Trump Administration Shifts Iran Policy: High-Risk Uranium Seizure Operation and A-10 Force Doubling

The Trump Administration’s Iran Policy at a Tipping Point: A Strategic Pivot Toward Nuclear Material Seizure and A-10 Force Expansion
In early April, a cascade of highly sensitive, interlinked military and diplomatic moves erupted in rapid succession: the U.S. military formally submitted to President Trump a special operations plan codenamed “Seize Iranian Highly Enriched Uranium”; simultaneously, the Pentagon announced the deployment of 18 additional A-10 “Warthog” attack aircraft to the Middle East theater—doubling the total number of A-10s stationed there; and on that very same day, a U.S.-Israeli joint air strike precisely targeted the former U.S. Embassy compound in Tehran—a symbolic landmark long controlled by Iran’s Basij militia (a branch of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC) and converted into an anti-American museum. This triple-layered signal marks a decisive crossing beyond the traditional framework of “deterrence–negotiation–sanctions” in U.S. Iran policy—and signals the arrival of a new phase grounded fundamentally in direct military intervention. This is not a tactical adjustment; it is a paradigmatic shift in strategic posture.
Nuclear Material Seizure: The Most Dangerous Extraterritorial Operation Conceived Since the Cold War
According to sources cited by China Central Television (CCTV), the U.S. military’s submitted plan has a clear objective: to seize over 460 kilograms of uranium enriched to ≥60%—far exceeding civilian nuclear power requirements (typically <5%) and approaching weapons-grade enrichment levels (90%). Unlike conventional airstrikes or targeted killings, this operation envisions a complex, multi-stage special forces mission involving airborne delivery of heavy excavation equipment, on-site construction of temporary landing strips, and subsequent airlift of the seized nuclear material via C-17 strategic transport aircraft. Its complexity and risk are unprecedented: it would require sustained operations for several days deep inside Iran’s heartland—within range of dense, integrated air defenses; confront rapid-response IRGC ground units; and navigate multiple catastrophic contingencies—including accidental radioactive leakage, interdiction during transit, or misjudgment triggering tactical nuclear escalation. Internal military assessments have explicitly warned of “significant operational risks,” yet Trump has directed that feasibility evaluations proceed. If implemented, this would mark the first instance since the end of the Cold War in which a sovereign state has deployed armed forces to seize another nation’s nuclear materials—shattering both the moral foundation and practical boundaries of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT). The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) would suffer a devastating blow to its authority, and the global consensus on nuclear security would face imminent collapse.
A-10 Fleet Doubling: Providing Ground-Fire Anchors for a “Two-to-Three-Week War”
The A-10 expansion is no isolated decision. With the addition of 18 aircraft, the total A-10 force in the region now stands at 36—establishing a high-intensity, persistent close-air support (CAS) network covering western Iran, western Iraq, and eastern Syria. Purpose-built to destroy armored formations, hardened bunkers, and dispersed guerrilla targets, the A-10’s 30mm GAU-8 Avenger cannon can penetrate the top armor of main battle tanks, while its payloads—including GBU-39 Small Diameter Bombs and AGM-65 Maverick missiles—pose lethal threats to militia command nodes and rocket launch sites. This buildup directly targets the ground forces of Iran’s “Axis of Resistance”: from Iraq’s Shi’a Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), to Hezbollah units operating in Syria, to Houthi mobile rocket launchers in Yemen. Notably, the widely circulated internal U.S. military timeline of “ending the war within two to three weeks” rests physically upon precisely this kind of high-tempo, sustainable, precision ground-attack capability. The A-10’s exceptional loiter time (exceeding two hours) and battlefield survivability make it the central node for suppressing Iranian ground counteroffensives and paralyzing the operational tempo of its proxy forces. When the nuclear seizure operation requires ground-clearing support, the A-10 fleet becomes the sharpest spearhead.
Geopolitical Earthquake: Systemic Countermeasures and a Crisis of Dollar Credibility
This strategic pivot will inevitably trigger multidimensional countermeasures. Russia has declared it will “take all necessary measures to safeguard Iran’s nuclear facilities”; accordingly, the intensity of S-400 air defense systems and Su-35 fighter deployments at Russia’s Khmeimim Air Base in Syria has quietly increased. Though China has refrained from public commentary, its Ministry of Foreign Affairs stressed that “no country has the right to undermine regional stability through unilateral action” and accelerated negotiations on a RMB-based oil trade agreement with Iran. More profoundly, the move threatens the global financial trust architecture: once markets internalize that U.S. policy may bypass international law at will—and forcibly rewrite nuclear order through military means—“America First” effectively equates to “Rules Abandoned.” This directly erodes investor confidence in the long-term safety of U.S. Treasury securities: on April 2, U.S. Treasury yields surged by 12 basis points in a single day, and the 10-year real yield hit its highest level since 2008. The dollar’s status as the “ultimate safe-haven” reserve currency is self-undermining; meanwhile, alternative settlement mechanisms outside the SWIFT system are gaining unprecedented political momentum.
The Information Battlefield: Narrative Contestation—from Tehran’s Rubble to American Living Rooms
Significantly, on the very day of the embassy compound strike, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian sent an open letter to the American public, urging them to “see through the fog of information warfare” and questioning whether Washington truly adheres to “America First”—or merely serves as “Israel’s proxy.” The letter strikes at the soft underbelly of policy legitimacy: when the former U.S. Embassy site—a symbol laden with historical trauma for both nations—becomes a bombing target, the moral narrative justifying military action unravels. Simultaneously, the U.S. decision to remove Venezuela’s acting president, Edgar Sanabria (replacing interim leader Juan Guaidó), from its sanctions list further exposes its pragmatic, selective-pressure logic: deploying nuclear-level risk against Iran, while signaling de-escalation toward Venezuela. Such double standards will further erode America’s moral authority across the Global South—ensuring that exhibits inside Tehran’s “anti-American museum” continue acquiring fresh, real-world annotations.
Conclusion: An Irreversible Slide Toward the Precipice
Seizing nuclear material and expanding the A-10 fleet appear, on the surface, to be escalations of military options—but at their core, they represent a desperate leap born of the acknowledged, total failure of existing containment strategies. They abandon all patience for gradual solutions and stake everything on the fantasy of a swift, decisive military victory. Yet Iran possesses the Middle East’s most sophisticated intelligence network, its most resilient militia mobilization system, and its most intricate underground nuclear infrastructure. A failed special operations raid could ignite full-scale war; a successful nuclear “heist” would permanently poison the global nuclear governance ecosystem. When nuclear material becomes air-freightable “spoils of war” on the great-power chessboard, then all prior discourse on restraint, red lines, and strategic stability dissolves into ash amid the smoke over Tehran. The world now stands at a perilous inflection point—not over whether war will break out, but over in what uncontrollable form and at what uncontainable intensity it will unfold.