Trump Deploys "Massive Flotilla" to Iran, Signals Openness to Talks

US President Donald Trump announced the deployment of a "massive flotilla" toward Iran in a Fox Business interview. He suggested Iran is open to negotiations but insisted any deal must prevent nuclear weapons and missile development. Trump heavily criticized the previous Obama-Biden administration's Iran nuclear deal, calling it "terrible" and "one of the dumbest deals." The remarks come amid ongoing regional tensions that are closely watched by countries like India due to energy and strategic interests.

Key Points: Trump on Iran Flotilla: "We'll See What Happens"

  • US deploys military flotilla toward Iran
  • Trump signals Iran may want negotiations
  • Demands a deal with "no nuclear weapons"
  • Criticizes Obama-Biden Iran nuclear deal
2 min read

Trump says flotilla headed toward Iran

President Trump announces US military deployment toward Iran, suggests Tehran seeks a deal but criticizes past diplomacy. Latest on Gulf tensions.

"We have a massive floatilla right now going over to Iran. We'll see what happens. - Donald Trump"

Washington, Feb 11

US President Donald Trump said the United States has deployed a "massive flotilla" toward Iran and signaled that Tehran is seeking negotiations, even as he warned that further action remains possible.

In an interview with Fox Business' Larry Kudlow, Trump described heightened US military posture in the region.

"As you know, we have a massive floatilla right now going over to Iran. We'll see what happens," he said.

Trump suggested Iran is open to talks. "I think they wanna make a deal. I think they'd be foolish if they didn't," he said.

He added that any agreement would have to address core US concerns. "It's gotta be a good deal. No nuclear weapons, no missiles, no this, no that, all the different things that you want," he said.

At the same time, Trump questioned whether a deal would hold. "A lot of people say no," he said, referring to doubts about the current Iranian regime's reliability.

Trump criticised earlier diplomacy with Tehran. "Obama and Biden, what they did in terms of creating a monster with Iran was terrible," he said. "That Iran nuclear deal was one of the dumbest deals I've ever seen."

He also referenced prior US action against Iranian nuclear facilities. "We took out their nuclear power last time and we'll have to see if we take out more this time," he said.

Trump framed the deployment and diplomacy as part of a broader strategy that links economic leverage and national security tools.

"I settled eight wars. Of the eight wars, at least six were settled because of tariffs," he said earlier in the interview, arguing that trade pressure strengthens U negotiating power globally.

The remarks come amid ongoing tensions over Iran's nuclear program and regional activities.

Iran remains central to regional security calculations in West Asia, affecting energy markets, maritime routes and geopolitical alignments.

India, which has longstanding civilizational and economic ties with Iran, closely tracks developments in the Gulf given its energy dependence and strategic interests, including connectivity projects and shipping security in the region.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
The US approach seems very heavy-handed. While Iran's nuclear ambitions are a concern, this "massive flotilla" rhetoric feels like escalation for domestic political gain. Diplomacy should be the first and last resort.
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Arjun K
Trump's "tariffs settled wars" comment is laughable. Real stability comes from dialogue and respecting sovereignty, not economic bullying. India has managed a balanced relationship with Iran for centuries, maybe the West should learn something about long-term thinking.
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Priyanka N
As an Indian, my main worry is for the thousands of our citizens working in the Gulf region. Any conflict there puts them at direct risk. The government must have strong evacuation plans ready. Safety of our people comes first.
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Vikram M
The article rightly mentions our civilizational ties with Iran. We share deep cultural and historical links. India's foreign policy has always been about strategic autonomy – we must continue engaging with Tehran independently, regardless of US pressure. Jai Hind!
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Michael C
With respect, I think some commenters are missing the point about nuclear non-proliferation. A nuclear-armed Iran would destabilize the entire region and trigger an arms race. The world can't afford that, India included. The core issue must be addressed.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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