The Rest of the World Report | Thursday, March 26, 2026 — Morning Edition
Day 27 | Iran War & Beyond
Weekday morning and evening editions. Saturdays once. Sundays once. All sources labeled. Translator notes on every story.
WAR DAY 27 | NUMBERS AT PUBLICATION
🇮🇷 Iran: 1,750+ killed (IRNA/Iran’s IMO representative, Day 27 upgrade from frozen 1,500). HRANA: 3,200+ including 214+ children. 82,000+ civilian structures damaged or destroyed (Iranian Red Crescent). Full toll unknown.
🇱🇧 Lebanon: 1,072 killed (Lebanese Health Ministry, updated Day 27). 1,200,000+ displaced (UN). Ground incursions ongoing in multiple towns. Third IDF soldier killed in ground operation overnight.
🇮🇱 Israel: Five Iranian missile salvos Thursday. Cluster munition struck Kafr Qasim. Two people killed in Abu Dhabi by debris from intercepted ballistic missile.
🇮🇶 Iraq: US chargé d’affaires summoned twice in 24 hours. UN Security Council complaint filed. PMF authorised to respond.
🇺🇸 US: 13 KIA / 290 wounded. 82nd Airborne deployment imminent. Two Marine Expeditionary Units now in region — amphibious assault-capable forces.
🛢️ Brent crude: $106.30 (+$4.13, +4.04%) as of 11:16 EST — surging on Kharg Island intelligence, expiring deadline, and Saudi export news. Up from $102 close Wednesday.
💰 WTI: $93.67 (+$3.35, +3.71%)
💰 US gas: $3.98/gallon (AAA) — 25th consecutive daily increase. Diesel: $5.37/gallon.
💰 Markets: Dow under pressure as oil spike renews inflation fears. Brent up 61% since February 28.
🌐 Iran internet blackout: 594+ hours (NetBlocks, estimated).
🌐 BREAKING: Saudi oil exports to China and India set to fall in April — second consecutive monthly decline as Yanbu bypass pipeline cannot cover Hormuz volumes (OilPrice.com).
1. THE WINDOW CLOSES SATURDAY
The five days Donald Trump bought on Monday morning are running out. Trump posted his power plant strike postponement to Truth Social at approximately 11:30 AM UTC on Monday March 23 — which means the five-day window closes at approximately 11:30 AM UTC on Saturday March 28 (6:30 AM EST). Today is Day 3 of 5. There is no deal. There are no confirmed talks. Iran has rejected the 15-point plan, issued five counter-conditions, and continued striking Israel and Gulf states throughout. The question the world is asking this morning: what happens Saturday when Trump’s word runs out?
The diplomatic picture is fractured in ways that make resolution before Saturday difficult to imagine. Iranian Foreign Minister Araghchi told state media this week that Washington’s shift in tone — having previously demanded Tehran’s “unconditional surrender” — amounts to an acknowledgment of failure. Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf called the ceasefire plan “fakenews.” The White House insists talks are “proceeding apace.” The gap between those two descriptions is not a matter of framing. It is a description of two different realities.
A new and significant diplomatic development emerged overnight. Pakistan intervened to prevent Israel from assassinating both Araghchi and Qalibaf. According to a Pakistani official who spoke to Reuters, Israel had targeting coordinates for both men and intended to eliminate them. Pakistan told Washington: “If they are killed, there is no one left to talk to.” The US told Israel to stand down. That intervention reveals how precarious the diplomatic channel is — the two most senior Iranian officials still willing to engage with outside mediators were, until Pakistan intervened, on an Israeli target list. It also confirms Pakistan’s indispensable and underreported role as the sole functioning channel between Washington and Tehran.
The Islamabad talks that mediators described as possible this week have not materialised. Pakistani Prime Minister Sharif has confirmed his country is willing to host negotiations. Egypt and Pakistan have both transmitted the 15-point plan and received Iran’s counter. But Iran’s five conditions — including reparations and international recognition of its sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz — remain structurally incompatible with the US plan. No convergence path has been identified by any mediating party.
What Trump does on Saturday matters beyond the immediate military question. His pattern with deadlines — the 48-hour Hormuz ultimatum extended by five days, the Liberation Day tariff pause, the Venezuela warning before Maduro’s capture — has established a recognisable playbook: maximum pressure followed by a last-minute reversal declared as a triumph. But each reversal without resolution has cost him credibility with the Iranians, who have now been attacked twice by the US during active diplomatic negotiations. Iranian officials have said explicitly: “We have a very catastrophic experience with US diplomacy.” Another extension without progress buys time. It does not buy trust.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The Pakistan assassination-prevention story — Pakistan intervening with Washington to pull Israel off targeting coordinates for Iran’s two most senior diplomatic interlocutors — is not receiving prominent treatment in American coverage. In Arab and South Asian press it is being treated as a near-miss with catastrophic consequences: had Israel proceeded, the sole remaining channel between Tehran and Washington would have been severed by an Israeli strike during active mediation. Al Jazeera has framed the intervention as confirmation that the war is running on multiple simultaneous escalation tracks, any one of which could produce an irreversible outcome before diplomacy catches up. The broader question that international observers are raising — and that American coverage has not fully addressed — is whether Trump’s pattern of deadline extensions is being read in Tehran not as diplomacy but as a sequence of market interventions with military posturing attached. Iran has said as much explicitly. Iran’s Foreign Ministry described the five-day pause as designed to “reduce energy prices and buy time.” That framing, from the Iranian government itself, is the international story. The US framing — “productive conversations” — is the domestic one.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The five-day window Trump declared on Monday at 11:30 AM UTC expires Saturday March 28 at approximately 11:30 AM UTC (6:30 AM EST). There is no deal. Pakistan just prevented Israel from killing Iran’s foreign minister and parliament speaker — the only senior Iranian officials engaging with mediators. The White House says talks are ongoing. Iran says there are no talks. Brent crude is at $106 this morning. Saturday morning is the most consequential deadline of the war so far.
Sources: CNN live blog Day 27 (US — deadline status, Islamabad talks, White House position); Times of Israel (Israel — Pakistan/assassination prevention, Reuters sourcing, Pakistani official quote); Reuters (international wire — Araghchi targeting coordinates, Pakistan intervention, US told Israel to stand down); Al Jazeera (Qatar, state-funded/editorially independent — Araghchi “acknowledgment of failure,” Qalibaf “fakenews”); PBS NewsHour/AP (US — five-day timeline, Iran counter-conditions); NPR (US — Trump deadline pattern, “catastrophic experience” Baghaei quote)
2. KHARG ISLAND: THE NEXT DECISION
Iran is laying traps. Troops are moving. Air defences are being repositioned. The United States is watching all of it in near-real-time.
Multiple people familiar with US intelligence reporting confirmed to CNN overnight that Iran has been actively fortifying Kharg Island in preparation for a possible American operation to seize it. The island — a coral outcrop roughly a third the size of Manhattan, 25 kilometres off Iran’s coast — processes 90% of Iran’s crude oil exports. It is connected by pipeline to Iran’s largest oil fields. The CIA described it in 1984 as “the most vital facility in Iran’s oil system.” That assessment has not changed. The Trump administration struck Kharg’s military infrastructure on March 13, destroying air defences, naval mine storage, and missile bunkers. Oil infrastructure was spared, Trump said, “for reasons of decency.” That decency has a deadline attached to it.
Treasury Secretary Bessent said last week that Kharg Island could become a “US asset,” adding that “all options are on the table” including ground troops. Two Marine Expeditionary Units — forces specifically trained and equipped for amphibious landings, raids, and assault missions — have deployed to the region. They arrived on the amphibious warships, aviation assets, and landing craft that would be required for a Kharg operation. Approximately 1,000 soldiers from the 82nd Airborne are also deploying imminently. The Soufan Center, in a published analysis, noted that Trump’s five-day pause on power plant strikes may have been designed to buy time for those forces to get into position — not for diplomacy.
The risks are not theoretical. Iran has layered Kharg’s defences with HAWK surface-to-air missiles, Oerlikon anti-aircraft guns, and — according to intelligence reporting — newly positioned MANPADs, the shoulder-fired missiles that are among the most dangerous threats to low-flying aircraft and helicopter operations. Iran has also reportedly laid physical traps in areas that could be used for a ground invasion. A retired American admiral described the island as defended by adversaries who are “clever and ruthless.” Gulf allies — who would bear the consequences of Iranian retaliation — are privately urging the US against the operation. Their concern: seizing Kharg would trigger Iranian strikes on Gulf energy infrastructure and potentially drag regional countries into a war they have carefully tried to stay out of.
The Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid has publicly called for destroying Kharg’s oil terminals, saying it would “cripple Iran’s economy and topple the regime.” That position is not the current US position. But the distinction between seizing Kharg’s military infrastructure and its oil infrastructure may not survive contact with Iranian resistance.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: Kharg Island is receiving substantially more attention in international energy, military, and political press than in US coverage, where it is primarily framed as a “possible option.” Reuters and Bloomberg are reporting the Marine deployments and Iranian fortification together as interconnected developments, not as separate stories. The Gulf states’ private opposition — confirmed by a senior Gulf official speaking to PBS/AP — is being noted in regional Arab press with acute anxiety: Iranian retaliation for an island seizure would almost certainly target Gulf energy infrastructure, ports, and the civilian populations of countries that have carefully tried to stay out of this war. That consequence is not theoretical. Iran has said explicitly that any attack on its coasts or islands triggers mining of all Gulf sea lanes.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: Iran is fortifying Kharg Island right now because it expects the US to try to take it. The US Treasury Secretary has said it could become a “US asset.” Two amphibious Marine units are in the region. The island handles 90% of Iran’s oil exports. Taking it would be the largest American ground operation in the Middle East since the Iraq invasion. Gulf allies are privately opposed. Iran has laid traps. If it goes wrong, American casualties could be severe. If it goes right, Iran loses its economic lifeline and the war enters a new phase with no visible end.
Sources: CNN Politics (US — Iran fortifying Kharg, multiple intelligence sources, MANPADs, traps, Marine deployments); Newsweek (US — Bessent “US asset,” all options including ground troops); PBS NewsHour/AP (US — MEU deployment, amphibious assault capability, Soufan Center analysis); CNN/Stavridis (US — “clever and ruthless,” HAWK missiles, Oerlikon guns, degraded defences); Wikipedia/2026 Kharg Island attack (confirmed March 13 strikes, 90 military targets, oil infrastructure spared); Times of Israel (Israel — Lapid quote, destroy oil terminals, cripple Iran’s economy)
3. LEBANON: THE THIRD WEEK OF A WAR NOBODY IS CALLING A WAR
Staff Sergeant Ori Greenberg, 21 years old, of the Golani Brigade’s Reconnaissance Unit, from Petah Tikva, was killed in southern Lebanon overnight. He is the third Israeli soldier to die in the renewed ground operation against Hezbollah. He was killed during an exchange of fire with Hezbollah operatives near Khiam at approximately 2am. The IDF says its soldiers killed several Hezbollah fighters in the same engagement. Another soldier was lightly wounded.
Greenberg’s death comes as the Lebanon operation deepens with no diplomatic brake visible. The Israeli army chief has called it a “prolonged operation.” Six of seven bridges over the Litani River have been struck. Ground troops have entered and are operating in Kfar Kila, Houla, Kfar Shouba, Yaroun, and Khiam. Iran fired five missile salvos at Israel overnight. A cluster munition struck the Arab-Israeli city of Kafr Qasim, lightly injuring two. Hezbollah mortars wounded four IDF soldiers in a separate incident in Lebanon, one seriously. Lebanon’s Health Ministry updated the death toll to 1,072 since the offensive escalated on March 2.
The Lebanese government has been trying to navigate an impossible position. Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said this week that Lebanon “did not adopt the support decisions for Gaza and Iran, but was forced to bear their consequences.” He called for restoring decision-making authority on war and peace exclusively to the Lebanese state. Lebanese President Aoun has been quietly promoting a negotiation channel, attempting to persuade Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri to play a central role. Berri has said negotiations with Israel are not possible at this stage.
The diplomatic picture from the Lebanese side is further complicated by a dramatic domestic rupture. The Lebanese government declared Iran’s ambassador persona non grata and ordered him to leave by Sunday. Lebanese authorities have banned Iranian flights from landing, citing fears they carry weapons or funding for Hezbollah. Some Lebanese officials have publicly accused Tehran of dragging Lebanon into a war it did not choose.
Israel’s stated objective — a security zone to the Litani River — and Finance Minister Smotrich’s call for formal annexation remain on the table simultaneously, representing two different visions of what the operation is for. UN Secretary-General Guterres said this week that Lebanon “must not become the next Gaza.” Whether Israel’s military and political leadership agrees with that constraint is not established.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The killing of a third Israeli soldier in Lebanon is significant because the IDF’s own army chief has described this as a “prolonged operation” with no stated end date — meaning this is not a raid or a limited incursion but a sustained ground campaign. Al Jazeera is covering the Lebanon war as a distinct, parallel conflict with its own logic and trajectory, not as a footnote to the Iran war. The Lebanon declaration of Iran’s ambassador persona non grata is a significant fracture that the story body documents on primary sourcing: a government formally distancing itself from the patron whose decisions dragged it into a war it says it did not choose. Lebanese Prime Minister Salam said so explicitly. That rupture between Beirut and Tehran — confirmed, sourced, on the record — is the international story American coverage is underweighting.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: A 21-year-old Israeli soldier was killed in Lebanon overnight. He is the third to die in a ground operation that the Israeli army chief describes as “prolonged” and that has no stated end date. 1,072 people have been killed in Lebanon in less than four weeks. 1.2 million are displaced — one in five Lebanese. The Lebanese government has expelled Iran’s ambassador. Israel is operating inside Lebanese towns. One of its cabinet ministers is calling for annexation. The US is backing the operation. This is a war.
Sources: Times of Israel (Israel — Greenberg killed, Golani Brigade, Khiam, 2am engagement, several Hezbollah killed); Al Jazeera (Qatar, state-funded/editorially independent — 1,072 killed, Lebanon Health Ministry, five missile salvos, Kafr Qasim cluster munition); Wikipedia/2026 Lebanon war (ground incursion towns, bridge strikes, IDF army chief “prolonged operation”); Alma Research Center (Israel — Hezbollah mortar, four IDF wounded including one seriously); Al Jazeera/PBS (Lebanon expelled Iranian ambassador, Iranian flights banned); NPR (US — Salam “forced to bear consequences,” Aoun negotiation channel, Berri position)
4. THE WAR AT HOME: CONGRESS SAYS IT DOESN’T KNOW WHAT THIS WAR IS FOR
On Wednesday, Republican members of the House Armed Services Committee walked out of a classified Pentagon briefing on the Iran war and said, on the record, that they don’t know what the war is for. That is not a Democratic talking point. That is the Republican chairman of the relevant committee, and Republican members, describing what they were told in a room where classified information can be disclosed.
House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mike Rogers — a Republican from Alabama who chairs the body responsible for defence oversight — told reporters after the briefing: “We want to know more about what’s going on, what the options are, and why they’re being considered. We’re just not getting enough on those questions.” He confirmed the Pentagon did not answer questions about the additional 3,000 troops and 2,000+ Marines deploying. He said it was “one in a series” of inadequate briefings and described “frustration on both sides of the aisle.”
Rep. Nancy Mace, a Republican from South Carolina, posted on X immediately after leaving the room: “Just walked out of a House Armed Services briefing on Iran. Let me repeat: I will not support troops on the ground in Iran, even more so after this briefing.” She said she felt “misled” and that officials “didn’t have a lot of answers.” Then the most significant statement from any member of Congress since the war began: “The justifications presented to the American public for the war in Iran were not the same military objectives we were briefed on today in the House Armed Services Committee. This gap is deeply troubling.” She added that she would not vote for additional war funding right now, and suggested the conflict is about oil. She called on Senator Lindsey Graham — who has publicly advocated for seizing Kharg Island — to be “removed from the Situation Room.”
NBC News separately confirmed through sources that much of the private frustration centred on ground troops. A “red line” has emerged among Republicans who currently support the war: boots on the ground in Iran. “That’s the time that they’re going to abandon the effort,” one source told NBC.
The briefing’s significance extends beyond congressional theatre. The administration is preparing a supplemental war funding request — a bill that will ask Congress to write a cheque for a war whose objectives Rogers and Mace say have not been clearly explained to the people being asked to pay for it. Several Republicans have said they will refuse to support additional war funding without a clear White House strategy.
The public numbers reinforce the congressional mood. A Pew Research poll conducted March 16-22 found 59% of Americans say the US made the wrong decision using military force in Iran. A Quinnipiac poll found 54% of registered voters oppose military action — with 64% of independents and 92% of Democrats opposed. Even among Republicans, 52% would oppose sending ground troops. Trump’s approval on handling the military action: 37% approve, 61% disapprove.
The domestic economic cost is becoming concrete. The US Postal Service announced this week that it will charge an 8% fuel surcharge on packages beginning April 26 — the first such surcharge in USPS history. Gas is $3.98 a gallon, up $1 in four weeks. Diesel is $5.37, up $1.61. Fertiliser prices are spiking ahead of spring planting season. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins, asked about the impact on farmers, blamed Joe Biden.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The Mace statement deserves to be read precisely: a Republican member of Congress, just out of a classified briefing, said on the record that the public justification for this war and the classified military objectives are different things. That is not an accusation from the opposition. That is a member of the president’s own party, with security clearance, describing a gap between what the American public has been told and what Congress was told in a room where truth is supposed to be disclosed. The international significance is that this statement, sitting alongside the documented Oman breakthrough the morning of the war, the pre-positioned oil futures, and the administration’s inability to produce the promised “imminent threat” evidence, forms a factual record. ROTWR is not drawing conclusions beyond that record. The record is the story.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: A Republican congresswoman just said, on the record, after a classified briefing, that what the public was told about why this war started is not what Congress was told in the classified session. The Republican chairman of the House Armed Services Committee says he doesn’t know the war’s objectives or end date. A majority of Americans oppose the war. Ground troops are the Republican red line. A supplemental funding bill is coming. Congress is being asked to pay for a war its own members say they can’t explain.
Sources: CNN Politics (US — Rogers quotes, Mace “misled,” “most contentious” Higgins, bipartisan frustration, supplemental request); The Hill (US — Mace full X post, Mace vs Graham, “over oil” suggestion, Graham “removed from Situation Room”); NBC News (US — ground troops red line, “abandon the effort,” classified briefing sources); The New Republic (US — Rogers “we’re just not getting enough,” Pentagon non-answers on troop numbers); Pew Research (primary — 59% wrong decision, March 16-22 survey); Quinnipiac (primary — 54% oppose, 64% independents, 92% Democrats, 52% Republicans oppose ground troops); CNN Day 27 live blog (US — USPS 8% surcharge, April 26 start, packages only); AAA (primary — $3.98 gas, $5.37 diesel, 25th consecutive daily increase)
5. THE SUPPLY CRUNCH ARRIVES: SAUDI EXPORTS TO CHINA AND INDIA NOW FALLING
For four weeks, a central assumption has insulated global markets from the worst projections: Saudi Arabia could reroute enough oil through its East-West pipeline to the Red Sea port of Yanbu to keep the world’s largest importers supplied. That assumption is now failing.
Saudi Arabia is cutting its crude oil exports to China and India for a second consecutive month in April, according to reporting published Thursday by OilPrice.com. The reduction comes despite Saudi Arabia’s significant efforts to bypass the de facto closed Strait of Hormuz by pumping oil westward through its 1,200-kilometre East-West pipeline. The bypass has been partially successful — Bloomberg reported last week that Saudi Arabia had revived roughly half of its normal export levels — but half is not enough, and the April loadings now reflect the arithmetic of a pipeline that was never designed to replace Hormuz.
The numbers explain why. Before the war, approximately 20 million barrels of oil per day moved through the Strait of Hormuz. Saudi Arabia’s East-West pipeline, even operating at capacity, can move approximately 5 million barrels per day. The UAE has a similar bypass pipeline to Fujairah, handling roughly 1.8 million barrels per day. Together, those bypass routes represent less than 35% of pre-war Hormuz flow. Saudi crude production has already been cut from 10.4 million barrels per day in February to approximately 8 million, because oil that cannot be exported cannot be stored indefinitely, and storage is filling. The missing oil is mostly medium and heavy grades — the grades that Asian refineries, particularly in China and India, are built to process and cannot easily substitute.
Japan is releasing 30 days of strategic petroleum reserves — its largest release in history — as a direct response to the supply shock. The IEA’s 400-million-barrel emergency release, which the agency itself acknowledged covers only 20 days of normal Hormuz flow, was always understood as a bridge, not a solution. Japan’s move is a signal that Asian governments are now planning for a disruption that lasts months, not weeks.
Brent crude opened Thursday at $106.30 — up more than $4 from Wednesday’s close, itself a recovery from a dip driven by brief peace-plan optimism. Brent is now 61% above its pre-war level of $66. Goldman Sachs has warned that prices could exceed the all-time high of $147, set in 2008, if the Strait remains closed for an extended period. The World Economic Forum, the Dallas Federal Reserve, and the IEA have all described the current disruption as the largest in the history of the global oil market — larger, in terms of volume, than the 1973 oil embargo.
The food dimension is receiving less attention than the energy numbers but may prove more consequential for more people. Approximately 30% of the world’s fertiliser raw materials ship through the Strait of Hormuz. Fertiliser prices are already rising ahead of spring planting season in the northern hemisphere. The humanitarian implications — for food security in import-dependent countries in Africa, South Asia, and Southeast Asia — will take longer to manifest than oil prices, but they are arriving.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The global economic picture emerging from this war is substantially more alarming than gas prices at the pump suggest. The World Economic Forum published an analysis this week documenting the cascading effects: Asian economies adjusting growth forecasts downward; central banks in countries as far from the battlefield as Chile and Poland scaling back rate cut expectations because oil prices feed directly into inflation. Bloomberg confirmed Poland’s central bank is holding rates specifically because of the Iran war. Vietnam holds fewer than 20 days of oil reserves and is facing acute energy stress. India, with roughly 50 days of combined reserves, is modelling a prolonged disruption. The Dallas Federal Reserve published modelling this week projecting that a Hormuz closure lasting through the second quarter of 2026 would deliver a global economic shock comparable to the worst oil crises of the 20th century. These are not speculative projections. They are the published assessments of major economic institutions based on four weeks of confirmed disruption data.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: Saudi Arabia is cutting oil exports to China and India because it cannot move enough oil around the Strait of Hormuz. The bypass pipeline maxes out at a fraction of what Hormuz normally carries. Japan is releasing its largest ever oil reserve draw. Brent is $106 this morning, up 61% since the war started. Gas is $3.98 a gallon and rising every day. The fertiliser disruption hasn’t hit food prices yet. It will. The IEA calls this the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market. It has been four weeks.
Sources: OilPrice.com (energy specialist — Saudi exports to China and India set to fall, April loadings, second consecutive monthly decline); Bloomberg (US — Saudi Arabia half-exports via Yanbu bypass, East-West pipeline, tanker armada); IEA Oil Market Report March 12, 2026 (primary — 10 mb/d curtailed, 8 mb/d Gulf production cuts, pipeline capacity figures); CNN Day 27 live blog (US — Japan 30-day reserve release, largest in Japanese history); Goldman Sachs via CNN (US — Brent could exceed $147 all-time high); World Economic Forum (international — fertiliser disruption, global economic cascades, food security); Dallas Federal Reserve (primary — economic modelling, Hormuz closure scenarios); Wikipedia/Economic impact of 2026 Iran war (confirmed production cut figures, force majeure declarations, Saudi production levels)
WATCH LIST — UPDATED DAY 27 MORNING
🔴 POWER PLANT DEADLINE — EXPIRES SATURDAY MARCH 28 ~11:30 UTC / 6:30 AM EST. Trump posted at 11:30 AM UTC Monday March 23; five days runs to Saturday morning. No deal. No Islamabad talks confirmed. Iran’s five conditions incompatible with US plan. Pakistan prevented assassination of Araghchi and Qalibaf. Saturday is the most consequential deadline of the war.
🔴 Kharg Island — Iran fortifying with MANPADs, traps, repositioned air defences. Two MEUs in region. Bessent “US asset.” Gulf allies opposed. Operation may already be in pre-execution phase.
🔴 Lebanon ground invasion — Third IDF soldier killed overnight. Six of seven Litani bridges struck. “Prolonged operation.” 1,072 killed. 1.2 million displaced. Expulsion of Iranian ambassador. No diplomatic off-ramp.
🔴 Iraq — UNSC complaint filed. PMF authorised to respond. US chargé d’affaires summoned twice. Kataib Hezbollah pause under maximum pressure. Second strike on Habbaniyah clinic still unclaimed.
🔴 Saudi Arabia exports falling — April loadings to China and India now cut. Bypass pipeline cannot cover Hormuz volumes. Brent $106 and rising. Supply crunch moving from futures to real-world deliveries.
🟡 Congressional war funding — Supplemental request coming. Republican red line on ground troops. Mace: public justification ≠ classified objectives. Rogers: no answers on end game. Several Republicans will not vote yes without clarity.
🟡 Mojtaba Khamenei — Still publicly silent. His position on any deal remains the only one that matters.
🟡 Kim Jong Un — Told parliament the Iran war proves he was right to keep nuclear weapons. Watch for DPRK opportunism or weapons test during US distraction.
🟡 $580M insider trading — Krugman “treason.” Bets Off Act introduced. SEC silent. Pattern now spans Venezuela, Iran war start, tariff pause, power plant pause.
🟡 Gaza “ceasefire” — 673+ killed since October. Crowded out. Still happening.
🟡 Ukraine — Spring offensive begun per ISW. 948-drone attack. Primorsk port struck. Zelenskyy: Iran war is slowing Ukraine peace momentum. Watch Russia exploit US focus.
🟡 Japan oil reserves — 30-day release Thursday. Signals Asia plans for months-long disruption, not weeks.
ROTWR DAY 27 MORNING — SOURCE CHEATSHEET
Story 1 — The Window Closes Tomorrow
- CNN live blog Day 27 (deadline, Islamabad, White House position): https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/26/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump
- Times of Israel/Reuters (Pakistan prevented assassination of Araghchi/Qalibaf): https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-march-26-2026/
- Al Jazeera (Araghchi “acknowledgment of failure,” Qalibaf “fakenews”): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2026/3/26/iran-war-live-us-demands-tehran-accept-defeat-israel-pounds-lebanon
- PBS NewsHour/AP (five-day timeline, Iran counter-conditions): https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/iran-dismisses-u-s-ceasefire-plan-issues-counterproposal-as-strikes-land-across-the-mideast
- NPR (Trump deadline pattern, Baghaei “catastrophic experience”): https://www.npr.org/2026/03/25/nx-s1-5760675/iran-war-military-deployment
Story 2 — Kharg Island
- CNN Politics (Iran fortifying, intelligence sources, MANPADs, traps, MEUs): https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/25/politics/iran-kharg-island-us-military-ground-troops
- NBC News/Bessent (Kharg “US asset,” all options including ground troops): https://www.nbcnews.com/world/middle-east/live-blog/live-updates-iran-war-trump-hormuz-deadline-energy-crisis-gulf-power-rcna264685
- PBS NewsHour/AP (MEU deployment, amphibious assault, Soufan Center): https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/strikes-hit-iran-while-tehran-targets-israel-and-gulf-states-amid-mixed-signals-over-talks-to-end-war
- Wikipedia/2026 Kharg Island attack (March 13 strikes, 90 military targets): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Kharg_Island_raid
- The Hill (Lapid quote, destroy oil terminals): https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-march-26-2026/
- CNBC/Warren (Pentagon no plan to stop Trump family profiting): https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/25/warren-pentagon-corruption-trump-children.html
Story 3 — Lebanon
- Times of Israel (Greenberg killed, Golani Brigade, Khiam, 2am): https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-march-26-2026/
- Al Jazeera (1,072 killed, five salvos, Kafr Qasim cluster munition): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2026/3/26/iran-war-live-us-demands-tehran-accept-defeat-israel-pounds-lebanon
- Al Jazeera Day 26 (Lebanon expelled Iranian ambassador, Iranian flights banned): https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/25/us-israel-war-on-iran-whats-happening-on-day-26-of-attacks
- NPR (Salam “forced to bear consequences,” Aoun negotiation channel): https://www.npr.org/2026/03/25/nx-s1-5760675/iran-war-military-deployment
- Wikipedia/2026 Lebanon war (ground incursion towns, bridges, army chief “prolonged”): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Lebanon_war
Story 4 — The War at Home
- CNN Politics (Rogers quotes, Mace “misled,” Higgins “most contentious,” briefing detail): https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/25/politics/iran-war-gop-lawmakers-trump-administration-briefing
- The Hill (Mace full X post, oil suggestion, Graham “Situation Room”): https://thehill.com/homenews/house/5801085-mace-criticizes-grahams-iran-policy/
- NBC News (ground troops red line, “abandon the effort,” sources): https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/tensions-flare-iran-briefing-lawmakers-trump-officials-ground-troops-rcna265231
- The New Republic (Rogers “we’re just not getting enough,” troop non-answers): https://newrepublic.com/post/208187/republicans-pentagon-briefing-iran-congress
- Pew Research (59% wrong decision, conducted March 16-22): https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/25/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump-03-25-26
- Quinnipiac (54% oppose, 64% independents, 92% Democrats, 52% Republicans): https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/25/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump-03-25-26
- CNN Day 27 live blog (USPS 8% surcharge, April 26 start): https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/26/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump
Story 5 — The Supply Crunch Arrives
- OilPrice.com (Saudi exports to China and India set to fall, April loadings): https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Saudi-Arabia-Slashes-Oil-Supply-to-Asia-as-War-Chokes-Export-Route.html
- Bloomberg (Saudi half-exports via Yanbu, East-West pipeline): https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-03-18/saudi-arabia-has-revived-half-its-oil-exports-via-hormuz-bypass
- IEA Oil Market Report March 12 (10 mb/d curtailed, pipeline capacity, production cuts): https://iea.blob.core.windows.net/assets/a25ddf53-cd6c-4910-ac90-16bfd28399e7/-12MAR2026_OilMarketReport.pdf
- CNN Day 27 live blog (Japan 30-day reserve release, largest in history): https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/26/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump
- World Economic Forum (fertiliser disruption, global economic cascades): https://www.weforum.org/stories/2026/03/the-global-price-tag-of-war-in-the-middle-east/
- Dallas Federal Reserve (Hormuz closure economic modelling): https://www.dallasfed.org/research/economics/2026/0320
- Wikipedia/Economic impact 2026 Iran war (production figures, force majeure): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_impact_of_the_2026_Iran_war

