According to reports, the U.S. Treasury has moved to seize another $1 billion in Islamic Republic crypto assets, dealing a major blow to the regime’s efforts to move money through alternative channels.
As the regime continues demanding sanctions relief and access to billions in frozen funds, the Trump administration is focused on tightening financial pressure instead.
For a regime already facing economic turmoil, losing another billion dollars is not the headline it wanted today.
After U.S. forces reportedly struck IRGC targets in Bandar Abbas in response to attacks on American assets, the Islamic Republic escalated further by launching missiles and drones toward Kuwait, including near a U.S. air base.
U.S. forces also intercepted four IRGC suicide drones targeting a commercial vessel before striking another drone launch unit preparing additional attacks.
The IRGC leaks fake “Trump agreed to the deal” rumors every few hours and Western media runs with it like it’s fact. Then reality hits.
No deal was announced. No breakthrough happened. The regime is economically collapsing, internally divided, and struggling to keep the system functioning.
That’s why they had to partially restore internet access. Not out of kindness, but because the country is flatlining.
The public falls for IRGC rumors every single time.
A regime affiliated outlet leaks “Trump agreed to all demands,” social media instantly spirals into “America surrendered,” and within hours people are declaring total defeat before the U.S. has even responded.
Then Marco Rubio comes out and says the exact opposite: it’ll either be a GOOD deal or there won’t be one at all.
Maybe stop treating regime propaganda as confirmed fact the second it hits the timeline.
President Trump says the U.S. will not let the Islamic Republic keep highly enriched uranium, while the regime continues refusing to back down on its nuclear demands.
At this point, a return to the conflict looks increasingly inevitable. But the final battle in Iran will not belong to foreign governments. It will belong to the Iranian people and their uprising against the Islamic Republic.
The regime called for full U.S. withdrawal, total sanctions removal, release of all frozen assets, and sweeping “war reparations.”
President Trump has rejected.
Washington sees it as a maximalist ask designed to extract cash while ending all leverage.