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President Trump is threatening to bomb Iran's bridges and power plants if it doesn't open
the street of war moves by tonight.
The entire country can be taken out in one night.
As Trump threatens possible war crimes, he's also asking for a ceasefire.
I mean, Martinez, that's Leyla Faddle, and this is up first from NPR News.
Israel is also warning Iranians not to take the trains today.
NPR's Daniel Astron expects heavy bombing on railroads that many civilians take.
Is there any end in sight to this war?
And the Artemis II crew is on its way home after a record-breaking trip around the moon.
We will explore, we will build ships, we will visit again.
But ultimately, we will always choose Earth.
We will always choose each other.
Stay with us.
We've got the news you need to start your day.
This week on the NPR Politics Podcast.
In Iran, President Trump is both escalating and de-escalating.
Posing strikes on energy sites claiming Iran wants to make a deal, but also moving troops
to the region.
We unpack what we know about where those troops are headed, and how talks are playing
out behind closed doors.
This week on the NPR Politics Podcast, listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
And Trump says Iran has until APM Eastern tonight to accept a deal that includes opening
the Strait of Hormuz before the U.S. starts blowing up bridges and power plants.
The entire country can be taken out in one night, and that night might be tomorrow night.
That was Trump in a lengthy press conference Monday.
He says Iran's next moves will determine whether the war is winding down or escalating.
NPR White House correspondent Franco Ordoniaz was at that press conference.
So Franco, it started off with all of them talking about the missing airman who was playing
was shot down by Iranian forces.
Where did it go from there?
Yeah.
Trump along with Defense Secretary and the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the CIA director really
gave a detailed description of the heroic efforts by the military to rescue that missing
airman.
And then involved hundreds of troops, the destruction of downed aircraft that they did not want
the Iranians to seize and a lot of deception actually to try and confuse the Iranians where
the officer actually was.
But as you know, Trump also veered in so many other directions.
It was at a time a rambling account of gripes against foreign countries who did not join
the fight.
He called NATO a paper tiger and even joked about his popularity in Venezuela.
But he really left no question though about plans to attack the power plants and bridges
the deal is not reached later today.
We have a plan because of the power of our military where every bridge in Iran will be
decimated by 12 o'clock tomorrow night where every power plant in Iran will be out of business
burning, exploding and never to be used again.
I mean complete demolition.
And he said all that will happen over the course of just four hours if they wanted to.
Okay.
Now he's made that threat before.
Last time he delayed those strikes because of negotiations, where do those negotiations
stand?
Yeah.
Talks are continuing.
Trump said they have an active willing participant on the other side.
A more moderate one that the U.S. can work with.
And there is a proposal for a 45 day ceasefire that continues to be kind of hammered out.
That's an effort led by Pakistan involves Egypt and Turkey.
Trump called the latest proposal a significant step, but not good enough.
That said, the Iranians rejected it.
So I'm thinking kind of remembering back because Trump has veered from this war is about
the end.
Now we're on the precipice of a very significant escalation that includes bombing Iran
into the Stone Age.
So which is it at this point?
Yeah.
I mean, I think that's the critical question.
An interesting Trump admitted that he didn't know either.
I can't tell you.
I don't know.
I can't.
It depends what they do.
This is a critical period.
Again, he mentioned the 8 p.m. deadline later today saying you'd already previously
given a 10 day extension, which he extended again, because he didn't think it was appropriate
to strike on Easter.
Did he say anything at all about the potential impacts on the Iranian people?
I mean, I should say that at the same time he's making these threats, he also says that
he hopes it doesn't come to this.
When he basically said this will take decades to rebuild the country if the U.S. follows
through with these threats.
But Trump also says the U.S. is receiving reports from Insideron that the people were willing
to suffer in order to have that freedom.
In response, though, the Iranian President posted on acts that 14 million Iranians, including
himself, have volunteered to sacrifice their lives in the war.
That's White House correspondent Franco Ordenius.
Thanks a lot, Franco.
Thanks.
In a post online this morning, President Trump wrote that, quote, a whole civilization
will die tonight, never to be brought again.
He says Iran still has time to agree to a deal to open the street of Hormuz, or else
the U.S. will destroy Iran's power plants and bridges.
This morning, the U.S. already struck some key military targets, defenses around Iran's
biggest oil production facility.
Israel also targeted infrastructure across Iran today.
And Pierre's Daniel Estren is on the line from Tel Aviv and joins me now.
Good morning, Daniel.
Good morning, Leyla.
Daniel, we're hearing this very ominous threat that an entire civilization will die tonight,
as attacks are ongoing.
What is the significance of the sites the U.S. and Israel are targeting today?
The U.S. struck military targets on Iran's strategic Harg Island.
That's according to a U.S. official not authorized to speak publicly who spoke on condition
of anonymity.
The targets struck on that island were not oil infrastructure.
They were strikes on targets the U.S. hit previously in the war.
The U.S. official would not say what the purpose of the strikes was.
We do know that Harg Island is the center of Iran's oil industry.
And President Trump has previously threatened to seize control of the island and oil facilities.
And Israel's military posted a warning today on social media for Iranians not to take
any trains or be near railroad tracks across Iran today.
Israel then announced it had completed strikes on infrastructure tied to the Iranian regime.
Strikes across Iran.
There are already reports of railways attacked.
Targeting infrastructure that's not used in direct support of military action does raise
the prospect of war crimes according to the Geneva Convention.
Railways may very well serve the Iranian regime.
We do know that many Iranian civilians also use the trains to visit their family across
the country.
And many Iranians have been using trains to leave the country to just get some internet
across the border in neighboring Turkey.
What do we know about ceasefire efforts?
What's on the table?
Well, NPR has heard from an Egyptian official involved in those latest efforts who spoke
to us on condition of anonymity to discuss the efforts.
This involves Pakistani, Turkish, and Egyptian officials who have all been talking to Iran.
And they've been holding intensive talks with the U.S. since last night to try to reach
a ceasefire.
But the gap still appeared to be very wide.
The U.S. wants the Strait of Hormuz opened as a precondition and experts say that Iran
wants to guarantee its control and its sovereignty over that key waterway, which is really proven
in this war to be a strategic lever for Iran.
So we're not seeing any signs that Iran is willing to compromise on the Strait of Hormuz.
And the clock is ticking.
Trump's deadline of 8 p.m. tonight is approaching.
Although remember, we have seen him delay his deadline many times before.
Yeah, that's right.
Trump does follow through with this threat to bomb all power plants and bridges in Iran.
Where could that war lead?
And how would this square with Israel's goals in the war?
There are a lot of concerns across the region that Iran could retaliate.
Iran has threatened that and that could affect millions of people across the region and
in Israel if Iran targets power plants in the region.
And let's say that President Trump seems to be looking for a quick deal to wrap up the
war here.
But there's a lot of concern in the region that Trump could exit the war and Iran's core
capabilities could be left intact, including its enriched uranium.
And now with Israel gearing up to bomb potentially Iranian trains today, that just helps Trump
adding pressure on the Iranians.
And PR is Daniel Estren in Tel Aviv.
Thank you, Daniel.
You're welcome.
The four astronaut crew of NASA's Artemis II mission is now on their way back to Earth.
They have traveled farther than any humans have before after a trip around the moon.
The mission is giving scientists here on Earth important new data that will help future
space flights.
Central Florida Public Media's Brendan Bern has been following the mission and joins
us now.
Good morning, Brendan.
Good morning.
So walk us through this trip home.
Sure.
So the Iranian spacecraft whipped around the backside of the moon yesterday.
And for about 40 minutes, the Earth was out of sight and the crew was unable to communicate
to mission control.
This was expected.
And during this communication blackout according to NASA, the crew reached the mission's
maximum distance from Earth at 252,756 miles, being the previous record set by the Apollo
13 mission.
And as the spacecraft emerged from the blackout, it began its journey back home with these
words from mission specialists Christina Cook.
We will explore.
We will build ships.
We will visit again.
We will construct science outposts.
We will drive rovers.
We will do radio astronomy.
We will found companies.
We will both do industry.
We will inspire.
But ultimately, we will always choose Earth.
We will always choose each other.
And with that cook and our fellow crewmates were on their way home, a quarter million
mile journey that will come to an end on Friday.
How has this mission gone so far?
All signs point to it being a success.
The Orion spacecraft conducted key test flights of its control and life support system.
The crew took thousands of photos of the far side of the moon and made their own geological
observations for lunar scientists to better understand just what the moon is made of and
how it came to be.
And on the way home last night, the crew even saw an eclipse from space.
The moon was in a location where it blocked the light of the sun, allowing them to see
things like the solar corona, which is the atmosphere of the sun.
There's mission pilot Victor Glover explaining just what he saw.
Now those remarks come from Glover after he and his crewmates spent hours viewing areas
of the moon never before seen by human eyes.
That eclipse must have been impressive.
And last night they got a call from President Trump to congratulate them on their accomplishments
and he even asked for their autographs.
Okay.
So what happens next?
The astronauts just get to hang out, coast back home.
Oh no, there's plenty of work that they'll do.
Remember this is first and foremost a test flight of Orion with its first human passengers.
The crew will demonstrate the radiation shielding of the spacecraft, manually control it once
more to see how it moves.
But one of the most critical tests will come during reentry on Friday as the Orion space
capsule punches through Earth's atmosphere at 25,000 miles per hour and during temperatures
of up to 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
That reentry will test the heat shield and parachutes that will slow the crew down so
their capsule can gently splash down in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego.
Brendan, I've got to ask since it's gotten so much attention, how's the space toilet?
It's certainly been a bit of a rocky road for Orion's bath, where it worked, it didn't,
it worked again.
But remember the crew's testing new hardware, this is the first toilet to fly to the moon.
So what they learned will help future human missions in the vehicle and hopefully that
next crew won't have any issues flushing their toilet.
Brendan Bern is with Central Florida Public Media and is the host of the Space Podcast.
Are we there yet?
Brendan, thank you for joining us again.
Anytime.
And that's up first for Tuesday, April 7th.
I'm Layla Faldin.
And I'm Amy Martinez.
Today's episode of Up First was edited by Rebecca Metzler, Jerry Holmes, Amina Khan,
Mohamed El Bar DC, and Alice Wolfley was produced by Zian Butch and Eva Poucac.
Our director is Katie Klein, we get engineering support from Nisha Hainas, our technical director
is Carly Strange, and our supervising senior producer is Vincent Pearson.
Join us again tomorrow.
Up First from NPR

