Rather than official diplomatic protests, the embassies resorted to memes and jokes
Iranian diplomatic missions around the world responded to US President Donald Trump’s profanity-laden threat on April 5 regarding the Strait of Hormuz with an unusual social media campaign that relied on humour, satire and political commentary rather than official diplomatic protests.
Social media accounts linked to Iranian embassies worldwide have continued to taunt Trump in what appears to be an effort to project defiance and counter US-Israeli narratives of a weakened leadership in Tehran.
🔴 LIVE updates: pic.twitter.com/2HjcYT0uy9
— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) May 23, 2026
Trump had warned Iran to reopen the strategic waterway or face attacks on infrastructure, according to reports.
Donald J. Trump Truth Social 04:05.26 08:03 AM EST
Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!! Open the Fuckin’ Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell – JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah.…
— Commentary Donald J. Trump Posts From Truth Social (@TrumpDailyPosts) April 5, 2026
According to Al Jazeera, Iranian embassies from Africa to Europe and Asia coordinated a series of social media posts that mocked the language and tone of Trump’s message, turning the episode into what the network described as a global online trolling campaign.
One of the most widely shared exchanges began when Iran’s embassy in Zimbabwe responded to Trump’s demand to “open the Strait” by joking that it had “lost the keys”. Other Iranian diplomatic missions joined the thread, extending the joke across multiple countries and platforms.
Al Jazeera reported that Iran’s embassy in South Africa replied that the “key” was hidden under a flowerpot and suggested it could be used “for friends”, while Iran’s embassy in Bulgaria added a pointed reference to Jeffrey Epstein, drawing attention to controversies that have surrounded Trump’s political opponents and associates.
The Iranian Embassy in Zimbabwe on the Strait of Hormuz:
We’ve lost the keys.
The Iranian Embassy in South Africa in response:
Shhh… the key is under the flower pot. Only for friends to open. pic.twitter.com/8gB0kzHMBo
— Sprinter Press Agency (@SprinterPress) April 6, 2026
Beyond humour, several Iranian missions sought to portray Trump as unfit for office. Posts from diplomatic accounts referenced the 25th Amendment to the US Constitution, which provides a mechanism for declaring a president unable to perform official duties.
According to Al Jazeera, the Iranian Embassy in South Africa said that “Humanity must know what kind of creatures are leading the American people.” The embassy also amplified criticism from British broadcaster Piers Morgan, who described Trump’s comments as embarrassing and suggested the president had “lost his marbles”.
No, let it be.
Humanity must know what kind of creatures are leading the American people.
The American people deserve better than this.— Iran Embassy SA (@IraninSA) April 6, 2026
Similar messaging later appeared from Iran’s embassy in Tajikistan.
Iran’s embassy in London adopted a literary approach. Rather than directly engaging Trump’s remarks, it shared a poem attributed to the Persian mystic Rumi about the danger of placing power in the hands of a madman, alongside a quotation commonly attributed to Mark Twain about the wisdom of remaining silent.
تیغ دادن دَر کَفِ زَنگیِ مَست
بِهْ که آیَد عِلم، ناکَس را به دَست
عِلم و مال و مَنصَب و جاه و قِران
فِتنه آمَد دَر کَفِ بَدگوهَرانمولانا مثنوی معنوی
It is better to keep your mouth closed and let people think you are a fool than to open it and remove all doubt
Mark Twain pic.twitter.com/ySkMfqg1qw
— Iran (I.R.of) Embassy in UK (@Iran_in_UK) April 5, 2026
Al Jazeera further noted that several embassies criticised Trump’s use of profanity. Iran’s embassy in India described the language as behaviour associated with “sore loser brats” and told the US president to “get a grip”.
The embassy in Austria placed an “18+” warning label over a screenshot of Trump’s message and reminded Washington that attacks on civilian infrastructure would constitute a war crime. “POTUS has stooped to an unprecedented level of begging, laced with bitter, hollow rudeness and threats,” the mission in Vienna wrote.
