Thursday, March 26, 2026

Official from mediating country: Trump leaning toward ground invasion, convinced Iran will then capitulate


Official from mediating country: Trump leaning toward ground invasion, convinced Iran will then capitulate


An official from one of the countries mediating between the US and Iran tells The Times of Israel that US President Donald Trump appears to be leaning toward ordering a US ground operation against Iran, with Washington convinced Tehran will buckle under such military pressure.

The official intimately familiar with the mediation efforts says the US privately recognizes that Iran is not likely to agree to the concessions presented in Washington’s 15-point plan and has dispatched thousands of troops to the region in order to capture Tehran’s Kharg Island on Trump’s orders.

A second official from a mediating country warns that while the US may be able to capture the island, holding onto it for an extended period of time will require many more soldiers and an extended period of fighting — far beyond the four-to-six week window that Washington has told the public that the war would last. While Saturday will be the four-week mark, the US still claims to be well ahead of schedule.

Both officials from mediating countries say that the Islamic Republic is not likely to capitulate, regardless of whether a ground operation moves ahead.

They insist that Iran will not agree to terms now that it wasn’t willing to accept before the US launched the war.

Trump on Monday announced that he was delaying until Friday his deadline for Iran to agree to his 15-point proposal for ending the war or face a bombing campaign against its power plants.

Thousands of additional US Marine troops are slated to arrive in the region around that new deadline.


Iran missile attacks on Israel continue overnight


Iran missile attacks on Israel continue overnight; Trump: Iranians ‘petrified’ to protest against regime


The Times of Israel is liveblogging Friday



The Pentagon is looking at sending up to 10,000 additional ground troops to the Middle East to give US President Donald Trump more military options even as he weighs peace talks with Tehran, the Wall Street Journal reports, citing Defense Department officials with knowledge of the planning.


Lebanese media report an Israeli strike hit Beirut’s southern suburbs early Friday, as AFP correspondents hear several explosions from the Hezbollah stronghold, which Israel has repeatedly struck since war erupted on March 2.

AFPTV footage shows smoke rise from the area after the raid. Israel has previously issued sweeping evacuation warnings for the area, but provided no specific warning in advance of Friday’s strike, which came in the early hours of the morning





'We're Not Doing This Again' Outcry Over Lockdown 2.0 Fuel Speculation


'We're Not Doing This Again' Outcry Over Lockdown 2.0 Fuel Speculation
PNW STAFF


The world is teetering on the edge of a crisis that could reshape life as we know it. The Strait of Hormuz -- a narrow waterway carrying nearly a fifth of the globe's daily oil supply -- is all but shut down amid the escalating conflict in Iran. The result: fuel prices soaring above $100 a barrel and governments quietly dusting off emergency playbooks that could force citizens to ration energy, limit travel, and accept curbs on freedoms previously taken for granted.

The International Energy Agency has outlined a series of steps meant to stretch dwindling supplies: remote work mandates, lower highway speed limits, alternating driving days based on license plates, slashed air travel, and even potential gasoline rationing. Taken together, these measures read less like guidance and more like a blueprint for societal lockdown -- "Lockdown 2.0," as critics online have already dubbed it. 


Social media is alight with outrage: "We're not doing this again!" is trending across platforms, echoing a collective fear that the freedoms stripped from daily life during the pandemic could return, this time under the guise of energy conservation.

Imagine a typical weekday under these measures. Your car can only be used every other day. Highway speeds are capped, extending commutes. Business travel is drastically curtailed -- no flights for conferences, no weekend getaways. Even grocery deliveries may slow as freight trucks adopt strict eco-driving mandates and curfews. Citizens may be forced to monitor their personal fuel consumption, weighing every trip: to work, to school, to a doctor's appointment. The invisible hand of rationing is moving closer, and the impact would be felt from suburban streets to bustling urban centers worldwide.

The economic repercussions could be staggering. With fuel costs skyrocketing, every sector that depends on transport -- from food to consumer goods -- faces price shocks. Small businesses may shutter. Supply chains could buckle. Consumers may see shelves emptying not just of luxury items, but essentials like fresh produce, heating fuel, and medications. The specter of recession looms, with the potential for a global economic contraction driven by the very energy that powers daily life.

But the crisis extends beyond the wallet. It strikes at a fundamental liberty: the freedom to move. Driving, flying, commuting, even taking a short road trip -- all could become regulated privileges rather than rights. And when governments start rationing travel, social unrest is inevitable. 

Online forums and social media are already a digital powder keg. Citizens recall pandemic restrictions with anger and fatigue; the refrain "We're not doing this again!" has become a rallying cry against perceived overreach. Protest movements could ignite, challenging authorities to enforce rationing while maintaining public trust -- a nearly impossible balance.

Geopolitical consequences are equally dire. Nations dependent on Middle Eastern oil will scramble for alternatives, potentially destabilizing trade and diplomacy. Countries with surplus resources may wield power aggressively, using scarcity to negotiate concessions. And in a world where every nation feels the pinch, the risk of miscalculation or escalation in conflict grows. The potential for local conflicts to spiral into a wider geopolitical firestorm is high, threatening not just energy supplies, but global security itself.


The reality is stark: this is more than an energy crisis. It is a crisis of freedom, of social cohesion, and of economic stability. It is a warning that a world dependent on oil, vulnerable to political turmoil halfway across the globe, is sitting on a knife's edge. The decisions made in the coming weeks could define not just markets, but the very rhythms of daily life: how we move, work, and interact with each other.

As the Strait of Hormuz remains blocked, one question hangs over us all: how much of our freedom are we willing to sacrifice to survive the next global fuel shock? And more importantly, how long will it take for society to fight back against restrictions that threaten to dictate the simplest aspects of daily life? 

The clock is ticking, and the backlash is already spreading. "We're not doing this again!" is more than a slogan -- it is a warning that millions will resist a future where energy scarcity controls everything from our morning commute to the journeys we take for granted.


Trump Tells Iran 'Get Serious' About Negotiations Or 'No Turning Back' As WH Mulls Plans For 'Final Blow'


Trump Tells Iran 'Get Serious' About Negotiations Or 'No Turning Back' As WH Mulls Plans For 'Final Blow'

TYLER DURDEN


  • White House, Pentagon reviewing options for 'final blow' as Trump tells Iranians 'get serious' about talks, which they've rejected.
  • Trump said to want 'speedy end to war' (WSJ) while at the same time warning Tehran of 'no turning back' if it doesn't negotiate.

  • 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.



    'Final Blow'

    President Trump on Thursday is on the one hand calling on Iran "to get serious soon" in negotiations with the US "before it is too late" - while on the other he's said to be mulling plans for a "final blow" in the military campaign. Axios writes that several possibilities are being considered, all which point toward serious escalation and in some cases even ground troops. All but one of the below "final blow" options carry the potential for US to get stuck in Iran for years:

     Seize or blockade Kharg Island (Iran’s main oil export hub).

    — Invade/control Larak Island (key to Strait of Hormuz control).

    — Take Abu Musa + nearby islands (strategic entrance to the strait).

    — Block or seize Iranian oil tankers in the region.

    — Launch massive airstrikes on nuclear/energy sites.

    — (More extreme) Ground operations inside Iran to secure nuclear material.

    Axios elsewhere reminds: "Trump's five-day pause on strikes against Iranian energy infrastructure expires Saturday, and a dramatic military escalation will grow more likely if no progress is made in diplomatic talks, particularly if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed."


    Negotiations or 'No Turning Back'

    Meanwhile, below are a couple of the latest Iran-related Truth Social posts by President Trump, at a moment Iran has made clear it will reject direct talks until its 'five conditions' are met. Iran has said it won't be "fooled again" and even though Trump has declared 'success' and that Iran has been "militarily obliterated, it's clear that Tehran has serious strategic leverage given its de facto control of the Hormuz Strait.

    Trump threatens in all caps that if Iran doesn't relent then there is "no turning back" - however, the WSJ is at the same time reporting Trump has told aides he wants a speedy end to the war.


    "President Trump has told associates in recent days that he wants to avoid a protracted war in Iran and that he hopes to bring the conflict to an end in the coming weeks," WSJwrites.


    The publication continues, "Nearly one month into the war, the president has privately informed advisers he thinks the conflict is in its final stages, urging them to stick to the four-to-six-week timeline he has outlined publicly, according to people familiar with the matter. White House officials planned a mid-May summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing with the expectation that the war would be concluded before the meeting begins, some of the people said."


    And then it states the obvious which should have been known before Operation Epic Fury was launched: "The problem is Trump has no easy options for ending the war, and peace negotiations are at a nascent stage." Certainly all of the above-mentioned 'final blow' options all carry extreme risk of quagmire (which might make the Iraq and Afghan wars easy by comparison). 


    Path to offramp or more massive escalation coming?


    More...



The Next Generation Of Iran’s Regime - Even More Radical Than Before?


The Next Generation Of Iran’s Regime - Even More Radical Than Before?
PNW STAFF



War is often described as chaos. But the most dangerous wars are not the ones with clear chains of command, identifiable leaders, and known objectives. The most dangerous wars are the ones where power splinters, ideology hardens, and younger men with something to prove begin acting without permission. That is where Iran now appears to be.

For years, the world understood the Islamic Republic as a hostile but structured regime -- brutal, radical, and expansionist, yes, but still governed by a vertical hierarchy. There was a supreme leader. There were senior Revolutionary Guard commanders. There were channels of command, factions, and power centers that, however sinister, still answered to someone at the top. 

But after the reported killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and numerous senior Iranian commanders in U.S.-Israeli strikes that began on February 28, that structure appears to have been shattered. Reuters and AP reporting indicates a temporary governing framework has emerged, but the larger reality is a vacuum -- and vacuums in revolutionary states are rarely filled by moderates.

That should terrify anyone hoping for a quick diplomatic resolution.

Because when the old guard is decapitated, the men who rise next are often not the most seasoned, wise, or restrained. They are the most zealous.


That is the central danger now hanging over Iran and the wider Middle East: not simply that Tehran remains hostile, but that many of the men increasingly exercising battlefield authority are younger, more ideologically rigid, and less politically calculating than the generation above them. 
Hooshang Amirahmadi's warning that second-rank revolutionary officers may now be "increasingly in charge" deserves serious attention. If he is right, then we are no longer dealing primarily with strategic state actors seeking leverage. We are dealing with a dispersed revolutionary class raised from childhood to believe that confrontation with America and Israel is not just policy -- it is destiny.

That generational point matters more than many Western analysts admit.

Older Iranians, even those who remained loyal to the regime, often still carried some living memory of what came before the 1979 revolution. They knew another Iran once existed -- flawed, certainly, but not consumed by the totalizing religious militarism that has since defined the Islamic Republic. They remembered a country that was not built around martyrdom, proxy war, anti-Western revolutionary export, and clerical absolutism.

But the younger hardliners now stepping into the breach do not remember any of that.

They were born into the revolution. Schooled in it. Sermoned by it. Militarized by it. Their political imagination was formed entirely inside the architecture of radical Shiite ideology. For them, the regime is not a detour from normalcy; it is normalcy. Endless confrontation is not a failure of the system. It is the system.

And that makes them more dangerous than the men they replace.

The old regime leadership, for all its evil, often knew when to calibrate. It knew when to posture and when to pull back. It understood that survival sometimes required tactical restraint. Younger battlefield commanders, especially those suddenly empowered by a broken hierarchy, are less likely to think that way. They are more likely to view compromise as betrayal, negotiation as cowardice, and any concession to Washington as apostasy.

That is why talk of imminent peace should be treated with deep skepticism.