Friday, March 27, 2026

Katz warns strikes on Iran to intensify amid unrelenting missile fire at civilian areas


Katz warns strikes on Iran to intensify amid unrelenting missile fire at civilian areas


Defense Minister Israel Katz warned on Friday that Israel would ramp up its strikes on Iran in the coming days, citing continued Iranian ballistic missile fire at civilian targets in Israel, despite US President Donald Trump’s apparent efforts to bring the hostilities to a halt.

His announcement came after the Israel Defense Forces announced earlier in the day that the Israeli Air Force had bombed a key Iranian naval missile and mine production site, as well as ballistic missile factories and air defense systems.

Iran, in turn, kept up its attacks on Israel and the Gulf states, after issuing a less-than-warm response on Thursday to Trump’s proposed deal to end the war. Despite this, diplomats from several interested countries suggested that indirect negotiations between Washington and Tehran were still on the table.

“The prime minister and I warned the Iranian terror regime to stop the missile fire toward the civilian population in Israel,” Katz said during an assessment with military officials. “Despite the warnings, the fire continues, and therefore IDF strikes in Iran will intensify and expand to additional targets and domains that assist the regime in building and operating weapons against Israeli civilians.”

He warned that Tehran would “pay heavy and increasing prices for this war crime,” according to remarks provided by his office.

The majority of ballistic missiles launched at Israel by Iran have had cluster bomb warheads, which indiscriminately spread dozens of small munitions over a wide area.

The munitions do not have their own propulsion or guidance and simply fall to the ground, where they are designed to explode on impact. Some of the submunitions do not explode upon hitting the ground, and can then still pose a danger to anyone who happens upon them.

The use of cluster bombs is prohibited under the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions, although neither Iran nor Israel is a party to the agreement.

Key naval weapons site targeted

Earlier on Friday, the IDF said the Air Force had bombed Iran’s “most central” facility for producing naval weapons, located in Yazd, central Iran.

The facility, the military said, was used by Iran to plan, develop, assemble and store “advanced missiles intended for launch from cruise vessels, submarines and helicopters toward mobile and stationary maritime targets.”

“This is a site where most of the missiles and naval mines are developed by the Iranian navy forces,” the military said.

It said the strike, carried out following intelligence provided by the Military Intelligence Directorate and Naval Intelligence Division, “constitutes a significant blow to the production capabilities of the naval forces.”

The strike marked yet another setback for Iran’s naval operations, after Israel killed the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ navy on Thursday, as well as other top officers.

Also on Friday, the IDF said the Air Force had bombed dozens of military targets in Iran overnight, including ballistic missile launch sites and Iranian soldiers whom it said had been preparing to carry out fire on Israel.

Also overnight, the IAF struck several ballistic missile launch sites — including one belonging to the IRGC — air defense systems, and surveillance posts of the IRGC and Iranian army, the military said.

The IDF said it also identified Iranian soldiers from Iran’s ballistic missile array at a building in Tehran. “Minutes after the identification, the Air Force struck and eliminated the soldiers who were planning to advance fire toward the State of Israel,” the military said.

Israel, Gulf face renewed fire

Meanwhile, after a nearly eight-hour lull, Iran renewed its ballistic missile fire on Israel on Friday morning, setting off sirens across southern Israel shortly before 11 a.m.

Another round of rocket fire, several hours later, set off alerts across central Israel, the Jerusalem area and the West Bank.

No injuries were reported in either attack, and in both instances, initial IDF assessments suggested that the missiles had been intercepted by air defenses.

Nor were the Gulf states spared from Iranian attacks on Friday, as both Kuwait and Saudi Arabia were hit with drones and missile fire.

Sirens also warned of attacks in Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, as Iran warned civilians across the region to distance themselves from US forces in the area.

Kuwait’s port authority said in a statement on X that the country’s main commercial port, the Shuwaikh Port, was targeted at dawn “by enemy drones, preliminary reports revealed material damage but no human casualties.”

Hours later, the country’s Mubarak Al Kabeer Port also came under attack by drones and cruise missiles, causing “material damage” but no injuries, authorities said.

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US said mulling ‘final blow’ options if Iran talks fail, including sending troops to seize key assets


US said mulling ‘final blow’ options if Iran talks fail, including sending troops to seize key assets
Lazar Berman,
Nava Freiberg


The US is working on options for a “final blow” to Iran that could see American ground troops deployed on Iranian soil, as well as a major bombing effort, the Axios outlet reported Thursday, citing two US officials and two sources with knowledge of the matter.

The sources said that if attempts to negotiate an end to the conflict with Iran do not bear fruit, and the Iranians continue to hamper shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, the US could initiate a major strike that would serve a dual purpose — improving the American position in possible further talks with Tehran, and potentially allowing US President Donald Trump to end the war unilaterally with an ostensible victory image.

The officials told Axios that four options are under discussion.

The first would entail seizing or blockading Kharg Island, Iran’s key hub for the export of oil.

A second would be to take Larak Island in the Strait of Hormuz, which houses Iranian bases and radars that track ships transiting Hormuz, and hosts small boats that can attack civilian ships. Tehran has largely blocked the passage of oil through the vital strait in retaliation for the US-Israeli attacks, pushing up global energy prices.


A third possibility would be to invade Abu Musa Island in the eastern Persian Gulf, which gives Iran control over ships leaving the Gulf. The island — and the nearby Greater and Lesser Tunb islands — are held by Iran but claimed by the United Arab Emirates, a key US and Israeli ally.

Finally, the US could simply block or take control of ships exporting Iranian oil.


According to Axios, there are also plans under consideration for US troops to seize Iran’s 450-kilogram stockpile of highly enriched uranium, believed to sit under bombed-out nuclear facilities deep inside Iran. Alternatively, the US could further strike the sites from the air to ensure that Iran can’t reach the material.

Trump has not decided on any of the courses of action, said the sources.

The report came as sources familiar with US intelligence told CNN that Iran was raising military defenses on Kharg Island in anticipation of a possible US operation to seize the territory.

Tehran has been laying traps, moving military personnel and boosting air defenses amid fears of an American plan to take control of the island, which handles about 90 percent of Iran’s crude oil exports, according to the report.

A source familiar with the planning said that a significant number of troops would be needed to take the island, putting its size at about a third that of Manhattan.

US officials and military experts have warned of significant casualty risks, saying the island is heavily fortified with layered defenses and that Iran had recently reinforced it with additional shoulder-fired, surface-to-air guided missile systems known as MANPADS, sources told CNN.

The report came as the Trump administration said it had made progress with Iran on a 15-point US plan for ending the conflict, though Tehran has publicly reacted coldly to the proposal.


Regardless of the talks’ progress, the US has deployed 1,000 paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division and 5,000 Marines toward the Gulf, with the Marines traveling on the USS Tripoli, an assault ship that could play a key role in a potential attack on Kharg, according to an NBC report.

Iranian parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, reported to be the “top man” in Tehran with whom Trump has been in indirect negotiations, warned on Wednesday that Iran was preparing for such an assault, writing on X that “based on some intelligence reports, Iran’s enemies are preparing to occupy one of the Iranian islands with support from one of the regional states.” Ghalibaf did not name the state.

“Our forces are monitoring all enemy movements, and if they take any step, all the vital infrastructure of that regional state will be targeted with relentless, unceasing attacks,” he said.

Meanwhile, Trump said Thursday Iran must “get serious soon” if it wants to salvage talks.

In a post on his Truth Social network, Trump said that Iran had been “militarily obliterated, with zero chance of a comeback,” and was “begging” for a deal.


Calling Iranian negotiators “very different and ‘strange,'” he added: “They better get serious soon, before it is too late, because once that happens, there is NO TURNING BACK, and it won’t be pretty.”

The US president went on to attack the NATO military alliance, saying its member states “have done absolutely nothing to help with the lunatic nation [of Iran], now militarily decimated.”

Writing in all caps, Trump said the US “needs nothing from NATO, but ‘never forget’ this very important point in time!”

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IEA Report: 10 “Emergency Measures” straight from the Great Reset playbook

IEA Report: 10 “Emergency Measures” straight from the Great Reset playbook



The International Energy Agency (IEA) has just published a new report that claims to identify ten “demand-side measures” which will “alleviate the economic impacts [of the] war in the Middle East.”

Titled “Sheltering From Oil Shocks”, it is notionally aimed at “easing oil price pressures on consumers”, but it reads like a page straight out of the Great Reset playbook.

Its ten recommendations include old favourites like working from home, limiting air travel and even phasing out gas cookers…

…targeted actions can ease pressure on fuels that are particularly constrained. A reduction in air travel where alternatives exist can significantly lower demand for jet fuel. Measures to shift LPG use away from transport and towards essential applications, such as cooking, can help protect vulnerable households. At the same time, encouraging the uptake of alternative clean cooking solutions where feasible can reduce reliance on LPG and avoid a return to more polluting fuels that harm people’s health.

In full, their recommendations are…

  1. Work from home where possible.
  2. Reduce highway speed limits by at least 10 km/h
  3. Encourage public transport
  4. Alternate private car access to roads in large cities on different days
  5. Increase car sharing and adopt efficient driving practices
  6. Efficient driving for road commercial vehicles and delivery of goods
  7. Divert LPG use from transport
  8. Avoid air travel where alternative options exist
  9. Where possible, switch to other modern cooking solutions
  10. Leverage flexibility with petrochemical feedstocks and implement short-term efficiency and maintenance measures

If a lot of those sound familiar, well, that’s because they were suggested inclusions in “Climate Lockdowns”, those totally imaginary things that conspiracy theorists just made up.

Let’s take a deeper look at a couple.

Number 4 is especially fascinating. What exactly does “alternate private car access in large cities on different days” mean? Because at first glance it doesn’t look like correct English.

The report explains:

Private vehicles are allowed into designated zones in large cities on specific days only based on their number plate. Vehicles with odd-numbered plates have access on different weekdays than those with even-numbered plates. This measure reduces traffic congestion, engine idling and fuel-intensive stop-and-go driving. It also reduces local air pollution and improves attractiveness of the city centre for the use of bicycles or walking.

…but notably doesn’t actually elucidate how this would be enforced.

It would require CCTV with Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) tech to scan all traffic, and presumably automatically issue fines to anyone with an even-numbered car who dares to drive on a Thursday.

It’s an idea pulled from the plans for “15-minute cities”.

Number 5 recommends “increasing car sharing”, which rather echoes calls to end private car ownership, doesn’t it? That’s a policy which the WEF has been nudging along for the last ten years.

There’s number 8“Avoid air travel where alternative options exist”number 1 “Work from home where possible” or number 9“switching to modern cooking solutions”.

Not one of which is a new policy or original idea; they all already existed as mooted solutions for totally different problems.

In short, what we have here is a “climate lockdown” by any other name. Perhaps a trial run.

This really should end the argument for anyone as yet unconvinced that the war in Iran is being used to push through the ever-familiar “Great Reset” agenda.

And in case you’re not seeing where we go from here, recall the (totally spurious) reports of “nature recovering” during the Covid lockdowns?

That’s what comes next.

We’re subjected to these measures as an “emergency management” system, and then – shockingly – we’re told that it’s really helped the environment and reduced pollution and CO2 and slowed warming and…whatever else they want to say.

They won’t be constrained by reality; that’s the benefit of just making stuff up.

Once again, we’re being asked to believe that, by total chance, what we need to do is what all governments on Earth already wanted to do.

It’s really shocking how often that happens.

Energy Lockdown: The Drumbeat Begins


There is a sinister new power in Iran, and it’s not who the West thinks


There is a sinister new power in Iran, and it’s not who the West thinks
Kasra Aarabi


Has a power vacuum emerged in Iran’s regime, and who is really calling the shots? As the conflict enters its fourth week, these questions are shaping Western policy and military strategy. The answer reveals why prematurely stopping the war will almost certainly produce a far more extremist regime.

The past month has seen the US and Israel eliminate the most senior ranking officials in the Islamic Republic, including supreme leader Ali Khamenei. Mojtaba, Ali Khamenei’s son, who has now formally succeeded his father as supreme leader, was also targeted, but reportedly narrowly survived. That said, Mojtaba’s complete absence from the public eye since he assumed the mantle has led many to conclude that the new supreme leader is severely wounded and out of the decision-making picture, at least for now.

Despite incurring significant losses, there is still a high degree of coordination between the government bureaucracy, military and intelligence apparatus – the three key pillars upholding the Islamic Republic. Against this backdrop and reports that Washington has been negotiating with the “real powerbroker” in the regime, Western policy circles have concluded a new strongman has emerged in Tehran. All attention has turned to the obvious contender: Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, speaker of the Iranian parliament and veteran of Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) – the regime’s ideological army.

But in Iran, the obvious answer is rarely the correct one. While the egotistical Ghalibaf has played to the limelight, a far more powerful figure is likely to be silently pulling the strings: Ahmad Vahidi – the new IRGC commander-in-chief who is a Khamenei absolutist.

Unlike Ghalibaf, Vahidi has remained in the shadows since the war. This is not without reason: our analysis suggests he is likely to be operating as the key cog in the regime’s chain of command and his survival is essential to its continuity. Long before the war, Ali Khamenei had entrusted Vahidi to draw up plans to further militarise the regime. If he outlasts this conflict and the regime survives, he will finally be able to implement this vision – a design that will produce a far more radical and extremist Islamic Republic.

Vahidi has unmatched experience and influence across the regime’s military, intelligence, and bureaucracy. His career began in the 1980s in the IRGC’s Intelligence Bureau, made up of the regime’s most ideologically loyal operatives. As the IRGC’s deputy for intelligence, he was hand-picked to join a secretive cohort to accompany Khamenei to visit North Korea – a trip designed to acquire missile and nuclear technology.

During the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988), Vahidi was also one of the original members of the Ramadan Headquarters, a unit within the IRGC created to form Islamist terrorist groups globally and overseen by Khamenei.

Upon assuming the supreme leadership in 1989, Khamenei created the notorious Quds Force – the IRGC’s extraterritorial terror branch – and appointed Vahidi as its first commander. It was a testament to his loyalty. Vahidi demonstrated in that role that his vision to export terrorism was far more global than his notorious successor Qasem Soleimani.

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Pentagon Weighs Sending Another 10,000 Ground Troops To Middle East, Suggests Seizing Iran-Controlled Islands


Pentagon Weighs Sending Another 10,000 Ground Troops To Middle East, Suggests Seizing Iran-Controlled Islands
TYLER DURDEN


Summary


  • The Pentagon is looking at sending up to 10,000 additional ground troops to the Middle East to give the US President more military options even as he weighs peace talks with Tehran, according to unnamed Department of War officials  
  • The earlier five-day deadline for resumption of US attacks on Iranian energy has now been moved to ten days (it was set to expire Fri/Sat). The following was issued by President Trump late Thursday afternoon on Truth Social. "As per Iranian Government request, please let this statement serve to represent that I am pausing the period of Energy Plant destruction by 10 Days to Monday, April 6, 2026, at 8 P.M., Eastern Time. Talks are ongoing and, despite erroneous statements to the contrary by the Fake News Media, and others, they are going very well." Shortly after, Iran denied it has requested a pause on energy-site strikes. 
  • Iran rejects US plan but says diplomacy continues (indirectly, apparently) - White House, Pentagon reviewing options for 'final blow' as Trump tells Iranians 'get serious' about talks. Hegseth: we'll "negotiate through bombs". Trump asserts Iran is begging for a deal. Trump extends energy destruction 'deadline' to 10 days - oil slides & almost immediately rebounds.
  • Trump touts "present" of several tankers allowed by Tehran through Strait, while at the same time warning Tehran of 'no turning back' if it doesn't negotiate. Cabinet meeting hails 'successes' while saying war to 'end soon', confirms 15-point plan delivered via Pakistanis.

  • Iranian hardliners ramp up call to get nuclear weapons, Reuters reports. Israel says it has killed Alireza Tangsiri, commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy.

  • Iran "laying Traps" & "building up defenses" on Kharg Island; NYT report says 13 US regional bases largely 'uninhabitable' in wake of Iran ballistic missile retaliation on Gulf.



    Just hours after President Trump said he was pausing strikes on Iran’s energy sector for 10 more days, to April 6, so peace negotiations can take place, the WSJ reported that the Pentagon is looking at sending up to 10,000 additional ground troops to the Middle East to give the US President more military options even as he weighs peace talks with Tehran, according to unnamed Department of War officials. 


    The force, which would likely include infantry and armored vehicles, would be added to the roughly 5,000 Marines and the thousands of paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division who have already been ordered to the region.  The will join well over 50,000 servicemembers already deployed to air and army bases, as well as on naval ships, across the Middle East in the lead up and since the start of Operation Epic Fury.


    It is unclear where precisely forces will go in the Middle East, but they will likely be within striking distance of Iran and Kharg Island, a crucial oil export hub off Iran’s coast.

    Trump has repeatedly said he will open the Strait of Hormuz, with or without the help of U.S. allies, and it is increasingly looking like 


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