Military | Europe
Trump's 'Power Plant Day' Ultimatum to Iran: What Happens If He Follows Through Tonight
Trump set April 7 at 8 PM ET as his final deadline for Iran to open Hormuz or lose every bridge and power plant. Here is what the strike plan looks like and what it would mean for 92 million Iranians.
Trump set April 7 at 8 PM ET as his final deadline for Iran to open Hormuz or lose every bridge and power plant. Here is what the strike plan looks like and what it would mean for 92 million Iranians.
- Trump set April 7 at 8 PM ET as his final deadline for Iran to open Hormuz or lose every bridge and power plant.
- On Sunday April 5, President Trump posted one of the most explosive social media messages in the history of American wartime communication: "Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran...
- By Monday April 6, Trump was elaborating at a White House press conference with specificity that left no diplomatic ambiguity: "Every bridge in Iran will be decimated by 12 o'clock tomorrow night, where every power plant...
Trump set April 7 at 8 PM ET as his final deadline for Iran to open Hormuz or lose every bridge and power plant.
The Ultimatum That Could Change the War Forever
On Sunday April 5, President Trump posted one of the most explosive social media messages in the history of American wartime communication: "Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!! Open the F****** Strait, you crazy bastards, or you'll be living in Hell – JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah." The specific deadline: Tuesday April 7 at 8:00 PM Eastern Time.
By Monday April 6, Trump was elaborating at a White House press conference with specificity that left no diplomatic ambiguity: "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 by 12 o'clock, and it will happen over a period of four hours if we wanted to — we don't want that to happen."
When a reporter asked whether he was concerned about committing war crimes under international law by targeting civilian infrastructure that doesn't contribute to military action — the specific legal standard that legal experts say would apply — Trump said simply: "No. I hope I don't have to do it."
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs General Dan Caine confirmed at the same press conference that an operational plan for the strikes is ready to execute.
What Iran's Power Infrastructure Actually Looks Like
Al Jazeera's specific analysis of Iran's power system provides the clearest picture of what the threatened strikes would actually destroy. Iran operates hundreds of power plants that form one of the largest electricity systems in the Middle East, collectively supplying energy to 92 million people — the entire civilian population of the country.
The largest specific facilities include the Damavand Power Plant near Tehran (2,868MW natural gas combined-cycle), the Shahid Salimi facility on the Caspian coast (2,215MW), and the Shahid Rajaee plant near Qazvin (2,043MW). Most of Iran's power plants are gas-fired, concentrated in the western half of the country near Tehran, Isfahan, Mashhad, and Karaj — the major population centres. The Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant on the Gulf coast adds 1,000MW of nuclear-generated electricity.
Destroying these facilities would mean complete electrical blackout for 92 million Iranians during a war already in its 40th day. European Council President António Costa stated directly: "The Iranian civilian population is the main victim of the Iranian regime. It would also be the main victim of a widening of the military campaign." International humanitarian law experts are unambiguous that targeting civilian energy infrastructure constitutes collective punishment, which is prohibited under the laws of war.
Iran's Response and the 45-Day Ceasefire on the Table
Iran publicly rejected a 45-day ceasefire proposal that Pakistan — alongside other mediating nations — submitted to both Washington and Tehran on Sunday. Through official IRNA news agency, Tehran instead submitted a 10-point counter-response after two weeks of review at the highest levels of the Iranian establishment. The counter-proposal rules out any temporary ceasefire but lays out conditions for a permanent end to hostilities: a permanent halt to all strikes, a safe passage protocol for Hormuz, reconstruction commitments, and sanctions lifting.
Iran's position on Hormuz was stated clearly by a presidential spokesman: "The Strait of Hormuz will open when all the damage caused by the imposed war is compensated through a new legal regime, using a portion of the revenue from transit fees." This is the Tehran Toll Booth formalized: Iran wants the war to end but with Hormuz operating under Iranian-controlled fee collection as a permanent arrangement.
Trump called the Iranian counter-offer "a significant proposal" but added it was "not good enough." He also told reporters he doesn't know whether the war is winding down or escalating: "I don't know. I can't tell. It depends what they do. This is a critical period."
As of the hours before the April 7 8 PM deadline, Iran's government was urging young people to form human chains around power plants to protect them — a civilian shield effort whose legal and practical implications are as complicated as everything else about this conflict. The death toll across the Middle East has now surpassed 3,400, with Iran's deputy health minister confirming more than 1,900 killed inside Iran alone by US and Israeli strikes, including 220 children under 18 and 18 children under age 5.