Saturday, March 7, 2026

White House: Iran campaign goals achievable in 4-6 weeks


White House: Iran campaign goals achievable in 4-6 weeks
Elad Benari,


White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Friday that the United States is well on its way toward controlling Iranian airspace, telling reporters that Washington expects the achievable US objectives to be completed in four to six weeks.

Leavitt added that "there are a number of people who we are looking to lead Iran."

Leavitt also said President Donald Trump would be meeting with defense contractors at the White House, along with Secretary of War Pete Hegseth.

“The purpose is to discuss the president’s aggressive and fierce support for rapidly increasing the ability of US manufacturers to produce American-made weapons," she said, stressing, “We have more than enough ammunition and weapon stockpiles to achieve the objectives of Operation Epic Fury and beyond."

Speaking later on Fox News, Leavitt clarified Trump’s post in which he wrote, "There will be no deal with Iran except unconditional surrender!"

"What President Trump means when he says 'unconditional surrender' is when he, as Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. Military and the leader of the free world - determines that Iran can no longer pose a threat to the United States," Leavitt explained.


Qatari forces intercept missile despite Iran’s vow not to strike neighboring countries


Qatari forces intercept missile despite Iran’s vow not to strike neighboring countries | LIVE BLOG



UAE says Iran launched 16 ballistic missiles and 121 drones at its territory today; most were intercepted, with one missile falling into the sea and two drones landing inside the country

The United Arab Emirates said Iran launched 16 ballistic missiles and 121 drones toward its territory on Saturday. According to Emirati officials, air defense systems intercepted 15 of the missiles, while one fell into the sea. The military also shot down 119 drones, though two drones landed inside the country. The latest barrage comes amid escalating regional attacks involving Iran and several Gulf states

Rocket fire from Lebanon: warning sirens sound in Tzfat and surrounding areas

Warning sirens sounded Saturday in the northern Israeli city of Tzfat and several surrounding towns after rockets were fired from Lebanon. No injuries were immediately reported. According to the Israeli military, the attack was likely carried out by Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran. Since Monday, the Lebanese terrorist group has fired dozens of rockets and drones toward Israeli territory.

Houthi official warns group is ready to join regional war, says US ‘will be the biggest loser' – report

IDF begins broad wave of strikes on Iranian regime infrastructure in Tehran and Isfahan

Emirates suspends all flights to and from Dubai until further notice; passengers advised not to go to the airport

IDF strikes Tehran’s Imam Hossein University, Iranian missile storage sites, and underground military infrastructure in central Iran

The IDF completed another wave of airstrikes against the Iranian terror regime, hitting key military infrastructure in Tehran and central Iran. Targets included the IRGC’s Imam Hossein University, missile storage facilities, and underground command centers. The strikes, carried out by over 80 Israeli Air Force jets guided by IDF intelligence, aim to reduce threats to Israeli territory and degrade Iran’s military capabilities.

White House Press Sec. Karoline Leavitt: Iran operations to be completed within 4 to 6 weeks

"There are a number of people who we are looking at to lead Iran," the press secretary added. 

Iranian ballistic missile attacks on Israel dropped by some 90% compared to the start of the war

More.....



Russia providing Iran intelligence to target US forces, officials say


Russia providing Iran intelligence to target US forces, officials say - report


Russia is providing Iran with information to target US forces in the Middle EastThe Washington Post reported on Friday, citing three officials familiar with the matter. 

According to the report, Russia has been giving Iran the locations of US military assets since the outbreak of the war, including warships and aircraft.

This signals that the expanding conflict now includes one of the US's biggest nuclear competitors with "exquisite intelligence capabilities," The Post noted, adding that it also marks a shift from what experts previously thought, namely that Russia would stay away from the conflict and limit its response to diplomatic condemnations.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov urged earlier this week for hostilities to stop and for a return to political and diplomatic efforts, claiming he was ready to support peaceful, compromise solutions based on international law.

'Putin has other priorities'

On Thursday, Anna Borshchevskaya, ⁠a Russia expert at the Washington Institute, said that, beyond Iran, “Putin has other priorities, and chief among them is Ukraine,” Reuters reported

“It would be foolish for Russia to go into a direct military confrontation with the United States," she added.

The report also cited a senior Russian source who said that “the escalation in and around Iran and the Gulf is already ​diverting attention from the war in Ukraine. That’s just a fact. Everything else is just emotion about a ‘fallen ally.'"

Military, nuclear aid already supplied

Moscow had helped Iran build military capacity by supplying missiles, air defense systems, and technology, Reuters added, in efforts intended to bolster deterrence and complicate US operations in the region. 

In April of last year, Iranian Oil Minister Mohsen Paknejad announced that Russia would fund a new nuclear plant in Iran.

The two countries would jointly undertake "the construction of new nuclear energy facilities and the completion of phases two and three of the Bushehr power plant," he said.

Later, in September, Russia provided Tehran with a series of military upgrades, including Russian MiG-29 fighter jets and S-400 air defense systems. 

However, the extent of Russia’s recent intelligence input was not entirely clear, according to The Post's report. The Iranian military’s own ability to locate US forces has been degraded less than a week into the fighting, said the officials.


Lines in the Sand


Lines in the Sand – Iran War


The conflict now unfolding with Iran is beginning to expose a series of geopolitical lines that had been quietly building for years. What is striking about the current situation is not simply the military confrontation itself, but the reaction of various nations. The world is no longer responding as it did in earlier conflicts where alliances moved almost automatically behind Washington. Instead, governments are drawing their own lines in the sand.

The United States and Israel are presently the two nations directly engaged in military operations against Iran. While Washington has access to bases throughout the Middle East, most of those countries are not actively participating in combat. Gulf states such as Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates host American military infrastructure, but their involvement largely reflects long-standing defense agreements rather than enthusiastic participation in a new regional war. These nations find themselves caught between two competing pressures: their security arrangements with the United States and the geographic reality of living within missile range of Iran.

What has been particularly revealing is the response in Europe. Spain openly refused to allow the United States to use its bases at Rota and MorĂ³n for operations against Iran, sparking a diplomatic confrontation with Washington. That decision has highlighted the growing divide inside NATO. During the Cold War and even in the early post-Cold War era, European governments generally aligned themselves with U.S. military policy. Today that unity is no longer automatic. European leaders increasingly calculate their own political and economic risks before committing themselves to American military campaigns.

The reluctance to join the conflict reflects deeper concerns about escalation. Many European governments are already facing fragile economies, political fragmentation, and rising social tensions. Opening another military front in the Middle East while the war in Ukraine continues would add another layer of uncertainty to an already unstable geopolitical environment. As a result, several governments are publicly urging diplomacy rather than military expansion.


What we are witnessing is the emergence of a fragmented geopolitical landscape where alliances are no longer rigid. Countries are evaluating their interests in a far more transactional way. Some governments provide logistical support while avoiding direct involvement. Others refuse cooperation altogether. Meanwhile, regional actors pursue their own strategic agendas independent of traditional Western alliances.

When crises arise, the difference between formal alliances and genuine strategic alignment becomes visible. The current situation with Iran is exposing those differences in real time. Nations are making calculations not only about military risk but also about energy markets, economic stability, and domestic political pressures.


The phrase “lines in the sand” has long been associated with the Middle East, yet today it applies equally to the diplomatic landscape surrounding the conflict. Countries are defining the limits of their involvement, sometimes publicly and sometimes quietly behind the scenes. These decisions reveal a world where geopolitical loyalties are becoming far more fluid than they once appeared.



Russia: No justification for US-Israeli war on Iran


No justification for US-Israeli war on Iran – Moscow
RT


There is no justification for the ongoing US-Israeli strikes on Iran as the Islamic Republic posed no threat to either nation, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has said.

Washington and West Jerusalem have framed their attacks on Iran as preemptive measures aimed at destroying its uranium enrichment and ballistic missile programs. The Islamic Republic insists that its nuclear program is peaceful and has denounced the strikes as entirely unprovoked.

Speaking to RIA Novosti on Wednesday, Zakharova stated that “although we are hearing claims from the US and Israel that they are even supposedly defending themselves… no one attacked them, no one threatened them.”The Russian diplomat noted that Iran had always been willing to engage in negotiations with the West.

Moscow previously condemned the US-Israeli strikes as a “premeditated and unprovoked act of aggression” aimed at toppling a government that “refused to yield to the dictates of force and hegemonic pressure.”

Commenting on the killing of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in the first wave of attacks unleashed last Saturday, Russian President Vladimir Putin characterized it as a “cynical violation of every norm of morality and international law.”

The Russian Foreign Ministry has similarly denounced the “practice of political assassinations and the ‘hunting’ of leaders of sovereign states.”

According to Iranian authorities, aside from Khamenei and a number of senior commanders, at least 168 children, as well as teachers and staff, were killed in the US-Israeli bombing of an elementary school in the southern Iranian town of Minab on Saturday.

While the Pentagon has said it is investigating the incident, the New York Times, citing newly released satellite imagery, verified social media posts and geolocated videos, reported on Thursday that American forces were likely responsible for the attack. According to the newspaper, the US military was targeting an adjacent naval base belonging to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).