Iranian state media has published a new propaganda video explicitly threatening President Donald Trump, claiming to reveal details about his movements and motorcade security while declaring that operatives could gain access to locations along his travel routes.
Iran’s move marking the latest escalation in Tehran's long-running campaign of threats of assassination against the U.S. president.
The video, titled "Where to Kill Trump?," was distributed through Iranian state media outlets before briefly appearing on social media.
According to reports, the production claims to have analyzed Trump's movements between 2024 and 2026 and purports to identify vulnerabilities in his security arrangements.
The presentation alleges it contains information about Trump's travel between airports and his residences, including routes from airports to Mar-a-Lago and Trump Tower.
It claims that certain locations would provide opportunities for what it describes as "the free people of the world" before concluding with the warning: "Stay tuned… we are going to get even closer than this."
Security experts generally caution that propaganda of this nature often mixes publicly available information with unverifiable claims and should not be treated as evidence of actual operational capability.
The video is the latest in a series of increasingly explicit public threats emanating from Iran since the killing of Gen. Qassem Soleimani in a U.S. drone strike ordered by Trump in January 2020.
Iranian officials and state-affiliated media have repeatedly vowed revenge for Soleimani's death, and U.S. intelligence officials have warned for years that Tehran has continued to pursue plots targeting current Trump and former American officials.
The latest release follows several recent incidents that have heightened concerns over Tehran's rhetoric.
Earlier this month, Iranian authorities unveiled a giant billboard in Tehran's Islamic Revolution Square depicting Trump lying in a coffin alongside the English-language message "We Kill Trump."
The display came only days after funeral ceremonies for Iran's late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, where mourners chanted "Kill Trump" and "Death to America" while displaying posters portraying Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Vice President JD Vance, War Secretary Pete Hegseth, and others in crosshairs.
Demonstrators also carried signs reading "There will be blood" during the state-organized ceremonies.
Iranian state newspaper Kayhan, whose editor is appointed by Iran's supreme leader, also recently published the headline, "We want Trump's head," adding to a pattern of increasingly direct public threats.
Trump has publicly acknowledged the continuing danger posed by Iranian threats.
Speaking to reporters during the NATO summit in Ankara, Trump said, "I'm on all their lists. So far, I've been a little lucky, but maybe that luck won't last much longer."
He has previously stated that Iran has sought to kill him in retaliation for Soleimani's death and has argued that Tehran continues to view him as one of its principal targets.
The threats have not been limited to Trump.
Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and former National Security Adviser John Bolton have also been identified by U.S. authorities as targets of alleged Iranian assassination plots.
The Justice Department previously charged an individual allegedly linked to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in connection with a murder-for-hire plot targeting Bolton.
U.S. officials had in the past provided protective security to both Bolton and Pompeo in response to intelligence assessments concerning potential threats.
More recently, War Secretary Pete Hegseth announced that U.S. forces had killed a senior operative whom he described as a key figure within an Iranian unit allegedly responsible for planning assassination operations against Trump and other current and former American officials.
U.S. officials said the operative played a central role in coordinating external attacks, although few operational details have been released publicly.
Federal authorities have not publicly commented on the specific claims made in the video.
The U.S. Secret Service does not discuss protective operations or security procedures involving the president, and security agencies generally avoid responding publicly to purported details regarding presidential movements.