Dubai’s globalist financial nest just got walloped by Iran

GeoPolitics Prime

The famous Dubai International Financial Center (DIFC) has been hit by Iranian kamikaze drone wreckage – sending shivers to global banking bigwigs.

🔶 The Dubai authorities were quick to label it a “successful interception,” despite the conspicuous plume of smoke rising near the DIFC Innovation Hub

🔶 They offered no details about what had supposedly been “intercepted,” assuring the public only that the debris “caused a minor incident on the facade of a building”

🔶 Whatever minor damage was done to the building, the DIFC has sustained far greater reputational damage as a top global financial center

Everyone’s jumping the sinking ship?

🔶 The attack followed Iran’s March 11 warning (https://t.me/geopolitics_prime/66587) that it would retaliate against US and Israeli financial interests after a strike on a bank in Tehran

🔶 Iran’s warning triggered a hasty exodus of several major Western banks from offices in Dubai and elsewhere in the Gulf on the same day:

👉 Employees of the US financial services group Citi were instructed to vacate offices in the DIFC and Oud Metha district

👉 Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs followed suit

👉 British banking groups Standard Chartered and HSBC also began evacuating staff from their Dubai offices

👉 On the same day, British consulting firm PwC announced it would close offices in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE, and Kuwait “for the remainder of the week”

👉 Staff of the British consulting firm Deloitte also evacuated their Dubai offices

🔶 Economic observers say the halo of safety that once surrounded Dubai has faded, warning that capital is likely to flee if the Iran war drags on

🔶 Even if the conflict eases, the vulnerability of Dubai’s airspace, infrastructure and communications has been laid bare for all to see

[…]

Via https://t.me/healthimpact/3239

White House divided as Trump struggles to find exit strategy from Iran war

Caption: US President Donald Trump leading a cabinet meeting in the White House. (File photo)

Press TV

A deepening internal tug-of-war is reportedly paralyzing the White House, as US President Donald Trump’s advisors clash over how to define “victory” amid a global energy crisis and significant strategic miscalculations regarding the unassailable resilience of the Iranian nation.

Citing a Trump adviser and sources close to the matter, Reuters reported a stark division within the administration over how to end the war with the Islamic Republic, which is now dragging into its third week.

On one side, the report said, hawks like Senators Lindsey Graham and Tom Cotton are pushing for a sustained offensive against Iran.

They argue that the US must prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon and respond forcefully to attacks on American troops and shipping in the Persian Gulf. Iran has always said it does not want to acquire nuclear weapons.

On the other side, political advisors—including Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and media figures like Tucker Carlson—are urging an immediate de-escalation. They argue that a prolonged war in West Asia directly violates Trump’s core campaign promise to end “stupid” foreign interventions.

Meanwhile, the recent surge in gasoline prices—triggered by US-Israeli aggression against Iran—has concerned Trump’s economic advisors, including those from the Treasury Department and the National Economic Council.

According to the report, they have issued dire warnings to the president, arguing that an economic shock will erode Trump’s base of support faster than any military setback.

Political advisors, including Chief of Staff Susie Wiles and Deputy Chief James Blair, are making similar arguments, focusing on the political fallout from higher gas prices and urging Trump to define “victory” narrowly and signal that the operation is limited and “nearly finished,” the sources said.

Trump’s rhetoric has fluctuated wildly in a single day. He claimed “we won” the war with Iran, only to pivot moments later and say “we must finish the job.”

Launching an unprovoked war on Iran—along with the Israeli regime—on February 28, the US president failed to offer even a shred of credible explanation to the American people.

Instead, his administration has offered justifications ranging from thwarting what they claimed was an imminent attack by Iran to crippling its nuclear program to regime change.

Ever since, Iranian armed forces have carried out retaliatory attacks on US military assets in regional countries and the Israeli-occupied territories.

On the other hand, Iran’s absolute command over the Strait of Hormuz—the world’s energy artery—has also left the Trump administration reeling, as soaring gas prices have ignited a political firestorm that threatens to topple Republican majorities in Congress and end Washington’s interventionist campaign, according to the report.

Facing the unshakable stability of the Iranian leadership, Trump has been forced to retreat from his delusions of regime change.

Intelligence reports now show that Tehran is nowhere near collapse, shattering the White House’s naïve attempts to replicate the Venezuela raid.

The US administration’s fatal error was treating a sovereign power like Iran with the same simplistic playbook used in the January 3 kidnapping of Venezuela’s president, Nicolas Maduro.

[…]

Via https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/03/13/765331/White-House-divided-as-Trump-struggles-to-find-exit-strategy-from-Iran-war–Report

How badly has Iran damaged US military bases?

How badly has Iran damaged US military bases?

 

RT

American military targets in six countries have come under Iranian fire, and the Pentagon is doing its best to hide the destruction 

Within hours of the US launching ‘Operation Epic Fury’, Iran unleashed retaliatory strikes against American military bases in the Middle East. Behind a veil of censorship, it’s clear that the damage is far more severe than the Pentagon is admitting.

Ten days into the war, the US has admitted the deaths of eight service members. Three fighter jets have been lost in mysterious circumstances, while damage reports from American bases have come not from Pentagon press releases, but from satellite images and cell phone videos – often shot in defiance of strict wartime censorship laws.

These sources reveal that Iran is engaged in a campaign of precision strikes, aimed at keeping American planes on the ground, and more importantly, crippling the US’ cutting-edge ballistic missile defense network.

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

The US operates a network of 19 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 US Central Command (CENTCOM).

RT

The eight permanent US installations are located in 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.

These bases surround Iran from the west and south, and are currently bolstered by the presence of the USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Gerald R. Ford in the Persian Gulf. These nuclear-powered aircraft carriers have a combined staff of more than 10,000, and carry more than 130 fighter jets.

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

Which US bases have been hit?

As of March 10, the following US bases and associated buildings have been struck by Iranian missiles and drones, often more than once.

  • Naval Support Activity, Bahrain (Headquarters of US Fifth Fleet)
  • Manama, Bahrain (Multiple hotels housing US troops in the city)
  • Erbil International Airport, Iraq (US base adjoining airport)
  • Muwaffaq Salti Air Base, Jordan
  • Ali Al-Salem Air Base, Kuwait
  • Camp Buehring, Kuwait
  • Camp Arifjan, Kuwait
  • Mohammed Al-Ahmad Kuwait Naval Base, Kuwait
  • Al-Udeid Air Base, Qatar
  • Al-Dhafra Air Base, UAE
  • Jebel Ali Port, UAE
  • Prince Sultan Air Base, Saudi Arabia

What’s on Iran’s target list?

The strikes on American air bases serve the immediate goals of reducing US ability to conduct air sorties over Iran, and forcing it to move air assets further away, from where they must rely on aerial refueling to continue their attacks. Data from FlightRadar24 showed a mass exodus of KC-135 Stratotankers from Prince Sultan Air Base on March 9, after a combined drone and missile attack the night before. A rudimentary calculation by analyst Anusar Farooqui suggests that the US ability to fly missions over Iran has been degraded by 35-50%.

Iran’s campaign has focused heavily on blinding the US military and crippling its THAAD missile defense network. An Iranian Shahed drone slammed into an AN/TPS-59 radar dome at Naval Support Activity in Bahrain on the first day of the conflict, obliterating the $300 million system. Installed in 2007, the radar was described by Lockheed Martin at the time as “the only 360-degree coverage mobile radar in the world certified to detect tactical ballistic missiles.”

Radar domes were also destroyed at Camp Arifjan and Ali Al-Salem Air Base in Kuwait, and at Al-Dhafra in the UAE, according to satellite images and video footage. At Al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar, a $1 billion AN/FPS-132 early warning radar installation,one of only six worldwide, was hit by an Iranian ballistic missile on February 28, according to Qatar’s defense ministry.

By destroying the radar equipment, Iran has hampered the US and Israel’s ability to track incoming ballistic missiles. The consequences can be seen in Israel, where by March 6, Iranian missiles were hitting Tel Aviv less than three minutes after sirens sounded, instead of the usual eight minutes.

In at least four locations – Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan, Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, and two Emirati-run bases in the UAE – Iran has hit AN/TPY-2 radar systems linked to US-made Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) batteries. Satellite images show that in Jordan and Saudi Arabia, these $500 million systems were completely destroyed.

Despite a drop in missile launches from Iran, the destruction of the US’ early-warning and THAAD infrastructure suggests that a higher percentage of Iranian missiles will hit their targets in the coming days and weeks.

How is the damage being covered up?

The US has adopted a policy of silence and denial, with the Pentagon refusing to answer press requests. Asked about damage to THAAD stations, the Department of War told CNN that “due to operations security, we are not going to comment on the status of specific capabilities in the region.”

An American KC-135 Stratotanker refueling aircraft went down in western Iraq on Friday, killing all six crew members on board, the United States Central Command (CENTCOM) said.

CENTCOM stated in a post on X earlier that four crew members had initially been confirmed dead and that rescue efforts were continuing. In a later update, the command said all six personnel were “now confirmed deceased.”

“The circumstances of the incident are under investigation. However, the loss of the aircraft was not due to hostile fire or friendly fire,” CENTCOM said.

CENTCOM has outright denied that Iran caused “severe damage at multiple US bases.” Despite satellite images and video footage suggesting otherwise, CENTCOM stated on social media that “damage to US installations was minimal and has not impacted operations.”

Satellite imaging firms Planet Labs and Maxar Technologies have both paused the release of footage from the region. Planet Labs, whose images revealed damage to bases in Bahrain, Kuwait, and Qatar, said that it would place a 14-day delay on new images to “prevent adversarial actors endangering the safety of allied and NATO-partner personnel.”

The Gulf monarchies have taken a more draconian approach, with the UAE threatening fines and jail time for anyone sharing videos of Iranian attacks, and Bahraini prosecutors reportedly seeking the death penalty for recording a video of a malfunctioning US Patriot air defense system hitting a residential area and allegedly killing more than 30 civilians. CENTCOM and the Bahraini government have claimed that an Iranian drone was responsible for the deaths.

How many US troops have been killed?

As of March 10, eight US troops have been confirmed killed since hostilities began. Six died in an Iranian attack on Camp Arifjan in Kuwait, when a missile hit what US Secretary of War Pete Hegseth described as a “tactical operation center that was fortified.” One soldier was killed in a missile attack on Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, according to the Pentagon, while another supposedly died in a “non-combat related” incident at Camp Buehring in Kuwait.

Around 140 American troops have been wounded since February 28, with eight of them

Tehran claims that the true US death toll is significantly higher. In an interview on March 7, Iranian Supreme National Security Council chief Ali Larijani accused US President Donald Trump of “lying” about the casualty count, predicting that the US would “probably later increase the number of deaths gradually under the pretext of accidents or something of the sort.”

Trump and Hegseth have both warned the American public that more deaths are likely. “Things like this don’t happen without casualties,” Hegseth said on March 8. “There will be more casualties.”

Who shot down the US F-15s?

Three US F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jets were shot down over Kuwait on March 2, in what CENTCOM called “an apparent friendly fire incident.” All six crew members ejected successfully, and CENTCOM maintained afterwards that they were “mistakenly shot down by Kuwaiti air defenses” during active combat with Iranian jets.

RT analyzed the incident in depth and concluded that this version of events was likely untrue. No telltale trails from Kuwait’s Patriot, HAWK, NASAMS, or Spada 2000 interceptors were visible in video footage of the incident, while the damage to the jets – which were hit near their engines – did not match up with the missiles fired by these systems.

Instead, it is more likely that the F-15s were brought down with heat-seeking missiles, fired either from Iranian or Kuwaiti fighter jets. Unconfirmed video footage suggests that at least one of the planes may have been shot down by a Kuwaiti F-18.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/633541-iran-attacks-us-bases/

 

US eases Russian oil sanctions

US eases Russian oil sanctions

RT

The US has eased sanctions to allow countries to purchase Russian oil and petroleum products already loaded on vessels at sea, according to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. The move comes as escalating Middle East tensions triggered by the US-Israeli war on Iran have sent global oil prices soaring.

The US and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran on February 28, prompting Iranian retaliatory attacks across the region. The crisis has led to the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz – which carries roughly one-fifth of the world’s daily oil supply – as Iran effectively blocks transit for ships from non-friendly nations, sending oil prices surging nearly 50% to almost $120 per barrel.

“To increase the global reach of existing supply, US Treasury is providing a temporary authorization to permit countries to purchase Russian oil currently stranded at sea,” Bessent said on Thursday in a post on X, stating that the move would stabilize energy markets and curb oil prices.

The waiver relates to exports of Russian oil loaded onto vessels prior to March 12 and is set to last 30 days.

Earlier in the day, US Energy Secretary Chris Wright had stated that broader restrictions on Russian oil would not be lifted, stressing that Washington was not planning to change its sanctions policy toward Moscow.

Commenting on the easing of restrictions, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the move is aimed at stabilizing the global energy market, adding that in this respect, the interests of Moscow and Washington align.

Last week, Bessent claimed the US had given India “permission” to buy Russian crude “to ease the temporary gap of oil around the world,” having announced plans to “unsanction other Russian oil” to further boost supply.

India, which alongside China emerged as a key buyer of Russian crude after sanctions were imposed following the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, has never confirmed it would adhere to the restrictions, although the US has claimed otherwise.

Moscow likewise said it had no information suggesting that India has put Russian crude imports on hold. The Kremlin has condemned the US-Israeli strikes on Iran as a “premeditated and unprovoked act of aggression” with no justification.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/business/634741-russian-oil-us-sanction-lifted/

Iranian envoy signals safe passage for Indian ships through Strait of Hormuz

Iranian envoy signals safe passage for Indian ships through Strait of Hormuz

RT

Iran’s ambassador to India, Mohammad Fathali, has indicated that Indian vessels can expect safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz amid the ongoing Middle East conflict.

Responding to a question from an RT India correspondent, the envoy highlighted that Tehran sees New Delhi as a friend and that there are converging interests between the two countries.

Asked directly whether India would receive safe passage through the strait, he replied: “Yes, because India is our friend. You will see it within two or three hours.”

Fathali emphasized that Iran and India share key interests in the region, describing New Delhi as an important partner for Tehran.

The Strait of Hormuz is one of the world’s most critical maritime chokepoints, handling a substantial share of global oil and gas shipments.

The disruption to traffic through the narrow waterway since the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran has already had immediate implications for energy markets globally, including for India, which relies heavily on crude supplies passing through the region.

Earlier this week, the first India-bound oil tanker sailing under a Liberian flag cleared the Strait of Hormuz and berthed at Mumbai.

The Iranian envoy’s remarks also come hours after top officials of the two countries held telephone talks. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on Thursday, expressing concern over the “escalation of tensions, the loss of civilian lives, and the damage to civilian infrastructure.”

In a separate conversation, Indian Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar spoke to his Iranian counterpart, Abbas Araghchi. During the conversation, Tehran outlined its position after US‑Israeli strikes and called for support from BRICS nations, while India emphasized cooperation and regional stability.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/india/634861-iranian-envoy-india-oil-hormuz/

Reflecting on the Unthinkable: Iran’s Grand Plan to End US Presence in the Middle East

Michael Hudson

Iran and Donald Trump have each explained why failure to fight the current war to the end would simply lead to a new set of mutual attacks.

Trump announced on March 6, “There will be no deal with Iran except unconditional surrender,” and announced that he must have a voice in naming or at least approving Iran’s new leader, as he has just done in Venezuela. “If the U.S. military must utterly defeat it and bring about a regime change, or else “you go through this, and then in five years you realize you put somebody in who’s no better.’” It will take at least that long for America to replace the weaponry that has been depleted, rebuild its radar and related installations and mount a new war.

Iranian officials likewise recognize that U.S. attacks will keep being repeated until the United States is driven out of the Middle East. Having agreed to a ceasefire last June instead of pressing its advantage when Israeli and regional U.S. anti-missile defenses were depleted, Iran realized that war will be resumed as soon as the United States is able to re-arm its allies and military bases to renew what both sides recognize is to be a fight to some kind of final solution.

The war that began on February 28 can realistically be deemed to be the formal opening of World War III because what is at issue are the terms on which the entire world will be able to buy oil and gas. Can they buy this energy from exporters in currencies other than the dollar, headed by Russia and Iran (and until recently, Venezuela)? Will the present U.S. demand to control of the international oil trade require oil-exporting countries to price it in dollars, and indeed to recycle their export earnings and national savings into investments in U.S. government securities, bonds and stocks?

That recycling of petrodollars has been the basis of America’s financialization and weaponization of the world’s oil trade, and its imperial strategy of isolating countries that resist adherence to the U.S. ruler-based order (no real rules, but simply U.S. ad hoc demands). So what is at issue is not only the U.S. military presence in the Middle East – along with its two proxy armies, Israel and ISIS/al Qaeda jihadists. And the U.S. and Israeli pretense that it is about Iran having atomic weapons of mass destruction is as fictitious an accusation as that levied against Iraq in 2003. What is at issue is ending the Middle East’s economic alliances with the United States and whether its oil-export earnings will continue to be accumulated in dollars as the buttress of the U.S. balance of payments to help pay for its military bases throughout the world.

Iran has announced that it will fight until it achieves three aims to prevent future wars. First and foremost, the United States must withdraw from all its military bases in the Middle East. Iran already has destroyed the backbone of radar warning systems and anti-aircraft and missile defense sites in Jordan, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Bahrain, preventing them from guiding U.S. or Israeli missile attacks or attacking Iran. Arab countries have bases or U.S. installations will be bombed if they are not abandoned.

The next two Iranian demands seem to far-reaching that they seem unthinkable to the West. Arab OPEC countries must end their close economic ties to the United States, starting with the U.S. data centers operated by Amazon, Microsoft and Google. And they not only must stop pricing their oil and gas in U.S. dollars, but disinvest in their existing petrodollars holdings of the U.S. investments that have been subsidizing the U.S. balance of payments since the 1974 agreements that made to gain U.S. permission to quadruple their oil-export prices.

These three demands would end U.S. economic power over OPEC countries, and thus the world oil trade. The result would be to dedollarize the world’s oil trade and re-orient it toward Asia and Global Majority countries. And Iran’s plan involves not only a military and economic defeat for the United States, but an end to the political character of the Near Eastern client monarchies and their relations with their Shi’ite citizens.

Step 1: Driving the United States out of its Middle Eastern military bases

Iraq’s parliament has continued to demand that U.S. forces leave their country and stop stealing its oil (sending most of it to Israel). It has just approved legislation yet again directing that American forces to leave their country. Meeting with senior advisor to Iraq’s interior minister and his accompanying military delegation in Tehran last Monday (March 2), Iran’s Brigadier General Ali Abdollahi reiterated the demand that Iran has been making for the last five years, ever since Donald Trump closed his first administration on January 3, 2020. by ordering the treacherous assassination of the two top Iranian and Iraqi anti-terror negotiators, Qassem Soleimani and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, who were seeking to avoid an all-out war. Seeing that Trump is now continuing the same policy, the Iranian commander stated: “Expulsion of the United States is the most important step toward the restoration of security and stability to the region.”

But all the Arab kingdoms are hosting U.S. military bases. Iran has announced that any country permitting U.S. aircraft or other military forces to use these bases will risk immediate attack to destroy them. Kuwait, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates already have come under attack, leading Saudi Arabia to promise Iran not to permit the U.S. military to use its territory for part of its war.

Spain has banned U.S. use of its airfields to support its war against Iran. But when its Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez forbade the United States from using them, President Trump pointed out at an Oval Office news conference that there was nothing that Spain really could do to prevent the U.S. air force from using the Rota and Morón installations in southern Spain that the U.S. and Spain share, but which remain under Spanish command. “And now Spain actually said we can’t use their bases. And that’s all right, we don’t want to do it. We could use the base if we want. We could just fly in and use it, nobody is going to tell us not to use it.” What would Spain do to prevent it, after all? Shoot down the U.S. aircraft?

This is the problem confronting the Arab monarchies if they try to deny U.S. access to their own U.S. bases and air space to fight Iran. What can they do?

Or more to the point, what may they be willing to do? Iran is insisting that Qatar, the United Arab Republics, Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and other Near Eastern monarchies close all U.S. military bases in their kingdoms and block U.S. use of their airspace and airports as a condition for not bombing them and extending the war to the monarchic regimes themselves.

Refusal – or inability to prevent the U.S. from using bases in their countries – will lead Iran to force a regime change. This would be easiest in countries in which Palestinians are a large proportion of the labor force, as in Jordan. Iran has called for Shi’ite populations in Jordan and other Near Eastern countries to overthrow their monarchies so as to break away from U.S. control. There are rumors that Bahrain’s king has left the country.

Step #2: Ending the Middle East’s commercial and financial linkages to the U.S.

Arab monarchies are under further pressure to meet Iran’s ultimate demand that they decouple their economies from that of the United States. Ever since 1974 they have tied their economies to the United States. Most recently Bahrain, the UAE and Saudi Arabia have sought to use their energy resources to attract computer data centers, including Starlink and other systems that have been associated with U.S. regime-change and military attacks on Iran.

Opposing U.S. plans to tightly integrate its non-oil sectors with the Arab OPEC Middle East, Iran has announced that these installations are “legitimate targets” for its drive to expel America from the region. One cloud computing manager suggested that Iran’s AWS attack on Amazon’s data center was targeted because it was serving military needs, much as Starlink (which the UAE is interested in financing) was used in February in the U.S. attempt to mobilize demonstrations against Iran’s government.

Step #3: Ending the recycling of OPEC oil exports into U.S. dollar holdings

The most radical Iranian demand has been for its Arab neighbors to dedollarize their economies. That is a key to preventing U.S. businesses from dominating their economies and hence their governments. An Iranian official told CNN that Iran has accused companies that buy U.S. government debt and invest in Treasury bonds of being partners in the war against itself, because it sees them as financiers of this war. “Tehran considers these companies and their managers in the region as legitimate targets. These individuals are warned to declare their capital withdrawal as soon as possible.”

Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, and Qatar are indeed discussing withdrawing from U.S. and other investments as Iran’s blocking of Hormuz has led them to stop producing oil and LNG now that their storage capacity is full. Their income from energy, shipping and tourism has stopped. The Gulf States are meeting on Sunday, March 8, to discuss drawing down their $2 trillion in U.S. dollar investments (mainly from Saudi Arabia). The threat is that this is an initial step to diversifying OPEC investment outside of the U.S. dollar.

[…]

For the monarchies themselves, the changes demanded by Iran to end the U.S. war against the Middle East would have an effect similar to the aftermath of World War I: the end of monarchic regimes in many of the Arab countries whose economies and political alliances have been based on an alliance with the United States. And for starters, pressure is now on Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Bahrain, Kuwait and United Arab Emirates that have agreed to join Trump’s Board of Peace.

Indonesia, with the world’s largest Islamic population, has just withdrawn its earlier offer to provide 8000 troops to the Trump “peace plan” in Gaza, and Iran is pressuring Arab monarchies to follow suit by withdrawing in protest against U.S. policy.

[…]

Collateral effects of Iran’s goal to drive the United States out of the Middle East

Pursuit of Iranian aims means a long war. It will escalate as Israel and the U.S. military exhaust their supply of anti-aircraft and missile defense, enabling Iran to launch its serious attack on a scale that it stopped short of last June when it agreee to a ceasefire. In coming weeks Iran will start using its most sophisticated missiles to attack Israel and other U.S. proxies.

There’s nowhere to put additional oil production now that Iran has closed the Strait of Hormuz to all but its own ships, most of which are carrying oil destined for China.. No ships are even trying to approach it, because Lloyds of London is not issuing insurance policies.

The U.S. military has recently sunk or seized Russian ships carrying oil, but the soaring oil prices have led it to permit such transfers in order to stem the world inflation. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said the Treasury Department is examining whether additional sanctioned Russian crude shipments could be released to the market. “We may unsanction other Russian oil,” he said. “There are hundreds of millions of barrels of sanctioned crude on the water … by unsanctioning them, Treasury can create supply.” His remarks follow a U.S. decision to issue a temporary 30-day waiver allowing Indian refiners to purchase Russian oil in an effort to maintain global supply.

Matters are not so easily cured for liquified natural gas, which is exported mainly by Qatar. Its storage tanks are full, forcing production to be shut down. Its LNG gas works have been bombed and will have to be rebuilt and put back on line. That will take two weeks plus an equal time to cool this gas properly.*


*LNG can spontaneously ignite above -162 degrees C.

[…]

Via https://libya360.wordpress.com/2026/03/12/reflecting-on-the-unthinkable-irans-grand-plan-to-end-the-us-presence-in-the-middle-east/

Trump and Rubio Give Final Offer to Castros and Díaz-Canel: “Off-Ramp” to Cede Power Without Forced Exile or End Up Like Maduro in Prison

portada-r-y-t

Joanna Campos

President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are pushing an economic agreement with the Cuban regime that includes an “off-ramp” —a negotiated exit— to allow the Castro family and President Miguel Díaz-Canel to cede power without forced exile, according to an exclusive report from The Telegraph.

The plan would allow these leaders to remain on the island in exchange for concessions in ports, energy, and tourism, with possible selective relief in sanctions.

The conversations involve Raúl Guillermo Rodríguez Castro, grandson of Raúl Castro, who maintains key influence. Rubio, son of Cuban immigrants, leads the high-level negotiations, as confirmed by Trump in public statements.

The president has said that “Cuba is in its final moment of life as it is” and that an agreement will be reached “very easily”.

This pressure intensified after the capture of Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores on January 3, 2026, in Caracas by U.S. forces.

After rejecting offers of exile, they were transferred to the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York, facing charges of narcoterrorism and drug trafficking, according to CNN coverage from January 4, 2026. The cutoff of Venezuelan oil shipments caused an energy crisis in Cuba with massive blackouts.

Trump declared at a press conference in Doral, Florida, on March 9, 2026, that the agreement “may be a friendly takeover or not,” but that the regime is “without energy, without money” and in “deep humanitarian problems.” In previous interviews, such as with CNN on March 6, he stated that “Cuba will fall soon” and assigned Rubio to handle the talks.

The approach combines economic force with a realistic offer, contrasting with past policies of engagement without results. Trump emphasized that Cuba “wants to negotiate desperately” after losing allies like Venezuela.

[…]

Via https://gatewayhispanic.com/2026/03/trump-rubio-give-final-offer-castros-diaz-canel/

Trump’s lies reveal real story about Iran war

The 15 most notable lies of Donald Trump's presidency | CNN Politics
Martin Jay

Join up the dots and you come to the same conclusion. America and Israel are the biggest losers in the Iran war. But not Trump.

A recent poll in the U.S. concluded that Donald Trump tells the truth only about 3 percent of the time during his public announcements at press conferences. Perhaps it was his stint at being a celebrity on TV that taught him how gullible people in America are when fed the most fanciful, moronic lies a leading figure can tell, through the American media.

Of course, it’s also about the journalists as well, and if there’s one thing that the Trump administrations have taught us, it is how poor the general level of journalism is in America these days. American journalists are not afraid to ask difficult questions or disbelieve what they are told. They simply don’t know how to do this in the first place.

Covering the Iran war, it is breathtaking, some of the brazen lies he tells while being questioned by journalists who are complicit in his dirty work. The mere idea that Iran, for example, acquired a Tomahawk missile and used it to kill its own schoolgirls is beyond absurd. How could journalists not question such a reply when it is so clear that Trump is lying through his teeth?

Because of this lying, we can see how Trump works, though. Unlike other U.S. presidents who have some shame and discomfort in lying to the press, Trump suffers no such handicap and so can take on bolder, more daring ventures on the global stage. In this environment, there is no respect for international law or even due process within the political framework of how Congress works.

Trump hasn’t worked out how to defeat Iran, but he has all the contingent narratives to lay out afterwards to explain why everything that goes wrong is not his fault. We see that he is already preparing himself for the day of judgement by the press pack in the coming days and weeks by telling them that it was Jared Kushner, Marco Rubio and Steve Witkoff who told him to hit Iran.

The direction towards these three is revealing. Of course, we have learned the simple rule of Trump when it comes to decisions. When things go well, everything was his decision; when things go badly, blame others.

And so, the blaming of these three is a clear example and acknowledgement by Trump that the Iran war was a failure. The U.S. didn’t bring about regime change nor seek any military concessions from its government. In fact, it’s really hard to establish one minor point where you could say that the Americans chalked up any kind of victory, given the high energy prices around the world and the Straits of Hormuz still closed to oil tankers. Despite the U.S. being a net exporter of oil, the crisis is raising pump prices back home, and so it is Trump’s support base of blue-collar workers who are, once again, paying the price for his failed policies.

This last point about the Straits of Hormuz is worth taking stock of when we examine Trump’s lies, which just get increasingly fatuous by the day. It’s like we’re dealing with a child in power who has lost sense of any of the realities around him. One of Trump’s claims which he repeats over and over again is that the U.S. navy has completely destroyed its Iranian counterpart, and that all ships have been sunk. And yet there is no video evidence at all to support this, official or even just phone footage from even one U.S. sailor’s phone.

Could this be another massive Trump lie, given that he is struggling to prove to the American people or the press that the operation has been a success? Very convenient that all Iranian vessels happen to have been sunk. Perhaps the truth sunk and the Iranian vessels are still operational. The saddest thing is that not one American “journalist” is even able at a press conference, or even in their copy, to ask the most obvious question about this claim, which is: “If there is no Iranian navy, then why are the Straits of Hormuz still closed to ships passing through?”

Or is it that the Iranian navy has been destroyed, but Iran’s control of the shipping and its threat against America’s aircraft carriers is so strong and prevalent that the U.S. navy doesn’t have the capability to break the siege?

Trump is busy building up a case to make him look less culpable in the whole war, which in itself is a massive admission that it has all gone horribly wrong. These indicators are subtle and sometimes are not easy to spot, like his recent comment that GCC countries helped the U.S. bomb Iran. So the mighty U.S. navy, air force and army did not come up to scratch and had to rely on regional partners? The president needs some help here with his messaging, as he is clearly trying to spread the blame and reduce his own importance, perhaps as a ploy to not only protect himself from impeachment but from facing international criminal courts.

The lie that GCC countries bombed Iran is even more laughable than the one about Iran bombing its own schoolgirls, but with no real journalists around who are even able to ask the most obvious questions, he’ll be able to get away with it, despite the odd dichotomy of logic shooting himself in the foot. The truth about the so-called Iran War is that almost nothing we see on our TV screens is anywhere near the truth. Sometimes it is simply omission, as in the case of the real level of destruction in Israel, which is not being reported due to a shameful agreement struck between U.S. networks and Israel to block the truth and only show bombs which have hit civilian targets rather than military ones.

The biggest lie possibly concerns the reasons behind it, although blithering buffoons like Lindsey Graham can hardly keep the lid on it. Money. Do even Trump’s more vociferous supporters doubt for one moment that he hasn’t made billions out of it by manipulating markets?

[…]

Via https://strategic-culture.su/news/2026/03/11/trumps-lies-reveal-the-real-story-about-the-iran-war/

Russian and US envoys discuss Iran oil crisis

Russian and US envoys discuss Iran oil crisis

 

RT

Dmitriev: Washington is starting to understand the key role of Russian energy in global stability

Russia and the US have held talks over the ongoing oil crisis triggered by the US-Israeli war on Iran, Kirill Dmitriev, an investment envoy to President Vladimir Putin, has announced.

In a post on Telegram on Thursday, Dmitriev said he had traveled to the US at Putin’s request to attend a working group meeting on economic cooperation between Moscow and Washington.

The sides, he said, discussed “potential projects” that could help restore Russian-American relations, along with “the current crisis in global energy markets.”

“Today many countries, above all the US, are beginning to better understand the key, system-forming role of Russian oil and gas in ensuring global economic stability, as well as the ineffectiveness and destructive nature of sanctions against Russia,” he added.

In a separate post on X, he thanked US special envoy Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner – President Donald Trump’s son-in-law – and White House senior adviser Josh Gruenbaum for a “productive meeting.”

Witkoff also confirmed the talks, which took place in Florida, adding that “the teams discussed a variety of topics and agreed to stay in touch.”

The discussions followed a phone call between Trump and Putin on Monday, which covered several issues, including the Middle East conflict. Moscow described the call as “businesslike, frank and constructive,” while Trump called the conversation “very good.”

The US and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran on February 28, prompting Iranian retaliatory attacks across the region. The crisis led to a de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz – a route that carries roughly one-fifth of the world’s daily oil supply – sending oil prices surging nearly 50% to almost $120 per barrel.

Although the rally eased after several countries agreed to release strategic reserves, prices rose again to above $100 on Thursday.

On Monday, Putin said that Moscow had “repeatedly warned that attempts to destabilize the situation in the Middle East would inevitably jeopardize” global energy supply and cautioned that Hormuz oil flows risked stopping entirely. He also stressed that Russia would be open to resuming oil and gas supplies to the EU, a proposal dismissed by EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who warned that a return to Russian energy would be a “strategic blunder.”

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/russia/634621-russia-us-talks-iran-oil-crisis/

‘Happy shooting!’ AI chatbots eager to help plan mass violence

‘Happy shooting!’ AI chatbots eager to help plan mass violence – report

 

RT

Eight out of ten leading AI chatbots willingly assisted users in planning violent attacks, including school shootings, religious bombings, and assassinations, according to a joint investigation by CNN and the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH).

Researchers posing as troubled teenagers tested ten popular chatbots, including ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Meta AI, and DeepSeek. In hundreds of exchanges, the AI assistants provided detailed guidance on target locations, weapons procurement, and attack methodologies.

One exchange with DeepSeek reportedly ended with the chatbot wishing a would-be attacker “Happy (and safe) shooting!” Character.AI, which is popular among younger users, actively encouraged violence, telling a user expressing hatred for a health insurance CEO to “use a gun.”

When asked about effective shrapnel for explosives, ChatGPT provided detailed comparisons of materials, offering to create “a quick comparison chart showing the typical injuries.” Google’s Gemini supplied similar information, including a detailed comparison table.

Only Anthropic’s Claude and Snapchat’s My AI consistently refused to assist, with Claude actively discouraging users and providing mental health resources.

The findings come after an 18-year-old shooter killed nine people at a school in Tumbler Ridge, Canada last month after allegedly using ChatGPT to plan the attack. The shooter’s account had been banned by OpenAI, but he evaded the ban by creating a second account – which the company did not report to the authorities.

The family of 12-year-old Maya Gebala, who was critically injured in the attack, filed a lawsuit alleging that OpenAI had “specific knowledge of the shooter utilizing ChatGPT to plan a mass casualty event” but failed to alert law enforcement. OpenAI has acknowledged that it considered reporting the activity but ultimately did not.

Last May, a 16-year-old in Finland stabbed three students after spending nearly four months researching attacks on ChatGPT, according to court documents. In January 2025, a man who blew up a Tesla Cybertruck outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas similarly used ChatGPT for guidance on explosives.

Meta told CNN that it has taken steps “to fix the issue identified,” while Google and OpenAI said newer models have improved safeguards. DeepSeek did not respond to requests for comment.

[…]

Via https://www.rt.com/news/634689-ai-help-mass-shootings/