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Representative AI composed image of Donaldt Trump and Mojtaba Khamenei in backdrop of Iran war. Photo: Gemini.

Iranian media portray Trump’s strike pause as ‘retreat’, signal deterrence strategy

| @indiablooms | Mar 23, 2026, at 09:37 pm

Iran’s state-aligned media on Monday framed U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to temporarily suspend strikes on the country’s power infrastructure as a sign of American hesitation, even as tensions continue to simmer.

Trump’s announcement of a five-day pause on targeting Iranian power plants and related facilities drew a mix of ridicule and triumph across Tehran’s media landscape, with outlets projecting the move as a strategic setback for Washington.

State broadcaster Press TV reported that no direct or indirect talks were underway between Tehran and Washington, dismissing suggestions of renewed diplomacy.

Citing a senior security official, it claimed Trump withdrew an offer of negotiations under pressure from Iran’s “credible military threats” and mounting economic strain in the West.

The official also warned that the pause did not signal de-escalation, describing it instead as part of a continuing cycle of threats. Any potential U.S. attack, the report said, would be met with “full-scale defence.”

Meanwhile, Mehr News Agency suggested recent Iranian responses to strikes on energy infrastructure had “forced” Washington to reconsider its approach.

It characterized Trump’s warning as a “bluff,” arguing the delay in action exposed limits to U.S. escalation.

The Tehran Times took a more direct tone, describing the pause as a retreat framed as diplomacy, while state broadcaster Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting linked the decision to Iran’s military signaling in the region.

IRIB highlighted Tehran’s earlier warnings, including potential disruption in the Strait of Hormuz and retaliatory strikes on energy infrastructure, suggesting these moves had placed regional power systems at risk and forced a recalibration by Washington.

Echoing the media narrative, Ebrahim Rezaei, spokesperson for Iran’s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission, said on social media that the U.S. had “backed down again,” calling it another defeat.

Collectively, the messaging from Iranian outlets pointed to a unified strategy: projecting deterrence as effective, rejecting the notion of concessions, and signaling that any escalation would be met in kind — particularly in the energy domain.

Despite Trump’s reference to “productive conversations,” Iranian media made no mention of ongoing diplomatic engagement, underscoring the narrow and uncertain window for de-escalation during the five-day pause.

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