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Iran War Escalates After Israeli South Pars Strike as Missiles Hit Israel, Tanker Off Qatar and Brent Tops $111

An Israeli strike on Iran’s South Pars gas field and a series of high‑profile strikes that Israel says killed senior Iranian security figures set off multiple Iranian missile and drone salvos at Israel and Gulf energy hubs, igniting fires at Qatar’s Ras Laffan LNG complex and striking a tanker off Qatar’s coast amid heavy civilian casualties and mass displacement across Iran and Lebanon. The clashes — including U.S. and regional strikes around oil facilities and Kharg Island, and mounting diplomatic tensions — have choked Gulf shipping and sent Brent crude sharply higher, topping $111 a barrel as markets and allies scramble to respond.

Iran War Costs and Casualties Global Oil Markets and Hormuz U.S. Public Opinion on Foreign Wars Iran War and Operation Epic Fury Donald Trump

📌 Key Facts

  • The immediate escalation followed an Israeli strike on Iran’s South Pars gas field: within days Iran launched multiple waves of missiles and drones at Israel and Gulf states and attacks struck or damaged major Gulf energy sites, including Qatar’s Ras Laffan LNG complex, Kuwait’s Mina Al‑Ahmadi refinery, Abu Dhabi’s Habshan/Bab facilities and other oil‑and‑gas infrastructure; a vessel off Ras Laffan and a tanker near Fujairah were also reported hit.
  • Israel announced it has killed multiple senior Iranian security figures in precision strikes — most notably Ali Larijani (secretary of the Supreme National Security Council), Basij commander Gholamreza Soleimani and Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib — claims later confirmed by Iranian authorities; Israeli officials say some of the strikes involved U.S.–Israeli intelligence cooperation.
  • The fighting has produced large civilian and military losses and displacement: as of mid‑March casualty tallies across reports cluster around roughly 1,300–1,348 killed in Iran, about 850–922 killed in Lebanon, about 12–16 killed in Israel, and 13 U.S. service members killed (with roughly 200 U.S. wounded); over one million people have been displaced in Lebanon and millions displaced across Iran and Lebanon overall.
  • Iran’s campaign has effectively choked much commercial traffic tied to the Strait of Hormuz and nearby waters — Iran says the strait is open selectively (not for the U.S., Israel and allies) and threatened sustained attacks on Gulf energy infrastructure; the U.S. has urged partners to help reopen the route but many allies have balked at sending ships.
  • The strikes and counter‑strikes have sharply disrupted energy markets and supply: Brent crude jumped above $110–$114 a barrel (a roughly 40–60% rise since the war began), U.S. gasoline and global gas prices rose, Qatar said Ras Laffan suffered ‘extensive damage’ and halted LNG production, and analysts warned some Gulf facilities could be offline for months, intensifying stagflation and supply‑risk concerns.
  • The conflict’s regional spillover is broad: Gulf states reported intercepted missiles and drones and disruptions (Bahrain, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar), Dubai International Airport briefly closed after drone‑related incidents, Saudi and Emirati energy sites reported fires or shutdowns, and some attacks and debris struck populated areas in Israel, Lebanon and the occupied West Bank, causing civilian deaths and injuries.
  • Diplomatic and political fallout is mounting: Qatar expelled two Iranian diplomats and evacuated/secured energy sites; European leaders warned that a major Israeli ground offensive in Lebanon would have devastating humanitarian consequences; President Trump publicly denied U.S. knowledge of the South Pars strike, threatened to destroy the field if Iran hits Qatari facilities again, and said many allies refused his calls to protect Gulf shipping.
  • Military postures and rhetoric have hardened on all sides — Israel has authorized commanders to target senior Iranian figures more freely and has warned of “significant surprises,” U.S. military spokesmen describe the campaign as decisive, Iran’s officials have signaled readiness to escalate (including threats to target energy tied to U.S. companies and keep Hormuz closed), and reports say Iran is receiving some military cooperation or communications with Russia and China — even as some operational claims remain unverified.

📊 Relevant Data

Hispanic households in the US faced an energy burden 24% higher than the national average in 2024, meaning they spend a larger share of their income on energy costs, a disparity that could be exacerbated by global fuel price surges from the Middle East conflict.

The Unseen Cost: Why Hispanic Communities Pay More for Energy — Hispanic Energy Council

The Iranian diaspora in the US numbers more than 400,000 people, with 44% prioritizing regime change in US-Iran relations according to a 2025 national survey, potentially influencing domestic views on the conflict.

2025 National Survey — PAAIA

The ongoing Middle East conflict has resulted in over 1,200 deaths in Iran, including around 200 women and 200 children, with pro-Iran Shia factions reporting 39 fighters killed in strikes attributed to the US and Israel.

War in the Middle East: casualty figures from across the region — Institut Kurde

The Iran war is disrupting fertilizer shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, causing fertilizer prices to surge and potentially raising US food prices, which could worsen food insecurity disparities where Black and Hispanic households already face rates 2-3 times higher than White households.

The Iran war's looming economic threat: Higher food prices — NBC News

More than 220,000 people left Lebanon in 2025 due to economic collapse and conflict, contributing to increased migration to the US and demographic shifts in Lebanese-American communities.

Implications of Lebanon's Changing Demography — JCFA

📰 Source Timeline (27)

Follow how coverage of this story developed over time

March 19, 2026
8:32 AM
War escalates, energy prices spike after Israeli strike on Iran gas field
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Israel’s South Pars strike is now explicitly linked to sharp same‑day moves in global markets: U.S. crude futures rose above $97 per barrel, Brent reached $111.87 (about a 4% daily jump), and U.S. natural gas prices climbed roughly 3%.
  • Asian and European equities reacted sharply, with Japan’s Nikkei index down more than 3%, South Korean stocks off 2.8%, and European futures down over 1.5% ahead of the open, as investors priced in stagflation risk from the energy shock.
  • Iran launched at least six waves of missiles at Israel overnight, including cluster munitions; one Thai agricultural worker was killed in Adanim, an elderly man was lightly injured in Tel Aviv, and cluster‑munition debris hit Jaljulia and other locations.
  • There was a reported direct missile hit in the Palestinian town of Bayt Awwa in the Israeli‑occupied West Bank, with Palestinian media claiming fatalities, though those casualty figures were not yet independently confirmed.
  • The U.K. Maritime Trade Operations Center reported that a vessel off the coast of Qatar’s Ras Laffan energy complex was 'hit by an unknown projectile,' with all crew reported safe, indicating the conflict is now directly affecting shipping near a key Qatari LNG hub rather than only in the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Chief investment strategist Charu Chanana told Reuters the South Pars strike means the war is now 'hitting the plumbing of the global energy system' and raising 'stagflation risk,' framing the escalation as a macroeconomic, not just geopolitical, shock.
  • Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard told senators that despite 'relentless' U.S.–Israeli attacks, Iran’s regime 'appears to be intact' though 'largely degraded,' signaling that the campaign has not yet achieved its core political objective.
8:16 AM
Israel and Iran attack gas facilities, in a major escalation that rattles markets
NPR by NPR Staff
New information:
  • Confirms the sequence that Iran’s attacks on Qatar, UAE and Saudi gas facilities came the day after an Israeli bombing of Iran’s South Pars gas field.
  • Reports Kuwait News Agency and Kuwait Petroleum Corporation confirmation of a drone attack on a unit at Mina Al-Ahmadi refinery, one of the largest in the Middle East.
  • Details QatarEnergy’s statement that Ras Laffan gas‑to‑liquid facilities suffered ‘extensive damage’ and that multiple LNG facilities were again hit early Thursday, causing further damage and fires.
  • States that Qatar has had to halt all gas production due to Iranian counterattacks, disrupting global LNG supply and fertilizer production.
  • Quotes President Trump’s Truth Social post denying U.S. knowledge of the South Pars strike, insisting Israel acted alone, and threatening to ‘massively blow up the entire South Pars Gas Field’ if Iran again targets Qatari energy infrastructure.
  • Includes Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan’s on‑the‑record warning that trust has been ‘completely shattered’ and that Gulf ‘patience… is not unlimited.’
8:10 AM
Oil Tops $110 as Key Gulf Energy Hubs Come Under Attack
The Wall Street Journal by Giulia Petroni
New information:
  • QatarEnergy says Iranian missile strikes caused 'extensive further damage' at the Ras Laffan LNG complex in a new attack early Thursday, following another damaging strike on Wednesday.
  • Brent crude rose 5.4% in early European trade to $113.20 a barrel—nearly 60% higher on the month—while WTI reached $93.57 and Dutch TTF front‑month gas jumped over 20% to about €67.25/MWh after briefly touching €70.
  • ING analysts warn traders must now price in the possibility that key Gulf gas production could be offline for months, not just days, due to repair timelines.
  • Iran threatened on Wednesday to attack several key facilities across the Gulf, triggering evacuations at some energy sites in Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
  • The article reiterates that Israel struck Iran’s South Pars gas field and notes President Trump’s public statement that Israel would not carry out further attacks there, coupled with his threat that the U.S. would 'blow up the entirety' of South Pars if Iran strikes Qatar again.
7:46 AM
Iran War Live Updates: Qatar Reports More Attacks on Energy Infrastructure as Oil Prices Rise
Nytimes by The New York Times
New information:
  • Qatar says Iranian attacks on its energy infrastructure continued Wednesday and Thursday, causing "extensive damage" at Ras Laffan Industrial City and "extensive further damage" and fires at its LNG facilities.
  • Qatar expelled two Iranian diplomats in response to the attacks, a concrete diplomatic escalation not in the prior summary.
  • A British maritime monitoring agency (UK Maritime Trade Operations) reports a vessel hit by a projectile near Ras Laffan, the second ship struck overnight near the Persian Gulf.
  • Saudi Arabia and the UAE report intercepting incoming drones and say incidents at gas facilities and an oil field were caused by debris from missile interceptions.
  • Brent crude rose to $114 per barrel, more than a 4% daily jump, and Japan’s Nikkei index fell more than 3%, with gasoline prices in Japan hitting a record high.
  • President Trump publicly claims Israel acted alone in the South Pars strike without informing the U.S., asserts Qatar was not involved, and threatens to "destroy" the South Pars field if Qatar’s energy facilities are attacked again.
  • In the West Bank, three Palestinians were killed when a missile hit a makeshift beauty parlor; Israel blames an Iranian missile while Palestinian officials say an Israeli interceptor was responsible.
  • DNI Tulsi Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe, in congressional testimony, indicate Iran’s leadership has been "largely degraded" but its government remains intact, and they undercut Trump’s claim that the war was launched because Iran was on the verge of fielding missiles able to hit the U.S.
7:37 AM
Tehran intensifies attacks on Gulf energy facilities after Israel hits Iranian gas field
ABC News
New information:
  • Details that Iranian attacks set Qatari LNG facilities ablaze, with Qatar saying production was already halted there from earlier strikes and that new missiles caused ‘sizeable fires and extensive further damage’ likely to delay postwar supply.
  • Confirmation of a drone attack on Kuwait’s Mina Al‑Ahmadi refinery, one of the Middle East’s largest with capacity of 730,000 barrels per day, causing a fire but no injuries.
  • Abu Dhabi authorities report shutting down operations at the Habshan gas facility and Bab field after Iranian attacks they called a ‘dangerous escalation.’
  • Saudi foreign minister says attacks on the kingdom mean ‘what little trust there was before has completely been shattered,’ signaling a further breakdown in regional relations.
  • Brent crude is trading above $110 a barrel, more than 50% higher than before U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran began Feb. 28.
  • Article notes 80% of Iran’s power comes from natural gas, so Israel’s earlier strike on South Pars directly threatens Iran’s electricity and civilian energy supplies.
  • President Trump publicly states Israel will not attack South Pars again but threatens that the U.S. will ‘massively blow up the entirety’ of the field if Iran continues striking Qatar’s energy infrastructure, while saying he is reluctant to authorize such destruction.
March 18, 2026
7:44 PM
Both sides in Iran war ratchet up attacks as oil prices surge
PBS News by Jamey Keaten, Associated Press
New information:
  • Confirms the killing of Iranian Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib as part of a sustained Israeli campaign that also eliminated Ali Larijani and Basij chief Gen. Gholam Reza Soleimani a day earlier.
  • Reports that Iran retaliated by striking Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province and energy‑related targets in Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and the UAE, as well as targets in Israel near Tel Aviv that killed two people.
  • Highlights that Iran’s broader strategy is to hit Gulf energy infrastructure and keep the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed to many Western‑linked ships in order to drive up oil prices and pressure the U.S. and Israel.
  • Notes that oil prices have risen another 5% to above $108 per barrel and are now up about 50% since the war began.
  • Adds Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz’s quote promising additional “significant surprises,” indicating further offensive operations may be coming.
11:51 AM
Israel kills Iranian intelligence minister who survived initial strike, official says
Fox News
New information:
  • A senior Israeli official tells Fox News that Israel killed Iran’s intelligence minister Esmaeil Khatib in an overnight precision strike and that he had been the sole survivor of an earlier strike on Iran’s 'Defense Council' compound in Tehran during the opening phase of Operation Epic Fury.
  • The official claims the Khatib strike was enabled by a joint U.S.–Israeli intelligence effort and calls Khatib a central player in plots targeting current and former U.S. officials, including President Donald Trump, saying he had 'American blood on his hands.'
  • The article notes that the State Department’s Rewards for Justice program had, just last week, offered up to $10 million for information on senior Iranian security figures including Khatib, tying the killing directly to that U.S. bounty campaign.
  • Israel’s military characterizes Khatib as having played a central role in directing crackdowns on Iranian protesters, including arrests and killings during the Mahsa Amini‑sparked 2022 nationwide demonstrations, and the piece recaps prior U.S. Treasury sanctions on him for cyber operations.
11:12 AM
Iran lashes out with missiles as Israel says war still intensifying
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz publicly claimed on Wednesday that Iran’s Intelligence Minister Esmaeil (Esmail) Khatib was killed in an overnight strike in Tehran and said 'the intensity of attacks in Iran is increasing.'
  • Katz said Israeli commanders have been authorized to target any senior Iranian figure pinpointed by intelligence without returning to political leadership for case‑by‑case approval, and warned of more 'significant surprises' across multiple arenas, including against Hezbollah in Lebanon.
  • An official in Iran’s Lorestan province said U.S.–Israeli strikes on 'densely populated residential areas' in Dorud County killed 7 people and wounded 56, including civilians and judicial staff.
  • Lebanon’s health ministry reported that Israeli strikes on central Beirut neighborhoods (Basta, Zuqaq al‑Blat, Bachoura) killed at least 12 people on Wednesday, while Lebanese officials put the total death toll in the country above 900 and said more than 1 million people — about one‑sixth of the population — have been displaced.
  • CBS notes that Iran launched new waves of missiles and drones at Israel and Persian Gulf states on Wednesday, with two people killed near Tel Aviv by falling debris, and that Brent crude remains over $100 per barrel, up more than 40% since the war began, contributing to rising U.S. gasoline prices.
  • The article reiterates that National Counterterrorism Center director Joe Kent resigned Tuesday, stating Iran posed 'no imminent threat' to the U.S., while U.S. efforts to convince other countries to send forces to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz have largely been rebuffed.
10:34 AM
Israel says that Iranian Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib has been killed
MS NOW by The Associated Press
New information:
  • Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz publicly stated that the Israeli military has killed Iranian Intelligence Minister Esmail Khatib.
  • Katz warned that “significant surprises are expected throughout this day on all the fronts,” signaling further imminent military actions.
  • The article reiterates that the U.S. Treasury sanctioned Khatib and Iran’s Intelligence Ministry in 2022 for cyber-enabled activities and serious human-rights abuses, underscoring his direct role in cyber operations against the U.S. and allies.
10:14 AM
Iran retaliates after Israel kills two top Iranian officials
NPR by NPR Staff
New information:
  • Iranian authorities have now officially confirmed the deaths of Ali Larijani and Basij commander Gholamrez Soleimani in Israeli strikes.
  • Iran’s Revolutionary Guard says it launched multiple‑warhead (cluster‑type) missiles at the Tel Aviv area overnight March 18, killing a man and woman in their apartment in Ramat Gan and damaging a Tel Aviv train station and other areas.
  • Israel struck central Beirut overnight, with officials saying they targeted Hezbollah militants and installations; Lebanese deaths in the war have risen to about 922.
  • Updated casualty figures since the Feb. 28 start of the war: roughly 1,300 killed in Iran, 922 in Lebanon, 16 in Israel, and U.S. Central Command reporting 13 U.S. service members killed and about 200 wounded.
  • Former Jordanian ambassador Zeid Ra’ad Al‑Hussein is quoted saying Larijani was seen as the key interlocutor for the international community after Khamenei’s killing, and that his death complicates knowing who to talk to within the IRGC.
4:19 AM
The top Iranian officials killed since Iran war's start
Axios by Rebecca Falconer
New information:
  • Provides a consolidated timeline of claimed killings of senior Iranian officials from Feb. 28 through March 17, rather than isolated mentions.
  • Lists numerous additional officials Israel says it killed in the opening Feb. 28 strikes, including Ali Shamkhani, IRGC commander Mohammad Pakpour, armed forces chief Abdolrahim Mousavi, Defense Minister Aziz Nasirzadeh, Khamenei’s chief military secretary Mohammad Shirazi, IRGC military intelligence chief Saleh Asadi, SPND chair Hossein Jabal Amelian and former SPND chair Reza Mozaffari-Nia, logistics chief Maj. Gen. Mohsen Darebaghi, police intelligence chief Gholamreza Rezaian, and plans-and-operations chief Maj. Gen. Bahram Hosseini Motlagh.
  • Adds March 3 claims that Israel killed Majid ibn al-Reza one day after he was appointed as Nasirzadeh’s replacement as defense minister, and that Reza Khazaei of the Quds Force was killed in Beirut.
  • Details a March 8 Israeli drone strike on a four-star Beirut hotel that Iran’s UN ambassador says killed Majid Hassini, Ali Reza Bi-Azar, Ahmad Rasouli and Hossein Ahmadlou, all senior IRGC figures in Lebanon- and Palestine-focused units.
  • Notes a March 12 IDF claim that Abu Dhar Mohammadi, operations commander in the IRGC’s missile unit within Hezbollah in Beirut, was killed in a strike.
  • Clarifies that, as of March 17, Israeli officials say Ali Larijani was attacked in a Tehran safe house and Basij commander Gholamreza Soleimani was hit in a makeshift headquarters with several top lieutenants.
March 17, 2026
5:55 PM
WATCH: Trump addresses Iran strikes, Kent resignation during St. Patrick's Day visit with Irish Taoiseach Martin
PBS News by Associated Press
New information:
  • Trump, citing Israeli claims, said at the March 17 White House meeting that two top Iranian officials were killed in Israel’s overnight strikes, aligning himself with Israel’s assertion that Ali Larijani and Gen. Gholam Reza Soleimani are dead.
  • Trump claimed one of the slain officials was responsible for the deaths of '32,000 Iranian protesters in recent weeks,' a number not independently substantiated in the piece.
  • Trump summed up the effect by saying 'Their leaders are gone' and calling Iran’s leadership 'an evil group,' while Iran still had not confirmed the deaths.
5:34 PM
Israel kills 2 top Iranian officials in another wartime blow to country's leadership
PBS News by Samy Magdy, Associated Press
New information:
  • Israel’s defense minister again asserted that Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, and Gen. Gholam Reza Soleimani, head of the Basij, were killed in overnight Israeli strikes, framing it as a major blow to Iran’s leadership, while Iran still has not confirmed either death.
  • The article reports that Iran has fired new salvos of missiles and drones at Gulf Arab neighbors and Israel, intensifying a war that shows no sign of abating.
  • Dubai briefly shut its airspace for the second time in as many days because of the attacks, highlighting ongoing disruption to one of the world’s busiest transit hubs.
  • An Iranian official is quoted saying Tehran has no intention of relinquishing its tight grip on shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, underscoring the risk to global oil flows.
  • President Donald Trump is quoted saying that NATO and most other allies have rejected his calls to help secure the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is quoted saying the killings are aimed at 'undermining this regime to give the Iranian people the opportunity to remove it,' making the regime‑change framing explicit.
  • The piece adds timing and social‑control context inside Iran, noting that the reported killings came on the eve of the Chaharshanbe Souri 'Festival of Fire' and that authorities sent threatening texts and deployed plainclothes men with rifles on motorcycles to deter protests.
2:59 PM
Why the death of Iran's top security official is significant
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Clarifies that Israel’s defense minister Israel Katz said in a statement that Ali Larijani was 'eliminated' in overnight strikes, but there is still no confirmation from Iran.
  • Details Larijani’s current role as secretary of the Supreme National Security Council and describes him as one of the most senior regime figures remaining after earlier killings of top leaders including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
  • Explains that operational impact of Larijani’s reported death is likely limited short‑term but politically significant, removing one of the few insiders trusted to manage both war strategy and potential political off‑ramps, including quiet contacts with Washington.
  • Notes that Larijani recently appeared publicly at an al‑Quds Day demonstration and had issued defiant messages toward President Trump, framing the war as an existential struggle and challenging Muslim countries over their silence.
12:27 PM
Top Iranian official, commander killed in strike, Israel defense minister says
Fox News
New information:
  • Fox quotes an extended, inflammatory passage from Defense Minister Israel Katz, including his claim that Larijani and Soleimani 'have joined Khamenei... in the depths of hell,' underscoring how the killing is being framed domestically in Israel.
  • The article highlights an IDF post on X describing Larijani as the regime’s 'effective leader' and personally responsible for overseeing a massacre of Iranian protesters during a recent wave of unrest.
  • It notes that a senior Israeli official told Fox the intelligence leading to the strikes was part of joint U.S.–Israeli efforts, sharpening the picture of U.S. operational involvement.
  • The piece ties in prior U.S. Rewards for Justice material showing Washington had already been offering up to $10 million for information on Larijani and other IRGC/security leaders.
11:54 AM
Israel kills Iran's national security chief, Israeli defense minister says
Axios by Barak Ravid
New information:
  • Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz publicly states that Israel assassinated Ali Larijani, identified as Iran’s national security chief and de facto leader for the first 10 days of the war, and Basij paramilitary commander Gholamreza Soleimani in separate strikes.
  • An Israeli official says Larijani was killed in a safe house in Tehran, while Soleimani was struck at a makeshift headquarters along with several top lieutenants.
  • Israeli officials portray Soleimani as being in charge of crushing protests and say his killing is intended to 'enable a popular uprising' against the regime.
  • Sources say Larijani had recently been part of an internal Iranian faction pushing to start peace talks with the U.S., opposed by a camp aligned with Mojtaba Khamenei and IRGC commander Ahmed Vahidi that wanted to continue the war.
  • After the reported strike, Larijani’s Telegram channel posted a handwritten message dated March 17 about a commemoration for navy 'martyrs,' and Iranian authorities have still not confirmed his death.
  • Israeli officials disagree somewhat on Larijani’s current clout, with one calling him 'the most powerful figure … running Iran' and another saying his power had been waning since Mojtaba was chosen as supreme leader.
11:17 AM
Iran War Live Updates: Top Iranian Official Is Believed Killed, Israel Says
Nytimes by The New York Times
New information:
  • Israel’s defense minister is now on record saying Israel believes it killed Ali Larijani in overnight strikes, and four Israeli military officials say they believe he is dead; Iranian authorities and state media have not commented.
  • The article gives more detail on Larijani’s role, identifying him as head of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, a close confidant of the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and the de facto manager of Iran’s response after Khamenei’s killing.
  • The piece confirms the killing of Gholamreza Soleimani, head of the Basij militia since 2019, and underscores the Basij’s central role in repression and its estimated one‑million‑member size.
  • Iran has continued retaliatory attacks on energy infrastructure in the Persian Gulf, with Brent crude rising to nearly $104 a barrel—about a 40% increase since the war began.
  • A tanker anchored near Fujairah in the UAE was hit by a projectile early Tuesday, the first ship attack in or near the Strait of Hormuz in five days; the tanker suffered minor damage, and at least 17 vessels have been attacked in the region since Feb. 28.
  • The article specifies that Germany, Japan, Italy, Australia and the EU have declined to send warships to the U.S. escort effort in the strait, while France, South Korea and Britain remain noncommittal, and notes Trump publicly disparaged these allies on Monday.
  • Updated regional casualty counts are provided: at least 1,348 civilians killed in Iran and 886 killed in Lebanon, 12 people killed in Israel, and 13 U.S. service members killed, based on Iran’s UN representative and other officials.
  • China’s Foreign Ministry confirms it is 'maintaining communication' with Washington about Trump’s planned visit after he requested a postponement and tied the timing to whether China sends naval forces to help protect Gulf shipping.
10:47 AM
Israel says it killed two top Iranian commanders in targeted strike
NPR by NPR Staff
New information:
  • Israel’s defense minister Israel Katz says Israel carried out a targeted strike in Tehran that killed Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council and adviser to the supreme leader, and Gholamreza Soleimani, commander of the Basij forces.
  • Iran has not yet confirmed the deaths; NPR frames them as Israeli claims, positioning this as the highest-profile assassinations in Iran since the killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and other top leaders on the first day of the war.
  • The article updates overall conflict casualties to about 1,300 killed in Iran, 886 in Lebanon and 12 in Israel, and notes U.S. Central Command’s figure of 13 U.S. service members killed and roughly 200 wounded.
  • Leaders of Canada, France, Germany, Italy and the U.K. issued a joint statement warning that a large Israeli ground offensive in Lebanon could have “devastating humanitarian consequences” and urged immediate de-escalation.
  • European governments again rejected President Trump’s call to send naval forces to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, signaling continued resistance to his proposed coalition.
  • The piece notes fresh attacks on the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad, projectiles fired in Abu Dhabi and a tanker hit in Oman, underscoring the regional spillover.
March 16, 2026
10:55 PM
As Israel launches Lebanon ground operation, Trump asks allies to help reopen oil route
PBS News by Winston Wilde
New information:
  • Israel has, for the first time since the Iran war began, launched what it calls 'limited targeted ground operations' in southern Lebanon, aimed at destroying Hezbollah infrastructure near the border.
  • Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz warned that more than one million people have already evacuated southern Lebanese cities and will not be allowed to return to their homes 'any time soon.'
  • Israel admitted striking part of Iran’s electricity grid, claiming the target was colocated with an intelligence center.
  • President Trump acknowledged he has directly approached 'half-a-dozen' countries and specifically cited European states and South Korea to send forces to help secure the Strait of Hormuz, while a European official told PBS that no European country is currently willing to deploy military assets in the Gulf while the war continues.
  • Trump publicly described Iran as a 'paper tiger' and framed allies’ reluctance as proof that NATO partners will not protect the U.S. when asked, sharpening his long‑running criticism of alliance burden-sharing.
5:47 PM
Israel steps up bombing in Lebanon as Iran keeps stranglehold on shipping
PBS News by Samy Magdy, Associated Press
New information:
  • Israel has conducted about 7,600 strikes on Iran so far, with an Israeli military spokesman claiming 85% of Iran’s air defenses and 70% of its missile launchers have been knocked out.
  • In Lebanon, Israeli strikes have displaced more than 800,000 people and killed roughly 850, with evacuation orders issued for multiple Beirut neighborhoods as well as southern Lebanon.
  • Iran carried out a drone strike that temporarily forced the closure of Dubai International Airport, a key global hub, as part of its retaliation campaign.
  • Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi publicly stated that from Tehran’s perspective the Strait of Hormuz is 'open' but not for the United States, Israel and their allies, and rejected as 'delusional' any claims Iran is seeking a truce or talks.
  • Brent crude oil remains above $100 a barrel as Iranian attacks and threats on commercial shipping in and around the Strait of Hormuz slow traffic to a 'trickle,' intensifying global energy‑crisis fears.
8:55 AM
Iran War Live Updates: Trump Pressures Countries to Open Vital Shipping Route
Nytimes by The New York Times
New information:
  • The war is now described as entering its third week, updating the timeline from earlier coverage.
  • Trump told The Financial Times that NATO members must help reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face a 'very bad' future, escalating his pressure on the alliance.
  • Trump said China should help unblock the Strait and threatened to postpone an April summit in Beijing with Xi Jinping if China does not cooperate.
  • China’s Foreign Ministry said both sides are still discussing Trump’s trip and stated that China is committed to de-escalation and communicating with 'all relevant parties.'
  • Australia’s transport minister said Australia does not intend to send ships to the Strait, indicating reluctance among some allies to participate in maritime operations.
  • The report notes Iran is allowing oil shipments to China to pass through Hormuz while other tankers have been attacked by projectiles, suggesting a selective approach to the de facto blockade.
  • The Israeli military announced a 'broad wave of attacks' on government infrastructure in Tehran, including renewed strikes on Mehrabad Airport.
  • In Iraq, Kataib Hezbollah claimed two drone strikes on a U.S. diplomatic logistics site at Baghdad International Airport; an Iraqi official said both were intercepted.
  • Dubai International Airport briefly suspended all flights after a 'drone-related incident' ignited a nearby fuel tank; civil defense teams brought the fire under control and no injuries were reported.
  • Authorities in Abu Dhabi reported a missile strike on a civilian vehicle that killed a Palestinian national.
  • Updated casualty figures: at least 1,348 civilians in Iran, about 850 people killed in Lebanon, at least 12 in Israel, and 13 U.S. service members killed since the war began.
March 15, 2026
3:17 PM
Iran war rages with no end in sight as gas prices soar
MS NOW by Erum Salam
New information:
  • Updates the civilian death toll in Iran to at least 1,319 people, including more than 200 children, citing the Human Rights Activists News Agency.
  • Reports that the International Organization for Migration is seeing 'increasingly complex mobility patterns' as deteriorating conditions in Iranian cities push people to relocate domestically or flee to Afghanistan and Pakistan.
  • Notes U.S. average gasoline prices have climbed to about $3.67 per gallon, up from $2.93 last month, explicitly tying the spike to the effective Hormuz shutdown.
  • Quotes U.S. Central Command describing its strikes as 'unpredictable, dynamic, and decisive' and claiming 'U.S. dominance builds over vast swaths of Iran,' rhetoric that signals how the Pentagon is publicly framing the campaign.
  • Highlights a new IRGC statement via IRNA threatening to 'pursue and kill' Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu personally.
  • Confirms that the war has now reached day 16 with more U.S. troops and warships headed to the Middle East.
7:31 AM
The Latest: Gulf countries report new attacks, a day after Iran warns 3 major UAE ports to evacuate
ABC News
New information:
  • Bahrain sounded sirens ahead of an assault on Sunday; the UAE reported a missile attack and told residents to shelter; and Saudi Arabia reported intercepting 10 drones over Riyadh and its eastern region, marking clear spillover into multiple neighboring Gulf states.
  • The IRGC issued a direct, personalized threat against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, stating that if he is still alive, Iran will continue to hunt and attempt to kill him "with full force."
  • Israel’s military reported that Iran had launched a new barrage of missiles toward Israel, with air‑raid sirens in Tel Aviv and loud booms indicating active interceptions.
  • Iran’s joint military command alleged that an adversary was using LUCAS drones—described as copies of the Shahed‑136—to strike 'irrelevant targets' in regional states such as Turkey, Iraq and Kuwait, a claim made without supporting evidence.
  • UAE presidential adviser Anwar Gargash publicly denounced the Iranian foreign minister’s accusations about U.S. use of UAE ports, adding a Gulf diplomatic pushback to the military developments.
March 14, 2026
7:45 PM
Iran is receiving ‘military cooperation’ from Russia and China, foreign minister says
MS NOW by Ayman Mohyeldin
New information:
  • Araghchi explicitly defends Iranian attacks on neighboring Gulf states and signals Tehran is prepared to escalate by striking energy infrastructure tied to U.S. companies across the region if Iran’s own oil assets are hit.
  • He hardens Iran’s stance that the Strait of Hormuz will remain at least partially closed, contradicting any expectation of a near‑term easing.
  • He publicly alleges that the UAE is being used as a launchpad for U.S. attacks from densely populated areas, a claim Gulf officials deny.
12:30 PM
Hamas calls on Iran to stop "targeting neighboring countries"
https://www.facebook.com/CBSNews/
New information:
  • Hamas issued its first known public statement calling on Iran to avoid targeting neighboring countries while affirming Iran’s right to respond to U.S. and Israeli attacks.
  • A Hamas official told AFP the group has been in contact with Iranian officials and has also reached out to Qatar, Turkey and Iraq to help halt what it calls American and Israeli aggression against Iran.
  • The article reiterates updated war tolls: nearly 800 killed in Lebanon, more than 1,200 killed in Iran, and at least 13 U.S. service members killed since the U.S. and Israel launched the war on Feb. 28.
  • Qatar said it intercepted two Iranian missiles on Saturday, reported blasts near Doha, evacuated some areas and the U.S. Embassy there ordered remaining emergency staff to shelter in place.
9:30 AM
U.S. military bombs Kharg Island, Iran's main oil export hub, Trump says
NPR by NPR Staff
New information:
  • The NPR article re‑uses and affirms key casualty figures: more than 1,300 killed in Iran, 773 in Lebanon, 12 Israeli civilians and two Israeli soldiers, while freshly integrating the updated U.S. death toll of 13 and eight severely wounded.
  • It adds Trump’s new qualitative claims that Iran has been 'decimated,' that 'their country’s in bad shape' and 'collapsing,' alongside Hegseth’s boast of 15,000 targets struck and injury to the new supreme leader, illustrating the administration’s narrative of near‑total success.
  • The story reiterates that displacement in Iran and Lebanon is now in the millions, reinforcing the humanitarian scale while top U.S. officials are emphasizing military gains.