Senate Again Blocks Murphy Iran War Powers Resolution as Duckworth and Other Democrats Demand Public Iran War Hearings
The Senate on Tuesday again blocked Sen. Chris Murphy’s war‑powers resolution to rein in President Trump’s Iran military campaign — a largely party‑line 47–53 vote with Sen. Rand Paul the only Republican joining Democrats — as Sen. Tammy Duckworth and other Democrats demanded public (not classified) congressional hearings and vowed repeated oversight votes. Their push for transparency comes amid an escalating conflict: U.S. airstrikes and deployments of Marines and warships to clear the Strait of Hormuz, consideration of options including seizing Kharg Island, hesitant allied support for a coalition, temporary waivers on some Iranian oil to blunt market pain, and debate over a possible ~$200 billion supplemental war funding package.
📌 Key Facts
- The Senate again blocked Sens. Chris Murphy’s and Tim Kaine’s war‑powers resolution to rein in President Trump’s Iran campaign, with the measure failing 47–53; Sen. Rand Paul was the only Republican to vote with most Democrats, and Sen. John Fetterman was the lone Democrat who did not support the measure.
- Sen. Tammy Duckworth and other Democrats demanded public, not just classified, Iran‑war hearings — criticizing top‑secret briefings, calling the conflict 'unnecessary' and 'incoherent,' and pressing for open congressional oversight as Democrats vow to force weekly war‑powers votes.
- Militarily, the U.S. has sharply escalated operations: CENTCOM says Operation Epic Fury has flown thousands of combat sorties (reported as more than 9,000), damaged or destroyed scores of Iranian naval vessels, used A‑10 Warthogs, Apache helicopters and 5,000‑lb penetrating bombs against Iranian ships, drones and silos, and pulled roughly 2,200 Marines off Indo‑Pacific patrols with additional MEUs and warships (including USS Tripoli and USS Boxer groups) en route to the Middle East.
- U.S. planners have considered and partially shaped a potential seizure of Kharg Island — airstrikes have struck targets there, officials say most defenses were degraded while oil infrastructure was left intact — and Pentagon preparations include options for possible ground operations if air and naval strikes cannot secure safe passage.
- The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively closed to most commercial shipping, leaving thousands of vessels stranded and prompting a limited multilateral political statement from six U.S. Western allies supporting preparatory planning for a coalition to reopen the strait but stopping short of committing warships or minesweepers; NATO/UK‑led multinational planning (reported as a 22‑country effort) is being organized.
- U.S. economic and market moves: the Treasury temporarily waived enforcement on some Iranian oil already loaded at sea through April 19 (estimated to add about 140 million barrels to markets), oil and fuel prices surged (Brent and U.S. gasoline jumped above $100/barrel and ~$3.94/gal at points), and markets showed volatile trading including suspicious futures activity tied to White House public messages.
- Diplomatically, the administration says it is both preparing additional strikes and exploring talks — back‑channel diplomacy is reported (mediated by Egypt, Qatar, the U.K. and others, with Pakistan named as a potential meeting site), Jared Kushner and outside aides are linked to planning, and U.S. negotiators have sketched a list of core demands they might seek from Iran in any deal.
- On Capitol Hill, lawmakers are bracing for a large supplemental war‑funding request (reported at roughly $200 billion), with House Republicans planning to pursue a single GOP reconciliation 'megabill' to pay for the campaign and pair funding with offsets; critics including former military leaders and some senators warn that airpower alone may not deliver lasting control of the strait or Iranian behavior.
📊 Analysis & Commentary (4)
"Shashank Joshi argues the Iran‑centered Middle East war is unlikely to end soon because strikes cannot remove Iran’s strategic depth, geography and asymmetric capabilities give Tehran enduring leverage, allied constraints and economic fallout limit U.S./Israeli options, and any attempt at decisive military solutions risks costly escalation."
"The City Journal opinion argues that focusing the Iran‑war debate on whether the president’s actions are 'legal' is a distraction—war‑powers lawsuits and symbolic resolutions are poor checks on executive force and obscure the real political and strategic questions that democratic institutions should address."
"A data‑focused deep dive arguing that public support for the Iran war is limited, partisan, and highly sensitive to question wording and perceived costs, so congressional actions and presidential rhetoric do not amount to a broad durable public mandate."
"The piece argues that the public and congressional fixation on labeling and war‑powers votes is a red herring that distracts from the operational necessity of securing the Strait of Hormuz and pursuing practical military and diplomatic measures against Iran."
📰 Source Timeline (33)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- Rubio has now told G7 counterparts the administration expects the Iran war to last another two to four weeks and publicly said it should end in 'weeks and not months,' adding specificity to the administration’s previously vague talk of winding down the conflict.
- He said Vice President JD Vance is likely to lead the U.S. delegation if formal talks with Iran occur, clarifying the anticipated leadership structure of any peace negotiations.
- Duckworth asserts that multiple Iran war briefings to Congress have all been classified as top secret despite her claim that many details are already in the public domain.
- She contrasts the Iran war with the Iraq War by saying that, despite flaws, Iraq at least involved public debate and congressional votes, which she says are missing now.
- Duckworth explicitly accuses Secretaries Hegseth and Rubio of trying to "hide behind closed doors" as they justify putting U.S. troops in harm’s way and calls the conflict an "unnecessary" and "incoherent" war.
- Trump told House Republicans at a fundraising event that he avoids calling the Iran conflict a 'war' because 'if you use the word war, that's maybe not a good thing to do' given expectations of seeking congressional approval.
- He said he prefers the term 'military operation' and described the conflict as 'an excursion that will keep us out of a war,' even though he has occasionally called it a war in other remarks.
- CBS details that since the conflict began, Senate Democrats have forced three votes to end or constrain the Iran campaign unless Congress authorizes it, all of which have failed largely along party lines, and quotes Sen. Chris Murphy saying the U.S. is 'unquestionably at war' while that reality is being 'hidden actively from the public by the Congress.'
- The article notes Trump has argued the War Powers Resolution is unconstitutional and that he justified the strikes in a notice to Congress as an exercise of his Article II commander‑in‑chief and foreign‑relations powers in response to Iranian missile threats.
- House Speaker Mike Johnson is quoted insisting 'We're not at war right now. We're four days into a very specific, clear mission,' echoing the administration’s effort to avoid the war label.
- House Budget Chair Jodey Arrington says Republicans are preparing a second budget reconciliation package explicitly designed to pay for President Trump’s Iran campaign.
- Arrington says he wants the reconciliation bill to pair Iran war funding with anti‑fraud provisions and cuts in social‑services spending as offsets so the package does not add to deficits.
- The Trump administration has floated a roughly $200 billion funding request for the Iran war but has not yet sent a formal supplemental to Congress.
- Arrington is coordinating closely with Senate Budget Chair Lindsey Graham, who said his committee will begin drafting reconciliation instructions and touted that the 'reconciliation train is leaving the station.'
- House Republicans are again turning to a single GOP‑only 'megabill' despite their razor‑thin majority, betting that wartime urgency will unify factions that barely backed Trump’s prior One Big Beautiful Bill Act in June 2025.
- Senate Democrats, led by Sens. Chris Murphy and Tim Kaine, have adopted a 'flood‑the‑zone' strategy to force at least one Iran war powers resolution vote per week.
- The latest Murphy war powers resolution to rein in Trump’s authority in Iran was blocked again on a largely party‑line vote, with Sen. Rand Paul the only Republican voting with Democrats.
- Trump warned over the weekend he would 'hit and obliterate' Iran’s power plants if the Strait of Hormuz is not fully reopened, then on Monday claimed 'very good and productive' talks toward a 'complete and total resolution,' a characterization Tehran publicly denies.
- Lawmakers are bracing for a White House Iran war supplemental request that some Republicans say could reach about $200 billion, with talk of trying to move it through a reconciliation package that may also carry ICE funding and SAVE America Act provisions.
- Kaine says the prospective funding numbers are 'pretty staggering' and argues they signal an extended conflict, reinforcing Democrats’ push for repeated oversight votes.
- The Senate voted 47–53 on Tuesday to block a Chris Murphy–sponsored war powers resolution, with every Republican except Sen. Rand Paul opposing it and every Democrat except Sen. John Fetterman supporting it.
- This is the third time since the Iran conflict began on Feb. 28 that Senate Republicans have blocked Democratic efforts to challenge Trump’s Iran war authority, in addition to an earlier failed vote after strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities.
- Pentagon officials have made detailed preparations for deploying U.S. ground forces into Iran as Trump considers next steps in the war.
- On Monday, Trump announced that strikes against Iran’s energy infrastructure—previously threatened over Tehran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—would be postponed for five days.
- A senior Iranian Foreign Ministry official confirmed to CBS that the U.S. has sent Iran a message through mediators, even as Tehran publicly denies direct talks.
- House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said Democrats are having ‘ongoing conversations’ about another House war powers resolution but will only bring forward a measure they believe can win.
- Trump has now listed five objectives for ending the war with Iran, up from the three generally cited by the Pentagon and Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the outset and four previously laid out by staff.
- Despite White House assertions that objectives are clear and unchanging, the list of priorities has expanded and shifted during the three‑and‑a‑half‑week air campaign as economic and diplomatic costs mount.
- Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth says Iran’s missile and drone programs are being 'overwhelmingly destroyed' and claims ballistic‑missile attacks on U.S. forces are down 90% since the conflict began, with Trump stating that 82% of Iran’s missile launchers have been 'killed.'
- The White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly characterizes the operation as a 'resounding success,' saying Iran’s navy is destroyed, its defense industrial base dismantled and its nuclear ambitions 'shatter more by the day,' even as Iran continues launching missiles and drones.
- The article underscores that leaving the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in power with some objectives unmet could produce political fallout at home and international doubts about what the war actually achieved.
- Jim Mattis told the CERAWeek conference in Houston that if the U.S. ended the war with Iran now, "they would now say they own the strait" and the U.S. would effectively cede control of the Strait of Hormuz.
- Mattis warned that Iran would likely impose a tax on every ship transiting the strait and said he "can’t identify a lot of options" for the U.S. in the current situation.
- Mattis argued that "never in history has air power alone changed a regime," casting doubt on the ability of current strike tactics to alter Iranian behavior.
- The article reports an Iranian lawmaker’s claim that Iran is already collecting about $2 million in transit fees from some vessels crossing the strait, which he called a sign of Iranian "strength."
- It reiterates that Trump has issued a specific 48‑hour ultimatum on Truth Social threatening to "hit and obliterate" Iranian power plants, starting with the largest, if Iran does not "fully open, without threat" the Strait of Hormuz.
- CENTCOM now says Operation Epic Fury has conducted more than 9,000 combat flights and destroyed or damaged more than 140 Iranian naval vessels since it began on Feb. 28.
- CENTCOM specifies that U.S. forces struck 16 Iranian mine‑laying ships on March 10, as part of efforts to counter threats in and around the Strait of Hormuz.
- Iranian Maj. Gen. Ali Abdollahi Aliabadi, speaking for Khatam‑al Anbiya Central Headquarters, vowed Iran’s armed forces will fight 'until complete victory' despite what U.S. officials describe as heavy losses.
- Trump publicly claims Iran’s navy, air force, air defenses, and multiple tiers of leadership are 'gone' or 'mostly gone,' and says the U.S. is now 'having a hard time' finding leaders in Tehran to talk to.
- The piece reiterates that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed at the beginning of Operation Epic Fury, a fact U.S. outlets are treating as established in the current war narrative.
- Confirms ongoing closure of the Strait of Hormuz "to most shipping, including tankers," and links that directly to skyrocketing oil prices.
- Clarifies that the G7 foreign ministers’ meeting near Paris will include Hormuz and the Iran war as central points of discussion, even though the official agenda is framed more broadly.
- Highlights Trump’s public anger at G7 and NATO allies for not committing military help to reopen Hormuz, and notes that Rubio’s trip comes just as some of those allies show limited willingness to support certain actions to restore shipping.
- Details of the March 24 missile that struck an upscale residential street in central Tel Aviv, leaving a crater, damaging an apartment building facade and crushing surrounding vehicles.
- Confirmation from Israeli health officials that at least six people were injured in Tel Aviv, plus at least one injury in northern Israel from another explosion, and additional blasts in the south.
- Israeli police’s estimate that the Tel Aviv missile’s warhead contained about 220 pounds of explosives and that it evaded Israel’s air defenses.
- Disclosure, via an unnamed Israeli official, that the U.S. is planning talks with Iran in Pakistan 'in the coming days,' with message-passing by Egypt, Turkey and Pakistan.
- Trump’s latest statement that he is postponing planned attacks on Iran’s energy infrastructure until the end of the week in hopes of clinching a deal by March 27.
- Iran’s public characterization of the negotiation narrative as 'fake news,' contrasted with its Foreign Ministry’s admission that it is replying to requests sent by 'friendly' intermediaries.
- Iran’s Revolutionary Guard statement that a gas pipeline feeding a southwestern Iranian power station was struck overnight.
- CBS, citing the Financial Times, introduces evidence of about $500 million in oil futures trades executed roughly 15 minutes before Trump’s social‑media claim of ‘productive conversations’ with Iran, immediately ahead of a sharp oil sell‑off.
- The article directly quotes a market strategist questioning who would be ‘relatively aggressive at selling futures’ right before Trump’s post, while conceding causality is hard to prove.
- The White House issues a categorical denial that it would tolerate any official ‘illegally profiteering off of insider knowledge’ and calls any implication of such activity ‘baseless and irresponsible reporting’ absent proof.
- Brent crude, after a 10% plunge on Trump’s talk‑claims, is now back above $100 — about 40% higher than before the war began — highlighting that the temporary dip did not undo the broader price shock.
- The International Energy Agency is quoted labeling the Strait of Hormuz shutdown a ‘major, major threat’ to the global economy, underscoring that the underlying war and chokepoint crisis have not eased.
- Trump has extended his ultimatum for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz by an additional five days beyond the initial late‑Monday deadline.
- He publicly claimed the U.S. is engaged in talks with Iran to end the war, a claim Iranian parliamentary leadership promptly denied.
- Oil prices briefly dipped below $100 per barrel on Trump’s announcement before rebounding to about $104, indicating only transient market relief.
- The extension came as Iran continued missile barrages, including a direct hit in central Tel Aviv and attacks that triggered power disruptions in Kuwait and air‑raid alerts across parts of the Gulf.
- Confirms that as Trump’s ultimatum clock runs, Israel is simultaneously executing its own campaign against Tehran’s infrastructure, producing large‑scale outages.
- Shows that, despite U.S. threats focusing on power plants, it is Israel that has so far carried out major strikes on Tehran’s grid.
- Provides updated death tolls in Iran, Lebanon, Israel and among U.S. troops, sharpening the backdrop for the ultimatum and allied diplomacy.
- Downing Street says Trump and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer spoke Sunday and agreed that reopening the Strait of Hormuz is essential to restore global shipping and stabilize the global energy market.
- The call took place the day after Trump publicly issued a 48‑hour ultimatum to Iran on March 21 to reopen Hormuz or face potential U.S. strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure.
- The article notes a slight thaw in Trump–Starmer relations: after Trump criticized the UK for being slow to authorize use of British bases for strikes on Iranian missile sites, the two now plan to 'speak again soon,' even as Trump continues to publicly pressure Starmer, including by sharing an 'SNL' clip mocking him.
- Clarifies that Trump has now publicly tied a 48‑hour deadline to reopening the Strait of Hormuz, threatening to start “destroying the nation’s power plants” if Iran does not comply.
- Shows that, despite Trump’s talk of “considering winding down” the war, oil markets are still pricing in ongoing conflict and transit risk, with Brent staying well above $100.
- Introduces a specific timeline for multinational talks on securing safe passage, with NATO’s secretary-general confirming a 22‑country, U.K.-led effort is being organized.
- Provides updated U.S. gasoline pricing — $3.94 per gallon — indicating the domestic consumer impact of the Hormuz disruption at this stage of the war.
- A U.S. official and another source say Trump’s team has begun initial internal discussions on what peace talks with Iran would look like, after roughly three weeks of war.
- Jared Kushner and real-estate ally Steve Witkoff are identified as being involved in these back‑channel discussions on potential diplomacy.
- U.S. officials outline six core demands they want from Iran in any deal: a five‑year halt to its missile program; zero uranium enrichment; decommissioning of bombed Natanz, Isfahan and Fordow reactors; strict external monitoring of centrifuge‑related machinery; regional arms‑control deals with a missile cap around 1,000 km; and an end to financing for Hezbollah, the Houthis and Hamas.
- Egypt, Qatar and the U.K. are currently relaying messages between Washington, Israel and Tehran; Egypt and Qatar have told the U.S. and Israel that Iran is interested in negotiations but demanding a ceasefire, guarantees the war will not resume, and compensation.
- Trump has told aides he is open to talks but currently rejects Iran’s ceasefire and reparations demands, though one U.S. official floats returning frozen Iranian assets as a possible face‑saving compromise that could be framed differently than 'reparations.'
- U.S. officials are debating whom to treat as their primary interlocutor in Iran and which country should be the main mediator, with Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi viewed by Trump advisers as a limited 'fax machine' rather than a real decision‑maker.
- Clarifies that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced the sanctions pause on X and quantified the expected market impact at roughly 140 million barrels.
- Introduces Bessent’s claim that the U.S. will effectively 'use the Iranian barrels against Tehran' by keeping prices down while limiting Iran’s access to revenue.
- Adds that the administration lifted sanctions on Russian oil the previous week, a separate but related decision that has agitated European allies.
- Provides detailed, on‑the‑record criticism from Sen. Jeanne Shaheen and Sen. Richard Blumenthal framing the move as a 'financial lifeline' and 'shamefully stupid,' suggesting intensified congressional opposition to Trump’s war strategy and sanctions policy.
- Quotes former CIA Director John Brennan warning that the conflict will last 'a long, long time' and be 'very, very dangerous' for U.S. security interests, and highlighting what he calls policy inconsistencies.
- Documents Trump’s latest public comments to MS NOW and on Truth Social about how long the war should last, including his assertion that Iran would take 10 years to rebuild if the U.S. stopped now and his comment that 'if we stay longer, they’ll never rebuild,' alongside his claim that he is considering 'winding down' the operation.
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced the U.S. is temporarily lifting sanctions on some Iranian oil and oil products already loaded on ships, through April 19, 2026, to ease the oil shock.
- Bessent said the waiver is expected to quickly add about 140 million barrels to the global oil market, which uses around 100 million barrels per day.
- The International Maritime Organization estimates that more than 3,000 vessels are stranded in the Middle East as the near‑total halt of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz turns the Persian Gulf into a "parking lot" for ships.
- NPR confirms that the USS Boxer Amphibious Ready Group, carrying thousands of Marines from the 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, has departed California and will take about three weeks to reach the Gulf, in addition to the inbound USS Tripoli group with more than 2,000 Marines from Japan.
- The Pentagon is now openly using Apache helicopters and A‑10 Warthogs to attack Iranian targets and is focusing on the small fast boats Iran uses in the Persian Gulf, signaling U.S. commanders believe the Iranian air and missile threat has been sharply reduced.
- Reports that Iran’s Natanz enrichment facility has just been hit again, even as Trump publicly talks about considering ‘winding down’ U.S. military efforts.
- Clarifies that this is part of a pattern of shifting U.S. and Israeli rationales for the war—ranging from regime change hopes to destruction of Iran’s nuclear and missile programs—with little evidence of either being achieved so far.
- Highlights that the latest strike coincides with continued Iranian missile launches against Israel and heavy drone activity against Saudi Arabia’s eastern oil region, undercutting any perception the conflict is tapering off.
- President Trump reiterated publicly that he is 'considering winding down' U.S. military operations in Iran while simultaneously telling reporters the U.S. is not currently considering a cease-fire with Iran.
- The article clarifies that the war has entered its fourth week, with U.S. air assets escalating efforts to clear the Strait of Hormuz of Iranian drones and naval craft.
- It documents a new U.S. deployment decision: three additional warships carrying 2,500 Marines will head to the Middle East next month, increasing an already large U.S. regional footprint above 50,000 troops.
- It reports that U.S. Treasury has temporarily lifted sanctions enforcement on some Iranian oil shipments at sea to ease energy prices, a new economic lever being pulled alongside military operations.
- Adds that Trump’s 'winding down' comments came as the U.S. officially announced deployment of additional warships and Marines to the Middle East.
- Reports that the administration will lift sanctions on Iranian oil already loaded on ships in an attempt to rein in soaring fuel prices, framed as a direct response to another jump in oil prices and a U.S. stock-market plunge.
- Provides updated regional battlefield context: Israel says Iran continues firing missiles at it, Saudi Arabia reports shooting down 20 drones over its eastern oil region with no injuries or damage, and the Israeli military says it is striking targets in Tehran and Hezbollah positions in Beirut’s southern suburbs.
- Updates tolls and humanitarian impact, citing more than 1,300 people killed in Iran, more than 1,000 in Lebanon, 15 in Israel, 13 U.S. service members dead, and millions displaced in Lebanon and Iran.
- Includes a concrete market-impact detail from United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby, who tells employees that jet-fuel prices have more than doubled in three weeks and says they could cost the airline $11 billion a year if they stay at current levels, with the airline preparing for oil not falling below $100 a barrel until the end of next year.
- Trump posted on Truth Social that the U.S. is 'getting very close' to meeting its objectives and is 'consider[ing] winding down' military efforts against Iran.
- In the post, Trump explicitly lists his claimed objectives — degrading Iran's missiles and industrial base, eliminating the Iranian navy and air force, preventing a nuclear weapon, and protecting U.S. allies — and asserts they are nearly met.
- Trump now says the Strait of Hormuz 'will have to be guarded and policed' by other nations that use it and that 'The United States does not' need to do so, signaling he may end the war without reopening the strait.
- A U.S. official tells Axios the post does not signal an imminent end to the war, estimating at least 'a couple of weeks' more of 'hard and continuously' conducted strikes.
- The article reports Trump is torn between concern over high oil prices and lack of allied help on Hormuz, and his reported enthusiasm for 'obliterating' Iranian capabilities, quoting him telling a confidant, 'We're hot! We're winning!'
- Axios adds that Trump recently called NATO partners 'cowards' and described NATO as 'a paper tiger' over their refusal to send ships and minesweepers to help reopen Hormuz.
- At a March 20, 2026 White House ceremony presenting the Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy to the Navy football team, President Trump referenced the ongoing Iran war and said, without detail, 'We’re doing extremely well.'
- Trump said Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Dan Caine were absent from the event because they were in the White House Situation Room.
- As the event occurred, a U.S. official told the Associated Press that the United States was deploying three more warships, consisting of roughly 2,500 additional Marines, to the Middle East as the Iran war continues.
- Analysts and historical internal Navy critiques show U.S. mine countermeasures (MCM) capability has been allowed to atrophy for decades, with a 2025 Center for Maritime Strategy study calling the current state of American minesweeping 'grim.'
- Vice Adm. Stan Arthur and other officers have been warning since at least the early 1990s that mine warfare was being neglected, and the Navy’s dedicated Mine Warfare Command was dismantled in 2006, described as a 'critical institutional blow.'
- CENTCOM officials, aware of the gap, estimate they have destroyed 16 Iranian mine‑laying vessels and multiple naval‑mine storage bunkers in recent strikes near the Strait of Hormuz.
- Despite Iranian threats to lay mines, U.S. officials and outside analysts say it is unclear how many, if any, mines are currently in the Strait, with some arguing Tehran would publicize mine‑laying on social media if it had already done so.
- The Navy once had robust dedicated MCM ships and helicopters during the Cold War, reflecting an institutional understanding that keeping sea lanes open was fundamental to every other mission, but that force structure has been substantially drawn down.
- A second Marine Expeditionary Unit of about 2,200 Marines and three warships has departed California and is headed toward the Middle East.
- The first Marine Expeditionary Unit, coming from the Pacific, is still en route to the region; together they will put two MEUs in theater once fully in place.
- The USS Tripoli, a modern 'big deck' amphibious assault ship optimized for F‑35s, Ospreys and other aircraft, is part of the first group.
- CBS notes an Amphibious Ready Group–MEU package was last used when the USS Iwo Jima took part in the operation to remove Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and has also been used for drug interdiction and oil‑cargo interception in the Caribbean.
- The article updates the U.S. casualty toll in Operation Epic Fury to 13 service members killed and reiterates Trump’s public denial of plans for 'boots on the ground,' contrasted with the growing amphibious presence.
- Multiple military and maritime experts tell MS NOW that achieving minimal or zero attacks on shipping in the Strait of Hormuz would likely require U.S. ground troops to seize and hold stretches of Iranian coastline if air and naval strikes prove insufficient.
- Retired Army Gen. James A. “Spider” Marks says Marines currently en route to the region are a contingency force to create a ground “buffer zone” should airstrikes not adequately suppress Iran’s ability to fire on transiting traffic.
- Jonathan Schroden of the Center for Naval Analysis distinguishes between tolerating some continued attacks on shipping — potentially manageable with extended strikes and naval escorts — and a much more demanding standard of security that would probably require putting troops ashore.
- Maritime historian Sal Mercogliano says ship captains waiting to transit the strait have not been briefed on any clear U.S. military plan, and experts warn tanker insurance costs could spike so sharply that Washington might need to guarantee compensation for any wartime damage to entice owners to sail.
- Gen. Dan Caine publicly confirmed that low‑flying A‑10 Warthog aircraft are now being used to 'hunt and kill' IRGC fast‑attack craft in the Strait of Hormuz, a repurposing of the platform from close air support to ship‑killing roles.
- Regional allies, not named in the piece, are using Apache helicopter gunships to target Iranian one‑way attack drones threatening Gulf states and energy infrastructure.
- CENTCOM disclosed that several 5,000‑pound penetrating bombs were dropped earlier in the week on underground missile silos near the strait as part of efforts to degrade Iran’s anti‑shipping capabilities.
- Roughly 2,200 Marines embarked on three U.S. warships have been pulled off an Indo‑Pacific patrol and are now steaming toward the Persian Gulf, where options include helping clear the strait or participating in a possible seizure of Kharg Island.
- Four sources tell Axios the Trump administration is actively considering occupying or blockading Iran’s Kharg Island to pressure Tehran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
- A source familiar with White House thinking says the notional plan is roughly a month of additional strikes to weaken Iranian forces, then seize the island and use it as leverage in negotiations.
- Three different Marine units are already en route to the region, and the White House and Pentagon are considering sending more troops.
- A senior administration official says Trump is willing to take Kharg Island or launch a coastal invasion if needed, though no decision has been made.
- Retired Rear Adm. Mark Montgomery warns that seizing Kharg could expose U.S. troops to high risk without guaranteeing Iranian concessions and suggests escorts through the strait after about two more weeks of strikes are more likely.
- The piece confirms last Friday’s massive airstrikes on dozens of targets on Kharg were both a warning shot and preparatory shaping for a possible ground operation, with officials saying they have destroyed most defenses but left oil pipes intact.
- The U.S. quietly sought Sri Lanka’s permission to land and park two arms‑loaded military aircraft on its territory two days before beginning airstrikes on Iran.
- Sri Lanka declined the request while it was also considering and ultimately rejecting an Iranian request to dock three warships, emphasizing its neutral posture.
- Sri Lanka is now hosting survivors from an Iranian warship the U.S. torpedoed off its coast days after the war began, plus sailors from another Iranian vessel.
- U.S. and allied forces have begun using low‑flying attack jets over the Strait of Hormuz sea lanes to strike Iranian naval vessels.
- Apache helicopters are actively shooting down Iranian drones as part of the same operation.
- Pentagon officials describe this as a multistage plan to reduce threats from Iranian armed boats, mines and cruise missiles that have halted traffic through the strait since early March, with a goal of eventually sending U.S. warships through and escorting commercial vessels.
- Six U.S. Western allies released a joint statement on March 19 expressing support for a potential coalition to reopen the Strait of Hormuz but stopped short of committing naval vessels or other resources.
- The U.K. and NATO Secretary General Marc Rutte orchestrated the push for the statement, with Rutte and U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer persuading French President Emmanuel Macron to drop his opposition to a political declaration while deferring decisions on practical steps.
- Japan joined the statement at the last minute ahead of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s White House meeting with President Trump, and the U.K. has already sent officers to CENTCOM in Tampa to begin coalition planning.
- The joint statement condemns Iran’s ‘de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz’ and Iranian attacks on commercial vessels and infrastructure, and says the allies are ‘ready to contribute to appropriate efforts’ and start ‘preparatory planning.’
- France, Germany, Italy and Japan have all previously ruled out sending warships during the war, and it remains unclear whether signing the statement will change those positions.