-
French court jails Lafarge ex-CEO for funding IS in Syria
-
Atletico need 'personality' to prevent Barca comeback: Koke
-
Cameroon's Catholics divided on papal visit
-
South Africa's new DA leader vows to shed party's white image
-
Karol G honors Latinos in Coachella headline performance: 'Feel proud'
-
Oil surges, stocks drop as Trump threatens to block Hormuz
-
Pope's African tour begins in shadow of Trump ire
-
'Help me!': family's anguish over Equatorial Guinean lured into Ukraine war
-
Germany unveils 1.6 bn euro fuel price relief to tackle energy shock
-
Iran executed at least 1,639 in 2025, more hangings feared: NGOs
-
Ukraine loan, frozen funds: how could Orban's ouster unblock EU?
-
What next for Pogacar, Van der Poel after Roubaix blow?
-
Orban loses Hungary vote to pro-Europe newcomer Magyar
-
US says to begin blockade of Iranian ports
-
Germany to cut fuel taxes amid Iran war energy shock
-
Pope Leo kicks off African tour under shadow of Trump's ire
-
Singer Luisa Sonza shares 'unique experience' of Coachella debut
-
US military to begin blockade of Iranian ports on Monday
-
Australia names Coyle first woman to lead army
-
Rashford with point to prove as Barca target Atletico comeback
-
Iran executed at least 1,639 people in 2025, most since 1989: NGOs
-
Nuggets roll into NBA playoffs, Raptors clinch berth
-
Flagg's sensational rookie season ends with injury
-
Trump says 'not a big fan' of Pope Leo after his anti-war message
-
Spain's Sanchez calls China trade imbalance with EU 'unsustainable'
-
Oil surges, stocks fall as Trump says to blockade Strait of Hormuz
-
Rivers departing as Bucks coach after disappointing season
-
Raptors top Nets, grab No. 5 seed on last day of NBA regular season
-
Greece's ancient sites get climate-change checkup
-
Lost film of French cinema pioneer retrieved from US attic
-
Rory-peat at Masters has McIlroy hungry for more majors
-
Liverpool seek 'special' Anfield night to salvage troubled season
-
Pope Leo XIV heads to Algeria, first stop of African tour
-
Europe reacts to Hungarian leader Orban's electoral defeat
-
Rose frustrated by latest Masters near-miss
-
Scheffler left ruing slow start after Masters record bid falls short
-
Runoff looms as Fujimori leads troubled Peru vote
-
Spain's Sanchez seeks closer China ties amid strains with US
-
Karol G to dance her 'Tropicoqueta' at Coachella
-
McIlroy wins second Masters in a row for sixth major title
-
Orban loses Hungary vote to pro-Europe newcomer after 16 yrs in power
-
Lebanon PM says working to get Israeli troop withdrawal
-
US to begin blockade of Iranian ports Monday: military
-
Easter truce between Ukraine and Russia ends
-
Villarreal add to Athletic misery, Oviedo survival hopes boosted
-
Peter Magyar: former govt insider promising system change
-
Inter close in on Serie A title after comeback triumph at Como
-
Exit stage right: Hungary's Orban 16-year rule draws to an end
-
Rose fights for Masters win with McIlroy, Young in hunt
-
Orban concedes 'painful' defeat to conservative Magyar in Hungary polls
Trump turns to Venezuela playbook on Iran, but differences sharp
Weeks after toppling Venezuela's leader, US President Donald Trump is turning to a similar playbook on Iran, sending what he calls an "armada" near its shores and warning an unpopular government.
Trump has been emboldened on multiple fronts by the tactical success in Venezuela, but Iran presents far more complexities.
- Nature of government -
After US commandos snatched Venezuela's Nicolas Maduro, Trump has leaned on his successor, vice president Delcy Rodriguez, threatening new attacks if she does not comply with his wishes, starting with access to the country's oil.
As with Maduro, a core principle of Tehran's clerical leadership is resistance to the United States -- but there are fewer signs of cracks in the state.
The Islamic republic relies on the elite Revolutionary Guards, who in recent weeks have ruthlessly put down mass protests, killing thousands.
The United States seized Maduro and his wife to face drug trafficking charges in New York -- which they deny -- after intermediaries for years quietly suggested a comfortable exile.
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, 86, has not left the country since 1989. A Shiite cleric, he lives frugally and was brought up in a religious tradition that reveres martyrdom.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, testifying Wednesday to a Senate committee, said the Islamic republic was "weaker than it has ever been" since the 1979 revolution overthrew the pro-Western shah.
But he said there was no "simple answer" on what, or who, would follow Khamenei if he falls.
"I would imagine it would be even far more complex" than Venezuela, he said.
- Military strength -
Trump said on social media that the US fleet near Iran was larger than the one sent to Venezuela.
"Like with Venezuela, it is, ready, willing, and able to rapidly fulfill its mission, with speed and violence, if necessary," Trump wrote.
Mona Yacoubian, director of the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said Iran "is inordinately more complex than Venezuela," with more diffuse centers of power.
"I think this is the concern -- that undertaking something like a 'decapitation strike' ends up in fact provoking all kinds of... very difficult to anticipate second- and third- and fourth-order effects and ends up really unleashing a mess inside of Iran," she said.
US forces rapidly went in and out of Caracas, which lies near the Caribbean coast and is in the same hemisphere as the United States.
Tehran is much farther inland. The Islamic republic has weathered previous blistering attacks -- by Iraq in the 1980s and Israel last June -- and a 1980 US helicopter mission to free hostages ended disastrously.
Iran's leaders, however, have been weakened by the protests, the largest seen since the revolution.
A number of protesters and exiled leaders have urged Trump to strike to help bring down the Islamic republic, although there are also plenty of skeptics who say either that it is too late or that Trump risks rallying the government's supporters to its side.
- What goal? -
Trump has brashly vowed to intervene at will in Latin America and Rubio, in defending the Venezuela operation, earlier said: "This is not the Middle East."
Trump has long denounced previous US policymakers as ill-informed warmongers for the 2003 assault that overthrew Saddam Hussein in Iraq, a smaller country than Iran.
Rather than vowing to topple the Islamic republic, Trump has urged it to end the standoff by accepting tough constraints on its nuclear program as well as missiles.
Iran has fought hard against such concessions but observers say its leaders may prefer to turn the conversation to its weapons rather than face an existential threat.
Kirsten Fontenrose, a non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council, wrote that for Iran, the Maduro operation is "strategically relevant less as a template than as a signal."
Iranian policymakers have believed the United States would stop short of targeting leaders for fear of escalation but "the Maduro episode complicates that assumption," she wrote.
While Trump has brushed aside Latin American critics of his Venezuela operation, he enjoys close ties with Gulf Arab monarchies that have warned against intervention.
The oil-rich US allies have little love for Iran but fear a spiraling regional conflict that would jeopardize their hard-earned image as stable havens for business.
E.Aziz--SF-PST