Trump says he could bomb Iran again, as the DFAT crisis register grows

Trump says he could bomb Iran again, as the DFAT crisis register grows

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US President Donald Trump has warned Iran that he would command a new bombing at his nuclear locations, as Tehran resumed the efforts to develop a nuclear weapon.

Trump spoke on Friday in the White House in the White House, Mr. Trump said that he would “without a doubt” absolutely “more military action if necessary.

His comments then came about 3,200 Australians and family members in Iran at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) Crisis Portal, with a number of help leaving the country.

On the advice of DFAT, some Australians traveled in Iran to the border of Iran-Aberabajan in the hope of leaving Iran last week, but the officials of Azerbaijan were partially saved because they had no special code, the ABC reported on Thursday.

Late on Friday, a DFAT spokesperson said that the backlog of Australian requests for border crossing codes was resolved.

DFAT supports Australians who want to leave Iran secured seats on commercial flights that started to operate the country, the spokesperson added.

Iranian-Australians ‘disillusioned’

A map with Iran with the overland route from Tehran to Astara on the border with Azerbaijan. ((ABC News: Jarrod Fankhauser))

Iranian-Australian Maryam lives and works in Melbourne, but is worried for her mother, brother and his family who are in Iran.

“The possibility of war would take everything away, you know, and you are worried about what would happen to them and how we can support them in this,” said Maryam.

Maryam’s mother is not Australian Staatsburger and although she has kept visitor visa earlier, she has no visa that is currently valid.

DFAT says people who are citizens or their close relatives to register for emergency aid.

Maryam said that Australia supported the American strikes against Iran, and the right of Israel to defend themselves, did not sit well with many Iranians in Australia.

“I think every Iranian I also talk, they felt very disillusioned,” she said.

‘You work here. You pay tax. We try to contribute to this society. “

According to the Interior there are more than 85,000 people who live in Iran who live in Australia.

Australian outputs via Turkiye

Cars travel along a large sealed road while smoke waves from buildings in the distance.

Soroush took this photo in Tehran during the recent rocket attacks. ((Delivered: Soroush))

Australian-Iranian Soroush, a civil engineer who works in fly-in fly-out jobs in Western Australia, returned to Australia last week after he had left Iran via Turkiye.

Soroush was visited his parents and sister for the first time in Iran, but his journey was demolished by the Israel-Iran War.

Soroush said that Tehran’s trio drove to the border of Iran-Turkiye to “escape” the situation and was confronted with chaotic situations trying to get out of the country.

He had tried to register with DFAT, but could not get through the process due to a lack of internet access in Iran.

“I couldn’t even call my friends to tell them that they had to do this for me, and when I decided to go from Turkiye … I thought if I got stuck somewhere, I would continue to register,” he said.

Heated exchanges continue

While a fragile ceasefire between Israel and Iran continued to hold, there was further heated rhetoric of Mr Trump on Friday the US time in response to comments from the highest leader of Iran, Ali Khamenei, last week.

Mr. Trump spotted the warning of Ayatollah Khamei to the US not to launch future strikes on Iran, as well as the The statement of the Iranian Supreme Leader that Tehran “won the war” with Israel.

The Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi hit X Trump back on Mr Trump early on Saturday.

He said that a potential nuclear deal was conditional for the US who put an end to his “disrespectful tone” towards the supreme leader.

“If President Trump is sincere about wanting a deal, he must put aside the disrespectful and unacceptable tone against the supreme leader of Iran, Grand Ayatollah Khamenei, and stop hurt his millions of sincere followers,” said Minister Abbas Araqchi on X.

Iran has rejected a request from the Nuclear Waakhond van de UN to visit sites bombed by the US and Israel and said it suggested an malicious intention.

Behind the cover of the war

A high -rise building seen from the street. A number of floors are heavily nearby.

A building damaged in Israeli strikes in Tehran in June 2025. ((Reuters: Majid Asgaripour/West Asia News Agency ))

Martin Hodgson is a senior lawyer at the foreign support service for prisoners, who works to hold Australians or otherwise at home abroad.

He said that he was currently with “more than 10” Australians who wanted to leave Iran who not only feared Israeli bombs, but also the Iranian authorities, which he said many suspected they used the war to hold those who were considered unfriendly to the regime.

This can be Iranian Australians who were known as secular intellectuals, people of Kurdish ethnicity and Sunni Muslims, he said.

Iran’s Theocratic regime and most of the population are of the Shiite cult of Islam.

The Iranian authorities said on Wednesday (Tehran Time) that they had executed three men who accused them of spying on Israel.

The deputy director of Amnesty International for the Midden -Oosten and Noord -Africa, Hussein Baoumi, said that calls from Iranian officials for accelerated tests and executions of those accused of cooperation with Israel showed an attempt to retain and fear to be in charge of the control “.

“The authorities must ensure that all those detained are protected against forced disappearance, torture and other abuse, and at all times honest trials offered, even during the armed conflict,” he said.

Reuters/AP

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