The Rest of the World Report | Thursday, March 19, 2026
Day 20 Evening Edition
Weekday morning and evening editions. Saturdays once. Sundays once. All sources labeled. Translator notes on every story.
WAR DAY 20 | NUMBERS AT PUBLICATION
🇮🇷 Iran: 1,444+ killed / 18,551+ injured (Health Ministry — FROZEN since ~Day 7. HRANA independent floor: 4,765+ through Day 14. Iran International reports at least 5,000 military and security forces killed and 15,000+ wounded. Full toll unknown.)
🇱🇧 Lebanon: 1,000+ killed / 1,000,000+ displaced
🇮🇱 Israel: 19+ civilians killed / 2 IDF / 3,600+ treated. Iranian missile fragment struck the Haifa oil refinery Thursday afternoon — first confirmed hit on Israeli energy infrastructure.
🇺🇸 US: 13 KIA / ~200 wounded. One F-35 made emergency landing after being struck by suspected Iranian fire — first US aircraft hit by enemy fire in the war.
🛢️ Brent crude: ~$114–116/barrel (briefly touched $119 during Thursday trading) | US gas: $3.84/gallon and rising
💰 Internet: Iran’s blackout enters Day 20 — 456+ hours, surpassing the January protests blackout. Longest in Iranian history (NetBlocks).
1. RAS LAFFAN: THE BILL
The smoke is clearing. The numbers are in. And they are worse than anyone said yesterday.
QatarEnergy CEO Saad al-Kaabi gave an interview to Reuters on Thursday that every energy ministry in Europe and Asia will have read before close of business. The damage to Ras Laffan Industrial City is not a temporary disruption. It is a structural wound to the global LNG market that will take three to five years to heal.
Iran’s strikes knocked out 17 percent of Qatar’s entire LNG export capacity. Two of Qatar’s 14 production trains are offline. One of its two gas-to-liquids facilities is destroyed. The sidelined capacity: 12.8 million tonnes of LNG per year. The estimated annual revenue loss: $20 billion. Force majeure is being declared on long-term supply contracts for Italy, Belgium, South Korea, and China — not for weeks, but for up to five years.
“I never in my wildest dreams would have thought that Qatar would be — Qatar and the region — in such an attack,” al-Kaabi told Reuters, “especially from a brotherly Muslim country in the month of Ramadan, attacking us in this way.”
The damaged facilities cost approximately $26 billion to build. ExxonMobil holds a 34 percent stake in one of the damaged trains and a 30 percent stake in another. Qatar’s condensate exports are expected to fall 24 percent. LPG output down 13 percent. Helium down 14 percent. For production to restart, al-Kaabi said plainly: “First we need hostilities to cease.”
This is not tomorrow’s problem. Italy, Belgium, South Korea, and China have been told their gas contracts — contracts signed years in advance, priced years in advance, built into national energy plans — are now in force majeure for half a decade.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: Al Jazeera, Reuters, Bloomberg, Doha News, and BNN Bloomberg all led with al-Kaabi’s numbers. The framing in European and Asian press is stark: this is not a price spike, it is a supply rewrite. Europe gets 12 to 14 percent of its LNG from Qatar through the Strait of Hormuz. South Korea and China together absorb a significant share of the remaining output. Al-Kaabi’s statement that “we already declared force majeure, but that was a shorter term — now it’s whatever the period is” landed in energy markets as a confirmation that the damage is beyond near-term repair. Iran’s Foreign Minister Araghchi warned Thursday that Iran’s response to the South Pars strike used “a FRACTION of our power” and that there will be “zero restraint” if Iran’s energy infrastructure is attacked again.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The US has no plan to restrict oil and gas exports to manage the domestic price shock — confirmed Thursday by Energy Secretary Wright and Interior Secretary Burgum. That means American consumers absorb the full price consequence of a war being fought, in part, against infrastructure that American companies helped build and still partially own. ExxonMobil holds stakes in two of the destroyed Ras Laffan trains. The country whose energy hub is burning hosts Al Udeid Air Base — the largest US military installation in the Middle East. Qatar is not an adversary. It is a consequence.
Sources: Reuters (international wire — primary QatarEnergy CEO interview); Al Jazeera (Qatar, state-funded/editorially independent); Bloomberg (US/UK, independent); BNN Bloomberg (Canada, independent); Doha News (Qatar, independent); CNBC international (international financial press); QatarEnergy statement (Qatar, primary source)
2. “ISRAEL ACTED ALONE” — AND TRUMP KNEW
Netanyahu held his second press conference since the war began on Thursday evening — the first, held March 12 via video link, was where he first claimed Israel was “crushing” the Iranian regime. The stated purpose was to address the South Pars strike. The actual purpose — as France 24’s correspondent in Jerusalem put it — was “targeted at an audience of one.”
His formulation on South Pars was precise and diplomatic in equal measure: “Fact number 1, Israel acted alone against the South Pars gas compound. Fact number 2, President Trump asked us to hold off on future attacks, and we’re holding off.”
Two sentences. Neither one answered the question that was actually being asked — which is whether Trump approved the strike before it happened. The Wall Street Journal had already reported that Trump was notified in advance and supported it. Axios separately confirmed Israeli officials said the strike was coordinated. Netanyahu’s “Israel acted alone” is technically compatible with both of those accounts — it means the US did not carry out the strike, not that it didn’t know about it or endorse it. The gap between what was said and what it means is deliberate.
The rest of the press conference was aimed at reassuring Trump directly. Netanyahu dismissed what he called a “canard” that Israel had dragged Washington into the war. “Does anyone really think that someone can tell President Trump what to do?” He claimed Iran can no longer enrich uranium or manufacture ballistic missiles — without presenting evidence. He said he sees “cracks” in the Iranian regime and is “trying to propagate them as fast as we can.” He said the war may end “a lot faster than people think.” He called Mojtaba Khamenei a “puppet” of the IRGC who “cannot show his face in public.”
France 24 analyst Noga Tarnopolsky said Netanyahu’s briefing provided “a behind-the-scenes peek into the manner in which Netanyahu framed the Iran situation for Donald Trump” before the war began.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: International press is not covering Netanyahu’s press conference as a briefing on the war’s progress. They are covering it as a message management exercise. Al Jazeera noted the “Israel acted alone” formulation carefully — diplomatically precise enough to not contradict Trump publicly, while leaving the actual question of coordination unanswered. Netanyahu’s claim that Iran can no longer enrich uranium or manufacture ballistic missiles directly contradicts Gabbard’s testimony before the Senate the previous day — which confirmed, under oath, that the IC’s assessment was that Iran’s enrichment program was “obliterated” in June but said nothing about a complete elimination of ballistic missile capacity. Two senior officials, one war, contradictory public claims.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: Netanyahu said the war may end “a lot faster than people think.” The QatarEnergy CEO said repairs will take three to five years. Iran said it used “a FRACTION” of its power and will show “zero restraint” going forward. These three statements were all made on the same day.
Sources: Times of Israel liveblog (Israel, independent — primary Netanyahu press conference); France 24 (France, public broadcaster/independent); Al Jazeera Day 20 summary (Qatar, state-funded/editorially independent); Euronews (pan-European, independent); Wall Street Journal via Al Jazeera (US coordination — confirmed); CBS News live updates (US, independent)
3. THE MORNING HEGSETH SAID WE WERE WINNING
At a Pentagon briefing Thursday morning, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the United States is “winning decisively.” He said Iran’s air defenses have been “flattened.” He said the US is delivering the “largest strikes yet” against Iran.
Later Thursday, a US Air Force F-35A made an emergency landing at a US base in the Middle East after being struck by what is believed to be Iranian fire during a combat mission over Iran. The pilot is in stable condition. CENTCOM spokesman Capt. Tim Hawkins confirmed the landing and said the incident is under investigation. He did not confirm the cause.
Also Thursday, an Iranian missile fragment struck the Haifa oil refinery in northern Israel — the first confirmed hit on Israeli energy infrastructure since the war began twenty days ago. Dark smoke was visible over the refinery. Israeli media reported there were no casualties and no hazardous material leak, but the symbolism was immediate and unambiguous: the energy war, which Iran began by striking Gulf infrastructure, has now reached Israeli soil.
The IRGC released video it claimed showed a surface-to-air missile striking the F-35 over central Iran. Iran’s passive infrared air defense systems — designed to track aircraft without emitting radar signals that would reveal the battery’s position — had been cited by US officials as a known threat. Iran deployed similar systems to support Houthi operations in Yemen. Air & Space Forces Magazine confirmed the F-35 was damaged, and noted Iran’s development of passive infrared sensors as a plausible vector.
Trump, asked about US aircraft losses at midday while meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Takaichi, said “nobody is even shooting at us.” The F-35 incident was reported hours later.
This is the third major instance in three days in which a senior administration official’s public claim about the war was directly contradicted by events on the ground: Trump on knowing nothing about South Pars; Hegseth on Iran’s flattened air defenses and US battle dominance; Trump on nobody shooting at US aircraft.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The credibility gap is no longer a domestic political story. It is a strategic liability. Allied governments — including the six that signed Thursday’s joint Hormuz statement — are being asked to commit military assets and political capital to a war whose management they cannot independently verify. Euronews, Al Jazeera, and France 24 have all covered the pattern of administration claims being contradicted by events within hours as a running thread this week. The Aviationist, Air & Space Forces Magazine, and defense analysts noted that an F-35 being hit by Iranian fire — if confirmed — demonstrates that Iran retains “pockets of integrated air defense capability despite three weeks of sustained suppression operations.” Hegseth’s claim that those defenses were “flattened” is now a matter of public record alongside the emergency landing.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The pattern matters more than any single incident. A government that consistently overstates battlefield success cannot be trusted to accurately assess when a war is going badly — or when it needs to end. The international press has noticed. Allied governments have noticed. The question is when the American public will be given an accurate account of what is actually happening.
Sources: CNN politics (US, independent — F-35 emergency landing); Air & Space Forces Magazine (US, independent — F-35 confirmed damage, Iran passive infrared systems); The Aviationist (UK, independent — technical analysis); Euronews live updates (pan-European, independent — Haifa refinery); Times of Israel liveblog (Israel, independent — Haifa); CENTCOM statement via Capt. Tim Hawkins (primary source — US government); Newsweek (US, independent — Trump “nobody is shooting at us”)
4. SEVEN NATIONS, NO SHIPS
The United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Japan, and Canada issued a joint statement Thursday calling on Iran to cease its attacks on commercial shipping and reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
The statement, published on the UK government’s official website and confirmed separately by the Canadian Prime Minister’s Office, condemned “in the strongest terms recent attacks by Iran on unarmed commercial vessels in the Gulf, attacks on civilian infrastructure including oil and gas installations, and the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz.” It called for Iran to comply with UN Security Council Resolution 2817. It acknowledged the IEA’s release of strategic petroleum reserves. It said the seven nations “express our readiness to contribute to appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait.”
What it did not say: that any of the seven nations would send warships.
“Readiness to contribute to appropriate efforts” is the language of diplomatic participation without military commitment. The UK separately confirmed it had sent a small deployment of military planners to work with US Central Command to help develop “a viable collective plan” — not ships, planners. France, Germany, Italy, and Japan had all previously and publicly ruled out sending naval vessels to the strait during active hostilities. Signing Thursday’s statement does not appear to change that posture.
Axios reported the behind-the-scenes: German Chancellor Merz was “very skeptical” of the idea and French President Macron initially opposed any such coalition except as part of a post-war agreement with Iran. NATO Secretary General Rutte and British PM Starmer spoke with Macron on Thursday morning and convinced him to lift his opposition to the political statement — while leaving “practical steps for later.” Japan joined at the last minute, ahead of PM Takaichi’s White House meeting. Canada confirmed participation after the statement’s initial publication.
Trump welcomed Japan’s participation while criticizing NATO allies — again — saying he was pleased with Takaichi’s posture “unlike NATO.” Three of the seven signatories are NATO members. None committed to active Hormuz patrol.
The EU’s foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said Thursday there is “a need to find an exit from the war involving Iran and avoid further escalation.” Iran’s ambassador to Germany told AFP that Tehran has asked Berlin to clarify the role of the Ramstein airbase in the US-Israeli campaign, citing UN Resolution 3314 on acts of aggression.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The gap between the statement’s language and what it actually commits is being read carefully in capitals from Tokyo to Paris. Axios described the statement plainly: it is “largely a gesture to placate President Trump,” noting that France, Germany, Italy, and Japan had all previously ruled out sending naval vessels and that it is “unclear whether any of them will change that posture after signing the statement.” Al Jazeera’s Zein Basravi: Gulf states and European nations are applying “political and diplomatic pressure — not just on Iran, but also on the United States — to try to pull back from the conflict.” The Macron detail matters — the most significant NATO ally initially refused to sign, had to be persuaded by Rutte and Starmer, and signed only on condition that practical steps be deferred. Planners, not ships. Statements, not action. The strait remains closed.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: Trump has repeatedly demanded allied military support for Hormuz operations and repeatedly criticized allies for refusing. Seven nations signed Thursday. None committed forces. The joint statement is being presented in Washington as progress. Internationally, it is being read as the strongest form of “not yet” that diplomatic language allows.
Sources: UK Government joint statement (primary source — gov.uk); Prime Minister of Canada statement (primary source — pm.gc.ca); Axios (US, independent — behind-the-scenes account); Al Jazeera (Qatar, state-funded/editorially independent); Reuters (international wire); AFP/France 24 (France, public broadcaster/independent — Iran ambassador on Ramstein); CTV News/BNN Bloomberg (Canada, independent)
5. NOWRUZ MORNING: THREE HANGINGS
On the first morning of Nowruz — the Persian New Year, the most symbolically loaded day in the Iranian calendar — the Islamic Republic publicly hanged three men in Qom.
Saleh Mohammadi, 19 — who had turned 19 only days earlier. Saeed Davoudi, 21. Mehdi Ghasemi. All three were arrested during Iran’s January uprising — the largest protests since the Islamic Revolution, in which rights groups say security forces killed thousands. All three were convicted of moharebeh — “waging war against God” — under Iran’s sharia law. All three, according to human rights organizations including the Center for Human Rights in Iran, Iran Human Rights, and Amnesty International, gave confessions obtained under torture. None received what international legal standards would recognize as a fair trial. According to HENGAW, there were no witnesses, evidence, or CCTV placing them at the scene.
The executions were the first officially announced hangings related to the January crackdown. Euronews reported that hundreds more protesters are currently facing death sentences — including children and teenagers. HRANA has documented more than 7,000 killings during the January crackdown itself.
Mohammadi’s case drew particular international attention. He was a national wrestling champion who had represented Iran at international competitions, including winning a bronze medal at the 2024 Saitiev Cup in Russia. Advocacy groups, the IOC, and United World Wrestling had all issued statements before his execution. Activist Masih Alinejad: “Today, in Iran, in the middle of a war, the regime executed a 19-year-old national wrestling champion for the crime of joining January protests.” International sports organizations are now facing calls to ban Iran from competition.
International press immediately drew the comparison to Navid Afkari — the champion wrestler executed in 2020 for alleged protest-related violence, whose case became one of the most prominent symbols of Iran’s use of capital punishment to suppress dissent.
The day before, Iran also executed Kourosh Keyvani, a Swedish-Iranian national, on charges of spying for Israel. Sweden condemned the execution.
The regime chose Nowruz morning. The message is not subtle.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: Euronews, Iran International, the Center for Human Rights in Iran, and international sports media are covering the timing as deliberate. Nowruz is the moment Iranians traditionally look forward — renewal, family, the start of a new year. Hanging a 19-year-old national wrestling champion, alongside two other young men, on that morning — the first hangings related to the January crackdown, while hundreds more await the same fate — is an act of political intimidation directed at a population living simultaneously under bombardment, a record internet blackout, and economic collapse. The Afkari comparison is being made explicitly by Iranian human rights advocates: this is not a judicial system, it is a terror apparatus.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: Trump warned Iran in January against executing protesters and told them “help is on its way.” The executions happened on Nowruz morning, twenty days into the war that was supposedly bringing that help. The regime that was meant to be collapsing chose this day — the Persian New Year, the day of renewal — to publicly hang a teenage wrestler in the city square.
Sources: Euronews (pan-European, independent); Center for Human Rights in Iran (US-based, independent human rights organization — primary source); Iran Human Rights/IHRNGO (Norway-based, independent human rights monitor); Iran International (UK-based, independent Iranian outlet); HRANA (US-based, independent human rights monitor); CBS News (US, independent); Amnesty International (primary source — independent human rights organization); Jerusalem Post (Israel, independent)
6. THE BILL IS COMING DUE
The Pentagon is asking for $200 billion in additional funding for the war. A senior administration official confirmed the request to the Associated Press on Thursday. The number is not a rumor. It has been sent to the White House.
Hegseth, asked about it at his Thursday briefing, did not deny it. “That number could move,” he said. “It takes money to kill bad guys.” Trump confirmed separately that he may seek the $200 billion, calling it “a small price to pay” to ensure the military has “vast amounts of ammunition.” He said the request goes beyond Iran — but declined to specify.
The numbers in context:
The Center for Strategic and International Studies estimated the first six days of the war cost $12.7 billion in direct US spending. CNN analysts calculated the war costs at least $890 million per day. The $200 billion request, if approved, would represent roughly the entire annual US defense budget for a war now entering its fourth week. It would be the largest emergency war supplemental in American history.
The Congressional Research Service calculated the total direct cost of the Iraq War through 2014 — more than a decade of operations — at $815 billion. This war has lasted less than three weeks.
For context on scale: $200 billion is approximately three times the annual US defense budget total. It is more than the GDP of most countries. It is, per Trump, “a small price to pay.”
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The $200 billion request is landing internationally as a signal that Washington either did not plan for a short war or has concluded that a long one is now inevitable. The Associated Press, Britannica’s live updates, and Military.com all noted the figure against the Iraq War baseline. Foreign Policy’s analysts had previously warned that the Iran war is already straining the US defense industry’s ability to support NATO allies’ Ukraine requirements — a concern raised at the Senate hearing Wednesday. The $200 billion request, if pursued, will require congressional authorization, which means the war’s costs will become a domestic political battleground in an election year.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The Dow has lost approximately $2.7 trillion in market cap since the war began. Brent crude is at $116 and briefly touched $119 on Thursday. US gas is at $3.84 and rising. The Federal Reserve has held rates. The Pentagon wants $200 billion more. Trump called it a “small price to pay.” The rest of the world is doing the arithmetic.
Sources: Associated Press (international wire — primary $200 billion confirmation); Military.com (US, independent); Center for Strategic and International Studies via ABC News (US, independent think tank); CNN live updates (US, independent — $890 million/day estimate); Congressional Research Service via ABC News (US government, primary source — Iraq War cost baseline); Britannica live updates (independent — AP sourcing)
WATCH LIST
🔴 Ras Laffan — Force majeure declared on long-term contracts. 3-5 year repair timeline confirmed. Watch for European and Asian government responses to supply disruption.
🔴 F-35 investigation — CENTCOM has not confirmed cause. Watch for official confirmation or denial of Iranian fire. If confirmed, significant escalation in Iran’s demonstrated air defense capability.
🔴 Haifa refinery — First Iranian hit on Israeli energy infrastructure. Watch for Israeli retaliation targeting.
🔴 Iran “zero restraint” warning — FM Araghchi explicit: next attack on Iranian infrastructure will be met with full force. Watch for any further Israeli or US energy strikes.
🔴 Protest executions — Hundreds more facing death sentences. Watch for further hangings and international response.
🔴 Pentagon $200 billion — Watch for White House submission and congressional response.
🟡 Netanyahu claims Iran can no longer enrich or build missiles — Watch for IC assessment response; directly contradicts Gabbard’s Senate testimony.
🟡 Caspian Sea strikes — New theater. Watch for Russia’s response to Israeli operations near Iran-Russia maritime corridor.
🟡 West Bank — Palestinian Red Crescent: 3 killed, 13 injured in Bayt Awwa. Beauty salon near Hebron: 4 killed by missile debris. Ongoing.
🟡 Seven-nation Hormuz statement — Watch for any movement from planners to assets.
🟡 Fertilizer shock — Ras Laffan damage makes this more urgent, not less.
🟡 Diplomacy — Oman, Saudi Arabia, EU all signaling. Watch for any ceasefire signal.
THE REST OF THE WORLD REPORT
Day 20 Evening Cheatsheet | Thursday, March 19, 2026
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STORY 1 — RAS LAFFAN: THE BILL
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https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/19/iran-attacks-cut-17-of-qatars-lng-capacity-for-up-to-5-years-qatarenergy
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/19/iran-attack-qatar-lng-capacity.html
https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/business/2026/03/19/iran-attack-wipes-out-17-of-qatars-lng-capacity-for-up-to-five-years-qatarenergy-ceo-says/
https://dohanews.co/iran-attack-wipes-out-17-of-qatars-lng-capacity-for-up-to-five-years-qatarenergy-ceo-says/
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-03-19/iran-strike-damages-17-of-qatar-lng-for-3-5-years-reuters-says
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STORY 2 — “ISRAEL ACTED ALONE” — AND TRUMP KNEW
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https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog_entry/asked-whether-trump-approved-strike-on-irans-south-pars-gas-netanyahu-says-diplomatically-israel-acted-alone/
https://www.france24.com/en/middle-east/20260319-live-trump-threatens-to-blow-up-major-iran-gas-field-if-strikes-on-gulf-energy-sites-continue
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/19/iran-war-what-is-happening-on-day-20-of-us-israel-attacks
https://www.euronews.com/2026/03/19/qatar-expels-officials-from-irans-embassy-after-attacks-on-ras-laffan-gas-field
https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/iran-war-israel-strike-south-pars-gas-field-trump-threat-oil-gas-prices/
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STORY 3 — THE MORNING HEGSETH SAID WE WERE WINNING
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https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/19/politics/f-35-damage-iran-war
https://www.airandspaceforces.com/f-35a-lands-after-taking-fire-over-iran-pilot-stable/
https://theaviationist.com/2026/03/19/us-f-35-emergency-landing-hit-by-iranian-fire/
https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-march-19-2026/
https://www.newsweek.com/us-f35-hit-iranian-fire-forced-emergency-landing-report-11704866
https://www.euronews.com/2026/03/19/qatar-expels-officials-from-irans-embassy-after-attacks-on-ras-laffan-gas-field
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STORY 4 — SEVEN NATIONS, NO SHIPS
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https://www.gov.uk/government/news/joint-statement-from-the-leaders-of-the-united-kingdom-france-germany-italy-the-netherlands-and-japan-on-the-strait-of-hormuz-19-march-2026
https://www.pm.gc.ca/en/news/statements/2026/03/19/joint-statement-leaders-canada-united-kingdom-france-germany-italy
https://www.axios.com/2026/03/19/strait-hormuz-coalition-allies-statement-uk
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/19/european-nations-japan-to-join-appropriate-efforts-to-open-hormuz-strait
https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/markets/oil/2026/03/19/canada-allies-ready-to-contribute-to-appropriate-efforts-on-strait-of-hormuz-blockage/
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STORY 5 — NOWRUZ MORNING: THREE HANGINGS
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https://www.euronews.com/2026/03/19/iran-hangs-three-men-in-first-executions-over-january-anti-government-protests
https://iranhumanrights.org/2026/03/three-protesters-publicly-hanged-in-iran-dozens-more-at-imminent-risk-of-execution/
https://www.iranintl.com/en/202603191432
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/iran-execution-teen-wrestler-january-protests/
https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/article-890526
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STORY 6 — THE BILL IS COMING DUE
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https://www.military.com/daily-news/2026/03/19/pentagon-seeks-200-billion-additional-funds-iran-war-source-says.html
https://www.newsnationnow.com/world/iran-war-saudi-arabia-refinery-israel-epic-fury-live-updates/
https://www.britannica.com/event/2026-Iran-Conflict
https://abc7news.com/live-updates/iran-war-live-updates-israel-steps-operation-lebanon-trump-says-countries-help-strait-hormuz/18721484/


Excellent work, thank you for keepingbus informed! 🙂