What will Iran become after this bloodshed? If the regime survives, it sends a clear signal to every bully -- kill enough people, and you stay in power," he said.

Iranian authorities have said well over 3,000 people were killed in the protests but have blamed the violence on "rioters" backed by the United States and Israel.

Rights groups however say the toll is far higher and could be as much as 20,000, adding that confirming the numbers is hugely impeded by the now two-week shutdown of the internet in Iran.

NGOs, including Amnesty International, have accused security forces of deliberately firing on protesters to suppress the demonstrations, which have now petered out.


Iran’s Top Prosecutor Denies Trump’s Claim That Tehran Halted Execution of 800 Prisoners

This photograph taken during a tour for foreign media shows a media representative walking past the parked buses that were burned at a depot during recent public protests, in Tehran on January 21, 2026. (AFP)
This photograph taken during a tour for foreign media shows a media representative walking past the parked buses that were burned at a depot during recent public protests, in Tehran on January 21, 2026. (AFP)
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Iran’s Top Prosecutor Denies Trump’s Claim That Tehran Halted Execution of 800 Prisoners

This photograph taken during a tour for foreign media shows a media representative walking past the parked buses that were burned at a depot during recent public protests, in Tehran on January 21, 2026. (AFP)
This photograph taken during a tour for foreign media shows a media representative walking past the parked buses that were burned at a depot during recent public protests, in Tehran on January 21, 2026. (AFP)

Iran’s top prosecutor on Friday denied a claim by US President Donald Trump that his intervention halted the execution of 800 people detained in nationwide protests, calling his comments “completely false.”

The news agency of Iran’s judiciary, Mizan, quoted Mohammad Movahedi as making the comment.

It again calls into question whether there will be mass executions over the nationwide protests.

Officials have already said some detainees face death penalty charges.

“This claim is completely false; no such number exists, nor has the judiciary made any such decision,” Movahedi said, according to Mizan.

Trump has said that mass executions and the killing of peaceful protesters are both red lines for a possible US military strike on Iran.

The toll in Iran's bloody crackdown on nationwide protests has reached at least 5,002 people killed, activists said Friday, warning many more were feared dead as the most comprehensive internet blackout in the country's history crossed the two-week mark.

The challenge in getting information out of Iran persists because of authorities cutting off access to the internet on Jan. 8, even as tensions rise between the United States and Iran as an American aircraft carrier group moves closer to the Middle East — a force Trump likened to an “armada” in comments to journalists late Thursday.


UN Rights Body Holds Emergency Session on Iran’s Protest Crackdown

This photograph taken during a tour for foreign media shows media representatives walking past the parked buses that were burned at a depot during recent public protests, in Tehran on January 21, 2026. (AFP)
This photograph taken during a tour for foreign media shows media representatives walking past the parked buses that were burned at a depot during recent public protests, in Tehran on January 21, 2026. (AFP)
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UN Rights Body Holds Emergency Session on Iran’s Protest Crackdown

This photograph taken during a tour for foreign media shows media representatives walking past the parked buses that were burned at a depot during recent public protests, in Tehran on January 21, 2026. (AFP)
This photograph taken during a tour for foreign media shows media representatives walking past the parked buses that were burned at a depot during recent public protests, in Tehran on January 21, 2026. (AFP)

The UN Human Rights Council will hold an emergency session on Friday to discuss the "alarming violence" used in Iran against protesters, while a group of states will call on United Nations' investigators to document alleged abuses for future trials.

Rights groups say thousands, including bystanders, were killed during the unrest, which represented the biggest challenge to Iran's clerical government since 2022.

At least 50 ‌countries backed ‌the call for a special session of ‌the ⁠UN ​Human Rights ‌Council to address credible reports of violence, crackdowns on protesters and violations of international human rights law across the country, according to a letter drafted by Iceland.

"The scale of the crimes is unprecedented," Payam Akhavan, a former UN prosecutor with Iranian-Canadian nationality, told Reuters ahead of the session, where he is set to speak.

"We are trying to ⁠set the stage for transitional justice in Iran, for the country’s Nuremberg moment, should ‌that come to pass," he said, referring ‍to the international criminal trials of ‍Nazi leaders following World War Two.

Iran's diplomatic mission did not ‍immediately respond to a request for comment.

Authorities have blamed the unrest and deaths on "terrorists and rioters" backed by exiled opponents and foreign adversaries, the United States and Israel.

EXTENDING MANDATE OF UN INVESTIGATION

The proposal before the ​Geneva body seeks to extend by two years the mandate of a UN investigation set up in 2022 ⁠after the previous wave of protests.

It would also launch an urgent investigation into violations and crimes linked to the latest unrest that began on December 28 "for potential future legal proceedings".

It was not clear who would cover the costs amid a UN funding crisis that has stalled other probes.

Human rights advocates hope that the emergency session will pressure Iran's government.

"The session sends a strong message to Iranian authorities that the international community is closely monitoring their actions and will not tolerate the suppression of dissenting voices," said Azadeh Pourzand, the spokesperson for ‌Impact Iran, which is a coalition of 19 non-governmental organizations campaigning for human rights in Iran.