- Trump posted to social media Thursday: “The biggest bridge in Iran comes tumbling down, never to be used again — Much more to follow!” accompanied by a video, in a direct escalation of infrastructure strikes against Tehran
- The post came with an ultimatum: “IT IS TIME FOR IRAN TO MAKE A DEAL BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE, AND THERE IS NOTHING LEFT OF WHAT STILL COULD BECOME A GREAT COUNTRY!”
- The strike on the bridge follows Wednesday’s prime-time address in which Trump threatened to hit every Iranian power plant “very hard and probably simultaneously” if no deal materializes
- Markets remain under pressure: Brent crude held above $106 a barrel, Treasury yields climbed, and U.S. equity futures fell as Trump’s mixed signals — simultaneous war threats and peace overtures — continue to suppress risk appetite
What Happened?
President Trump escalated his public pressure campaign against Iran on Thursday, posting a video to social media showing the destruction of what he described as Iran’s largest bridge, along with the threat that “much more” would follow. The post was paired with a direct ultimatum to Tehran to make a deal “before it is too late.” The strike came a day after Trump’s prime-time White House address in which he claimed Operation Epic Fury’s core objectives were “nearing completion” while simultaneously threatening to strike Iran’s entire power grid “very hard and probably simultaneously” if negotiations failed to produce a deal. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian had released a rare letter addressed directly to the American people on Wednesday warning that continued confrontation was “more costly and futile than ever before.”
Why It Matters?
The bridge strike — and Trump’s public celebration of it on social media — illustrates the administration’s “escalate to de-escalate” strategy: applying maximum pressure on Iranian infrastructure to force Tehran to the negotiating table, while simultaneously conducting back-channel diplomacy. Targeting major civilian infrastructure like bridges carries significant humanitarian and reputational implications and risks hardening Iranian public opinion against any compromise. For markets, the persistent gap between Trump’s “very close to ending” framing and his simultaneous escalation threats is eroding confidence in any near-term resolution. Each fresh threat or strike announcement resets risk premiums in oil and pushes back the timeline investors are pricing for Hormuz reopening. With Brent above $106 and U.S. gasoline at $4-plus, the economic clock is ticking for both sides.
What’s Next?
The next two to three weeks will be decisive, per Trump’s own timeline. Either the escalating pressure campaign produces a diplomatic breakthrough — likely involving Iranian concessions on Hormuz access and nuclear program constraints in exchange for some relief — or the conflict enters a more destructive infrastructure phase that could trigger wider humanitarian concern and greater geopolitical blowback. Gulf states, particularly the UAE and Saudi Arabia, have been pushing for a negotiated resolution and may serve as intermediaries. Investors should watch for any signal of a ceasefire framework emerging from back-channel talks — if a deal takes shape, the reversal in energy prices and risk assets could be sharp and rapid.
Source: Bloomberg














