Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
International Business Times UK
International Business Times UK
World
Chelsie Napiza

Lindsey Graham Urges Trump To 'Kill' Iran's Leaders As Nationwide Protests Turn Deadly

US Senator Lindsey Graham has ignited a firestorm of international tension by warning Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, that President Donald Trump will 'kill' him if the Iranian regime continues its lethal suppression of nationwide protests.

The senior Republican senator's ultimatum, delivered during a high-stakes Fox News broadcast, comes as Iran faces its most significant domestic uprising since the 1979 Revolution.

With hundreds of demonstrators reportedly killed and the country plunged into a near-total internet blackout, Graham's rhetoric—backed by Trump's own 'locked and loaded' warnings—has pushed the geopolitical standoff between Washington and Tehran toward a terrifying new precipice.

Graham's language marks a sharp escalation in US political rhetoric, colliding with international law, diplomatic norms and fears of a wider regional conflict.

The South Carolina Republican lawmaker's remarks came as Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One that the US military is examining 'very strong options' in response to Iran's brutal crackdown, including potential military intervention.

The historic protests in Iran began on 28 December 2025, triggered by deepening economic distress, including steep inflation, surging food prices and the Iranian rial's sharp devaluation.

Demonstrations quickly broadened from economic frustration to widespread anti-regime demands. Over the first weeks of January 2026, the unrest spread across all 31 provinces, drawing millions into the streets in what has been described as possibly the largest challenge to clerical rule since 1979.

Graham's Remarks and US Political Context

Senator Lindsey Graham made highly controversial comments during a Washington television interview that were later amplified by international news outlets.

During his appearance on Fox News, including discussions reported on Sunday Morning Futures, Graham addressed the crisis in Iran and framed it as a matter of moral urgency. He urged that if Iran's leadership continued to kill protestors, then the United States should consider targeting that leadership directly.

Graham explicitly linked the brutality against demonstrators in Iran to a need for decisive action, saying that the United States 'needs to embolden the protesters and scare the hell out of the regime.'

He stated that, in his view, Trump should 'kill the leadership that are killing the people' in Iran, framing the measure as a way to bring an end to state repression.

These remarks echoed earlier rhetorical escalations by Graham on US cable television, where he conveyed a stark warning to Khamenei, stating that if the clerical regime continued to kill its own citizens, President Trump would respond with lethal force.

Graham's comments came alongside broader US political messaging. Other US officials were more cautious publicly, but the State Department had issued statements on 5 January 2026, emphasising that President Trump was prepared to act and warning Iranian authorities against harming protestors.

Protests in Iran: Scale, Causes and State Response

Iran's current cycle of unrest has deep roots in structural economic issues compounded by long-standing political grievances. Analysts note that the protests began as merchant and labour demonstrations in Tehran's historic Grand Bazaar in late December, sparked by the rial's collapse and harsh cost-of-living pressures.

Within days, students and other civil society groups had joined the movement. Demonstrations proliferated from major metropolises to smaller cities and towns, with chants not just about economic conditions but also calling for systemic political change, including anti-regime slogans directed at the country's clerical leadership.

Iran's government responded by imposing a near-total internet blackout on 8 January 2026, a tactic previously used to disrupt protest coordination and limit reporting beyond the country's borders.

Human rights organisations monitoring the unrest report conflicting figures due to the blackout, but estimates suggest hundreds of deaths and more than 10,000 arrests as security forces escalate their use of force, including live ammunition.

State authorities have also described the unrest in stark terms. Iran's attorney general reportedly declared that some protest activity could be treated as a capital offence or 'betrayal', heightening fears of severe reprisals against demonstrators and supporters.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei comments on nationwide protests, on Iranian State Television in the capital Tehran. (Credit: IRIB/Handout/Anadolu/Getty)

Diplomatic and Geopolitical Implications

The implications of US political rhetoric, particularly that of an elected US senator urging the assassination of a foreign leader, reverberate in international diplomatic forums. International law prohibits targeted killings of state leaders outside recognised armed conflict, and calls for extrajudicial assassinations heighten legal and ethical scrutiny.

Within the US, lawmakers from both parties have expressed concern about the risks of direct military confrontation with Iran, warning that any such move could entangle the United States in a wider conflict with uncertain outcomes.

Meanwhile, voices within the protest movement and among exiled Iranian opposition leaders are pushing for systemic political reform from within, including calls for new democratic paths forward.

A Volatile Moment With Global Consequences

As protests continue and Iran's leadership shows little sign of retreat, the situation remains dangerously fluid. Graham's remarks underscore how rapidly domestic unrest can intersect with global power politics. Whether the United States chooses restraint or escalation in its response may shape not only Iran's future but also stability across the wider Middle East.

For now, the world remains on edge as the narrative battle between the White House and the Kremlin-backed Iranian leadership exposes the fragile reality of 2026 diplomacy, where a single miscalculation could trigger a direct military confrontation.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.