Iran must acquiesce to US President Donald Trump's demand that it not acquire a nuclear weapon or "there will be all hell to pay," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Friday.
"(Trump's) ultimate goal and the ultimate objective is to ensure that Iran can never obtain a nuclear weapon," she told reporters.
"The president believes in diplomacy, direct talks, talking directly in the same room in order to achieve that goal," she added. "But he's made it very clear to the Iranians and his national security team as well that all options are on the table and Iran has a choice to make: you can agree to President Trump's demand or there will be all hell to pay."
Donald Trump is more likely to secure a nuclear deal with Iran than his predecessor, The New York Times reported on Friday citing former US special envoy for Iran Robert Malley.
“Biden was lukewarm about a deal; Trump is eager. Biden fixates on domestic politics; Trump couldn’t care less. Biden was calculating; Trump, impulsive,” Malley was quoted as saying.
“Trump is throwing caution, prudence and logic to the wind. Which is why there is probably a greater chance of some kind of understanding now than there ever was under the prior administration.”
US Central Command has dismissed a claim by Yemen's Houthis that they targeted the USS Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier in a missile and drone attack in the Red Sea.
"The USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75) carrier strike group continues non-stop 24/7 operations against the Houthis despite the Houthis’ outlandish claims," CENTCOM said in a post on X late Friday.
Earlier, the Houthis had released a statement on their Telegram channel alleging the American carrier was among the “hostile warships” struck on Friday in the northern Red Sea in what they called a joint operation involving cruise missiles, drones and naval forces.
The US military has redeployed a Patriot missile defense battalion from the Indo-Pacific to the Middle East, a major logistical operation involving at least 73 C-17 cargo flights, Axios reported citing Indo-Pacific Command boss.
The Patriot system, capable of intercepting missiles and aircraft, arrives at a tense time in the region.
The move is part of a broader US military buildup under Central Command, which now includes two aircraft carriers—Carl Vinson and Harry S. Truman—and an unusually large group of B-2 bombers sent to Diego Garcia, the report said.

Akbar Etemad, a physicist and the first head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization—often referred to as the "father of Iran's nuclear program"—passed away in Paris on Friday at the age of 95.
The construction of Iran's Bushehr nuclear power plant began during his tenure.
Etemad founded and served as the first head of the AEOI under Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi but resigned in 1978, shortly before the Islamic Revolution.


Iranian authorities had removed several organs from dual national Jamshid Sharmahd before transferring his body to Berlin after his sudden death in an Iranian prison while awaiting execution, the family's lawyers said Friday.
The lawyers said autopsy results revealed that several organs, including his tongue, larynx, thyroid, and heart had been removed before his body was transferred to Germany, hindering a full investigation into the cause of his death.
The possibility that Sharmahd may have been poisoned cannot be dismissed, according to lawyer Patrick Kroker.
His body was in poor condition Kroker said, adding that the corpse had only two teeth remaining.
Sharmahd was abducted by Iranian agents during a visit to the United Arab Emirates in 2020 and forcibly taken to Iran. According to Sharmahd family's lawyers, he was taken to Iran via Oman.
In February 2023, the Iranian judiciary sentenced him to death on charges of endangering national security.
He was convicted of heading a pro-monarchist group called Tondar accused of a deadly 2008 bombing at a religious center in Shiraz, killing 14 and injuring 215 more. The accusation, which Sharmahd repeatedly denied, was never substantiated by any public evidence.
'Mutilation'
At the memorial ceremony on Friday co-organized by the Berlin-based rights group Hawar Help, Sharmahd's daughter, Ghazaleh, told Iran International that the removal of his organs served two purposes: to traumatize the family and conceal evidence of his fate.
"They took out his tongue, the one with which he spoke about what they didn't want him to and they removed his heart, the one that beat for Iran," Ghazaleh said.
She added that in death by hanging, examiners might look for external evidence such as marks from a tight noose. However, after a few months these marks fade and internal organs must be investigated.
“The organs they removed are the very things that could show he was executed,” she said.
On October 28 last year, Iran's judiciary website Mizan announced that Sharmahd was executed. However, a week later on Nov 5, the judiciary spokesperson Asghar Jahangir said that Sharmahd died of a stroke before his scheduled execution.
The conflicting accounts of the Iranian authorities at the time raised questions about the truth behind his death.
Nearly four months after his demise was announced by Iranian authorities, German authorities informed Ghazaleh that her father’s body would be transferred to Berlin.
"We had to try really hard to bring him here, and German authorities didn’t want to help," Ghazaleh told Iran International.
Activist Mina Khani said that rights group Hawar Help, led by founder Düzen Tekkal and co-initiator of the group’s German political sponsorship program for Iranians detained in Iran, Mariam Claren, were deeply involved in pushing the German government to pressure Iran to repatriate Sharmahd's body.
“The most shocking part was the Islamic Republic’s mutilation of Jamshid Sharmahd's body, where parts of his body including his tongue, larynx, thyroid, and heart were removed before being sent,” Khani added.
In a statement following the ceremony, Julia Duchrow, Secretary General of Amnesty International said: "The shocking finding of the autopsy is that the cause of Jamshid Sharmahd's death cannot be determined due to the condition of the body."
Duchrow called on the German Federal Prosecutor's Office to immediately launch criminal investigations against Iranian officials suspected of being responsible for Sharmahd's death.






