The Rest of the World Report | Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Day 19 Morning Edition
Weekday morning and evening editions. Saturdays once. Sundays once. All sources labeled. Translator notes on every story.
WAR DAY 19 | NUMBERS AT PUBLICATION
🇮🇷 Iran: 1,444+ killed / 18,551+ injured (Health Ministry — FROZEN since ~Day 7. HRANA independent floor: 4,765+ casualties through Day 14. Full toll unknown.)
🇱🇧 Lebanon: 892+ killed / 6 more killed overnight in Beirut / 1,049,328+ displaced
🇮🇱 Israel: 17 civilians killed (2 more overnight in Ramat Gan) / 2 IDF / 3,530+ treated
🇺🇸 US: 13 KIA / ~200 wounded
🛢️ Gulf oil exports: down 60% week ending March 15 vs. February
💰 Brent crude: ~$104.50 | US gas: ~$3.70/gallon
1. “TODAY I ERASED TWO NAMES ON THE PUNCH CARD”
Israel killed Iran’s Intelligence Minister overnight.
Esmail Khatib — head of Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence, the official responsible for internal surveillance, the suppression of dissent, and countering foreign intelligence operations — was killed in an Israeli airstrike on Tehran, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz confirmed this morning. Iran has not yet confirmed his death. The same pattern held with Larijani yesterday: Israel confirmed in the morning, Iran confirmed by afternoon.
Katz announced the killing alongside a significant rules-of-engagement change: the IDF has been authorized to “thwart any senior Iranian who is cornered, without the need for additional approval.” The targeted killing campaign is no longer waiting for case-by-case authorization from the political level. “Significant surprises are expected throughout this day on all the fronts,” Katz said, without elaborating.
Netanyahu, speaking from the Air Force command bunker, said: “Today I erased two names on the punch card.”
The scorecard of Iran’s senior leadership since February 28:
— Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei: killed Day 1 — IRGC commander: killed — Basij commander Gholamreza Soleimani: killed Day 18 — Basij deputy Seyyed Karishi: killed Day 18 — IRGC Aerospace Force chief: killed Day 18 — National Security Council secretary Ali Larijani: killed Day 18, confirmed — Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib: killed Day 19, claimed by Israel
Iran’s new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei has not appeared publicly since Day 1. He has not confirmed, denied, or commented on any of these killings. He has not delivered a statement of any kind that can be independently verified.
Khatib’s ministry had been the primary instrument for arresting alleged spies, confiscating Starlink terminals used to evade the internet blackout, and identifying Iranians suspected of cooperating with foreign governments. The US Treasury sanctioned Khatib in 2022 for “directing networks of cyber threat actors involved in cyber espionage and ransomware attacks.” Treasury also described his ministry as “responsible for serious human rights abuses,” including torture in secret detention centers and persecution of journalists, women’s rights activists, and religious minorities.
The diplomacy dimension: two senior White House officials told CNN on Tuesday that Iranian officials tried to reopen a diplomatic channel through US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff — but Trump declined to negotiate. Part of the reason, one official said, is that the administration is not confident Mojtaba Khamenei “is actually in charge.” With Khatib now dead, the Iranian official who ran domestic intelligence and internal communications has also been removed from the equation.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: Three days after Larijani’s death, the international press — particularly in the Gulf, Europe, and the broader Middle East — is asking a specific question that Washington has not answered: what does removing Iran’s potential negotiating partners actually achieve? Larijani was the most likely interlocutor for any ceasefire conversation. Khatib ran internal intelligence. Both are now dead. The decapitation campaign has an internal logic. Its endgame does not yet have one.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The stated US goal is to create conditions for regime change. The method appears to be eliminating every senior official in Iran’s government. What happens to a government of 85 million people when you remove every person at the top is a question that is not being publicly addressed in Washington. It is being asked, loudly, everywhere else.
Sources: The National/AP (UAE/international wire, independent); Al Jazeera live (Qatar, state-funded/editorially independent); CNN live updates (US, independent); Times of Israel liveblog (Israel, independent); US Treasury Department sanctions records (US government, primary source — 2022)
2. TWO IN RAMAT GAN
The couple killed in Ramat Gan last night were both in their 70s.
An Iranian cluster munition missile dispersed its submunitions over the greater Tel Aviv area overnight. A man and a woman died of serious shrapnel injuries in Ramat Gan, just east of Tel Aviv. A 25-year-old in nearby Bnei Brak was hospitalized with minor shrapnel wounds. CNN reporters in Tel Aviv witnessed what appeared to be cluster warheads dispersing over the city. Israeli fire and rescue responded to impact sites across multiple central Israeli communities.
Iran’s IRGC said the attack was deliberate retaliation for the killing of Larijani. It is the first confirmed increase in Israeli civilian deaths since the Beit Shemesh strike in the first week of the war.
Cluster munitions — which release multiple submunitions across a wide area — are banned under the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions, which 111 countries have signed. Iran, Israel, and the United States have not signed the convention. All three have used cluster munitions in the current conflict. Israel has used them in Lebanon. Iran is now using them against Israeli cities.
The geometry compounds the problem. Each cluster warhead that is not destroyed at altitude disperses into dozens of individual submunitions across a wide ground footprint. Israel’s Arrow-tier systems are designed to intercept ballistic missiles in flight — not to engage individual submunitions after separation. That task falls to lower-tier ground-based systems responding across multiple simultaneous impact points. This is not an inventory question. It is a design mismatch between the weapon being used and the defense architecture built to stop it.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The cluster munition dimension of this war has been tracked consistently by Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and the ICRC. None of the three major parties — Iran, Israel, or the United States — have acknowledged using cluster munitions against civilian areas. The evidence that all three are doing so is documented and published. It is receiving almost no sustained coverage in US domestic media.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: Two Israeli civilians in their 70s died in their city last night from Iranian cluster munitions. This is what the war looks like on the ground in Israel — not the abstract missile counts in official statements, but a man and a woman in Ramat Gan who did not survive the night. It is also a reminder that the weapons being used against Israeli civilians are the same category of weapons being used by all sides in this conflict, including by the United States’ closest ally.
Sources: Magen David Adom (Israel, primary source — emergency services); CNN live updates (US, independent — reporters on ground); Times of Israel liveblog (Israel, independent); Newsweek (US, independent — confirmed names/ages); AP/multiple wire services (international, independent)
3. THE WAR THE WORLD ISN’T WATCHING
While the airstrikes dominate international headlines, a parallel campaign is running in the occupied West Bank — and it has been running since Day 1.
The pattern is consistent and documented. The Israeli military imposed a near-total closure of West Bank Palestinian communities the morning the war began — sealing gates, blocking roads between cities and villages, installing new iron barriers where none had previously existed. Israeli settlers, moving freely on Israeli-only roads, have used that closure as operational cover.
The documented toll since February 28, drawn from the Palestinian Health Ministry, UN OCHA, Human Rights Watch, B’Tselem, and Yesh Din:
— March 2, Qaryout: Settlers raided the village, killed two brothers with live ammunition, wounded eight others while bulldozing olive groves. After the shooting, settlers established a new outpost nearby. — March 7, Masafer Yatta: A settler reservist in military uniform shot and killed 28-year-old Amir Shanaran at close range, seriously wounding his brother. — March 8, Khirbet Abu Falah: Settlers shot two men in the head — Fare Jawdat Hamayel, 57, and Thaer Farouq Hamayel, 24. A third man died of cardiac arrest from Israeli military tear gas. — March 15, near Tammun: Israeli soldiers opened fire on a car carrying Ali Bani Odeh, 37, his wife Wa’ed, 35, and their four young sons. Both parents and two of their children were killed. An 11-year-old survivor told a Palestinian journalist: “My father was saying the shahada and raised his finger.” — March 15, Qusra: Settlers shot and killed 28-year-old Amir Oudeh during two assaults on the village. His father was shot in the leg, then beaten and stabbed as he tried to reach his son.
UN OCHA has recorded 18 Palestinians killed in the West Bank since the start of 2026, including eight by settlers. Yesh Din has documented 109 incidents of settler violence across dozens of communities since the war began. Human Rights Watch notes that 2026 is on track to surpass 2025 — itself a two-decade high for settler killings — with three of the shooters confirmed to have been in military uniform.
A UN Human Rights Office report released Monday documented 1,732 incidents of settler violence in the 12 months prior to the war, a significant increase from the year before, and concluded that Israeli authorities play “the central role in directing, participating in or enabling this conduct.” The EU stated on March 10 that Israeli actions were unacceptable under international law.
The Palestinian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has said Israel is “exploiting the atmosphere of war, regional tensions, and the preoccupation of the international community to impose a new reality.” Last month, Israel passed a new law to register West Bank land as state property, fast-tracking a decades-long annexation process. Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has stated explicitly that the goal is to bury the possibility of a Palestinian state.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: This story has been covered seriously and consistently by Al Jazeera, The Intercept, +972 Magazine, The New Arab, Human Rights Watch, B’Tselem, the Irish Times, and the New Humanitarian since Day 1 of the war. It has received minimal sustained coverage in US mainstream media. The international press is not treating it as a sidebar. It is being reported as a coordinated, state-enabled campaign of dispossession running in parallel with the Iran war — and benefiting directly from the distraction the Iran war provides.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The United States is conducting a war against Iran. While that war dominates the news, Israeli settlers — some in military uniform, operating with documented army support — have killed at least eight Palestinians in the West Bank in 19 days. A family of four, including two children, was shot in their car by Israeli soldiers. The international community has condemned it. The Israeli military says it is investigating. No settler has been charged.
Sources: Palestinian Health Ministry (Palestine, primary source); UN OCHA (UN, primary source); Human Rights Watch (US, independent — March 13 report); B’Tselem (Israel, independent — March 9 statement); Yesh Din (Israel, independent — 109 incidents documented); UN Human Rights Office/OHCHR (UN, primary source — March 17 annual report); Al Jazeera (Qatar, state-funded/editorially independent); The Intercept (US, independent); +972 Magazine (Israel/Palestine, independent); CNN (US, independent — Bani Odeh family); New Arab (UK/regional, independent); EU statement via Reuters (primary source)
4. BEIRUT: THE BUILDING THAT CAME DOWN
Israel struck Beirut twice overnight.
The Lebanese Health Ministry confirmed 6 killed and 24 injured. At least one residential building in the Bashoura neighborhood of central Beirut was completely levelled. Smoke and fire rose from Beirut’s southern suburbs as Israel said it struck Hezbollah financial infrastructure — specifically the Al-Qard Al-Hassan Association, a financial network linked to Hezbollah operations — as well as a “key terrorist” in a separate strike.
The IDF issued new evacuation orders overnight for the coastal city of Tyre and surrounding villages. Israel said Hezbollah had fired dozens of rockets toward northern Israel and that it had struck rocket-launching squads and launchers in Lebanon in response. One Lebanese soldier was killed and four wounded in an IDF strike in southern Lebanon.
The ground operation — the 91st “Galilee” Division advancing toward Khiam — continues to deepen. Israel has now been conducting ground operations in Lebanon simultaneously with its air campaign against Iran for more than two weeks. The G5 joint statement calling on Israel to halt a large-scale ground offensive has received no response from Jerusalem.
Lebanon’s displaced population stands at more than one million. The Lebanese government — which opposed Hezbollah’s involvement in this war from the start — continues to watch its country absorb strikes it had no role in inviting.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The Beirut strikes are being covered as a distinct, significant escalation by AFP, Al Jazeera, and Lebanese media. The levelling of a residential building in central Beirut — not in Hezbollah’s southern stronghold of Dahiyeh but in the Bashoura district — is being noted. France, which has deep historical ties to Lebanon and led the G5 statement, has not yet responded specifically to the overnight strikes.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The US is fighting a war against Iran. Israel is simultaneously fighting Hezbollah in Lebanon. These are presented as a single connected conflict, and in military terms they are. But Lebanon is a separate country with a separate government that has been trying to stay out of this war. Six more of its people died overnight.
Sources: Lebanese Health Ministry (Lebanon, primary source); ABC News/AP (US, international wire, independent); Al Jazeera (Qatar, state-funded/editorially independent); IDF statement (Israel, primary source); CNN live updates (US, independent)
5. THE FORD AND THE 5,000-POUND BOMBS
Two things happened in the same theater this week that tell the same story from opposite directions.
On March 12, a fire broke out in the main laundry room of the USS Gerald R. Ford — the world’s largest aircraft carrier, America’s most advanced warship — while it was operating in the Red Sea. The fire took more than 30 hours to extinguish. More than 600 sailors were displaced from their sleeping quarters, resting on floors and tables. Three were injured, one flown off the ship for care. The Navy said the cause was non-combat and the ship “remains fully operational.”
The Ford is now heading to Souda Bay naval base on the Greek island of Crete for more than a week of repairs to damaged electrical systems. As of today, the carrier has been deployed for 266 days — approaching the longest post-Vietnam War carrier deployment on record. The IRGC had explicitly named the Ford as a target six days before the fire.
Meanwhile, CENTCOM announced that US aircraft dropped “multiple 5,000-pound deep penetrator munitions” on hardened Iranian missile sites along the Hormuz coastline on Tuesday — specifically targeting anti-ship cruise missiles Iran has positioned to strike commercial shipping through the strait. These are bunker-buster bombs, designed to penetrate reinforced and underground targets. They are significantly larger than the 2,000-pound bombs the US has predominantly been using.
Read together: the US is escalating the weight of its strikes against Iran’s Hormuz defenses while one of its two carrier strike groups is pulling out of theater for repairs. The Abraham Lincoln group remains in the Arabian Sea. The Ford is heading to Crete.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: USNI News — the US Naval Institute’s news service, one of the most reliable independent sources on US naval operations — broke the Souda Bay repair story. The combination of the Ford’s departure and the escalation in bomb weight against Hormuz positions is being analyzed in international defense press as a signal of both urgency and strain. The IRGC named the Ford as a target on March 10. The fire broke out on March 12. The Navy says the cause was non-combat. That sequence is in the public record. This report draws no further conclusion from it.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The US has two carrier strike groups deployed in support of this war. One is in the Arabian Sea, outside the Persian Gulf. The other has been at sea for 266 days, just caught fire, and is heading to Greece for repairs. The Strait of Hormuz remains closed. 5,000-pound bombs are now being dropped on its coastline. These are the conditions under which the administration says the war is going well.
Sources: USNI News (US, independent defense — primary on Souda Bay); Navy Times (US, independent); Military Times/Washington Times (US, independent); CENTCOM statement via ABC News/AP (US government, primary source); Egypt Independent (Egypt, independent — CENTCOM detail); IranWire (Iran, independent — IRGC targeting warning)
6. THE FIRE WENT OUT. NOWRUZ IS FRIDAY.
Two questions were hanging over last night’s Chaharshanbe Suri. Here is what the available reporting tells us.
What happened in the streets:
The answer, filtered through a near-total internet blackout that severely limits what reaches the outside world, is: the regime held — at least in Tehran, and at least in the places where it was watching most closely.
Around 8 PM local time, Tehran’s main streets were quiet. State television showed large pro-government crowds gathering in Punak Square — the same square that was a site of massive anti-government protests in January. The regime had deployed security forces in large numbers, threatened prosecution “under wartime conditions,” and warned that anyone arrested could remain in detention until late June. The Qazvin prosecutor announced that noise itself was a crime.
Unverified footage published by Iranian opposition outlets showed bonfires burning in Tehran and other cities — the festival did happen, in some form, in some places. The Times of Israel noted that Israeli officials had privately assessed that any protesters who took to the streets would be “slaughtered.” The internet blackout means we cannot know the full picture from inside the country.
What is confirmed: no large-scale open protests have been reported through credible, verifiable sources. The regime that killed an estimated 7,000 to 36,000 of its own people in January appears to have succeeded, for now, in keeping the streets under control.
What Friday means:
Nowruz — the Persian New Year — arrives Friday at the spring equinox. It is, by tradition, the occasion for the supreme leader of Iran to deliver an annual address to the nation.
Mojtaba Khamenei has not been seen publicly since Day 1 of the war. He has issued no verified statement. He has not confirmed the deaths of Larijani, the Basij commander, or any other senior official. Reports circulating in the first week of the war suggested he may have been injured and transferred abroad for medical care — none of this has been confirmed or denied.
If no Nowruz address comes from Iran’s supreme leader on Friday, it will be the first time in the history of the Islamic Republic that this address has not been delivered. The absence would tell the world something significant about the state of Iran’s leadership — something the government has been working very hard to conceal.
🌍 TRANSLATOR’S NOTE: The combination of the Chaharshanbe Suri result and the Nowruz question is the most important domestic Iranian political story of the war. The international press — particularly IranWire, Iran International, Euronews, and the Jerusalem Post — has been tracking both threads carefully. The US press has largely covered the festival as a cultural footnote. It is not a footnote. It is the clearest window available into whether the Islamic Republic is still functioning as a governing entity.
🇺🇸 WHAT AMERICAN READERS NEED TO KNOW: The US and Israeli governments have stated publicly that regime change in Iran is a war objective. Last night was the first real-world test of whether Iranian civilians would rise against their government under the cover of an ancient festival. The streets of Tehran were quiet. The supreme leader has not been seen in 19 days. Nowruz is Friday. Three data points. No clear conclusion yet.
Sources: Times of Israel liveblog (Israel, independent); Euronews (Europe, multilingual independent); IranWire (Iran, independent exile press); Iran International (Iran, independent exile press); AFP/Times of Israel (Bukan man, AFP wire); CNN (US, independent — Mojtaba Khamenei status)
WATCH LIST
🔴 Khatib death — Israeli claim, Iran unconfirmed as of 6 AM ET. Watch for Iranian confirmation — Larijani pattern suggests by afternoon.
🔴 "Significant surprises today" — Katz warning of further escalation on all fronts. Unspecified. Watch throughout the day.
🔴 Nowruz Friday — Supreme leader's address expected March 20. Mojtaba Khamenei unseen 19 days. No address announced. Absence = historic signal.
🔴 Beirut — Building levelled overnight in Bashoura. Second major strike this morning in Zuqaq al-Blat during rush hour. Tyre evacuation order. Ground operation deepening. Watch for Lebanese government response.
🔴 Diplomacy / interlocutor vacuum — Iran tried Witkoff channel, Trump declined. Larijani and Khatib both dead. No confirmed Iranian official now holds diplomatic authority. Watch for any signal of who speaks for Tehran.
🔴 Bushehr nuclear plant — A projectile struck the plant premises Tuesday evening. IAEA confirmed this morning: no damage, no casualties, radiation normal. Rosatom CEO confirmed hit, 480 Russian nationals on site, evacuation preparations underway. No one has claimed it. CENTCOM not responding to press. First strike on a nuclear facility in this war.
🔴 Baghdad Green Zone — Three-day threshold crossed. Day 17: attacks. Day 18: drone landed inside embassy compound, fire reported, four killed at house hosting Iranian advisers, Rashid Hotel hit. Day 19 morning: attacks resumed, CNN confirming additional strikes at 6 AM ET. Islamic Resistance in Iraq claimed 47 attacks in a single day. Iraqi government explicitly condemning the militias. Iraq is being pulled in.
🟡 Japan PM Takaichi — White House today — Meeting is today (Wednesday), not Thursday. PM is Sanae Takaichi, not Ishiba (Ishiba is former PM, gave personal opinion on Hormuz). She is the first allied leader to meet Trump since Hormuz coalition demand. 90% of Japan's oil transits Hormuz. Naval deployment legally fraught under Japanese constitution, deeply unpopular. No outcome yet. Watch for joint statement or public pressure from Trump.
🟡 Hormuz coalition — Effectively dead as a multilateral effort. Germany, Italy, Japan, Australia all said no. EU foreign ministers: "no appetite." UK ruled out aircraft carrier. Trump called it a "foolish mistake" and said "we are going to remember." Pivoting to Israel and Gulf states. Rubio announcement never came. Close this as an active hold — collapse is now the established fact.
THE REST OF THE WORLD ON AMERICA
A brief look at how the international press is covering US domestic developments beyond the war.
Zambia — The New York Times reported Monday that the State Department is considering cutting HIV/AIDS funding to 1.3 million Zambians as leverage to force the country to grant US companies access to its copper, cobalt, and lithium mines. A leaked State Department memo prepared for Secretary Rubio uses the phrase “potential use of sticks” and warns that Zambia cannot be allowed to reject the deal because “other countries are watching.” The story is receiving prominent coverage across African, European, and Latin American media. It is receiving minimal sustained coverage in the US. Full midday note today.
THE REST OF THE WORLD REPORT publishes weekday morning and evening editions, Saturdays once. Sundays once. All sources labeled by country and funding. Not left, not right — just the rest of the world.
THE REST OF THE WORLD REPORT
Day 19 Morning Source Cheatsheet | Wednesday, March 18, 2026
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STORY 1 — “TODAY I ERASED TWO NAMES ON THE PUNCH CARD”
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SOURCES:
- The National/AP: https://www.thenationalnews.com
- Al Jazeera live blog: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2026/3/18/live-israel-hamas-war
- CNN live updates: https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump-03-17-26
- Times of Israel liveblog: https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-march-18-2026/
- US Treasury sanctions record (Khatib, 2022): https://home.treasury.gov/
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STORY 2 — TWO IN RAMAT GAN
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SOURCES:
- Magen David Adom (Israeli emergency services): https://www.mdais.org/en
- CNN live updates (reporters on ground): https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump-03-17-26
- Times of Israel liveblog: https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-march-18-2026/
- Newsweek (names/ages confirmed): https://www.newsweek.com
- AP wire: https://apnews.com
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STORY 3 — THE WAR THE WORLD ISN’T WATCHING
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SOURCES:
- Human Rights Watch (March 13 report): https://www.hrw.org/news/2026/03/13/in-the-shadow-of-war-settler-violence-against-palestinians-intensifies
- B’Tselem (March 9 statement): https://www.btselem.org/press_releases/20260309_under_cover_of_the_war_settler_militias_increas_lethal_shooting_of_palestinians_as_part_of_wb_ethnic_cleansing
- UN OCHA: https://www.ochaopt.org
- UN Human Rights Office/OHCHR (March 17 annual report): https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2026/03/israels-settlement-expansion-drives-mass-displacement-west-bank-un-report
- Yesh Din (109 incidents documented): https://www.yesh-din.org
- The Intercept: https://theintercept.com/2026/03/10/israel-iran-war-west-bank-lockdown/
- +972 Magazine: https://www.972mag.com/west-bank-closure-israeli-settler-violence-iran/
- New Arab: https://www.newarab.com/analysis/under-cover-iran-war-israel-accelerates-west-bank-annexation
- CNN (Bani Odeh family): https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/15/middleeast/israel-kills-palestinian-family-west-bank-ramadan-intl
- Al Jazeera: https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2026/3/5/under-cover-of-iran-war-israeli-settlers-terrorise-palestinian-communities
- NBC News (OCHA figures): https://www.nbcnews.com/world/middle-east/israeli-soldiers-fire-family-car-occupied-west-bank-killing-4-rcna263633
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STORY 4 — BEIRUT: THE BUILDING THAT CAME DOWN
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SOURCES:
- Lebanese Health Ministry: https://www.moph.gov.lb
- ABC News/AP: https://abcnews.go.com
- Al Jazeera: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/liveblog/2026/3/18/live-israel-hamas-war
- IDF statement: https://www.idf.il/en/
- CNN live updates: https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump-03-17-26
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STORY 5 — THE FORD AND THE 5,000-POUND BOMBS
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SOURCES:
- USNI News (Souda Bay primary): https://news.usni.org
- Navy Times: https://www.navytimes.com
- CENTCOM statement via AP: https://apnews.com
- Maritime Executive (fire report): https://maritime-executive.com/article/uss-gerald-r-ford-reports-laundry-room-fire
- Washington Post (fire report): https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2026/03/12/aircraft-carrier-laundry-fire-iran/
- IranWire (IRGC targeting warning): https://iranwire.com/en/news/150511-irgc-warns-us-carrier-uss-gerald-r-ford-is-a-potential-target/
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STORY 6 — THE FIRE WENT OUT. NOWRUZ IS FRIDAY.
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SOURCES:
- Times of Israel liveblog: https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-march-18-2026/
- Iran International: https://www.iranintl.com/en/202603176866
- IranWire: https://iranwire.com/en/features/150497-chaharshanbe-suri-the-festival-the-iranian-government-fears/
- Euronews: https://www.euronews.com
- CNN (Mojtaba Khamenei status): https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump-03-17-26
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THE REST OF THE WORLD ON AMERICA — ZAMBIA
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SOURCES:
- New York Times (Stephanie Nolen, Lusaka): https://www.nytimes.com
- Africanews: https://www.africanews.com
- Common Dreams: https://www.commondreams.org
- Washington Blade: https://www.washingtonblade.com
- Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com


Thank you for the work you do, it has been so helpful. Of course all of the news is basically bad but Zambia feels particularly infuriating for some reason 😡 probably because I haven’t heard a thing about it until now