Warren Link Spotted Amid Death Threats

A state-funeral speaker asked why Donald Trump was “still alive,” while crowds waved “Kill Trump” signs and cheered.

Story Highlights

  • A performer at Iran’s state funeral for Ali Khamenei questioned why Donald Trump was alive.
  • Mourners displayed signs calling for Trump’s death and targeted Americans by name.
  • Chants of “Death to America” and stone-throwing at Trump’s image marked the procession.
  • An Iranian commander warned the United States and Israel against “miscalculation” before the funeral.

State-Run Ceremony Turns Into Open Threats Against Americans

Footage from the state funeral for Ali Khamenei showed a performer on the official stage asking why President Donald Trump was still alive, drawing loud cheers from a massive crowd in Tehran. Scenes across the procession featured signs and placards threatening Trump. Some imagery listed Americans as targets. Organizers managed security and messaging as millions filled the streets. Chants of “Death to America” and “Death to Israel” echoed through the state-orchestrated ceremony, signaling open hostility toward the United States.

Reporters and video showed mourners throwing stones at a large image of Trump, presented for a ritual “stoning the devil” display. A poster styled as a wanted notice read “Kill Trump,” with claims of a bounty attached, while others highlighted supposed “advisers” as targets. The crowd also waved red flags tied to the theme of vengeance in Shiite tradition. The setting and scale, under government control, gave these threats a wider stage than a typical street protest.

Official Warnings Framed The Funeral Period As A Stand-Off

Days before the main procession, an Iranian commander warned the United States and Israel not to attack Iran, promising “harsh retaliation” for any move against the country. State media described strict security and temporary airspace limits over major cities. Those measures underscored the war-time mood as the leadership sought to project strength. Within that frame, funeral speakers and mourners used chants and threats to claim moral cover for revenge, raising the risk of lone-actor or proxy violence.

International outlets reported that anti-Trump banners and direct calls for his death were common sights during the procession. Live coverage described a sea of flags and photos of Khamenei alongside the kill-language and target imagery. While anti-American chants are routine at regime events, the on-stage line about Trump’s life at a state funeral was a sharper escalation. The mix of state staging and crowd threats will likely shape how U.S. officials judge intent and risk.

How To Read The Signals Without Losing Sight Of The Stakes

Analysts often debate whether such scenes equal a formal state threat or “only” reflect crowd anger. Here, the funeral was state-run, the stage was official, and the rhetoric named American targets. That combination makes the message harder to dismiss as random. At minimum, Iran allowed, amplified, and televised calls for the death of a former and current American political leader, which invites copycats and propaganda payoffs for hostile actors.

The Trump administration faces a clear test: defend Americans at home and abroad while avoiding moves that hand Tehran a narrative win. Practical steps include tightening security for named targets, pressing allies to condemn incitement, and exposing the regime’s use of funerals for political intimidation. Clear red lines, smarter sanctions on enablers, and rapid attribution for proxy attacks can raise costs for Iran’s leaders without dragging U.S. troops into a wider fight.

Why This Matters To American Families And Our Constitution

American families watched a foreign state platform celebrate violence against a U.S. president. That crosses a moral line and seeks to bully our free society. The United States must not normalize kill-lists and bounty talk from a regime event. Strong, lawful steps to deter threats protect free speech at home, guard due process, and uphold the duty of government to secure its citizens. Deterrence now helps prevent wider war later and keeps pressure on a regime that thrives on fear.

Sources:

pjmedia.com, reuters.com, counterterrorismgroup.com

© conservativesense.com 2026. All rights reserved.