Yemen enters Iran war: Red Sea blockade and strikes on US Navy on the table

As Yemen’s Ansar Allah has jumped into the fray (https://t.me/geopolitics_prime/67400), it could throw plenty of unwanted surprises at the US‑Israeli coalition, Tehran‑based political analyst Professor Mohammad Marandi tells Norwegian academic Glenn Diesen.

💬 “We are still not very much up the escalation ladder,” Marandi says.

💬 “Yemen has joined, but its targets are so far limited. Iran has been involved for weeks now, but again it can go much further. There is talk that the Iraqis may take Kuwait.”

What to expect from Ansar Allah:

🔴 Closure of the Red Sea

🔴 Strikes on Saudi Arabia’s oil facilities, potentially cutting its oil imports from the Red Sea completely

🔴 Strikes on Israeli assets

🔴 Strikes on US assets in the Indian Ocean

💬 “We don’t know what weapons [Ansar Allah] now has; obviously, over the past year they’ve been developing their capabilities swiftly, just like Iran did.”

Via https://t.me/geopolitics_prime/67500

Growing insecurity, soaring prices fuel protests in northern Israel as regime bans evacuation

An Israeli settler stands in the settlement of ‘Metula’ in northern occupied territories. (AP Photo)

Press TV

The worsening situation on the internal front of the Israeli regime, particularly in the northern occupied territories, has driven up food and transportation prices, fueling settler discontent.

According to informed security sources, regime authorities have refused to permit the evacuation of settlers from northern areas, despite deteriorating security conditions amid Hezbollah’s unstoppable retaliatory strikes.

Rising costs of essential goods, including food and transportation, have intensified pressure on settlers, contributing to a growing wave of anti-regime protests.

Discussions across Israeli social media platforms reflect increasing skepticism toward official narratives regarding developments in the north.

Users have questioned regime claims on the extent of damage and casualties, asserting that actual losses far exceed what is being reported.

Some posts also emphasize that the regime’s defensive capabilities in the region have significantly degraded, while Hezbollah has effectively rendered life unsustainable for settlers in northern areas.

Meanwhile, emerging reports suggest that regime authorities are deliberately avoiding a full evacuation of settlers from the north, even as security conditions worsen amid intense exchanges of fire.

Analysts attribute this decision to deep concerns that, once evacuated, settlers may refuse to return – a scenario that would deliver a severe blow to the regime’s long-term strategic position in the area.

According to sources, military forces have been deployed to forcibly prevent settlers from leaving, underscoring the regime’s determination to project an appearance of normalcy even as conditions on the ground tell a different story.

Hezbollah has carried out a record number of retaliatory operations against the occupied territories, sowing fear among the settler population in the north.

Yet the regime remains intent on portraying normalcy across the occupied territories while concealing the true scale of casualties and damage sustained from retaliatory strikes, both from Hezbollah and the Iranian armed forces.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/03/30/766082/growing-insecurity-soaring-food-prices-fuel-protests-regime-bans-evacuation-sources

Russian tanker bypasses US oil blockade of Cuba

Russian tanker bypasses US oil blockade of Cuba

RT

A Russian tanker has arrived in Cuba to deliver a humanitarian oil shipment amid a months-long US blockade that has led to severe fuel shortages and recurring power cuts across the island.

Russia’s Energy Ministry reported that the Anatoly Kolodkin, carrying 100,000 tons of crude oil, has docked at the port of Matanzas and now waits to be unloaded.

Despite US Coast Guard ships being present in the region, “the Trump administration did not order those vessels to act,” an official familiar with the matter told the New York Times.

“Barring orders instructing it otherwise, the Coast Guard planned to let the tanker reach Cuba as of Sunday afternoon,” the source added, speaking on condition of anonymity.

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened tariffs on countries exporting fuel to Cuba. However, speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One on Sunday, he confirmed that Washington had allowed the Russian tanker through on humanitarian grounds.

“We don’t mind having somebody get a boat load because they need to survive,” he said. “I’d prefer letting it in, whether it’s Russia or anybody else, because the people need heat and cooling.”

Trump, however, added that he still expects Havana to “fail soon,” saying the US would be there to “help it out.”

The Caribbean nation has faced severe fuel shortages and power cuts in recent months after Venezuela, once Havana’s closest ally, halted oil shipments following pressure from Washington.

Multiple international fuel deliveries have been disrupted, vessels linked to Havana have struggled to secure supplies, and some have been turned away or intercepted – with at least one escorted away from Cuban waters, according to ship-tracking data.

Earlier this month, Havana agreed to enter talks with Washington in a bid to defuse tensions and avert a humanitarian crisis. Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel confirmed that negotiations were ongoing and aimed at “finding solutions through dialogue to the bilateral differences we have between the two nations.”

Trump, however, has not abandoned his stated intention to take over the island “one way or another.” On Friday, he said Cuba could be “next” following what he described as successful US military operations in Venezuela and Iran.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/636691-russian-oil-cuba-us-blockade/

What damage has Iran inflicted on US military bases?

What damage has Iran inflicted on US military bases?

RT

The tally of US military bases targeted in Iranian strikes continues to rise, with Washington acknowledging attacks across multiple countries. While Iranian military and media sources put the number of targeted bases at more than a dozen, the Pentagon is apparently doing its best to conceal the destruction.

Within hours of the US launching ‘Operation Epic Fury’ on February 28, Iran unleashed retaliatory strikes against American military bases across the Middle East, with US officials confirming a growing number of sites hit and the Prince Sultan base in Saudi Arabia emerging as a focal point of the campaign.

Behind a veil of censorship, it’s increasingly clear that the damage may be far more severe than the Pentagon is admitting.

The reported damage to high-value assets such as an E-3 AWACS aircraft and an F-35 fighter jet points to a broader pattern of Iran targeting US airpower and surveillance capabilities. An E-3 Sentry was reportedly damaged or destroyed in a March 27 strike on Prince Sultan Air Base. Earlier, a US F-35 was damaged during a mission over Iran and forced to make an emergency landing, while three US F-15E jets were shot down over Kuwait on March 2 in an apparent friendly fire incident, US Central Command (CENTCOM) said.

With the war entering its second month, the US death toll continues to rise. The US military has confirmed 13 fatalities from Iranian attacks across the region, while more than 300 troops have been wounded, according to US officials cited by Reuters in late March.

New strikes and expanding damage

Iran has continued to expand the scope of its attacks beyond the initial wave. Iranian military statements carried by local media have in recent days named targets including Camp Arifjan in Kuwait, Prince Sultan Air Base near Al-Kharj in Saudi Arabia, and Sheikh Isa Air Base in Bahrain, while also referring more broadly to strikes on US positions in Iraq, the UAE, and across the Gulf. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) also claimed it had targeted the US Fifth Fleet and destroyed “high-value” American military equipment.

A March 27 Iranian missile and drone strike on Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia wounded 12 US troops, two of them seriously, according to a US official cited by Reuters. The attack also damaged several US aircraft, according to American officials, with separate reports indicating that refueling planes were among those hit.

US and Arab officials cited by the Wall Street Journal said the same strike also hit a Boeing E-3 Sentry airborne warning and control system (AWACS) aircraft, a critical surveillance platform. The IRGC said the aircraft was “100% destroyed” in the strike, while open-source flight tracking data indicated that multiple such planes had been stationed at the base in recent weeks. The E-3, a key command-and-control platform, costs around $270 million to produce. CENTCOM has not publicly confirmed the extent of the reported damage.

Iranian media on Sunday claimed fresh drone and rocket strikes on US-linked facilities in Iraq, including targets around Baghdad and the Victory Base complex. Earlier Reuters reported a drone strike on a US diplomatic facility near Baghdad airport on March 10, followed by further rocket and drone attacks on March 17.

How many bases does the US have in the Middle East?

The US operates a network of around 20 permanent and temporary military bases throughout the Middle East, with the largest – Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar – hosting 10,000 troops and serving as the forward headquarters for CENTCOM. The US maintains a network of major military bases across Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, and as of mid-2025, there are between 40,000 and 50,000 American troops stationed in the region at any one time.

RT

 

These bases surround Iran from the west and south, and are backed by US naval assets in the region, including the USS Abraham Lincoln in the Arabian Sea, alongside amphibious forces in the region, including the USS Tripoli, with additional carrier reinforcements expected. The USS Gerald R. Ford has been pulled out of the Middle East and moved to port for repairs following a fire, leaving the Lincoln as the only carrier currently on station.

Recent deployments have further expanded the US military footprint in the region. The arrival of around 2,500 marines and 2,500 sailors has pushed the total number of American troops in the Middle East to more than 50,000, roughly 10,000 above typical levels, according to a US military official cited by the New York Times.

Which US bases have been hit?

All of the US bases in the region have been described as “legitimate targets” by the Iranian military, and facilities in seven countries have already been hit by Iranian missiles and drones.

As of late March, the following US bases and associated facilities have been struck by Iranian missiles and drones, often more than once, according to US officials, media reports, and regional sources:

  • Naval Support Activity, Bahrain
  • Erbil International Airport, Iraq
  • Al-Asad Airbase, Iraq
  • Victory Base complex (Baghdad International Airport area)
  • Muwaffaq Salti Air Base, Jordan
  • Ali Al-Salem Air Base, Kuwait
  • Camp Buehring, Kuwait
  • Camp Arifjan, Kuwait
  • Mohammed Al-Ahmad Naval Base, Kuwait
  • Al-Udeid Air Base, Qatar
  • Al-Dhafra Air Base, UAE
  • Jebel Ali Port, UAE
  • Prince Sultan Air Base, Saudi Arabia.

Several of these strikes have been confirmed by US officials or reported by Reuters and other international media, while others remain based primarily on Iranian claims.

What’s on Iran’s target list?

The strikes on American air bases serve the immediate goal of reducing US ability to conduct air operations over Iran and forcing aircraft to operate from more distant locations. Iran’s campaign has also focused heavily on radar and missile defense systems, including THAAD-linked installations and early warning radars across the region.

Special Consultant to United Nations RESIGNS – LEAKS NUCLEAR ATTACK PLANNING FOR IRAN

Muhammad Safa was the Executive Director and Main Representative at the United Nations in New York City, for the “PVA” a designated “Special Consultative Group” handling Human Rights issues.   He resigned 48 Hours ago, and tonight, he has LEAKED NUCLEAR ATTACK PLANNING in the Iran conflict.

[…]

Via https://halturnerradioshow.com/index.php/component/content/article/special-consultant-to-united-nations-resigns-48-hours-later-leaks-nuclear-attack-planning-for-iran?catid=17&Itemid=101

Kids’ Sleeping Problems Linked to Wireless Radiation, Screens

child having hard time sleeping

 

The number of children and teens ages 5-19 in Sweden diagnosed with sleep disorders has increased roughly 17-fold since 2001, according to a new peer-reviewed study.

Kids ages 0-4 saw a roughly five-fold increase, said the study authors, who published their report on Jan. 8 in Diseases.

The authors said the sharp uptick in sleeping problems coincided with the increased use of cellphones and the widespread proliferation of 5G cell towers, which emit radiofrequency (RF) radiation.

The increased use of screens, which emit blue light, is also a likely culprit, they said. Blue light can disrupt hormones like melatonin that affect sleep, according to Harvard Health Publishing.

“The steep increase of sleep problems among children aged 0-19 years is extremely concerning because sleep is, of course, of vital importance for good health, the study’s lead author, Mona Nilsson, told The Defender.

Nilsson and her co-author, Lennart Hardell, M.D., Ph.D., analyzed national health statistics on sleep disorder diagnoses from 2001-2024.

Nilsson is co-founder and director of the Swedish Radiation Protection Foundation. Hardell is an oncologist and epidemiologist with the Environment and Cancer Research Foundation. He’s also the author of more than 350 papers, nearly 60 of which address RF radiation, and one of the first researchers to publish reports on the toxicity of Agent Orange.

In addition to finding that the number of sleep problems among kids had dramatically risen, Nilsson and Hardell noted that young adults ages 20-39 saw a roughly five-fold increase in sleep problems, too.

For years, scientists have warned about the harmful effects of wireless radiation, including sleep problems, Nilsson said. “But unfortunately, the telecommunications industry has captured most influential organizations responsible for protecting the public.”

According to Nilsson, the World Health Organization, the European Union and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) protect the wireless industry’s interests, rather than people’s health.

“This situation needs to change rapidly so that the evidence is objectively evaluated, independent experts are heard and people are informed about the many health risks with this technology,” she said.

Hardell agreed. “Our results must be taken seriously,” he told The Defender.

According to Hardell, mainstream media have reported on the rising number of sleep problems among kids and teens. “But so far the impact of exposure to radiofrequency radiation has not been considered.”

Findings on sleep problems add to earlier findings of memory problems

In October 2025, Hardell and Nilsson published a study showing that children ages 5-19 in Sweden and Norway were experiencing an “alarming” rise in memory problems. The increase also coincided with the rise in RF radiation exposure.

According to Nilsson, the sleep and memory problems being experienced by Swedish youth are likely related. She noted that research has repeatedly shown that RF radiation from wireless technology impairs the brain.

She shared with The Defender a list of nearly 60 studies that document RF radiation’s negative effect on learning and memory.

‘The evidence keeps getting stronger and stronger’

The study’s new findings on increased sleep problems add to the growing pile of studies that suggest RF radiation is undermining kids’ health, said Miriam Eckenfels, director of Children’s Health Defense’s (CHD) Electromagnetic Radiation (EMR) & Wireless Program.

“The evidence keeps getting stronger and stronger as more studies are published that associate RF radiation with more negative health impacts,” Eckenfels said. “It is about time governments take this issue more seriously.”

However, the FCC is trying to adopt new rules that would make it easy for telecom companies to install cell towers in communities without residents’ consent — even if the tower isn’t really needed to close a coverage gap in cell service, she said.

On Nov. 25, 2025, CHD filed a motion with the FCC, urging the agency to comply with a 2021 court order to review evidence that RF radiation at levels currently allowed by the agency harms people, especially children, and the environment.

“The document essentially tells the FCC to either protect people, or get out of the way and let other federal agencies, like the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, set health and safety limits for wireless radiation exposure,” Eckenfels said.

[…]

Via https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/kids-sleeping-problems-linked-to-wireless-radiation-screens/

Lawmakers Launch Bipartisan Bill to Block Trump’s Executive Order on Glyphosate

Glyphosate sign and u.s. capitol building

Two days after President Donald Trump ordered the U.S. to boost production of glyphosate, two federal lawmakers introduced bipartisan legislation to block the controversial executive order.

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Rep. Chellie Pingree (D-Maine) on Friday introduced the No Immunity for Glyphosate Act (H.R. 7601).

If passed, the bill would block federal funding to implement the executive order. The legislation also explicitly grants people injured by glyphosate — or elemental phosphorus, its key ingredient — to sue manufacturers for their injuries.

Trump’s executive order offered U.S.-based chemical makers immunity from liability if the government orders them, under the Defense Production Act of 1950, to produce glyphosate.

Glyphosate is the active ingredient in Monsanto’s Roundup weedkiller. Bayer, which acquired Monsanto in June 2018, is facing tens of thousands of lawsuits from people alleging Roundup caused them to develop cancer. The company is the only producer of the chemical in the U.S. It also supplies about 40% of the world’s glyphosate.

Bayer has been aggressively pursuing legislative and judicial strategies to block such lawsuits at the state and federal levels.

“If we’re Making America Healthy Again, government shouldn’t be promoting glyphosate and providing liability immunity for corporations making it,” Massie said on X.

Co-sponsors also include a mix of Republicans and Democrats — including Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) and Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.). Farm Action Fund endorsed the bill.

Pingree: executive order is ‘dangerous and indefensible’

In a press release, Massie said, “Congress should ensure that Americans retain their right to seek a remedy in court if they believe they have been injured by this product.”

Pingree echoed the need to safeguard public health and accountability, calling the executive order “dangerous and indefensible.”

Trump’s order stated that elemental phosphorus and glyphosate-based herbicides are scarce materials critical to national defense, and that inadequate domestic production poses an imminent threat to military readiness and food security.

“Glyphosate-based herbicides are a cornerstone of this Nation’s agricultural productivity and rural economy,” it said.

But Pingree said the order “has nothing to do with protecting farmers or feeding the country — it’s about protecting corporate profits and insulating polluters from accountability.”

Executive order triggers cascade of criticism

Glyphosate, the active ingredient in widely used herbicides such as Roundup, has been at the center of decades of legal and scientific debate.

Roundup Ready crops, genetically engineered by Monsanto to withstand glyphosate application, dominate U.S. agriculture. Over 90% of soybeans, cotton and corn are produced in the U.S. using the technology.

The widespread use of the seeds has led to Roundup-resistant “superweeds,” forcing farmers to use greater quantities of chemicals.

Studies link glyphosate to cancer and other serious health issues, including harm to the kidney, liver, immune system, reproductive system, and during early-life development.

In December, the hallmark 2000 paper widely cited as evidence that Roundup is safe was retracted due to “serious ethical concerns.” Evidence showed that Monsanto employees helped ghostwrite the paper.

Bayer has faced tens of thousands of lawsuits alleging the chemical causes cancer. Just days before the executive order, the company proposed a $7.25 billion settlement to resolve many of those claims.

Trump’s executive order outraged MAHA, or Make America Healthy Again, activists, many of whom have been fighting the use of Roundup and other glyphosate-based weedkillers for decades.

Zen Honeycutt of Moms Across America told The Defender the decision was a betrayal of Trump’s earlier promises on health reform, and said it “paved the path for glyphosate to continue destroying farmland, fertility, and our families’ health for generations to come.”

Kelly Ryerson, known on X as “GlyphosateGirl,” who has been lobbying for restrictions on glyphosate and other pesticides, said it was an insult to the people who had supported Trump because of promises that MAHA issues would be taken seriously.

Bayer rolling out multi-pronged strategy to protect itself against liability

Bayer has also been rolling out a series of legislative attempts to constrain consumers’ ability to sue it for health damages from glyphosate.

Earlier this year, a broad bipartisan coalition of food and environmental health advocates succeeded in eliminating a Bayer-backed provision tucked into a congressional appropriations bill that would have restricted the ability of people to sue the company for failing to warn of health risks if the U.S. Food and Drug Administration didn’t require the warnings.

Bayer has been pushing for a similar measure to be written into the pending Farm Bill,

The company also created a lobbying group, the Modern Ag Alliance, which has been pushing for laws at the state level to make it harder for consumers to sue over pesticide risks.

The state laws would shield Bayer from future lawsuits and potentially nullify at least some of the 67,000 active claims against the company. Georgia and North Dakota have passed these liability shield laws.

[…]

Via https://childrenshealthdefense.org/defender/no-immunity-for-glyphosate-act-bipartisan-bill-block-trump-executive-order/?utm_id=20260301

Trump’s MAGA America Whines about ‘Putin Winning’ as India surges Russian Oil Imports

As the US aggression on Iran continues, global oil and natural gas markets frantically look for alternative suppliers.

Naturally, the world’s most populous countries have the highest demand and must ensure their citizens have sufficient energy. Economic consequences of failing to do so would be catastrophic.

This is especially true for India and its rapidly growing economy (nearly 8% in late 2025). Thus, Delhi decided to turn to Russia for emergency oil imports, with Indian refiners acquiring approximately 60 million barrels of Russian oil for April. The mainstream propaganda machine is already pulling its hair out and whining about “Putin winning”, as Russia is expected to make at least $6.5 billion a month through oil trade with India alone.

Bloomberg reports that

“the cargoes were booked at premiums of $5 to $15 a barrel to Brent”.

In simpler terms, this means that Russian oil is about $5–15 more expensive per barrel. Data intelligence firm Kpler reports that “the volume is similar to the amount of purchases for this month, but more than double that for February”.

The US was even forced to waive potential sanctions on India, because shortages would’ve compelled Delhi to seek alternatives either way. Washington DC realized this would’ve further strained Indo-American ties, particularly after the US was caught red-handed supporting terrorists against India and other countries in the region (all orchestrated with full support from the Neo-Nazi junta and its openly terrorist intelligence services).

Delhi has been hit hard by the truly unprovoked US aggression on Iran, as the resulting plunge in oil and natural gas supplies made it impossible to maintain energy security. India has also become a major importer of Russian hydrocarbons since the start of the special military operation (SMO), effectively acting as a middleman for the European Union, which made a suicidal decision to stop buying energy directly from Russia. Washington DC certainly didn’t like the prospect of closer ties between Moscow and Delhi, so it pressured the latter to stop buying Russian energy. India largely switched to trade in other currencies, including Indian rupees (INR) converted to dirhams or yuan, to settle oil purchases, aiming to bypass the USD and Western sanctions.

However, Delhi continued imports from the Middle East (particularly Saudi Arabia and Iraq), meaning that it was left without those supplies after the US launched yet another war in the Middle East.

According to the mainstream propaganda machine, refiners such as Mangalore Refinery & Petrochemicals and Hindustan Mittal Energy, which had allegedly “avoided Russian oil since December”, returned to the market.

In addition, the political West is concerned that India is “increasingly settling purchases of Russian oil in alternative currencies, as they seek to reduce reliance on the dollar amid rising geopolitical tensions and shifts in US policy“. As previously mentioned, this is the only way to circumvent aggressive pressure from the US-led racketeering cartel.

Some sources report that in addition to the Emirati dirham and Chinese yuan, Delhi is also considering the Singaporean and Hong Kong dollar. For the time being, Washington DC is extending waivers for several weeks at a time, which is not enough to secure long-term contracts. The latest such waiver is set to expire on April 11, although it’s highly unlikely that US aggression against Iran will stop by then. The Trump administration will probably extend the waiver, but Russian suppliers are not exactly happy with such arrangements, meaning they’ll insist on long-term contracts. It should be noted that Russia is not pressuring India in any way, much unlike the US, which keeps treating the Asian giant as a “second-rate” power and yet another “vassal”.

Expectedly, Delhi doesn’t appreciate such disrespect, especially after the aforementioned scandal with joint support for terrorists by Washington DC and its Kiev regime satellite. However, India is still trying to maintain its multi-vectored foreign policy framework, meaning that it won’t cut ties with the US. For its part, the Trump administration is still trying to drive a wedge between the Asian giant and its partners in the multipolar world, particularly China. Long-standing border disputes between Beijing and Delhi have been the main tool of America’s strategic manipulation that prevents the two neighbors from establishing much closer ties, particularly in terms of economic cooperation, which would strengthen both their ties and the multipolar bloc itself.

Washington DC sees such a prospect as a strategic and geopolitical nightmare, so it’s expected to continue disrupting this process. However, due to America’s (ab)use of the USD’s dominant position, it’s highly questionable whether it’ll be able to arm-twist India into self-defeating moves after the latter fully switches to other currencies for international trade.

Western financial institutions are deeply concerned by this prospect. For instance, in a note on March 24, Deutsche Bank said that “the conflict is testing the petrodollar’s role as the currency for global oil trade, with one long-term consequence being a potential shift toward the yuan”. Such a change on a mass scale would be catastrophic for the US, as its very parasitical survival would be in question.

On the other hand, regardless of the currency, major oil and natural gas producers outside of the Middle East will make enormous profits from the current situation.

America’s decision to start yet another war of aggression against a sovereign nation that keeps refusing its (neo)colonial diktat is now backfiring and will continue to reverberate for years (if not decades) to come. This is especially true for the Trump administration, which desperately needs a major win before the midterm elections later this year. For the time being, things are not going as planned, which is why Trump now wants a $200 billion budget for war with Iran. This is around a fifth of the Pentagon’s annual spending, demonstrating just how serious the situation is for the US.

[…]

Via https://www.globalresearch.ca/trumps-maga-america-whines-about-putin-winning-as-india-surges-russian-oil-imports/5920387

Seizing the Kharg: Washington’s path to defeat in the Persian Gulf

Photo Credit: The Cradle

Aniss Rais

Four weeks of US-Israeli war on Iran – and the stakes have climbed far higher than Washington anticipated. US President Donald Trump threatened on Truth Social to “hit and obliterate” Iran’s power plants if the Strait of Hormuz was not reopened within 48 hours.

The deadline passed. He blinked and, for the second time, postponed his own ultimatum, recasting it as ‘productive conversations.’ Tehran denied any talks and insisted the reversal was driven by “fear of Iran’s response.”

The US-Israeli air campaign was supposed to break Iran. It didn’t. Now the hawks are pushing for boots on the ground. But the ground war being floated does not simply risk American lives on an island 15 miles (around 24 kilometers) off Iran’s coast. It threatens the entire US military architecture in the Persian Gulf – the bases, the alliances, and the energy infrastructure that has underwritten American dominance in West Asia for decades.

In an interview with NBC News, Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, in response to a question about a possible ground invasion by the US, delivered four words the Pentagon had no answer for: “We are waiting for them,” which became a meme in the process. The bluff has been called. The question now is whether showing Washington’s hand collapses the entire table.

Raising the stakes with an empty hand

The ground invasion discourse is no longer hypothetical. Pentagon officials have submitted detailed preparation requests for deploying ground forces. Three Marine amphibious assault groups are converging on the Persian Gulf: the USS Tripoli carrying the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit from Japan, the USS Boxer with the 11th MEU from California, and roughly 1,500 paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg.

By the time all units arrive, between 6,000 and 8,000 US ground troops will be within striking distance of Iran. But the composition of these forces exposes the gap between rhetoric and reality. Military analyst Ruben Stewart noted that what is being deployed is “consistent with discrete, time-limited operations, not a sustained ground campaign.”

At the same time, Israel’s own military is showing signs of strain. Chief of staff Eyal Zamir warned on 25 March that the army is “going to collapse in on itself,” citing an eroding reserve force and a deepening manpower crisis as wars stretch from Gaza to Lebanon and now Iran.

Washington is pushing more chips to the center of the table – but the hand behind them remains weak. The scenarios now circulating form an escalation ladder where each rung risks pulling the US deeper into a fight it is structurally unprepared to sustain.

Pickaxe Mountain and the raid that takes too long 

The most politically attractive option is a covert raid on Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile – believed to be around 400 kilograms enriched to roughly 60 percent, possibly stored near Isfahan or deep inside Pickaxe Mountain.

But the problem is one Sun Tzu identified centuries ago: speed is the essence of war – yet this mission demands the opposite. Extracting nuclear material requires troops to remain on-site long enough for Iranian forces to respond.

Former CENTCOM commander General Joseph Votel described such operations as “feasible,” but issued a clear warning: “You’re going to have to take care of them, resupply them, medevac them. And that requires a logistical tail, and at some point that tail has to be protected as well.”

Washington still carries the scar of Operation Eagle Claw – the failed 1980 hostage rescue that collapsed in the Iranian desert and helped end Jimmy Carter’s presidency.

Kharg Island: The trap disguised as a shortcut

If covert raids carry too much risk for too little certainty, the next option on the table is a limited territorial seizure – and Washington’s hawks have converged on a single target: Kharg Island.

An eight-square-mile (around 20.7 square kilometers) coral outcrop in the northern Persian Gulf, Kharg processes roughly 90 percent of Iran’s crude exports. US Senator Lindsey Graham urged Trump to “take Kharg Island,” while retired Lieutenant General Keith Kellogg described himself as a “big believer in boots on the ground” there.

The logic sounds surgical: seize Iran’s economic lifeline and force Tehran to the table. But it collapses under even basic scrutiny. Kharg sits just 15 miles (around 24 kilometers) off the Iranian mainland – well within range of coastal missile batteries, drones, rockets, and artillery. Any US force stationed there would face “near-constant bombardment.”

Retired Rear Admiral Mark Montgomery put it bluntly: “If we seize Kharg Island, they’re going to turn off the spigot on the other end. It’s not like we control their oil production.”

Sun Tzu warned that there is no instance of a nation benefiting from prolonged warfare. Modern analyses reach the same conclusion. Think tank assessments warn that Kharg is a textbook case of mission creep, pulling US forces step by step toward a wider ground war.

The war Iran has prepared for

What Washington’s hawks consistently overlook is that Iran has spent decades preparing for precisely this scenario – not to match US firepower, but to make any ground war prohibitively costly.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) is divided into 31 autonomous ground divisions, each capable of operating independently if central command is disrupted.

When strikes killed the Islamic Republic’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei, intelligence minister Esmail Khatib, and Basij chief Gholamreza Soleimani, the military apparatus continued launching missiles, closing the Strait of Hormuz, and fighting. A command structure designed to survive decapitation appears to be doing exactly that.

At sea, Iran’s naval doctrine relies on asymmetric warfare. Its reported arsenal: hundreds of fast attack craft, coastal missile batteries, an estimated 5,000 naval mines, over 1,000 unmanned suicide vessels, and Ghadir-class midget submarines built for the Gulf’s shallow waters. The Persian Gulf is not an open ocean. It is a corridor shaped by geography and fortified by doctrine – designed to swallow conventional naval power.

On land, the scale alone is decisive. Iran is four times the size of Iraq, with a population exceeding 90 million. Estimates suggest that any conventional invasion would require “hundreds of thousands of troops.”

Then there is the Basij paramilitary network, reportedly capable of mobilizing up to a million reservists – and the IRGC’s decades of experience coordinating asymmetric resistance across the region.

The US currently has fewer than 8,000 moving into position. This is not a war Iran needs to win – but one it is designed to make Washington unable to sustain.

Winning Kharg, losing the Gulf

Even if Washington succeeds tactically – seizing Kharg and declaring victory – the strategic consequences are immediate.

Since the war began, Iran has already demonstrated its escalation capacity. Missiles and drones have targeted US-linked infrastructure across Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, the UAE, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia. Energy facilities, airports, and desalination plants have all come under fire.

A seizure of Kharg would likely trigger a far broader response. Iranian officials have explicitly warned of “continuous and relentless attacks” on regional infrastructure if Iranian territory is occupied.

Tehran has also signaled it could expand the conflict to the Bab al-Mandab Strait through allied Ansarallah-aligned forces in Yemen, threatening a second global chokepoint.

Every US position in the Gulf depends on supply lines that run through the very states already under threat. Bahrain hosts the Fifth Fleet. The UAE hosts Al-Dhafra. Kuwait functions as a logistical hub.

As the Stimson Center noted, Gulf states already fear Trump could declare victory and leave them fighting Iran alone.

The political ceiling in Washington

If Iran’s strategy forms the military trap, US public opinion may be the political one.

Polling shows overwhelming opposition to a ground war. A Quinnipiac survey found 74 percent of voters oppose deploying troops, while CNN recorded minimal support for escalation.

More significantly, dissent is emerging within Washington itself. Republican lawmakers have openly questioned the gap between public messaging and classified briefings. Representative Nancy Mace warned that the justifications presented to the public differ from those given behind closed doors.

Meanwhile, the Pentagon is seeking $200 billion in supplemental funding at $1 billion per day. When the lawmakers holding the purse strings call the war’s justifications “deeply troubling,” the political chips are running out – before a single body bag has arrived from Iranian soil.

Funding is already becoming a fault line, with projected costs running at extraordinary levels.

The last card

The escalation ladder has its own momentum. Every failed pressure tactic – every ineffective strike, every walked-back ultimatum – increases the pressure to climb higher.

Kharg Island is no longer theoretical. The Marines are already at sea. The 82nd Airborne is mobilizing.

Iran has closed the Strait of Hormuz and issued its challenge.

The question is no longer whether the US can seize Kharg, but whether it can afford to – in blood, in treasure, in the stability of its Gulf allies, and in the political credibility that evaporates the moment the first bodybag arrives home.

[…]

Via https://thecradle.co/articles/seizing-the-kharg-washingtons-path-to-defeat-in-the-persian-gulf

Iran Threatens to Seize UAE and Bahrain Coastlines if U.S. Invades

Peta

(DEFENCE SECURITY ASIA) — Iran’s warning that its armed forces could seize the coastlines of the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain if the United States launches a ground invasion signals a potential shift from missile-and-drone confrontation toward territorial escalation that would directly threaten the forward operating network sustaining U.S. military power in the Gulf.

The statement, delivered on Iranian state television by national security analyst Morteza Simiari, frames coastal seizure operations as a prepared contingency rather than rhetorical escalation, implying that Tehran is positioning its force posture to open additional fronts designed to complicate American logistics and alliance cohesion.

By linking the threat explicitly to any U.S. “mistake” in the region, the warning creates a strategic condition in which Gulf host nations become immediate operational targets, transforming the regional conflict from a bilateral confrontation into a multi-theatre scenario centred on access, basing, and maritime control.

The emphasis on coastal seizure introduces the possibility that Iran intends to challenge the geographical foundation of U.S. military presence in the Gulf, where air bases, naval facilities, and supply hubs along allied shorelines form the backbone of sustained American operations.

Such signalling also suggests Tehran is preparing to shift the conflict from long-range strike exchanges toward proximity warfare near key maritime chokepoints, increasing the risk that commercial shipping lanes and energy export routes could become contested operational zones.

By highlighting the UAE and Bahrain specifically, the warning targets two states hosting critical infrastructure supporting U.S. deployments, reinforcing the message that any ground invasion of Iran would trigger immediate pressure on forward bases rather than remaining confined to Iranian territory.

The statement further implies that Iran views territorial escalation as a tool to fracture coalition cohesion by forcing Gulf partners to reconsider the security costs of allowing their territory to be used for American military operations.

In strategic terms, the threat represents an attempt to expand deterrence beyond Iran’s borders by signalling that the defence of U.S. regional posture could become more complex, more expensive, and more politically risky if the conflict transitions into a ground campaign.

Warning Signals Possible Amphibious Contingency Planning

Morteza Simiari stated during the IRIB broadcast that Iranian forces are prepared to “take action” if the United States escalates further, asserting that entering the coasts of the UAE and Bahrain is already part of operational planning and could fundamentally alter the regional landscape.

He said Iran has conducted exercises for coastal operations, indicating that the threat refers to rehearsed military scenarios rather than hypothetical political messaging, which suggests that amphibious or littoral warfare concepts are being incorporated into Iran’s deterrence signalling.

Although Simiari is not an official government spokesman, his repeated appearances on state television and perceived links to security institutions mean such statements are widely interpreted as controlled messaging intended to communicate escalation thresholds without issuing formal declarations.

The use of state media as the platform for the warning allows Tehran to transmit strategic signals while preserving deniability, a pattern often employed when Iranian decision-makers want to influence adversary calculations without committing to binding policy positions.

Observers interpret the remarks as part of a broader communication strategy designed to warn Gulf states that hosting American forces could make their territory a primary battlefield if the conflict transitions from strikes to ground operations.

The emphasis on coastal seizure rather than missile retaliation indicates a shift in the narrative toward territorial leverage, implying that Iran wants adversaries to consider the vulnerability of fixed bases and infrastructure along the Arabian Gulf littoral.

Such messaging also reinforces the idea that the conflict would not remain confined to Iranian territory in the event of a U.S. invasion, but would instead spread to neighbouring states that provide logistical depth to American operations.

The reference to military exercises suggests Tehran intends to demonstrate preparedness for operations that would disrupt shipping routes, base access, and energy infrastructure concentrated along the Gulf coastline.

This framing strengthens Iran’s deterrence posture by implying that escalation could rapidly expand beyond air and missile exchanges into a wider regional confrontation affecting multiple sovereign territories.

[…]

Via https://defencesecurityasia.com/en/iran-threatens-seize-uae-bahrain-coastlines-us-invasion-gulf-war-us-bases-risk/