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President Trump Announces Tariffs Against Anyone Doing Business With Iran

President Donald Trump delivered a strong message to Iran’s enablers worldwide today, announcing a 25% tariff on any nation conducting business with the Islamic Republic. The move comes as Tehran’s regime intensifies its brutal suppression of nationwide protests, with reports confirming over 500 demonstrators killed in the ongoing unrest. Trump’s decision, posted on Truth Social, targets countries like China, Russia, Turkey, and Brazil—Iran’s largest trading partners—aiming to isolate the ayatollahs economically and force a reckoning for their actions.

The protests erupted weeks ago, fueled by widespread discontent over corruption, economic hardship, and the regime’s iron-fisted control. Security forces have responded with live ammunition, mass arrests, and internet blackouts, drawing sharp rebukes from nations including Germany and Canada. Eyewitness accounts describe scenes of unrelenting violence, with protesters gunned down in the streets while chanting for freedom. Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has vowed to escalate the crackdown, labeling dissenters as foreign agents in a bid to rally his shrinking base.

“Effective immediately, any Country doing business with the Islamic Republic of Iran will pay a Tariff of 25% on any and all business being done with the United States of America. This Order is final and conclusive,” Trump stated in his post. The policy leaves little room for ambiguity, applying the levy to all U.S.-related trade for those entangled with Iran. Administration officials have hinted at broader measures under consideration, including potential military options to deter further atrocities.

This tariff strikes at the heart of Iran’s lifeline, where oil exports and shadowy deals prop up a government long accused of sponsoring terrorism across the Middle East. China, absorbing much of Iran’s crude, now faces a dilemma: continue propping up a failing theocracy or risk billions in U.S. trade penalties. Russia, too, with its arms sales and alliances, stands to lose as Trump’s strategy echoes his first-term efforts to choke off adversarial regimes through economic pressure.

Critics in Washington whisper that entrenched bureaucrats and globalist interests might push back, viewing such bold steps as disruptions to their carefully balanced international schemes. After all, past administrations have tiptoed around Iran’s malign influence, allowing it to fund proxies like Hezbollah and Hamas while American taxpayers foot the bill for regional instability. Trump’s approach cuts through that fog, prioritizing American security over endless diplomatic charades.

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