PROPHECY UPDATE
PROPHECY RELATED NEWS AND COMMENTARY
Thursday, March 26, 2026
'We're Not Doing This Again' Outcry Over Lockdown 2.0 Fuel Speculation
Trump Tells Iran 'Get Serious' About Negotiations Or 'No Turning Back' As WH Mulls Plans For 'Final Blow'
- 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?
The Next Generation Of Iran’s Regime - Even More Radical Than Before?
US preparing ‘final blow’ options that could see use of ground troops if Iran talks fail — report
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, Axios reports, citing two US officials and two sources with knowledge.
If attempts to initiate high-level negotiations with Iran do not bear fruit and the Iranians continue to threaten shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, the US could initiate a final blow that would serve a dual purpose — improving its position in future talks with Tehran, or allowing US President Donald Trump to end the war unilaterally with a victory image.
The officials tell 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 option would be to take Larak Island in the strait, which has Iranian bases and radars that track ships transiting Hormuz, as well as smaller boats that can attack civilian ships.
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 highly enriched uranium, believed to sit under ruined nuclear facilities deep inside Iran. Alternatively, the US could simply bomb the sites from the air to ensure that Iran can’t reach the material.
Trump has not decided on any of the plans, say the sources.
Board of Peace envoy lays out principles of disarmament plan presented to Hamas
The Board of Peace’s top Gaza envoy on Tuesday revealed the principles of the disarmament proposal submitted to Hamas earlier this month, urging the international community to pressure the Palestinian terror group to accept the offer in order to prevent another cycle of violence in the Gaza Strip.
“It has been presented to the parties, and the engagement on it is very serious,” Board of Peace High Representative for Gaza Nickolay Mladenov said in remarks at the United Nations Security Council’s monthly session on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Two senior Arab officials familiar with the proposal submitted by Gaza ceasefire mediating countries — the United States, Qatar, Egypt and Turkey — told The Times of Israel that they expect Hamas to respond with a counteroffer in the coming days.
While the officials offered some details on the proposal, which were published in The Times of Israel, Mladenov’s briefing to the Security Council was the first time aspects of the disarmament offer were disclosed on the record.
Five principles of disarmament
According to Mladenov, who briefed the council repeatedly during his previous tenures as UN envoy for Iraq and the Middle East peace process, the proposal to Hamas has five principles.
“First is reciprocity. Decommissioning proceeds in parallel with staged withdrawal (by the IDF). This is fundamental to the credibility of the entire process,” he said.
While Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu publicly endorsed US President Donald Trump’s 20-point plan for ending the Gaza war last year, he and other members of his government have expressed a desire to maintain a permanent IDF presence in at least the eastern half of the Strip still controlled by Israel.
Mladenov said that the second principle of the disarmament proposal submitted to Hamas is sequencing. Confirming The Times of Israel’s reporting, he said that “the most dangerous weapons — rockets, heavy munitions, explosive devices, assault rifles owned by arm groups [will be] addressed first [and] Tunnels must be neutralized.”
“Personal weapons are addressed later through a registration and collection process,” he said, ostensibly referring to what the Arab diplomats said would be the buy-back program in which funds and jobs are offered to those who hand over their weapons to the Palestinian police force being formed.
Tens of thousands of Palestinian civilians have already applied to serve in this police force, which will operate under the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG), the technocratic government that will transitionally replace Hamas in running the Strip until the Palestinian Authority has completed the reforms necessary to take over.
Police applicants are currently being vetted, Mladenov said, touting Egypt’s agreement to serve as the “lead training partner” for the force, which will be launched in the coming weeks.
As for the third principle of the disarmament plan, Mladenov characterized it as “verification.”
“Compliance (with the program) will need to be monitored and verified,” he said, asserting that the reconstruction of Gaza is strictly contingent on the decommissioning of weapons.
“Fourthly, the framework addresses the people, not just the weapons,” the Board of Peace envoy continued. “It includes pathways for individuals currently affiliated with armed groups to re-enter civilian life with dignity, through structured amnesty arrangements and reintegration programs.”
While previous Gaza ceasefire proposals offered immunity to Hamas operatives who give up their weapons, Israel has reportedly ruled out such an exchange for those it says took part in the October 7, 2023, onslaught or other terror activities against Israel.
The fifth principle of the disarmament proposal relates to the timeline, Mladenov said.
“My office has the authority to grant timeline extensions when parties are making good faith efforts,” he explained. “This is a managed process with built-in flexibility because the reality on the ground does not always conform to the timelines on paper.”
During their last meeting with Hamas and other Palestinian factions in Cairo earlier this month, the Gaza mediators stressed that implementing the disarmament proposal “is the only way to ensure that reconstruction in Gaza and Israeli military withdrawal happens,” Mladenov said.