Trump to deliver primetime address on Iran war amid pressure to avoid prolonged conflict

With the world watching, Donald Trump will deliver a primetime update on the war in Iran on Wednesday night, a high‑stakes address that comes amid mounting domestic pressure to find a way out of the conflict and growing anxiety over its economic fallout.
The White House has indicated there may be no major announcement, leaving observers to parse whether the hastily arranged remarks herald the beginning of the end or a potential escalation. The ambiguity is familiar. Trump often keeps his intentions close, a style that has left allies and adversaries unsure of his next move.
At home, patience is wearing thin. Polls show Americans have little appetite for a protracted conflict in Iran, particularly if it risks putting US troops on Iranian soil. A Reuters survey this week found that about two-thirds of Americans believe the US should work to quickly wind down its involvement even if stated military objectives are not fully achieved.
Meanwhile, petrol prices have climbed above an average of $4 a gallon for the first time in years — an unwelcome shift for a president who frequently touted cheaper fuel before the war.
The war’s “deep domestic unpopularity” and its economic knock-on effects “both pose a problem ahead of midterm elections” if the conflict drags on, said Imran Bayoumi, a geostrategy expert with the Atlantic Council in Washington DC and a former policy adviser to the defence department.
Trump’s own endgame has shifted repeatedly. He initially demanded Iran’s “unconditional” surrender, then floated the possibility of a negotiated agreement. On Tuesday, he said he believed the US would “leave” Iran soon, even without a deal, suggesting the war could end in “two to three” weeks.
On Wednesday morning, he posted on Truth Social that Iran’s “much less radicalised” president had asked the US for a ceasefire, but said Washington would not consider it until the Strait of Hormuz is open.
Until then, he wrote, the US would be “blasting Iran into oblivion, or as they say, back to the Stone Ages.” According to a White House official, the address will spotlight what the administration views as military successes, including degrading Iran’s navy, missile capabilities and nuclear programme.
Trump is expected to reiterate his belief that the operation will be over in two or three weeks. What any US exit would look like remains unclear. For now, millions are expected to tune in on Wednesday night in search of clarity — on how and when the fighting might end, and what comes after — even as the president keeps his options open.
