Iran’s military leaders are warning the world that their forces are fully prepared to restart the war with Israel at any moment.
Even though a fragile ceasefire brokered by the U.S. has paused the recent 12-day conflict, Tehran says it will not back down or show mercy if attacked again, raising tensions across the region.
Newsweek has reached out the State Department and Iran’s foreign ministry for comment.
Why It Matters
The renewed warnings from Iran’s top commanders come as Israel signals that the recent fighting may not be over. With the U.S. pushing for diplomacy while keeping military options on the table, the Middle East remains on edge. How Iran responds next could shift the fragile balance between confrontation and peace.
What to Know
Major General Mohammad Pakpour, commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), said his forces are “fully prepared to resume combat from exactly where it stopped.” Speaking during a meeting with Iran’s Army chief, Major General Amir Hatami, Pakpour stressed that “the aggressors will not be spared” and praised the unity and determination of the Iranian people. He added that Iran will respond with full force only if war becomes necessary.
Nuclear Sites Claim
Meanwhile, The Trump administration is pushing back against a new intelligence assessment that contradicts President Donald Trump’s repeated claims that U.S. airstrikes “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear facilities last month. According to five current and former U.S. officials familiar with the assessment, NBC News reported that while Iran’s Fordow nuclear enrichment site was mostly destroyed in the U.S. military operation, the Isfahan and Natanz sites may have only been set back by months and could resume operations. In response, Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell posted on X, “False. The credibility of the Fake News Media is similar to that of the current state of the Iranian nuclear facilities.”
Return to Talks?
As questions swirl around the long-term impact of the strikes, Iran’s foreign minister warned that any return to nuclear talks would only happen under terms Tehran views as fair and balanced. Following a call with his counterparts from France, Britain, Germany, and the EU’s top diplomat, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi pushed back on Western pressure for a deal by the end of August, saying it was the U.S.—not Iran—that walked away from diplomacy. “It was the US that withdrew from a two-year negotiated deal, coordinated by the EU in 2015, not Iran,” Araghchi posted on X.
What People Are Saying
Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell: “The credibility of the Fake News Media is similar to that of the current state of the Iranian nuclear facilities: destroyed, in the dirt, and will take years to recover.”
IRGC Commander Major General Mohammad Pakpour: “Our forces are fully prepared to resume combat from exactly where it stopped. The aggressors will not be spared.”
Israel’s Military Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir: “The campaign against Iran is not over. We are entering a new phase.”
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi: “It was the US that withdrew from a two-year negotiated deal -coordinated by EU in 2015- not Iran; and it was US that left the negotiation table in June this year and chose a military option instead, not Iran.”
What Happens Next
The ceasefire has paused the fighting, but tensions remain high. Iran’s commanders say they are ready to resume hostilities if provoked, while Israel says the conflict is unfinished. The U.S. is pushing for renewed nuclear talks but continues to threaten further strikes. Tehran says it will only return to negotiations under fair terms and rejects Western pressure. With diplomacy stalled and both sides digging in, the risk of renewed conflict remains dangerously real.
