Iranian ‘fingers on triggers’ amid US military buildup, Trump threats, Tehran says

Iranian ‘fingers on triggers’ amid US military buildup, Trump threats, Tehran says
Iranian ‘fingers on triggers’ amid US military buildup, Trump threats, Tehran says
A huge banner displayed in Revolution Square depicts a missile attack on board a US Carrier painted in US flag colors in the Persian Gulf on January 26, 2026 in Tehran, Iran. (Kaveh Kazemi/Getty Images)

(LONDON) — Iranian military forces are prepared to “immediately” retaliate against any U.S. attack, Tehran’s top diplomat warned on Wednesday, as more American military assets arrived in the region and U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to launch a new attack on the country.

Iranian Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi said in a post to X on Wednesday that Iran’s “brave Armed Forces are prepared — with their fingers on the trigger — to immediately and powerfully respond to ANY aggression against our beloved land, air and sea.”

“Valuable lessons learned” during the 12-day conflict with Israel and the U.S. in June “have enabled us to respond even more strongly, rapidly and profoundly,” Araghchi wrote.

“At the same time, Iran has always welcomed a mutually beneficial, fair and equitable NUCLEAR DEAL — on equal footing, and free from coercion, threats, and intimidation — which ensures Iran’s rights to PEACEFUL nuclear technology, and guarantees NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS,” the foreign minister added.

“Such weapons have no place in our security calculations and we have NEVER sought to acquire them,” he wrote.

Araghchi issued the warning after Trump touted what he called a “massive armada” heading toward Iran, which he said was “ready, willing, and able to rapidly fulfill its mission, with speed and violence, if necessary.”

Trump urged Iran to make “a fair and equitable deal” regarding its nuclear program, key facilities and personnel of which were among the targets attacked by Israel and the U.S. in June.

“Hopefully Iran will quickly ‘Come to the Table’ and negotiate a fair and equitable deal — NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS — one that is good for all parties. Time is running out, it is truly of the essence!,” Trump said a social media post.

Trump referred to the strikes on Iran’s nuclear sites last summer. “As I told Iran once before, MAKE A DEAL! They didn’t, and there was ‘Operation Midnight Hammer,’ a major destruction of Iran. The next attack will be far worse! Don’t make that happen again,” Trump added.

The aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln, accompanied by three destroyers, arrived in the Middle East earlier this week, bolstering the U.S. military presence in the region.

The carrier is carrying a complement of strike aircraft, while the accompanying destroyers are armed with Tomahawk missiles.

The naval buildup adds some 5,000 American troops to the region, swelling an already robust American military footprint spread across multiple bases across the Middle East, such as Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar.

In total, more than 30,000 U.S. troops are deployed across the Middle East. The USS Abraham Lincoln is the first U.S. aircraft carrier to operate in the region since last summer.

Araghchi on Wednesday denied any request for new talks Tehran and Washington, D.C., though said Iran was in touch with “various intermediaries.”

“Our position is clear. Negotiations cannot take place under threats, and any talks must be conducted in conditions where threats and excessive demands are set aside,” Araghchi said.

The speaker of the Iranian parliament, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said on Thursday that Iran is “ready for sincere and genuine negotiations with America,” as quoted by the state-aligned Tasnim News Agency. Ghalibaf warned that though Trump “may be able to start a war,” he cannot foresee how it will end.

Trump’s latest threats focused on Iran’s nuclear program, which — alongside Tehran’s ballistic missile arsenal and its use of regional proxy forces — has been a key and longstanding concern for the U.S., Israel and their regional partners.

Trump’s Wednesday social media post did not mention Tehran’s bloody suppression of nationwide anti-government protests over the past month. The demonstrations began in late December in response to the collapsing value of the national currency — the rial — before morphing into a wider anti-regime movement which drew backing from dissidents abroad and Western governments.

Trump lent his support to protesters in mid-January, urging them to “KEEP PROTESTING — TAKE OVER YOUR INSTITUTIONS!!!” He added, “HELP IS ON ITS WAY.”

The president then appeared to back off the prospect of imminent U.S. strikes on Iran, saying Tehran had informed him that the killing of protesters and executions of those arrested had stopped.

The major security crackdown appears to have suppressed the massed demonstrations. The U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) — which relies on a network of activists in Iran for its reporting and has been accurate during previous unrest — said Wednesday that at least 6,373 people had been killed in the protests.

The dead included 5,993 protesters, 113 people under the age of 18, 214 government-affiliated personnel and 53 non-protesting civilians, HRANA said. The organization said it is still reviewing 17,091 reports of other deaths.

A total of 42,486 people have been arrested in the demonstrations since they began on Dec. 28, including 11,018 injured protesters with serious wounds, according to HRANA.

ABC News cannot independently verify HRANA’s numbers.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio told a Senate hearing on Wednesday that the U.S. regional buildup represents a “baseline” for defense.

“We have to have enough force and power in the region just on a baseline to defend against that possibility that at some point, as a result of something, the Iranian regime decides to strike at our troop presence in the region,” Rubio said.

Rubio also said that it was an “open question” and “no one knows” who would fill a leadership void in Iran if Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was removed from power.

Rubio asserted that protests across Iran due to a free-falling economy show “that [the] regime is probably weaker than it has ever been.”

If the regime were to fall, he said the U.S. could “hope” for a “transition” like the one it is attempting to facilitate in Venezuela.

But Rubio added that he “would imagine it would be far more complex … because you’re talking about a regime that’s been in place for a very long time.”

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In brief: ‘DTF St. Louis’ trailer and more

In brief: ‘DTF St. Louis’ trailer and more
In brief: ‘DTF St. Louis’ trailer and more

The trailer for the upcoming HBO limited series DTF St. Louis has arrived. The new series, which stars Jason Bateman, David Harbour and Linda Cardellini, premieres on March 1. It centers on a love triangle between three middle-aged adults that leads to one of them ending up dead. A new episode will debut each week leading up to its finale on April 12, which will air ahead of the Euphoria season 3 premiere …

Even more actors have hopped on to star in the upcoming Netflix series Rabbit, Rabbit. Odessa Young and Will Poulter have joined the cast of the upcoming thriller. They join previously announced stars Adam Driver and Regina Hall. Rabbit, Rabbit tells the story of an escaped convict who takes hostages to bargain for his freedom before he falls into “an emotional poker match with a vertex FBI Crisis Negotiator,” according to an official synopsis from the streamer …

Sydney Sweeney looks to be teaming up with Noah Centineo for a new project. Deadline reports the pair are set to star in a live-action feature adaptation of Gundam for Legendary and Netflix. Gundam is a popular anime that pioneered a sci-fi subgenre centered on giant, fighting robots …

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Protesters clash with law enforcement outside Texas facility where detained 5-year-old is held

Protesters clash with law enforcement outside Texas facility where detained 5-year-old is held
Protesters clash with law enforcement outside Texas facility where detained 5-year-old is held
People protest against Immigration and Customs Enforcement as they march toward the South Texas Family Residential Center, January 28, 2026 in Dilley, Texas. (Joel Angel Juarez/Getty Images)

(HOUSTON) — Law enforcement deployed tear gas during a clash with protesters outside a Texas detention facility on Wednesday, where a 5-year-old boy and his father are being held.

At least two protesters were detained, according to ABC News’ San Antonio affiliate KSAT.

Both U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents and Texas Department of Public Safety troopers were on the scene during the protest, according to KSAT.

Video of the encounter showed troopers pushing back protesters as tear gas was deployed.

Ahead of the protest, community organizers said in a press release they were gathering at the facility to hold “a vigil to amplify the voices and protests of children and families held in detention against their will.”

The facility in Dilley, Texas, is located about 85 miles southwest of San Antonio.

The protest took place on the same day that Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, met with 5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father, Adrian Alexander, at the center.

Castro said he was able to meet with him and his father for 30 minutes in the facility’s courtroom.

The lawmaker told reporters that he was told by the father that the 5-year-old has “been depressed and has not been eating well” since being detained.

“His father said that Liam has been sleeping a lot, that he’s been asking about his family, his mom, and his classmates, and saying that he wants to go back to school.”

Castro added that there are other children at the detention center, including several under the age of five and a two-month-old baby.

The father and son were detained on Jan. 20 as part of the federal government’s ongoing immigration crackdown in Minnesota.

Images from the young boy’s detainment garnered international attention when he was apprehended by immigration officials shortly after arriving home from preschool while his father was in their driveway, school officials said last week.

The Department of Homeland Security said at the time that “ICE conducted a targeted operation to arrest Adrian Alexander Conejo Arias, an illegal alien from Ecuador who was RELEASED into the U.S. by the Biden administration.”

“As agents approached the driver, Adrian Alexander Conejo Arias, fled on foot — abandoning his child. For the child’s safety, one of our ICE officers remained with the child while the other officers apprehended Conejo Arias.”

DHS’ account differed from what the family’s attorney and school officials said occurred.

“Another adult living in the home was outside and begged the agents to let them take care of the small child, but was refused,” officials from Conejo Ramos’ school said.

A federal judge in Texas on Monday temporarily blocked the removal of Alexander and Ramos, saying that the father and son cannot be removed from the district in Texas pending the habeas case challenging their detention.

At the time of their detention, they had a pending asylum case but no order of deportation directing that they be removed from the United States.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 1/28/26

Scoreboard roundup — 1/28/26
Scoreboard roundup — 1/28/26

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Wednesday’s sports events:

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Rangers 2, Islanders 5
Flyers 3, Blue Jackets 5
Avalanche 2, Senators 5

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
Lakers 99, Cavaliers 129
Bulls 110, Pacers 113
Hawks 117, Celtics 106
Magic 133, Heat 124
Knicks 119, Raptors 92
Hornets 112, Grizzlies 97
Timberwolves 118, Mavericks 105
Warriors 140, Jazz 124
Spurs 111, Rockets 99

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Dylan Scott says ‘the one about me dying’ is his wife’s favorite song

Dylan Scott says ‘the one about me dying’ is his wife’s favorite song
Dylan Scott says ‘the one about me dying’ is his wife’s favorite song
Dylan Scott (Disney via CMA/John Russell)

Dylan Scott‘s latest hit, “What He’ll Never Have,” is a family affair.

“It’s a special song to me,” he tells ABC Audio. “One, I’ve got my little brother, he’s a co-writer on the song. He’s my lead guitar player. It’s his first-ever song that’s being recorded. Top 40, top 20 now. So it’s fun watching him get excited about all this stuff, you know. It makes me happy.”

Dylan’s brother, Logan Robinson, can be even more excited now, since “What He’ll Never Have” just broke into the top 15.

What mystifies Dylan about his hit, however, is how his muse, wife Blair Robinson, feels about the tune.

“Here’s what I don’t understand about the song,” he reveals. “I’ve written all these love songs, right? ‘My Girl,’ ‘Nobody,’ ‘Can’t Have Mine,’ all these brownie-point songs for my wife. And then I write this song and it’s her favorite one, the one about me dying. Can you explain that to me?”

“She said, ‘What female [doesn’t] want to hear that? “If I was to die, just know that whoever you find, the love I have for you, he’ll never have.”‘ Like, what?” he asks. “I don’t know. She was right, though. It’s a big hit for us.”  

Dylan sets his Till I Can’t I Will Tour in motion March 12 in Syracuse, New York. 

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Spiritbox returns to the ‘big kids table’ with third Grammy nomination

Spiritbox returns to the ‘big kids table’ with third Grammy nomination
Spiritbox returns to the ‘big kids table’ with third Grammy nomination
Spiritbox at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards. (Phil McCarten/CBS)

Spiritbox is headed back to the Grammys for the third straight year.

After being previously nominated in 2024 and 2025, the Canadian metallers are once again up for best metal performance for the 2026 ceremony with their song “Soft Spine.” For guitarist Mike Stringer, getting nominated for a Grammy feels like being “invited to the big kids table.”

“It’s a huge honor,” Stringer tells ABC Audio. “It’s something that you think about your entire life, and then when it happens, you’re like, ‘Holy s***.’ It’s very unbelievable.”

That feeling is only amplified once you actually arrive at the Grammys.

“It’s just a whole thing, it’s crazy,” Stringer says. “It’s something that you never think that you’re gonna be involved in, and then you get there, and it’s just, like, go go go. There’s all these people you never thought in a million years you’d be in the same room with, all these cameras, everyone’s dressed to the nines.”

We’ll see if the third time is the charm for Spiritbox, but Stringer says he’ll be happy either way.

“Honestly, if we’re invited, that’s incredible,” Stringer says. “If we win, that’s also incredible, but just being asked to go and being recognized by that whole board is just nuts.” 

The 2026 Grammys will air Sunday starting at 8 p.m. ET on CBS and streaming on Paramount+. Spiritbox will be performing during the Grammy Premiere Ceremony, which streams on YouTube Sunday beginning at 3:30 p.m. ET.

The Grammys will air on ABC in 2027. 

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ariana Grande’s brought a ‘very, very new sensibility’ to ‘Fockers’ franchise, says Ben Stiller

Ariana Grande’s brought a ‘very, very new sensibility’ to ‘Fockers’ franchise, says Ben Stiller
Ariana Grande’s brought a ‘very, very new sensibility’ to ‘Fockers’ franchise, says Ben Stiller
Ariana Grande attends Moët & Chandon At The 83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards on Jan. 11, 2026 in Los Angeles.(Phillip Faraone/Getty Images for Moët & Chandon)

After spending years portraying Glinda in the Wicked films, Ariana Grande will get to show off her comedic chops in the upcoming movie Focker-In-Law — and Ben Stiller says he’s glad she’s shaking the franchise up.

“It was great to have her energy coming into this franchise that has been around a long time, and we hadn’t done for a very long time,” Stiller tells Entertainment Weekly. “She’s incredibly professional, and watching her on SNL, she knows comedy, and she was just a joy to work with.”

“I had a blast working with her, and I think what she brought to the movie is just a very, very new sensibility that also felt very much like it worked within the tone of the movie,” he added.

In the film, Ariana plays the partner of Henry, the adult son of Stiller’s Greg Focker. According to the actor, Ariana’s character has a “fun relationship” with Robert De Niro‘s character, Jack Byrnes, Greg Focker’s intimidating father-in-law.

“Watching him and her together — I can’t really give away too much, but the connection between them in the film is pretty fun,” he noted. “And it plays into the dynamic of Greg Focker always kind of being stuck on the outside.”

Stiller also has high praise for Benson Boone, his co-star in a new Super Bowl commercial for Instacart. Even though Benson has never acted before, Stiller said, “He just has this incredible ability to put himself out there.”

“What I was most excited about is that this guy’s really an actor, and it was cool to see that, ‘Oh, he could do this if he wanted to do it,'” Stiller added.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Jason Derulo says fans will see ‘the new version of me’ on tour, even if they don’t go in person

Jason Derulo says fans will see ‘the new version of me’ on tour, even if they don’t go in person
Jason Derulo says fans will see ‘the new version of me’ on tour, even if they don’t go in person
Jason Derulo, ‘The Last Dance (Part 1)’ (Gary Corr)

Following the release of The Last Dance (Part 1), Jason Derulo has dropped a new video for one of its songs, “Sexy For Me.” He says the clip — along with his new tour, which kicks off Thursday — will give fans a look at his “next chapter.”

Of the clip, which features Jason and a group of scantily clad women, he tells ABC Audio, “There’s a ton of dance in it. My fans love when I’m really, really dancing in videos. And it’s been a while since I’ve danced quite like this. … This is some next-level dancing and vibes.”

As for the tour, which is currently limited to the U.K. and Europe, he says, “What’s interesting is you’ll see the new version of me on tour” — even if he doesn’t make its way to North America.

“I feel like with social media, you’re able to see somebody’s show without even going,” he laughs. “So I think people will get a glimpse of what is to come.”

He adds that the video also offers a peek at his new era.

“While the audio feels nostalgic, the look and feel of the [tour] performance and music video” is “of the next chapter,” he notes.

That “next chapter” means he’s closing the book on what’s come before, but looking back, Jason says he has plenty to be proud of.

“I think it’s incredible to be part of people’s lives when people are coming to me and saying, ‘Marry Me’ is the song that I used to propose to my wife, or ‘Ridin’ Solo’ helped me through a breakup or ‘Savage Love’ got me through the pandemic, or ‘Swalla’ [and] ‘Talk Dirty’ are my club anthems,” he told ABC Audio.

“Being a part of people’s lives, I think is pretty crazy.” 

(Video contains uncensored profanity.)

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Rush to donate portion of Fifty Something tour proceeds to Neil Peart memorial

Rush to donate portion of Fifty Something tour proceeds to Neil Peart memorial
Rush to donate portion of Fifty Something tour proceeds to Neil Peart memorial
Rush drummer Neil Peart performs at the Mandalay Bay Events Center on May 10, 2008 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The rock trio are touring in support of the album, “Snakes & Arrows.” (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Rush‘s Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson are doing what they can to help make a Neil Peart memorial in St. Catherines, Ontario, finally happen.

The St. Catherine Standard reports that Lee and Lifeson plan to donate a portion of the proceeds from Rush’s upcoming Fifty Something tour to the St. Catharines memorial, which will help the city where Peart grew up meet the $1 million goal it has targeted for the Peart tribute.

The plan is to commemorate the Rush drummer with a bronze sculpture installation in Lakeside Park. It will feature two Peart statues, connected by a pathway, one of him in his younger years and one of him in his later years.

The Neil Peart Commemorative Task Force was established in April 2020 to move the project forward, with the plan to raise all funds through donations. After a soft fundraising launch in 2021, the official fundraising campaign began in September 2024. It has so far raised $208,000 for the project.

According to the paper, Rush’s contributions will come from sales of VIP experiences to their shows.

Peart died Jan. 7, 2020, at 67 after a battle with brain cancer.

Rush’s Fifty Something tour, featuring Anika Nilles behind the drum kit, kicks off June 7 in Los Angeles and wraps Dec. 17 in Vancouver, British Columbia. It will be their first tour in 10 years and the first tour since Peart’s death.

A complete list of dates can be found at Rush.com.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Luke Thompson on telling Benedict’s love story in ‘Bridgerton’ season 4

Luke Thompson on telling Benedict’s love story in ‘Bridgerton’ season 4
Luke Thompson on telling Benedict’s love story in ‘Bridgerton’ season 4
Yerin Ha as Sophie and Luke Thompson as Benedict in ‘Bridgerton’ season 4. (Liam Daniel/Netflix)

A certain second son is swept off his feet by a mystery woman at a masquerade ball in Bridgerton season 4.

The first part of the fourth season of Bridgerton has made its way to Netflix. It finds Benedict Bridgerton (Luke Thompson) taking center stage as he falls for the resourceful housemaid Sophie Baek (Yerin Ha).

Thompson told Good Morning America that Benedict has probably been running away from love for a long time.

“He’s someone who’s lost his dad very young and watched his mum mourn his dad. So, you can see why a loving relationship might look like something pretty terrifying to him,” Thompson said. “Because it’s sort of facing … the reality of life and death square in the face.”

Benedict is known for being something of a “rake” at the beginning of season 4. As the Bohemian second-born son, he has been loathe to settle down. But, “like any good coping mechanism,” Thompson said, being noncommittal has started to get old.

Still, the innocent nature of Benedict and Sophie’s coupling, Thompson said, makes for quite a surprising love story.

“He’s a character that, the way it’s written, has constantly got a lot of surprises,” Thompson said. “The innocence of this story, certainly the beginning, is not necessarily [what] I thought Benedict’s love story would look like. But, amazing. Because it really does make sense of his character.”

The first part of Bridgerton season 4 is available to watch now. Part two drops on Feb. 26. 

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