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After Trump’s No-Strike Decision, Iranian Media Bursts Out Laughing

Iranian state-aligned media wasted no time celebrating what they called a victory. Hours after President Donald Trump announced a five-day pause on strikes against Iran’s power grid, Tehran’s news outlets flooded with messages of triumph and mockery. The tone was clear: Trump blinked first, and Iran’s deterrence strategy had worked.

A Unified Message of Triumph

Press TV, Iran’s main state-aligned broadcaster, reported that there had been no contact with the US for talks, direct or indirect. Citing a senior security official, Press TV said Trump’s pause came not from goodwill but from Iran’s credible military threats and rising financial pressures in the US and the West. The official added that psychological warfare would not reopen the Strait of Hormuz or stabilize energy markets.

Mehr News took to social media to call Trump’s threat “a bluff.” The outlet said recent attacks on energy sites and Tehran’s response had “forced” Washington to reconsider. The postponement of US strikes, Mehr argued, proved Trump’s original warning was hollow.

Mockery and Insults

The Tehran Times went further, hurling an insult at Trump and calling his strategy a “retreat masquerading as diplomacy.” The newspaper framed the five-day pause as a defeat dressed up as a gesture.

Iran’s state broadcaster IRIB posted twice, linking the pause directly to Iran’s military warnings. It recalled the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and strikes on Israeli energy infrastructure, suggesting that Trump paused only because Tehran had placed the region’s power grid in the line of fire.

‘Another Defeat for the Devil’

Press TV declared that Trump had “backed down again,” placing the five-day halt in a sequence of supposed reversals. Ebrahim Rezaei, spokesperson for Iran’s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission, posted on X: “Trump and America have backed down again. The field is still charging forward. Another defeat for the devil.”

Across the board, Iranian media presented a unified front. Deterrence had worked. Escalation would remain mutual. The energy grid would stay a battlefield. There was no mention of any “productive conversations” that Trump had cited when announcing the pause.

A Narrow Window

The diplomatic space carved out by Trump’s pause is small. Five days offer little room for structured negotiation, especially with multiple fronts still active and each regional actor running its own clock. But for Iran, the messaging victory was immediate. Whether the pause leads to any real de-escalation remains to be seen. For now, Tehran is treating it as proof that its hardline approach is winning.

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