The Rest of the World Report | Saturday, March 28, 2026 — Saturday Edition
Day 29 | Iran War & Beyond
Weekday morning and evening editions. Saturdays once. Sundays once. All sources labeled. Translator notes on every story.
WAR DAY 29 | NUMBERS AT PUBLICATION
🇮🇷 Iran: 1,937 killed, 24,800+ wounded (Iran Deputy Health Minister Jafarian to Al Jazeera, Thursday — last official update). HRANA: 3,200+. Iranian Red Crescent: 93,000+ civilian housing units damaged across Iran since February 28.
🇱🇧 Lebanon: 1,116 killed (Lebanese Health Ministry, Thursday). 42 health workers killed. 121+ children. 3,229+ wounded. 620,000+ women and girls displaced (UN Women, Friday).
🇮🇱 Israel: 20+ killed (Al Jazeera tracker, updated Saturday). 5,492+ wounded. 🇮🇶 Iraq: 96 killed total (CNN tally).
🇺🇸 US: 13 KIA. 10 additional service members wounded at Prince Sultan Air Base, Saudi Arabia, overnight Friday (CNN, two US officials). 300+ wounded total.
🛢️ Brent crude: $112.57 (Friday close — highest since July 2022). WTI: $99.64.
💰 Dow: 45,166 (Friday close). S&P 500: Fifth consecutive losing week.
💰 US gas: $3.98/gallon (AAA). Diesel: $5.37/gallon.
🌐 Iran internet blackout: 624+ hours (NetBlocks, estimated).
1. ONE MONTH IN — AND THE HOUTHIS JUST ENTERED
Thirty days ago, the United States and Israel launched Operation Epic Fury against Iran. On the one-month anniversary of that decision, Yemen’s Houthi rebels fired their first missiles at Israel — and announced they are not done.
Brigadier-General Yahya Saree, the Houthis’ military spokesman, announced Saturday morning on the rebel group’s Al-Masirah satellite television that Yemen’s armed forces had carried out their “first military operation” of the war — what Saree described as a barrage of ballistic missiles targeting “sensitive Israeli military sites” in southern Israel. The Israeli military confirmed it detected a missile launch from Yemen and intercepted the projectile. Sirens sounded in Beersheba and the surrounding area, including near Israel’s main nuclear research center at Dimona. Saree said the attacks “will continue until the declared objectives are achieved.”
The entry is a reversal. For 29 days the Houthis held back, a posture that US analysts attributed partly to an Iranian request to stay out. What changed is not publicly confirmed. What is confirmed is the warning that accompanied the entry: Houthi deputy information minister Mohammed Mansour told local media Saturday that “closing the Bab al-Mandab strait is among our options.” The Bab al-Mandab is the narrow passage between Yemen and the Horn of Africa — the southern gateway to the Red Sea and the Suez Canal. It is the chokepoint through which approximately 12% of global seaborne oil and 8% of LNG trade passes en route from the Gulf to Europe and North America.
The Houthis have done this before. From November 2023 to January 2025, the group attacked more than 100 merchant vessels in the Red Sea, sinking two ships and killing four sailors, before a ceasefire paused the campaign. Maersk, widely regarded as a barometer of global trade, said earlier this month it had paused future trans-Suez sailings through the Bab al-Mandab until further notice. The precedent is established. The capability is demonstrated. The question is whether Saturday’s entry is a signal or a commitment.
The timing is notable. The Houthis chose the one-month anniversary of the war’s opening to announce their entry, on the same morning the world’s attention was turning to what one month of this conflict has actually cost.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The Houthi entry is receiving significant coverage internationally for a reason that goes beyond the military dimension. Al Jazeera, which covers Yemen more closely than most outlets, is tracking the Bab al-Mandab threat as the central risk — not the missile that was intercepted over Beersheba. The calculation being made in international shipping press and economic analysis is this: Hormuz and Bab al-Mandab together are the two ends of the world’s energy superhighway. Hormuz controls what comes out of the Gulf. Bab al-Mandab controls what reaches Europe and North America through Suez. If both are closed or severely constrained simultaneously, the global rerouting around the Cape of Good Hope adds weeks to voyage times and hundreds of millions of dollars in shipping costs — costs that will arrive in grocery stores and fuel prices within months. Chatham House fellow Farea Al-Muslimi told the BBC: “It’s a nightmare. We already have a nightmare, and this would make it worse.”
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: On the one-month anniversary of the Iran war, Yemen’s Houthi rebels fired their first missiles at Israel and warned they may close the Bab al-Mandab strait — a second major global shipping chokepoint alongside the Strait of Hormuz. The Houthis have closed this route before, for fourteen months. The war that started with one chokepoint now threatens two. Hormuz controls the Gulf’s energy exports. Bab al-Mandab controls the route to Europe and North America through the Suez Canal. If both close, there is no good alternative. Ships reroute around the Cape of Good Hope — adding weeks to every voyage and costs that fall on consumers.
Sources: Al Jazeera (Qatar, state-funded/editorially independent — Saree statement, Al-Masirah announcement, Mansour Bab al-Mandab quote, Elmasry analysis, Houthi Red Sea history); Washington Post/AP (US/international wire — Houthi claim confirmed, Saree statement, one-month anniversary framing); CNBC (US — Houthi entry confirmed, Bab al-Mandab 12% oil, 8% LNG, Maersk pause); NPR (US — IDF intercepted missile, Beersheba sirens, Dimona area alert, Houthis confirmed entry)
2. TEN AMERICANS WOUNDED IN SAUDI ARABIA — THE ONE-MONTH LEDGER
Iran struck Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia overnight Friday, wounding at least ten US service members and damaging a refueler tanker aircraft. No service members were killed. At least two of the injured had shrapnel wounds described as not life-threatening. Several others were “impacted” in ways a US official declined to specify, according to CNN, which confirmed the attack through two separate US officials.
Prince Sultan Air Base, located outside Riyadh, is a shared installation — home to both Saudi and American forces. It has been a recurring target throughout the war. Friday’s strike was among the most consequential to directly hit American personnel since the conflict began.
The attack brings the one-month American casualty count into focus. Thirteen US service members have been killed since February 28. Ten more were wounded Friday night in Saudi Arabia. An additional refueling aircraft — a category of asset already under pressure as the US has fired through munitions at a rate that has alarmed the Senate Armed Services Committee — was damaged. Six US service members were also killed when a refueling aircraft crashed in western Iraq on March 13. The war that Trump declared won — “we’ve won this, because this war has been won,” he said Tuesday — is still wounding American soldiers on the soil of an allied nation.
The broader toll at one month: 1,937 Iranians killed by official count, with independent organizations estimating above 3,200. 1,116 Lebanese killed. 96 in Iraq. At least 30 civilians in Gulf Arab states, many of them migrant workers. And a man killed in Tel Aviv by Iranian cluster munitions Friday night — one of at least eight impact sites in the city overnight into Saturday, including a university.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The Prince Sultan strike is receiving significant attention in Gulf Arab press because it represents Iran successfully hitting a target inside Saudi Arabia that hosts American personnel — again. Gulf states that have been hosting US forces are navigating an increasingly uncomfortable position: they are targets of Iranian retaliation precisely because they are providing basing rights to the country conducting the war. That dynamic is not being acknowledged in American public statements about Gulf cooperation. Arab regional press is tracking it closely. The one-month casualty count, presented together, tells a story that individual daily dispatches can obscure: this war has killed or wounded Americans, Iranians, Lebanese, Iraqis, and Gulf civilians continuously for thirty days with no confirmed diplomatic resolution in sight.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: Iran wounded ten US service members at a base in Saudi Arabia overnight. That brings the American toll in one month to 13 killed and more than 300 wounded. A refueling aircraft was damaged — the same category of asset the US lost in Iraq on March 13 with six crew killed. Trump said Friday night the war “is not finished.” The war that began with a promise of swift, decisive results has lasted a month, expanded to Lebanon, and is now drawing in Yemen. Americans are being wounded on Saudi soil.
Sources: CNN (US — two US officials confirmed, 10 service members wounded, shrapnel injuries, refueler tanker damaged, Prince Sultan Air Base location); NPR (US — one-month anniversary ledger, overnight Tel Aviv strikes, eight impact sites, university struck, one killed two injured)
3. NO KINGS DAY — THE WORLD SAYS ENOUGH
On the one-month anniversary of a war that was not debated by Congress, not approved by allies, and not explained to the public before it began, millions of Americans took to the streets. In Paris, in London, in Berlin and Toronto and Sydney, people who are not American citizens chose to march under American slogans about American democracy — because they understand that what happens in Washington does not stay in Washington.
More than 3,000 demonstrations were registered across the United States on Saturday, organized by Indivisible and a coalition of progressive groups under the banner No Kings — the third iteration of a protest movement that began in June 2025. The first No Kings drew an estimated five million people. The second, in October, drew an estimated seven million. Organizers called Saturday’s third gathering the largest yet and said it could be the single largest day of domestic political protest in American history. Speakers at the flagship rally in Minnesota included Senator Bernie Sanders, Bruce Springsteen, Jane Fonda, and Joan Baez.
The protests are not only about the war. They draw together opposition to immigration enforcement tactics — including the shooting deaths of Renée Good, Keith Porter, and Alex Pretti by federal agents — and broader concerns about executive overreach. But the Iran war has become a gravitational center. Organizers explicitly described the movement as opposing “illegal war abroad” alongside “secret police at home.” In Philadelphia, demonstrators said they were “concerned about the human and financial costs of war overseas while Americans struggle at home.” Gas is $3.98 a gallon. Diesel is $5.37. The war and the economy are not separate conversations for the people in the streets.
The international dimension is significant. Events were held in Europe, Canada, Australia, and beyond. In Paris, crowds that have grown at each iteration returned to the streets — French residents and expats standing in front of French landmarks under American constitutional slogans, on the one-month anniversary of a war their government was not consulted about before it began.









🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The No Kings protests are receiving coverage in international press as something more than American domestic politics — they are being read as a referendum, conducted in the streets, on a war the American public was not asked about. European outlets are noting that the protests are growing larger with each iteration, and that the Iran war has added an explicitly foreign policy dimension to what began primarily as a domestic grievance movement. The image of millions of Americans marching against their own government’s war, on the war’s one-month anniversary, is being broadcast across the Arab world, Europe, and Asia. For populations whose governments have been unable to stop or even formally oppose the war through diplomatic channels, the American street is being watched as the remaining avenue of accountability. In Paris today, the people who came were not performing solidarity. They were registering a verdict.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: Millions of Americans marched today against a war that was not debated, not declared, and not explained. They marched alongside people in Paris, London, Berlin, Toronto, and Sydney — allies whose governments were not consulted before Operation Epic Fury began and who have watched their energy prices, food prices, and economic forecasts deteriorate for thirty days as a result. The protests are the largest sustained domestic opposition movement in modern American history. They are happening on the one-month anniversary of a war that Trump said Friday night “is not finished.” The American public is not waiting for it to be finished to say what they think of it.
Sources: NPR (US — 3,000+ protests, Indivisible organizers, Minnesota flagship, Sanders/Springsteen/Fonda/Baez, “illegal war abroad” quote); Democracy Now! (US — Leah Greenberg of Indivisible quote, millions expected, every state and county); Time (US — potentially largest day of protest in US history, October drew millions, makeup shifting toward broader electorate); WHYY Philadelphia (US — Philadelphia demonstrators “human and financial costs of war,” march route confirmed)
4. TRUMP AT ONE MONTH — “IT’S NOT FINISHED”
On Friday night, speaking at the Future Investment Initiative summit in Miami Beach, Donald Trump said the following about the war he started thirty days ago: “It’s not finished yet. I’m not saying it’s sort of finished, but it’s not finished. It’s got to be finished.”
The statement arrived after a month of claims that it effectively already was. Trump declared victory from the Oval Office on multiple occasions. On Tuesday he said: “You know, I don’t like to say this — we’ve won this, because this war has been won.” On the same day his Secretary of State was telling G7 allies in a closed room that the war would last another two to four weeks. The gap between what has been said publicly and what has been confirmed in private or by the battlefield has been a defining feature of this war’s first month.
The stated objectives have shifted. Administration officials have at various points cited: preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, destroying Iran’s missile and military capabilities, securing Iran’s natural resources, and achieving regime change. On Friday, Rubio offered the clearest formulation yet: “We are going to basically destroy their ability to make missiles and drones in their factories. And we’re going to substantially — and I mean dramatically — reduce the number of missile launchers so that they cannot hide behind these things to build a nuclear weapon and threaten the world.” Regime change has been quietly retired as a public objective. German Chancellor Merz said Friday he didn’t think the war would produce it.
What one month has actually produced: Iran’s leadership structure has been severely disrupted but not collapsed. A new supreme leader — Mojtaba Khamenei, son of the assassinated Ali Khamenei — was confirmed on March 9 under IRGC pressure. Hardline IRGC-era figures are filling command positions around him. The Soufan Center assesses they will demand major US concessions before agreeing to end the war. The Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed. The Houthis have now entered the conflict. Ten Americans were wounded in Saudi Arabia overnight. And the war, in Trump’s own words, is not finished.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The international press is tracking the one-month mark with a particular focus on the gap between stated American objectives and measurable outcomes. The regime change objective — which several administration officials cited in the war’s first days — has been quietly dropped without acknowledgment. The nuclear objective, as the IAEA’s director general has repeatedly noted, cannot be fully achieved by military force alone: enrichment knowledge and dispersed materials survive strikes. The missile degradation objective is real but contested, as War on the Rocks and others have noted that reduced launch rates may reflect deliberate pacing as much as depletion. What is not contested is this: thirty days in, Iran is still launching missiles, the Strait of Hormuz is still closed, and a new front has just opened from Yemen.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: Trump said Friday the war is “not finished.” On Tuesday he said it was won. His Secretary of State told allies privately it has two to four more weeks to run. The stated objectives have shifted at least four times in thirty days. Hardline figures are consolidating control inside Iran — analysts say they will demand major concessions. The Houthis entered the war this morning. The Strait of Hormuz is still closed. Ten Americans were wounded last night. One month in, the war has not achieved its publicly stated objectives. That is not an editorial position. It is a description of where things stand.
Sources: CNN (US — Trump FII Miami quote “it’s not finished,” Trump Tuesday Oval Office “we’ve won this,” USS George H.W. Bush deployment); NPR (US — Rubio Friday quote on destroying missile and drone factories, “ahead of schedule”); Asharq Al-Awsat (international — Merz regime change “unlikely”); SOF News/Soufan Center via Intelbrief (US — IRGC hardliners filling positions, will demand major concessions)
5. 93,000 HOMES — IRAN’S CIVILIAN TOLL AT MONTH ONE
The Iranian Red Crescent announced Saturday that US-Israeli strikes have damaged more than 93,000 civilian housing units across Iran since February 28. The figure is the first comprehensive civilian infrastructure count of the war from an internationally recognized humanitarian organization — and it lands on the conflict’s one-month anniversary.
The number requires context. The Iranian Red Crescent is not an independent actor — it operates within the Iranian state and its figures cannot be independently verified. But it is a recognized component of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, and its reporting carries the institutional weight of that affiliation. HRANA, the US-based human rights organization that has maintained independent casualty counts throughout the war, has consistently reported higher figures than Iranian government sources on deaths — currently above 3,200 killed versus the government’s 1,937. On infrastructure damage, there is no comparable independent count to check against.
What is independently confirmed: US-Israeli strikes have hit targets in 30 of Iran’s 31 provinces, according to CENTCOM’s own public statements. Satellite imagery has shown extensive damage to residential neighborhoods in Tehran, Tabriz, Isfahan, and other cities. The UN launched an $80 million humanitarian appeal Friday specifically for refugees inside Iran — noting that 4.5 million Afghans and hundreds of thousands of Iraqis living in Iran are now caught in a conflict not of their making. Iranian diaspora websites have been receiving footage, filmed by residents circumventing the internet blackout now exceeding 624 hours, showing strikes on steel and cement factories across southern and central Iran.
The 93,000 housing units figure, if even partially accurate, represents a displacement and shelter crisis that has received almost no coverage in the American press. Thirty days of strikes across 30 provinces, in a country of 87 million people, produces consequences that extend far beyond military targets.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The 93,000 figure is being reported across Arab and international humanitarian press as significant even with its sourcing caveats, because it forces a comparison that American coverage has largely avoided. The UN’s own agencies, including UNHCR and UN Women, have been reporting displacement and humanitarian need inside Iran for weeks. 620,000 women and girls displaced in Lebanon. Refugees inside Iran losing jobs and shelter. Migrant workers killed in Gulf states. The civilian geography of this war’s damage is vast, and the 93,000 homes figure — whatever its precise accuracy — is the first attempt by any organization to put a single number on the residential scale of it. International humanitarian organizations are already planning for a post-war reconstruction phase that the war’s architects have not publicly discussed.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: Iran’s Red Crescent says 93,000 homes have been damaged in thirty days of US-Israeli strikes across 30 of Iran’s 31 provinces. The figure comes from an organization that operates within the Iranian state and cannot be independently verified — but it is the first comprehensive civilian infrastructure count of the war, and it arrives as the UN has launched an $80 million emergency appeal for refugees trapped inside Iran. 4.5 million Afghans live in Iran. Hundreds of thousands of Iraqis. They did not choose this war either. The American coverage of this war has focused, understandably, on the military and diplomatic picture. The civilian picture inside Iran is only beginning to come into view.
Sources: Al Jazeera (Qatar, state-funded/editorially independent — Iranian Red Crescent 93,000 civilian units damaged figure); CNN (US — UN $80 million humanitarian appeal for refugees in Iran, 4.5 million Afghans, Iraqi refugees; internet blackout, diaspora footage of factory strikes); NPR (US — overnight Tel Aviv strikes, eight impact sites, university struck)
6. THE REGIME THAT WASN’T SUPPOSED TO SURVIVE
The theory behind Operation Epic Fury included, at various points, the idea that killing Iran’s supreme leader and senior leadership would trigger regime collapse or at least produce a government more willing to negotiate. One month in, the opposite appears to have happened.
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has used the war to consolidate control over the Iranian state in ways that would have been difficult to achieve in peacetime. The evidence is extensive and sourced from multiple directions. US intelligence assessed as early as mid-March, according to the Washington Post, that Iran’s regime would emerge “weakened but more hard-line, backed by the powerful IRGC.” That assessment has proven accurate.
The selection of Mojtaba Khamenei as supreme leader on March 8 was itself an IRGC operation. Reuters, sourcing five senior Iranian officials, reported that the IRGC “bludgeoned aside” the concerns of pragmatists and forced the choice through a compressed, partly virtual vote — some Assembly of Experts members were not even informed the meeting was taking place. The IRGC’s argument was straightforward: wartime required speed and defiance, not deliberation. Mojtaba, who lacks the religious credentials normally required of a supreme leader, was chosen for his IRGC ties and his role as gatekeeper to his father’s office. The Soufan Center’s analysis is direct: hardliners “now monopolize the power structure.”
The personnel changes since then have reinforced the pattern. Mohsen Reza’i — the IRGC commander throughout the entire Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s and the architect of the “war until victory” doctrine against Saddam Hussein — has been appointed Mojtaba’s military advisor. Mohammad Zolghadr, another Iran-Iraq war IRGC veteran described by historian Shahram Kholdi as “one of the last remnants of the radical revolutionaries,” was imposed on President Pezeshkian as the new chief of the Supreme National Security Council — against Pezeshkian’s wishes, according to Iran International. Elected President Pezeshkian, a reformist, has been reduced to a figurehead: when he apologized to Gulf states for Iranian attacks early in the war, the IRGC overrode him publicly within hours and forced him to walk it back.
The Stimson Center’s assessment, published this week, puts the strategic consequence plainly: “These leaders — some pulled out of retirement — are more hardline, anti-US, and anti-Israel than those they replaced.” The decapitation strategy has not produced a more pliant Iran. It has produced a more IRGC-dominated one. Trump said on March 24 that the US had achieved regime change because “the leaders are all different.” They are different. They are harder.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The consolidation of IRGC power inside Iran is being covered in depth by Foreign Affairs, the Soufan Center, Just Security, Stimson, and Iran International — outlets specializing in exactly this kind of structural analysis. The picture they present is consistent: the war has not weakened the hardline faction. It has eliminated the pragmatists and moderates who might have been able to cut a deal, while empowering precisely the figures who built their careers on resistance to the United States. This is the context behind Rubio’s admission at the G7 that there is “unclarity about who is actually making decisions in Tehran.” The Foreign Ministry under Araghchi says there are no negotiations. The IRGC operates independently. Parliament speaker Qalibaf — whom US officials identify as a potential interlocutor — is himself an IRGC veteran whose hardline credentials span four decades. Any agreement reached through Pakistan would need to be honored by the people who actually hold power. Those people chose “war until victory” the last time Iran fought a long war — against Iraq, for eight years.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The war was supposed to produce a more compliant Iran. US intelligence now assesses it has produced a more hardline one. The IRGC forced through the selection of the new supreme leader, overrode the elected president, and appointed Iran-Iraq war veterans to key national security positions. The men now running Iran built the doctrine of fighting the United States until victory. Rubio admitted at the G7 he doesn’t know who is making decisions in Tehran. The Soufan Center says those decisions are now being made by people who will demand major US concessions before agreeing to end the war. This is who Trump needs to make a deal with.
Sources: Washington Post (US — US intelligence assessment, “weakened but more hard-line, backed by IRGC”); Soufan Center/Intelbrief (US — hardliners monopolize power structure, Reza’i appointment as Mojtaba’s military advisor, Qalibaf as US interlocutor with caveats, pragmatists “largely powerless”); Times of Israel/Reuters (international wire — IRGC “bludgeoned aside” pragmatists, five senior Iranian sources, assembly vote details, Mojtaba’s IRGC ties); Iran International (international — Zolghadr appointment imposed on Pezeshkian, IRGC pressured president, Kholdi historian quote); Just Security (US — Pezeshkian apology overridden by IRGC, reduced to figurehead); Foreign Affairs (US — hardliners “triumphant,” will “maintain aggressive posture toward Israel and US”); Stimson Center (US — new leaders “more hardline, anti-US, and anti-Israel than those they replaced,” Trump “regime change” quote March 24)
WATCH LIST — UPDATED DAY 29 SATURDAY
🔴 HOUTHIS — Entered war Day 29. Missile at Israel intercepted. Bab al-Mandab closure explicitly threatened. Deputy info minister: “among our options.” Houthis closed this route for 14 months during Gaza war. Watch for follow-up strikes and shipping announcements.
🔴 NUCLEAR ESCALATION — Arak heavy water complex and Ardakan yellowcake plant struck Friday. Iran threatened “heavy” retaliation. IRGC called for regional evacuations. Watch for Iranian response — may come as large coordinated strike.
🔴 ENERGY PLANT STRIKE PAUSE — April 6, 8 PM ET deadline. Ten days remaining. Rubio told G7 two to four more weeks. Pakistan talks imminent. Hardliners consolidating — deal harder to reach and harder to hold.
🔴 PRINCE SULTAN — 10 US troops wounded overnight. Refueler damaged. Iran continues striking bases hosting American personnel. KIA: 13. Wounded: 300+.
🔴 Lebanon ground war — Day 12. Israel moving thousands more troops north. 1,116 Lebanese dead. No end date.
🟡 IRAN HARDLINERS — IRGC monopolizes power structure. Reza’i (Iran-Iraq war commander) appointed Mojtaba’s military advisor. Zolghadr imposed on Pezeshkian. Pezeshkian reduced to figurehead. US intelligence: “weakened but more hard-line.” Stimson: new leaders “more hardline, anti-US, anti-Israel than those they replaced.” Any ceasefire must hold through these figures.
🟡 BAB AL-MANDAB — Houthi closure threatened but not executed. Maersk already paused trans-Suez sailings. USS Gerald R. Ford redeployment path goes through Red Sea. Two simultaneous chokepoints would be unprecedented disruption.
🟡 Pakistan talks — Witkoff “meetings this week.” Rubio waiting on Iranian representation. Wang Yi urged peace via Pakistan FM. Hardliners in Tehran will demand major concessions.
🟡 Iran civilian toll — 93,000 housing units damaged (Red Crescent). UN $80M refugee appeal. 624+ hour internet blackout.
🟡 US missile stockpile — 535 Tomahawks in first 16 days (17% of supply). Nearly half ATACMS/PrSM inventory expended. USS George H.W. Bush deploying.
🟡 No Kings — Millions in streets across US and internationally on war’s one-month anniversary. Third and largest iteration. International dimension growing.
🟡 Global economy — Brent $112.57. S&P fifth losing week. Philippines 40 days fuel. Finland recession warning. Houthi entry adds second chokepoint risk.
🟡 Gaza “ceasefire” — 691 killed since October. 142 attacks in 164 days. Still happening.
🟡 Mojtaba Khamenei — Still publicly silent. One month in. May be wounded per Iranian state television reference.
🟡 Bushehr — Rosatom “worst-case scenario.” IAEA maximum restraint. Russia reducing staff.
“Whenever the people are well informed, they can be trusted with their own government.” — Thomas Jefferson, 1789
ROTWR DAY 29 SATURDAY — CHEATSHEET (SOURCE LINKS ONLY)
Story 1 — ONE MONTH IN — AND THE HOUTHIS JUST ENTERED
- Al Jazeera (Saree statement, Al-Masirah, Mansour Bab al-Mandab quote, Elmasry analysis, Houthi Red Sea history): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/28/yemens-houthis-claim-responsibility-for-a-missile-attack-on-israel-2
- Washington Post/AP (Houthi claim confirmed, Saree statement): https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2026/03/28/iran-us-israel-trump-lebanon-march-28-2026/fadadc42-2a7a-11f1-a0f2-3ba4c9fe08ac_story.html
- CNBC (Houthi entry confirmed, Bab al-Mandab figures, Maersk pause): https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/28/yemens-houthis-launch-israel-strike-the-first-of-the-iran-war.html
- NPR (IDF intercepted missile, Beersheba sirens, Dimona area): https://www.npr.org/2026/03/28/nx-s1-5764720/iran-war-one-month
Story 2 — TEN AMERICANS WOUNDED IN SAUDI ARABIA
- CNN (two US officials confirmed, 10 wounded, shrapnel, refueler damaged, Prince Sultan location): https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/28/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump
- NPR (one-month ledger, overnight Tel Aviv strikes, eight impact sites, university, one killed): https://www.npr.org/2026/03/28/nx-s1-5764720/iran-war-one-month
Story 3 — NO KINGS DAY
- NPR (3,000+ protests, Indivisible, Minnesota flagship, speakers, “illegal war abroad” quote): https://www.npr.org/2026/03/28/nx-s1-5763702/no-kings-saturday-protests
- Democracy Now! (Leah Greenberg of Indivisible quote, millions expected, every state and county): https://www.democracynow.org/2026/3/27/no_kings_day_march_28
- Time (potentially largest protest in US history, October millions, electorate shift): https://time.com/article/2026/03/24/no-kings-protests-march-28-biggest-anti-trump-crowds-ever/
- WHYY Philadelphia (Philadelphia demonstrators “human and financial costs of war”): https://whyy.org/articles/philadelphia-no-kings-protest-2026-trump/
Story 4 — TRUMP AT ONE MONTH
- CNN (Trump FII Miami “it’s not finished,” Trump Tuesday “we’ve won this,” USS George H.W. Bush): https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/28/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump
- NPR (Rubio “destroy their ability to make missiles and drones,” “ahead of schedule”): https://www.npr.org/2026/03/28/nx-s1-5764720/iran-war-one-month
- Asharq Al-Awsat (Merz regime change “unlikely”): https://english.aawsat.com/world/5256037-israel-army-confirms-struck-two-nuclear-sites-iran
- SOF News/Soufan Center via Intelbrief (IRGC hardliners filling positions, will demand major concessions): https://sof.news/middle-east/iran-war-weekly-update-28-mar-2026/
Story 5 — 93,000 HOMES
- Al Jazeera (Iranian Red Crescent 93,000 civilian housing units figure): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2026/3/28/iran-war-live-trump-again-slams-natos-lack-of-support-for-war-on-tehran
- CNN (UN $80M humanitarian appeal, 4.5 million Afghans, Iraqi refugees, diaspora footage, internet blackout): https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/27/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump
- NPR (overnight Tel Aviv strikes, eight impact sites): https://www.npr.org/2026/03/28/nx-s1-5764720/iran-war-one-month
Story 6 — THE REGIME THAT WASN’T SUPPOSED TO SURVIVE
- Washington Post (US intelligence “weakened but more hard-line, backed by IRGC”): https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2026/03/16/iran-regime-intelligence-irgc-war/
- Soufan Center/Intelbrief (hardliners monopolize power, Reza’i appointment, Qalibaf caveats, pragmatists powerless): https://thesoufancenter.org/intelbrief-2026-march-26/
- Times of Israel/Reuters (IRGC “bludgeoned aside” pragmatists, five Iranian sources, assembly vote): https://www.timesofisrael.com/iranian-revolutionary-guards-orchestrated-selection-of-new-supreme-leader-sources/
- Iran International (Zolghadr imposed on Pezeshkian, IRGC pressured president, Kholdi quote): https://www.iranintl.com/en/202603250024
- Just Security (Pezeshkian apology overridden by IRGC, figurehead): https://www.justsecurity.org/133945/entrenchment-iran-security-state/
- Foreign Affairs (hardliners “triumphant,” aggressive posture toward US and Israel): https://www.foreignaffairs.com/iran/new-khamenei
- Stimson Center (new leaders “more hardline, anti-US, anti-Israel,” Trump “regime change” quote): https://www.stimson.org/2026/irans-not-so-new-leaders-may-strike-a-hard-bargain/


