Iran Vows to Retaliate Against Any US Attack as Protests Spread

By Jacob Burg
Jacob Burg
Jacob Burg
Jacob Burg reports on national politics, aerospace, and aviation for The Epoch Times. He previously covered sports, regional politics, and breaking news for the Sarasota Herald Tribune.
January 11, 2026Updated: January 13, 2026

The Iranian regime on Jan. 11 threatened to strike Israeli and U.S. military bases if Washington attacks the Islamic nation, as thousands of people have taken to the streets to protest rising inflation and a crumbling economy.

The U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency on Jan. 11 reported 538 deaths amid the protests, and far more are feared to be dead.

The human rights agency, which relies on supporters in Iran to cross-reference its information, said at least 490 of the deceased were protesters and 48 were members of Iran’s security forces. The agency said it is still assessing reports that larger numbers may have been killed amid the more than 10,600 people who are believed to have been put in detention by the regime’s security forces in recent weeks.

The protests have reached a critical threshold in recent days, challenging Tehran’s clerical establishment with the largest wave of anti-government protests since 2022.

U.S. President Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social on Jan. 2 that if Iran shoots and “violently kills peaceful protesters, which is [its] custom, the United States of America will come to their rescue.”

“We are locked and loaded and ready to go,” he said.

Trump reiterated on Jan. 10 that the United States is “ready to help,” spurring strong condemnations from Iran’s political elite.

This would be “a miscalculation,” Speaker of the Parliament of Iran Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf said while speaking in Parliament on Jan. 11.

“Let us be clear: In the case of an attack on Iran, the occupied territories [Israel] as well as all U.S. bases and ships will be our legitimate target,” said Qalibaf, who previously served as a commander in Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards.

Protests Challenge Regime

Since protesters took to the streets on Dec. 28, 2025, Iranian authorities have increased efforts to stem the tide of unrest and signaled on Jan. 9 that the suppression of demonstrations was coming soon.

“Last night in Tehran & some other cities, a bunch of people bent on destruction came and destroyed buildings that belong to their own country in order to please the President of the United States and make him happy,” Iranian leader Ali Khamenei wrote on social media on Jan. 9.

Chief Justice of Iran Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei promised that punishment for protesters would be “decisive, maximum and without any legal leniency.”

First demonstrating against Iran’s skyrocketing inflation, protesters have now turned against Tehran’s clerical establishment, which has retained an iron grip on the country since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

Tehran has repeatedly pinned the blame for domestic political demonstrations on Israel and the United States, accusing the two nations of igniting unrest within Iran’s borders.

Iranian authorities instituted an internet blackout on Jan. 8, cutting off the nation’s citizens from the outside world. Netblocks, an internet monitoring watchdog, reported that connectivity levels in Iran are at roughly 1 percent of the norm.

Iran has shut down internet access domestically twice before, including once in 2019 when protesters challenged an increase in regime-subsidized gasoline prices, resulting in the deaths of more than 300 people.

The regime pulled the plug again in 2022 when citizens took to the streets to protest the death of Mahsa Amini after the nation’s morality police arrested her for allegedly not wearing a hijab. After a months-long crackdown, authorities had killed more than 500 people.

Reza Pahlavi, the exiled crown prince of the former ruler of Iran, who was ousted during the 1979 revolution, has called for increased protests throughout the Islamic Republic over the past four days, telling demonstrators to wave Iran’s old lion-and-sun flag and other national symbols from his father’s rule to “claim public spaces” as their own.

Iran’s internet blackout has many worried that a crackdown on protests could turn bloody, as it has in the past.

Recounting when security forces killed hundreds of people during demonstrations in 2019, Ali Rahmani, the son of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi, who is imprisoned in Iran, said, “We can only fear the worst.”

“They are fighting, and losing their lives, against a dictatorial regime,” Rahmani said.

Guy Birchall, The Associated Press, and Reuters contributed to this post.