Despite Trump's temporary pause announcement, the Iran war tensions remain high with ongoing strikes and military build-ups. The disruption of Strait of Hormuz oil routes is not over, signalling continued instability and no clear path to de-escalation. Why it's not over till it's over.
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Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Fog of war: Eight signs that Iran-US-Israel conflict is not over despite Trump's five-day pause announcement
Despite Trump's temporary pause announcement, the Iran war tensions remain high with ongoing strikes and military build-ups. The disruption of Strait of Hormuz oil routes is not over, signalling continued instability and no clear path to de-escalation. Why it's not over till it's over.
Trump: 'If talks don't go well, we'll keep bombing our little hearts out'
US President says Iran needs 'better PR people' after the Iranian foreign ministry denies his statement that productive talks between the US and Iran were held recently. US President Donald Trump dismissed the denials from Iran's Foreign Ministry of his statement that the US and Iran had held "very good and productive" talks on ending the current conflict in recent days, remarking that Iran needed "better public relations people."
Iran denies engaging in talks with US after Trump claims Kushner, Witkoff held meeting
IAF drops over 100 bombs on regime headquarters in Tehran
In widescale wave of strikes, IDF targeted several Iranian regime security organization headquarters and bases, as well as key weapons manufacturing sites.
* An IRGC aerial defense headquarters
* An IRGC Ground Forces headquarters. This site was established in a large military compound in the heart of Tehran. Several headquarters in the compound were struck before.
* A Quds Force intelligence headquarters
* An Iranian Ministry of Defense naval cruise missile manufacturing site
* Additional manufacturing sites and research facilities related to electronics, ballistic missiles, and warheads. (Source)
Chances of US-Iran deal 'very small,' Israeli officials tell 'Post'
An American source told the Post that “the strikes are continuing as planned," and Israeli officials also said there has been no change in coordination with the US military or in operational plans.
Minister Smotrich: Our border with Lebanon must be the Litani River
As Trump steers away from war with Iran, Israel rediscovers cost of riding with him
Israel will protect its interests if US, Iran engage in peace talks, Netanyahu says
US President Donald Trump believes Israel and the US can reach a joint agreement with Iran that protects Israel's interests, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement on Monday. "We will safeguard our vital interests under all circumstances," Netanayhu affirmed. The prime minister confirmed that Israel will continue to strike both Iran and Hezbollah until a deal is reached.
"We are continuing to strike in both Iran and Lebanon. We are smashing the missile program and the nuclear program, and we continue to deal severe blows to Hezbollah. Just a few days ago, we eliminated two more nuclear scientists – and we are still active." On Monday, Trump claimed that the US and Iran have had “very good and productive” discussions over the last two days regarding a permanent end to the war.
Mossad is calling senior Iranian commanders and pressuring them to stand aside
“Hello, how are you? Is this Commander Fathi Zadeh?” the Israeli Mossad agent asks at the start of the phone call. “Who are you? Hello?” the senior Iranian police officer responds. “Are you listening?” the Israeli intelligence agent continues in Farsi. “We know everything about you, you are on our blacklist, and we have all the information about you.” “OK,” the Iranian officer, identified as Mohsen Fathi Zadeh, head of the Protection and Intelligence Organization of the Law Enforcement Forces (LEF) of Iran, replies in the recording.
He noted that the psychological warfare Israel was using in Iran, coupled with targeted assassinations, was similar to the tactics the IDF used against Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon, Iran’s proxies, only now at a distance of about a thousand miles away. “There is no doubt that this is weakening the regime, but it is too early to say if this will do the job,” Kuperwasser said. “It is hard to determine at what point the regime is so weak that the people will rise up against it. Time will tell.” Over the last three weeks, Israel has been hunting down Iranian regime members, one by one, and taking out their supporters on the streets of Iran. (Ed note: And the Mossad includes in their call, "If you act now, we will send you, free of charge, one of our latest daily pagers for your convenience in these busy times."Wow, the Mossad is good!) (Read More)
Monday, March 23, 2026
Trump Shocks Us (again): U.S. Forces Will Enter Iran to Seize All Enriched Uranium, Even Under a Full Deal
Trump has said a lot of wild things lately, but this one really takes the cake.
President Donald Trump made it crystal clear today: any nuclear deal with Iranwill require American teams to physically enter the country and remove every kilogram of enriched uranium themselves. In his live Fox Business interview with Maria Bartiromo, the same explosive segment where he said Iran “really wants to make a deal… badly” and that an agreement “could happen within the next five days - or sooner,” Trump was asked the direct question: “How are you going to get the enriched uranium?” His answer was blunt and unmistakable:
“It’s very easy. If we have a deal with them, we’re going down and we’ll take it ourselves.” Trump explained the move is non-negotiable because Iran’s stockpiles of near-weapons-grade uranium are buried deep underground in fortified sites. Air strikes alone cannot guarantee complete destruction, and he refuses to trust Tehran to hand it over or destroy it themselves.
Trump explained the move is non-negotiable because Iran’s stockpiles of near-weapons-grade uranium are buried deep underground in fortified sites. Air strikes alone cannot guarantee complete destruction, and he refuses to trust Tehran to hand it over or destroy it themselves. He then laid out his full list of ironclad demands for any agreement:
- No nuclear bomb: “no nuclear weapon, not even close to it.”
- Low key on missiles: dramatic scaling back of Iran’s ballistic missile program.
- Peace in the Middle East.
- Zero enrichment: “We want the nuclear dust. No enrichment.”
- Complete removal: “We want the enriched uranium.”
The Art of the "Strategic Climbdown" — Why Trump Just Blinked on Tehran
Opinion: Why Trump’s 48-hour ultimatum was a tactical trap and how he used "productive talks" as a strategic exit. While the energy grid is safe for now, the bombs are still falling on Tehran. For forty-eight hours, the world held its breath. The ultimatum was classic Trump: "Open the Strait of Hormuz, or I turn off the lights in Iran." It was bold, it was cinematic, and according to seasoned diplomatic correspondent Ariel Kahana of Israel Hayom, it was a tactical dead end that the President has now expertly abandoned.
The "Tree" Trump Had to Climb Down From
The Pahlavi Factor and the "Humanitarian" Out
Every good deal needs a face-saving exit. Enter Reza Pahlavi, the son of the former Shah. His public plea—urging the U.S. not to punish the Iranian people by destroying their civilian infrastructure—provided Trump with the perfect pivot. It allowed the President to shift from "The Destroyer" to "The Negotiator," appearing to listen to the voices of the Iranian people while maintaining a position of strength.
Trump pauses strikes on energy sites after talks with Tehran
U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday ordered a five-day pause on military strikes against Iranian energy infrastructure following what he said were “very good and productive” talks with Tehran. Trump in a post on his Truth Social platform said he had instructed the Department of Defense to postpone “any and all military strikes against Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure” while negotiations continue this week, adding that the freeze is contingent on “the success of the ongoing meetings and discussions.” The recent talks were “in depth, detailed, and constructive,” he wrote, suggesting they could lead to a “complete and total resolution” of the conflict with the Islamic regime.
Russia warns US-Israeli strikes near Bushehr nuclear plant are extremely dangerous
US-Israeli strikes near the Bushehr nuclear power plant in Iran are extremely dangerous, and Russia has shared its concerns with the United States, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday. Such strikes could have irreparable consequences, Peskov said. "We believe that strikes on nuclear facilities are potentially extremely dangerous. (...) Therefore, the Russian side, taking an extremely responsible stance on this issue, has repeatedly voiced its concerns," Peskov said.
The Kremlin spokesman said that the conflict in Iran, "as recently as yesterday," should have been channeled towards a political and diplomatic settlement"This is the only thing that can effectively help defuse the catastrophically tense situation that has now developed in the region." On 17 March, the Russian state nuclear corporation Rosatom said that a strike was carried out "on the territory adjacent to the building of the metrological service, located on the site of the Bushehr nuclear power plant, in close proximity to the operating power unit." Russia condemned a strike on the territory of the plant and called for de-escalation around the facility. (Source)
Israel blows up bridge allegedly used by Hezbollah to move troops into south Lebanon
US considers ground operation to seize Iran’s Kharg Island amid tensions, source tells Post
Senior US officials have informed their counterparts in Israel and other nations in recent days that it appears there may be no alternative but for the United States to launch a ground military operation to seize the Iranian island of Kharg, two sources familiar with the matter told The Jerusalem Post.
Located in the Persian Gulf, Kharg Island serves as Iran’s primary hub for oil exports, with 90% of its crude oil destined for China. In recent days, discussions have begun within the US administration regarding whether to occupy the island to compel Iran to stop blocking vessel traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. A US official confirmed to the Post that “the US military has accelerated the deployment of thousands of Marinesand Navy personnel to the Middle East.”
This deployment includes the USS Boxer Amphibious Readiness Group, featuring the amphibious assault ship USS Boxer – which functions as a light aircraft carrier – alongside the amphibious transport docks USS Portland and USS Comstock. These three vessels carry approximately 4,500 Marines and additional combat personnel.
About a week and a half ago, the US struck military targets on Kharg Island, after which US President Donald Trump tweeted: “We have destroyed all military targets on the island.” The president added that he had decided not to dismantle the island’s entire oil infrastructure at that time but warned, “If Iran thwarts movement in the Strait of Hormuz, I will reconsider.” (Read More)
The Kharg Gambit: How 4,700 U.S. Marines Can Beat Iran
As the USS Tripoli and USS Boxer converge on the Gulf, the mission is clear: Seize Kharg Island. Here's why "vertical insertion" is the only way to bypass Iran’s minefields and how 4,700 Marines have become the ultimate bargaining chip in the 2026 conflict. As the 48-hour ultimatum issued by President Trump looms over the Middle East, analyst Shanaka Anslem Perera says that the strategic focus of the 2026 Iran War has shifted to a singular, rocky outpost: Kharg Island.
Gulf states opposed war with Iran. Most are now pushing to keep the fight going
WASHINGTON — While Gulf countries cautioned US President Donald Trump not to launch a war against Iran in the runup to the conflict, most of them are now urging Washington to continue striking the regime, four senior officials representing different Gulf capitals told The Times of Israel. There is still some frustration with the way the US and Israel are prosecuting the war, but there is a desire among Gulf countries — particularly the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Qatar — to ensure that Iran comes out of this war with its military power sufficiently degraded to cease posing a threat to them, said the four senior officials, speaking to The Times of Israel last week on condition of anonymity.
Can Iran’s power grid be knocked out?
A system built on thermal power
Iran using ‘satellite-like’ launches to double missile range, ex-IDF air defense chief warns
Iran’s launch of a ballistic missile over a distance of around 4,000 km., shattering the 2,000 km. range that much of the world hoped it would stay under, likely involved a two-stage satellite-like launch process, former IDF air defense chief Brig.-Gen. Ran Kochav told The Jerusalem Post on Sunday. Kochav said that the launch had “doubled the demonstrated capability overnight” of what Iran could do when it targeted the joint UK-US base at Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean.
Sunday, March 22, 2026
BREAKING: Trump Issues 48-Hour Ultimatum to Iran - 'Open the Strait or Lose Your Power Plants'
President Donald Trump has just escalated the high-stakes showdown in the Middle East, issuing a blunt 48-hour ultimatum to the Iranian regime: Fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face the "obliteration" of the country's power grid. In a characteristically fiery post on Truth Social Saturday evening, the President didn't mince words about the consequences of continued maritime disruption in the world’s most critical energy chokepoint.
"If Iran doesn’t FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT, the Strait of Hormuz, within 48 HOURS from this exact point in time, the United States of America will hit and obliterate their various POWER PLANTS, STARTING WITH THE BIGGEST ONE FIRST!" — President Donald J. Trump. The post, timestamped at approximately 7:44 PM ET, sets a deadline for late Monday. It marks a dramatic shift in strategy; until now, the U.S. had reportedly avoided targeting Iran’s civilian power infrastructure to minimize the long-term impact on the population. That "restraint," it seems, has expired.
The Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway through which 20% of the world’s oil flows, has been effectively paralyzed since early March. The closure has sent global oil prices skyrocketing past $112 a barrel, causing economic tremors from Washington to Tokyo. While the Trump administration recently moved to ease some sanctions on "stranded" Iranian oil to soothe the markets, this latest move suggests the President is losing patience with Tehran. The current war, which began with massive US-Israeli strikes on February 28, has already decimated much of Iran's military capabilities. Reports indicate that Iran’s ballistic missile and drone production is estimated to be down by over 90%.
Trump threatens to 'obliterate' Iran's power plants if Hormuz strait not fully opened
"If Iran doesn’t FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT, the Strait of Hormuz, within 48 HOURS from this exact point in time, the US will hit and obliterate their various POWER PLANTS," Trump wrote.
Iran responds to Trump’s ultimatum, threatens attacks on US, Israeli infrastructure
Iran threatens to strike US and Israeli infrastructure across the region if its facilities are attacked, responding to President Trump’s 48-hour ultimatum to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
NUCLEAR SHOWDOWN IN IRAN
Missiles cloud Mideast skies over the Persian Gulf. Iran shuts down the Strait of Hormuz. Arab oil is choked off to world markets. Hezbollah and Hamas launch scores of missiles into Israel. Terror cells initiate cycles of violence in America. Global economies begin to collapse. Radioactivity permeates the skies over Bushehr’s nuclear reactor. Countless Iranian’s hastily seek refuge into neighboring nations. The Arabian Gulf becomes a cesspool of contamination. Desalinization plants can’t process the polluted waters. A humanitarian crisis burgeons out of control. A disaster of epic biblical proportion has finally arrived in the Middle East!
About 2600 years ago the Hebrew prophets Jeremiah and Ezekiel issued parallel end times prophecies concerning modern-day Iran. Today the rogue country is becoming a nuclear nation and aggressively advancing its hegemony throughout the greater Middle East. Nuclear Showdown in Iran, The Ancient Prophecy of Elam is a non-fiction thriller taking the reader on a journey of discovery through the eyes of the prophets and the minds of today’s key national players.Can anything good come from the evil that is about to befall us? The ancient prophecy of Elam will reveal what God has ordained, what the prophets saw and what you need to know and do now. A must read by Dr Bill Salus. (CLICK HERE)
Over 20 Nations Announce Readiness to Help Open Strait of Hormuz
More than 20 nations spanning from Asia to Europe to the Gulf have expressed a “readiness to contribute” to the effort of opening up the Strait of Hormuz amid threats to ships by the Islamist regime in Iran. In a joint statement released on Saturday morning, the nations of Australia, Bahrain, Canada, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Republic of Korea, Romania, Slovenia, Sweden, United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom condemned in the “strongest terms” the recent attacks by Iran against unarmed, civilian shipping vessels, its attacks on oil and gas infrastructure throughout the Gulf, and its move to shut down traffic in the Strait of Hormuz.
“We express our deep concern about the escalating conflict. We call on Iran to cease immediately its threats, laying of mines, drone and missile attacks and other attempts to block the Strait to commercial shipping, and to comply with UN Security Council Resolution 2817,” the group of nations said. “Freedom of navigation is a fundamental principle of international law, including under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. The effects of Iran’s actions will be felt by people in all parts of the world, especially the most vulnerable.”
“We emphasise that such interference with international shipping and the disruption of global energy supply chains constitute a threat to international peace and security. In this regard, we call for an immediate comprehensive moratorium on attacks on civilian infrastructure, including oil and gas installations,” they continued. “We express our readiness to contribute to appropriate efforts to ensure safe passage through the Strait. We welcome the commitment of nations who are engaging in preparatory planning.” (Read More)
In Tehran: IDF strikes IRGC ballistic missiles production facilities
Israel orders all Litani River bridges destroyed to hem in Hezbollah
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz, after an assessment of the situation in Lebanon with top-ranking Israel Defense Forces staff on Sunday, said he and the prime minister have ordered the IDF to “immediately destroy all the bridges over the Litani river” to prevent the movement of Hezbollah terrorists and weapons to the south. On March 18, the IDF destroyed two bridges over the Litani after destroying one on March 13, reportedly the first targeting of Lebanese state-owned infrastructure since the start of hostilities. Katz also ordered the IDF to speed up the destruction of homes in southern Lebanese villages to eliminate terrorist infrastructure, following a similar model used by the Israeli army in Rafah and Beit Hanoun in the Gaza Strip.
Saturday, March 21, 2026
After the Fatwa: Iran’s Path to the Nuclear Weapon
For two decades, one document stood between Iran and the bomb — at least in diplomatic terms. Ayatollah Khamenei’s fatwa against nuclear weapons was cited in international negotiations, referenced by Western analysts, and treated by some governments as genuine evidence that Iran would not pursue nuclear arms. On February 28, 2026, Khamenei was killed in a joint U.S.-Israeli strike. The fatwa died with him. And 440 kilograms of uranium enriched to 60 percent purity — enough, if further enriched, for ten nuclear weapons — sit in an underground tunnel complex in Isfahan, beyond the reach of international inspectors. The question is no longer whether Iran has the technical capacity to build a nuclear weapon. The question is whether anything still prevents it from doing so.
Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility hit in US-Israeli strikes, atomic energy organisation says
The US and Israel struck Iran’s Natanz nuclear facility, targeting its enrichment complex. Iran says no radioactive leak was reported after the airstrike.
Iran claims US, Israel attack on Natanz enrichment facility, Israel denies knowledge of strike
The US and Israel struck the Natanz uranium enrichment facility in Iran on Saturday, Iranian state media and the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran claimed. The IDF told The Jerusalem Post that it was not aware of an Israeli strike targeting Natanz. The AEOI, the government body that runs and oversees the country’s nuclear installations, said no radioactive leakage was subsequently detected in the area. Additionally, no casualties were reported in the alleged incident.
US military preparing for potential ground invasion of Iran - report
The Pentagon has made preparations for deploying US ground forces into Iran, according to a CBS News report citing multiple sources briefed on the subject on Friday. According to the report, senior US military officials have submitted detailed preparation requests to US President Donald Trump as Operation Epic Fury against the Iranian regime continues. Additionally, the Pentagon is reportedly preparing for the potential detention of Iranian soldiers and paramilitary operatives during a ground offensive against Iran.
Iran fires two missiles at US-UK military base beyond known Iranian military range - WSJ
According to a report published by Israel’s Alma Research and Education Center at the start of the war, Iran’s missile inventory primarily consists of short-range ballistic missiles, which reach up to 1,000 kilometers, and medium-range ballistic missiles, which can reach as far as 3,000 kilometers. However, the Center added that “according to various reports, long-range ballistic missiles are currently in advanced stages of development.”
Diego Garcia is located on an island in the middle of the Indian Ocean and functions as a strategic base, from which the US hosts bombers, nuclear submarines, and guided-missile destroyers, WSJ wrote. (Ed note: It is interesting to note that 2000 kilometers is about 1243 miles. Also, along wth the nuclear submarines, the US lands their B-2 bombers there.) (Source)






























