特朗普称伊朗正研发可很快打击美国的导弹 消息人士称此举未获美国情报机构支持


By Jennifer Hansler, Natasha Bertrand, Kylie Atwood, Zachary Cohen
Updated Feb 27, 2026, 2:48 PM ET
PUBLISHED Feb 27, 2026, 2:41 PM ET

WASHINGTON, DC – FEBRUARY 24: U.S. President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress in the House Chamber at the Capitol on February 24, 2026 in Washington, DC.

Kenny Holston/Pool/Getty Images

周二晚间,美国总统唐纳德·特朗普向美国民众发表讲话时声称,伊朗“正在努力研发将很快抵达美利坚合众国的导弹”。

消息人士向美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)透露,这一说法未得到美国情报机构的支持。

这是特朗普政府就伊朗威胁所做的公开表态之一,其目的是为可能的军事行动铺垫基础,尽管他们仍声称美国总统希望通过外交途径解决问题。

2025年美国国防情报局(DIA)一份未分类评估报告称,伊朗“若决定发展该能力”,可能在2035年前研制出“具备军事可行性”的洲际弹道导弹。

两名消息人士表示,关于伊朗将很快拥有能打击美国的导弹的说法,没有情报依据——目前没有任何情报表明伊朗正在推进洲际弹道导弹计划以打击美国。

然而,正如特朗普政府所警告的那样,伊朗确实拥有能够威胁美国在该地区军事基地和人员的短程弹道导弹。

三位消息人士告诉CNN,近期对伊朗洲际弹道导弹野心的评估未发生变化。

白宫发言人安娜·凯利回应CNN的报道称:“特朗普总统强调伊朗构成的严重威胁是完全正确的。伊朗这个高喊‘死亡到美国’的国家,拥有洲际弹道导弹。”

截至发稿前,美国国务院未回复置评请求。

周五,特朗普在对记者讲话时表示,他对美伊关于伊朗核计划的谈判“不满意”,称伊朗“不愿给予我们所需的东西”。

他表示,尚未就是否进行军事打击“做出最终决定”,称将进行进一步讨论。

随着特朗普多次暗示可能对伊朗采取军事行动,美国在中东集结了自2003年入侵伊拉克以来规模最大的军事装备。

知情人士透露,本周在与国务卿马尔科·卢比奥、中央情报局局长约翰·拉特克利夫及“八人小组”国会领袖的简报会上,伊朗导弹技术问题并未被提及。

伊朗外交部长阿巴斯·阿拉格奇本周接受采访时表示,伊朗并未研发远程导弹。

“我们故意将导弹射程限制在2000公里,”他告诉《今日印度》电视台,称这些导弹仅用于防御。

当被追问特朗普关于伊朗“很快”就能拥有打击美国导弹的说法时,卢比奥表示不会猜测“它们距离目标有多远”,但称伊朗“肯定”正在努力研制洲际弹道导弹。

“你看到他们正在增加现有导弹的射程,显然他们正朝着有一天能够研发出可打击美国本土武器的方向前进,”他周三在圣基茨新闻发布会上对记者说。

他认为,伊朗在谈判中拒绝讨论其弹道导弹计划“是个大问题”。到目前为止,美伊谈判回合仅聚焦于核问题。

被问及国防情报局关于伊朗洲际弹道导弹发展的报告时,卢比奥称:“我不会评论情报界的评估或任何相关内容。但可以肯定的是,这是一种威胁。我们能看到这种可能性。”

这位美国最高外交官表示:“除了他们拥有的核计划外,这些常规武器纯粹是为了攻击美国和美国人,如果他们选择这样做的话。这些问题必须得到解决。”

在核计划问题上,卢比奥承认伊朗“目前没有进行铀浓缩”,但称“他们正试图达到最终能够做到这一点的程度”。

然而,美国主要谈判代表之一、特使史蒂夫·维特科夫上周六接受采访时声称,伊朗“可能一周内就能拥有工业级制弹材料”。这一说法与特朗普政府反复声称美国去年的军事打击“彻底摧毁”了伊朗核计划相矛盾。

一名消息人士透露,情报显示伊朗正积极重建铀浓缩能力,包括安装更多离心机、恢复去年军事打击中幸存的离心机运转,并重建用于浓缩铀武器化的设施——其中许多设施在打击中受损或被摧毁。

不过,消息人士和专家表示,这些工作需要的时间远超一周。并且,有消息称重建核计划的工作正在不易受军事打击影响的地点进行。

CNN的亚历杭德拉·哈拉米略对此报道有贡献

Trump claimed Iran is building missiles that could soon hit the US. Sources say that’s not backed up by US intelligence.

By Jennifer Hansler, Natasha Bertrand, Kylie Atwood, Zachary Cohen
Updated Feb 27, 2026, 2:48 PM ET
PUBLISHED Feb 27, 2026, 2:41 PM ET

WASHINGTON, DC – FEBRUARY 24: U.S. President Donald Trump delivers the State of the Union address during a joint session of Congress in the House Chamber at the Capitol on February 24, 2026 in Washington, DC.

Kenny Holston/Pool/Getty Images

When US President Donald Trump addressed the American people on Tuesday night, he claimed that Iran is “working to build missiles that will soon reach the United States of America.”

That assertion is not backed up by US intelligence, sources told CNN.

It was one of several claims about threats from Iran made publicly by the Trump administration as it lays the groundwork for possible military action, even as they continue to say the US president wants to reach a diplomatic solution.

An unclassified assessment from the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) from 2025 said that Iran could develop a “militarily-viable” intercontinental ballistic missile by 2035 “should Tehran decide to pursue the capability.”

According to two sources, the claim that Iran will soon have a missile capable of hitting the US is not backed up by intelligence — there is no intelligence to suggest that Iran is pursuing an ICBM program to hit the US at this time, the sources said.

Iran does, however, possess short range ballistic missiles that could threaten US bases and personnel in the region, as the administration has warned.

Three sources told CNN there has been no change in recent assessments about Iran’s intercontinental ballistic missile aspirations.

White House spokesperson Anna Kelly responded to CNN’s reporting, saying “President Trump is absolutely right to highlight the grave concern posed by Iran, a country that chants ‘death to America,’ possessing intercontinental ballistic missiles.”

The State Department did not reply to a request for comment before publication.

Speaking to reporters Friday, Trump said that he is “not happy” with ongoing negotiations between the US and Iran over that country’s nuclear program, saying that Iran was “not willing to give us what we have to have.”

He said he had not “made a final decision” on whether he would proceed with military strikes, saying that there would be additional discussions.

The US has amassed its largest collection of military hardware in the Middle East since the invasion of Iraq in 2003 as Trump has repeatedly suggested he might take military action against Iran.

The matter of Iranian missile technology did not come up in a briefing with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, CIA Director John Ratcliffe and the “Gang of Eight” congressional leaders this week, sources familiar with the briefing said.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said in an interview released this week that his country was not developing long-range missiles.

“We have deliberately limited the range of our missiles to 2,000 kilometers,” he told India Today TV, saying the missiles were for defense.

Pressed on Trump’s claim that Iran could “soon” have missiles that could reach the US, Rubio said he would not speculate “as to how far away they are,” but said Iran is “certainly” trying to achieve intercontinental ballistic missiles.

“You’ve seen them increasing the range of the missiles they have now, and clearly they are headed in the pathway to one day being able to develop weapons that could reach the continental US,” he told reporters at a press conference in St. Kitts Wednesday.

He argued that Iran’s refusal to discuss its ballistic missile program in negotiations is “a big problem.” The rounds of discussions between Washington and Tehran have, so far, only focused on nuclear issues.

Asked about the DIA report on Iranian intercontinental ballistic missile development, Rubio said, “I won’t comment on assessments or anything that the Intelligence Community says. Suffice it to say that it’s a threat. We can see that it’s possible.”

“Beyond just the nuclear program they possess these conventional weapons that are solely designed to attack America and attack Americans, if they so choose to do so. These things have to be addressed,” the top US diplomat said.

On the nuclear program, Rubio acknowledged that Iran is “not enriching right now,” but said “they’re trying to get to the point where they ultimately can.”

However, Special Envoy Steve Witkoff – one of two main US negotiators – claimed in an interview released last Saturday that Iran was “probably a week away from having industrial-grade bombmaking material.” That claim came despite the Trump administration’s repeated assertions that the US had “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear program in military strikes last year.

According to a source, intelligence shows that Iran is actively trying to build back its enrichment capability, including installing additional centrifuges, getting back online centrifuges that survived military strikes last year, and rebuilding facilities – many of which were damaged or destroyed – needed to weaponize the enriched uranium.

However, sources and experts say that work would take far longer than a week. And, according to a source, the work to build back the nuclear program is happening in places that are not likely to be impacted by military strikes.

CNN’s Alejandra Jaramillo contributed to this report

评论

发表回复

您的邮箱地址不会被公开。 必填项已用 * 标注