JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER. 1 COR 15:23-JESUS THE FIRST FRUITS-CHRISTIANS RAPTURED TO JESUS-FIRST FRUITS OF THE SPIRIT-23 But every man in his own order: Christ the firstfruits; afterward they that are Christ’s at his coming.ROMANS 8:23 And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.(THE PRE-TRIB RAPTURE)
WAR WITH IRAN - DAY 17 - IRAN TRYS TO SKYROCKET OIL.
THE NEXT
US-ISRAEL HIT ON IRAN SHOULD BE VERSE 37. ALL OFFENSIVE NUKE SITES
MISSLES,DRONES,AND OF COURSE KHEMENI AND THE IRGC GUARDS.THEN AFTER
IRANS REGIME CHANGE. MUSLIMS COME TO JESUS BY THE MILLIONS.
JEREMEIAH 49:32-39 (IN IRAN AT THE BUSHEHR OR ARAK NUKE SITES AND ALL OFENSIVE WEAPONS DESTROYED IN IRAN)
Jeremiah 49:32-39
32
Their camels shall be a booty, and the multitude of their cattle a
spoil: and I will scatter to all winds those who have the corners [of
their hair] cut off; and I will bring their calamity from every side of
them, says Yahweh.
33 Hazor shall be a dwelling-place of jackals, a
desolation forever: no man shall dwell there, neither shall any son of
man sojourn therein.(Location & Size: It was strategically located
along the Via Maris (Way of the Sea), a major trade route connecting
Egypt with Syria and Mesopotamia.)
34 The word of Yahweh that came to
Jeremiah the prophet concerning Elam,(IRAN) in the beginning of the
reign of Zedekiah king of Judah, saying,
35 Thus says Yahweh of
Hosts: Behold, I will break the bow of Elam,(IRANS OFFENSIVE WEAPONS)
the chief of their might.(MISSLES AND NUKE SITES)
36 On Elam (IRAN)
will I bring the four winds from the four quarters of the sky, and will
scatter them toward all those winds; and there shall be no nation where
the outcasts of Elam shall not come.(SINCE 1979 IRANIANS HAVE GOTTIN OUT
OF IRAN BECAUSE OF KHEMENI AND HIS APOCOPOLIPTIC DEATH CULT
BELIEF-BLACK HATER 12ERS)
37 I will cause Elam (IRAN) to be dismayed
before their enemies, and before those who seek their life;(ISRAEL THE
LITTLE SATAN AND THE U.S THE BIG SATAN) and I will bring evil on them,
(MISSLES) even my fierce anger,(FIRE) says Yahweh; and I will send the
sword after them,(IRANS OFFENSIVE WEAPONS) until I have consumed them;
(DESTROYED THEM ALL NUKE SITES,MISSLES ETC)
38 and I will set my
throne in Elam,(IRAN WILL BECOME A CHRISTIAN NATION) and will destroy
from there king (KHEMENI, ISLAM) and princes, says Yahweh.(IRANIAN ARMY
GUARDS)
39 But it shall happen in the latter days, that I will bring
back the captivity of Elam,(IRAN) says Yahweh.(WERE IN THE LATTER DAYS
NOW)
JEREMEIAH 49:23-27
23 Concerning Damascus.(SYRIA) Hamath
is confounded, and Arpad: for they have heard evil tidings: they are
fainthearted; there is sorrow on the sea;(WAR SHIPS WITH NUKES COMING ON
SYRIA) it cannot be quiet.
24 Damascus is waxed feeble, and turneth
herself to flee, and fear hath seized on her: anguish and sorrows have
taken her, as a woman in travail.
25 How is the city of praise not left, the city of my joy!
26
Therefore her young men shall fall in her streets, and all the men of
war shall be cut off in that day, saith the LORD of hosts.
27 And I
will kindle a fire (NUKES OR BOMBS) in the wall of Damascus, and it
shall consume the palaces of Benhadad.(ASSADS PALACES POSSIBLY IN
DAMASCUS)
Seizing Iran’s uranium could take ‘largest special
forces operation in history’ – WSJ-Upward of 1,000 personnel could be
required on-site to secure Isfahan facility, amid Iranian missile and
drone fire, to dig through rubble for near-weapons grade nuclear
material By ToI Staff Today, 10:35 am-MAR 16,26
A military
operation to seize Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium would require
“the largest special forces operation in history,” The Wall Street
Journal reported on Sunday, citing US and Israeli security experts.When
American and Israeli fighter jets bombed three of the Islamic Republic’s
key nuclear sites last June, the regime was believed to have had some
440 kilograms of 60 percent-enriched uranium — a short step away from
weapons-grade material, enough for an estimated ten nuclear
bombs.Another almost 200 kilograms, at 20% enriched, were also believed
to be in the regime’s possession. Weapons-grade uranium is
90%-enriched.International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi said
last week that around half of the 60%-enriched uranium was stored in a
tunnel complex at the Isfahan nuclear site. A report earlier this month
said the US believes there is a “very narrow access point” through which
the material could potentially be retrieved.Seizing the uranium amid
the war would require a major operation, which former NATO commander
James Stavridis told the Journal could be “the largest special
operations forces in history.”The daily, citing former military
officials, reported that upward of 1,000 military personnel would have
to be present on-site.Combat troops would need to secure perimeters
while engineers dug through tons of debris while checking for mines and
booby traps, the newspaper reported.To deliver the equipment to the site
and move the recovered material out of the country, a local airfield
would be required, and if none was available, a makeshift airfield would
have to be set up as part of the operation, the report said.And forces
would likely come under drone and missile fire, requiring ground forces
and planes to ward off the attacks.Also noted in the report was the
possibility of diluting or destroying the material rather than removing
it, though this would bring the risk of contaminating the area.On
Sunday, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told CBS: “Our nuclear
facilities were attacked, and everything is under the rubble.”He said
the regime has no plan to recover the material, but also that it is not
willing to negotiate about the stockpile’s future while under fire.US
President Donald Trump, asked last week if there is a plan in place to
seize the stockpiled uranium, told Fox News radio, “No, not at
all.”“We’re not focused on that. But at some point we might be,” he
said. “Right now we’re focused on knocking the hell out of their
missiles and their drones.”A longstanding dispute over Iran’s nuclear
program escalated into military conflict on February 28, with the US and
Israel launching strikes against Iran and the Islamic Republic
responding with attacks across the Middle East.Tehran, which routinely
calls for the destruction of Israel, maintains that its nuclear program
is for purely civilian purposes. However, before the June war, Iran had
been enriching uranium to levels far beyond what’s necessary for any
peaceful application, and consistently obstructed international
inspectors from checking its facilities. Israel has also said Iran was
taking steps toward weaponization.Agencies contributed to this report.
Drone
sparks fire at UAE's Fujairah oil industry zone-Iran hits Gulf
neighbors, keeps stranglehold on oil shipping, fueling energy crisis
fears-Dubai Airport temporarily closed, passengers evacuated to lower
floor after drone strike sets fuel tank on fire; Saudi crown prince said
to be urging Trump to keep hitting Iran hard-By Agencies and ToI Staff
Today, 9:38 am-MAR 16,26
Dubai was forced to temporarily close
its airport early Monday after an Iranian drone hit a fuel tank and a
major refinery was on fire as Iran maintained its attacks on its Gulf
neighbors, heightening fears of a global oil crisis.Since being attacked
by the United States and Israel more than two weeks ago, Iran has been
regularly hitting Israel, American bases, and its Gulf Arab neighbors’
energy infrastructure and other key infrastructure targets with drones
and missiles.It has also effectively stopped shipping traffic in the
Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil is
transported, giving rise to growing fears of a global energy crisis and
putting pressure on Washington as consumers are already feeling the pain
at the pump.Brent crude oil, the international standard, remained
stubbornly over $100 a barrel on Monday. It was at $104 in early
trading, up nearly 45 percent since the US and Israel attacked Iran on
February 28. It has spiked as high as about $120 during the conflict.US
President Donald Trump said he has made demands to about seven countries
to send warships to keep the Strait of Hormuz open, but his appeals
have brought no commitments. His party is growingly concerned that
rising prices for American consumers will hurt the Republicans in
elections this fall.“I’m demanding that these countries come in and
protect their own territory, because it is their own territory,” Trump
told reporters as he flew back to Washington from Florida aboard Air
Force One. He did not identify the countries, but has previously
appealed to China, France, Japan, South Korea, and Britain.Iran’s
Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi called claims that his country may be
seeking a negotiated end to the war “delusional,” saying in a social
media post early Monday that his country was seeking neither “truce nor
talks.”“Our Powerful Armed Forces will keep firing until POTUS realizes
that illegal war he’s imposing on both Americans and Iranians is wrong
and must never be repeated,” he wrote on X.Iran hits Dubai airport,
forcing temporary closure-As morning broke Monday, a drone hit a fuel
tank near Dubai International Airport, the world’s busiest for
international passenger traffic, causing a large fire.Firefighters were
able to contain the blaze and there were no injuries reported, but the
airport temporarily suspended all flights. UAE airline Emirates, which
uses the airport as its main hub, said all of its flights were
“suspended until further notice.”⚡️#BREAKING Fires erupt in Dubai
following Iranian drone strikes pic.twitter.com/sBDs9JX809 — War Monitor
(@WarMonitors) March 16, 2026-Later, the UAE’s Defense Ministry said
its forces were working to intercept another round of Iranian missiles
and drones.“UAE air defences are currently responding to incoming
missile and drone threats from Iran,” the ministry posted on X. It noted
that “sounds heard” were from air defense systems intercepting missiles
and drones.“Dubai Civil Aviation Authority announces the temporary
suspension of flights at Dubai International Airport as a precautionary
measure to ensure the safety of all passengers and staff,” the Gulf
financial hub’s media office posted on X.Emirates told passengers in a
statement on X not to come to the airport and said it was working with
authorities “to assess the situation and support the safe resumption of
operations when possible.”The national carrier said in a later post it
expected to operate a “limited schedule” after 10:00 am Dubai time (0600
GMT) and that some flights had been cancelled.Dubai’s police said the
main road to the airport had been temporarily closed to traffic.The
airport operator later said flights were resuming.“Flights to and from
DXB are gradually resuming to selected destinations, following the
temporary suspension implemented as a precautionary measure,” Dubai
Airports said in a statement on X.The latest incident near what is
usually the world’s busiest airport for international travel affected a
fuel tank, the Dubai media office said, later adding that authorities
had contained a fire that broke out and reporting no injuries.Two
witnesses told AFP they saw a thick plume of black smoke rising from the
direction of the airport at around 10:00 local Dubai time, hours after
the incident.A witness at Dubai airport told AFP that passengers
awaiting their flights had been evacuated to a lower floor after the
attack for several hours.“It has been a difficult few weeks hearing
explosions regularly, but the Iranian attacks followed me in my last
hours before I could fly back home,” the witness added.Another drone
attack on the UAE’s east coast Fujairah oil industry zone sparked a
fire, authorities said.“A large fire broke out in the Fujairah Oil
Industries Zone as a result of being targeted by a drone, with no
injuries reported,” Fujairah authorities said, adding “efforts continue
to bring it under control”.The site sits on the UAE’s Gulf of Oman
coast, beyond the Strait of Hormuz.Iran has fired over 1,800 missiles
and drones at the United Arab Emirates, more than any other country
targeted by Tehran in the Middle East war, upending travel plans in the
financial hub despite its air defense intercepting a vast majority of
the projectiles. Debris and some drones have fallen inside the
country.Iran has also fired hundreds of missiles and drones toward Gulf
countries hosting US military assets since the war began, as well as at
Israel.Iranian officials have recently accused the UAE of allowing its
territory to be used for attacks against Iran. Emirati officials have
rejected the allegations as misleading and said the country’s actions
have been defensive.Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, said it had intercepted a
wave of 35 Iranian drones sent at its eastern region, home to major oil
installations.Despite the attacks, Saudi Arabia was reported to be
encouraging the US to keep hitting Iran hard.Several officials told the
New York Times that Trump was speaking regularly to Gulf leaders,
particularly Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman, who had been urging
him to continue the strikes.The report said Bin Salman was
“essentially repeating the advice that King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia,
who died in 2015, repeatedly gave to Washington: ‘Cut off the head of
the snake.'”Israel’s military said early Monday that Iran launched
missiles toward Israel as well.Israel’s military says Iran is firing
cluster bombs that can evade some air defenses and indiscriminately
scatter submunitions across multiple locations.Trump threatens to
‘remember’ which allies do not help-On Air Force One, Trump wouldn’t say
which countries could be part of the coalition he wants to police the
Strait of Hormuz to provide security for oil tankers and other
commercial ships passing through.But he said he won’t forget the
countries that decline to help. He named British Prime Minister Keir
Starmer, who he said initially declined to put British aircraft carriers
“into harm’s way.”“Whether we get support or not, but I can say this,
and I said to them: We will remember,” Trump said.On Monday, Japanese
Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi told parliament that her government “has
not heard anything” from Washington about Trump’s call for ships to help
protect the Strait of Hormuz.Japan imports more than 90% of its crude
oil from the Middle East, however, and she said there had been
discussions about what could be done to protect Japanese ships
“regardless of a US request.”Japan’s Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi
said he has no plans to send warships to the Strait of Hormuz under the
current safety conditions.Japan on Monday began releasing its oil
reserves to address concerns about supply shortages and rising
prices.Trump has speculated that prices would fall, but wouldn’t
directly answer whether his administration is talking about selling oil
futures as a way to cap surging oil prices, something his interior
secretary had mentioned as a possibility.“The prices are going to come
tumbling down as soon as it’s over. And it’s going to be over pretty
quickly,” he told reporters.
Trump reportedly weighs seizing
Iran's Kharg Island oil hub-Lauding Israeli help, Trump intensifies
pressure on China, others to help secure Hormuz Strait-US leader warns
NATO faces ‘very bad’ future if allies fail to pitch in, but countries
avoid committing, even as Trump said aiming to declare coalition this
week; US officials predict war’s end within weeks By Agencies and ToI
Staff Today, 6:39 am-MAR 16,26
US President Donald Trump said
Sunday that he has demanded about seven countries send warships to keep
the Strait of Hormuz open, though his appeals have brought no
commitments as oil prices soar during the Iran war.While noting that
Israel has been working with the United States to secure the waterway
where about one-fifth of the world’s traded oil normally flows, the
president declined to name the countries heavily reliant on Middle East
crude that the administration is negotiating with to join a coalition to
police the strait.“I’m demanding that these countries come in and
protect their own territory, because it is their own territory,” Trump
said about the strait, claiming the shipping channel is not something
the United States needs because of its own access to oil. Trump spoke
while answering reporters’ questions as he flew back to Washington from
Florida aboard Air Force One.Trump said China gets about 90 percent of
its oil from the strait, while the US gets a minimal amount. He declined
to discuss whether China will join the coalition.“It would be nice to
have other countries police that with us, and we’ll help. We’ll work
with them,” Trump said. Previously, he has appealed to China, France,
Japan, South Korea and Britain.US Energy Secretary Chris Wright told NBC
earlier Sunday that he has been “in dialogue” with some of the
countries Trump had mentioned previously, and said he expected China
“will be a constructive partner” in reopening the strait.Escalating his
rhetoric in an interview with the Financial Times, Trump warned that
NATO faced a “very bad” future if US allies fail to assist in opening up
the shipping route, and suggested he could delay his summit with
China’s President Xi Jinping later this month.“It’s only appropriate
that people who are the beneficiaries of the Strait will help to make
sure that nothing bad happens there,” Trump told the British
newspaper.Both The Wall Street Journal and Axios reported that Trump was
planning to announce the formation of such a multinational coalition as
early as this week. Axios added, citing unnamed US officials, that
Trump was also mulling the option of seizing Iran’s key oil depot on
Kharg Island — which the US bombed over the weekend — if Tehran
continues to deny oil tankers passage through the strait, a move that
would require American boots on the ground.Countries are cautious after
Trump’s call-But despite Trump’s intense lobbying over the past few
days, countries have made no public promises to join a coalition to
secure the Strait of Hormuz.Britain said Prime Minister Keir Starmer on
Sunday discussed with Trump the importance of reopening the strait “to
end the disruption to global shipping,” and spoke with Canada’s prime
minister about it separately.Aboard Air Force One, Trump specifically
named Starmer, who he said initially declined to put British aircraft
carriers “into harm’s way.”“Whether we get support or not, but I can say
this, and I said to them: We will remember,” Trump said.A spokesperson
for China’s embassy to the US, Liu Pengyu, said previously that “all
parties have the responsibility to ensure stable and unimpeded energy
supply” and that China would “strengthen communication with relevant
parties” for de-escalation.South Korea’s Foreign Ministry said it “takes
note” of Trump’s call and that it “will closely coordinate and
carefully review” the situation with the US.Expectations are high that
Trump will ask Japan directly when Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi meets
him on Thursday at the White House. But Takaichi said Monday that any
maritime security operation would be “extremely difficult legally,” and
Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi told parliament that “in the current
Iran situation, we are not at the moment considering issuing a maritime
security operation.”France previously said it is working with countries —
President Emmanuel Macron mentioned partners in Europe, India and Asia —
on a possible international mission to escort ships through the strait,
but has stressed it must be when “the circumstances permit,” when
fighting has subsided.Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul of Germany, which
was not mentioned in Trump’s call, told ARD television: “Will we soon
be an active part of this conflict? No.”And Australia’s Transport
Minister Catherine King told national broadcaster ABC Monday: “We won’t
be sending a ship to the Strait of Hormuz. We know how incredibly
important that is but that’s not something we’ve been asked or we’re
contributing to.”US officials predict war’s end within weeks-US
officials responding to economic uncertainty over high oil prices
predicted on Sunday that the war on Iran would end within weeks and that
a drop in energy costs would follow, despite Iran’s assertion that it
remains “stable and strong” and ready to defend itself.With crude oil
prices hovering around $100 a barrel, Trump administration officials
insisted Sunday that all signs point to a relatively quick end to the
conflict.“This conflict will certainly come to the end in the next few
weeks — could be sooner than that,” US Energy Secretary Chris Wright
told ABC’s “This Week” program.Trump himself, speaking to reporters
aboard Air Force One, did not put a timeframe on concluding the war but
said oil prices “are going to come tumbling down as soon as it’s over,
and it’s going to be over pretty quick.”But the US president said he saw
no reason to declare victory yet.“I think I just say they’re
decimated.” Trump told reporters. “If we left right now, it would take
them 10 years or more to rebuild, but I’m still not declaring it
over.”He added that Washington has been in contact with Iran, but
expressed doubt that Tehran is prepared for serious negotiations to end
the conflict.“I don’t think they are ready,” he said.Iran’s Foreign
Minister Abbas Araghchi earlier told CBS that Tehran has been
“approached by a number of countries” seeking safe passage for their
vessels, “and this is up to our military to decide.” He said a group of
vessels from “different countries” had been allowed to pass, without
providing details.Iran has said the strait is open to all except
theUnited States and its allies.Araghchi added that “we don’t see any
reason why we should talk with Americans” about finding a way to end the
war, noting that Israel and the US started the fighting with
coordinated attacks on February 28 during indirect US-Iran talks on
Iran’s nuclear program. He also said Tehran had “no plan to recover” the
enriched uranium that is under rubble following US and Israeli attacks
last year.Meanwhile, emergency oil stocks “will soon start flowing to
global markets,” the International Energy Agency said Sunday, describing
the collective action to lower prices “by far the largest ever.”It
updated last week’s announcement of 400 million barrels to nearly 412
million. Asian member countries plan to release stocks “immediately,”
and reserves from Europe and the Americas will be released “from the end
of March.”Trump didn’t directly answer whether his administration is
talking about selling oil futures as a way to cap surging oil
prices.“The prices are going to come tumbling down as soon as it’s over.
And it’s going to be over pretty quickly,” he told reporters.
IDF
reports hitting 200 targets in western Iran-Iran FM claims Tehran never
sought ceasefire or talks with US amid war-Araghchi says Iran’s
enriched uranium stockpile lies ‘under the rubble’ after strikes, with
no plan to recover it; claims Hormuz open except to US allies-By Nava
Freiberg,Lazar Berman-and Emanuel Fabian-15 March 2026, 11:26 pm
Iranian
Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Sunday that Tehran had neither
requested a ceasefire nor sought negotiations with Washington amid the
ongoing war with the United States and Israel, despite US President
Donald Trump claiming Tehran appeared ready to agree on terms unsuitable
to Washington.“No, we never asked for a ceasefire, and we have never
asked even for negotiation. We are ready to defend ourselves as long as
it takes,” Araghchi said in an interview with CBS’s Face the Nation.He
also rejected the assessment that the conflict represented a “war of
survival” for Iran, arguing that his country was “stable and strong
enough.”“We are only defending our people from [this] act of
aggression,” he said.In the same interview, Araghchi said Iran’s
stockpile of highly enriched uranium was now buried “under the rubble,”
following US and Israeli strikes on the country’s nuclear facilities
last June.Iran’s estimated 440 kilograms of enriched uranium — enriched
to up to 60 percent fissile purity, which can relatively easily be
raised to the 90% level considered weapons-grade — were believed to be
stored deep underground at the Isfahan nuclear site.“Our nuclear
facilities were attacked, and everything is under the rubble,” Araghchi
said.He acknowledged that the material could potentially be retrieved,
but said Tehran currently had no plan to do so.“Of course, you know
there is the possibility to retrieve them, but under the supervision of
the [International Atomic Energy Agency],” he said. “If one day we come
to the conclusion to do that, it would be under the supervision of the
agency. But for the time being, we have no program. We have no plan to
recover them from under the rubble.”Washington had demanded that Iran
relinquish the stockpile in nuclear talks that were halted by the
bombing campaign. Trump said last week that he would consider sending
ground troops in the future to secure the material.Araghchi suggested
that the issue could become part of future negotiations, but said that,
for now, Tehran was not prepared to put the matter on the
table.“Everything depends on the future,” he said. “If any time in the
future we decide to enter into negotiation with US or other
interlocutors, you know, we may decide what to put on the table. For the
time being, nothing is on the table.”Araghchi also said that multiple
countries have approached Tehran to negotiate the safe passage of oil
and gas vessels through the Strait of Hormuz amid Iran’s efforts to
block the strategic passage point.“We are open to countries who want to
talk to us about the safe passage of their vessels,” Araghchi said,
though he declined to name which countries had approached Iran to win
safe passage for their vessels.The Financial Times reported that France
and Italy had contacted Iran to try to arrange passage for their
ships.“This is up to our military to decide, and they have already
decided to let, you know, a group of vessels belongs to different
countries to pass in a safe and secure,” he continued, repeating claims
by Iranian officials that certain countries were permitted to pass ships
through the strait, while adding that some of these countries were, by
choice, “not coming themselves because of the insecurity which is there,
because of the aggression by the US.”In a separate interview with
Al-Araby Al-Jadeed, Araghchi said the Strait of Hormuz remained open,
but only to countries other than “America and its allies.”Araghchi also
justified Iran’s hundreds of strikes on its neighbors in the Persian
Gulf region and beyond, claiming that it is only targeting American
bases situated in these countries.“We did not attack any residential or
civilian targets,” he said. “There may have been collateral damage in
residential areas, which is normal in any war.”Iranian drones and
missiles have been fired at civilian infrastructure in the UAE and other
US allies, including Dubai’s airport, landmark hotels and the financial
hub.Araghchi also boasted about striking Citibank offices in Manama and
in Dubai in response to a US strike on an Iranian bank in Tehran that
is used to pay Iranian security forces.He also blamed the US and Israel
for strikes on Arab states, claiming that Iran had “recently received
information indicating that the United States and Israel are also
launching attacks from specific locations toward Arab countries.”His
remarks came as the IDF said a wave of strikes in the Hamedan area of
western Iran targeted several headquarters belonging to the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Basij paramilitary force.The IDF said
it was “expanding” its strikes against Iranian regime infrastructure in
western and central Iran, “with the aim of broadly and systematically
damaging the regime’s command and control capabilities.”The Israeli Air
Force struck more than 200 targets in western and central Iran over the
past day, the military said.According to the IDF, the targets included
command centers manned by Iranian soldiers, as well as air defense
systems and weapons storage and production sites.
Trump said
briefed on US intel showing Ali Khamenei thought his son ‘not very
bright,’ unfit to lead-US president reportedly unmoved by briefing as he
believes Mojtaba may be dead already, leaving Iran leaderless again;
Kuwaiti outlet claims he was smuggled out of Iran to Russia-By Nava
Freiberg-and ToI Staff 15 March 2026, 11:04 pm
US President
Donald Trump was briefed recently on American intelligence showing that
Iran’s late supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, was wary about his son Mojtaba
Khamenei replacing him as ruler in the event of his death, according to
a Sunday report.Sources familiar with the matter told CBS News that the
elder Khamenei’s fears stemmed from the perception that Mojtaba, who
was recently named as his father’s successor, was “not very bright, and
was viewed as unqualified to be leader,” as well as from an awareness
that Mojtaba had “issues in his personal life.”The report came as the
newly elected 56-year-old supreme leader has remained conspicuously
absent from the public eye in the week since he was elected, fueling
rumors of injury or death, or that he has fled Iran.The only public
comments attributed to him since he was elected on March 8 were
delivered in the form of a statement read out by a television presenter
on Thursday.The sources cited by CBS were said to include people within
the Trump administration, the US intelligence community, and figures
close to the president. The outlet said both Trump and Vice President JD
Vance had been briefed on the intelligence information.In a possible
reference to the intelligence he was allegedly briefed on, Trump told
Fox News in an interview on Friday night that Khamenei was “not somebody
that the father even wanted.”According to CBS, Trump has told people
close to him that he is not putting too much weight on the intelligence
briefing, as he already considered Iran to be “essentially leaderless,”
and believes Mojtaba, like his father, may already be dead.Other US
officials have voiced similar opinions, including Secretary of Defense
Pete Hegseth, who on Friday said Khamenei was “wounded and likely
disfigured.”On Friday, the US announced that it was offering a reward of
up to $10 million for information about Khamenei, as well as several
other senior Iranian military and intelligence officials.Iran has
fiercely denied any suggestion that all may not be well with the new
supreme leader, with Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi telling the
pan-Arab Al-Araby Al-Jadeed news outlet on Sunday that he “is in
excellent health” and “in control of the situation, and present at his
post.”“The timing of televised messages or direct appearances before the
people is his prerogative,” he said.Araghchi made similar remarks a day
earlier, insisting that there was “no problem” with Khamenei, and that
he “will perform his duties.”These assurances have not convinced
everyone.On Sunday, citing “a senior source close to the new Iranian
leader,” Kuwait’s Al-Jarida news outlet reported that Khamenei had been
smuggled out of Iran in a secretive Russian operation on Thursday to
receive medical treatment in Moscow for injuries sustained in the same
airstrikes that killed his father and wife on the first day of the
ongoing US-Israeli offensive.The report alleged that Russian President
Vladimir Putin had proposed bringing Khamenei to Russia for treatment to
ensure that he would be able to recover properly, without being
targeted by Israeli and American airstrikes.He was accompanied to Russia
by a team of Iranian doctors, the report said.The newspaper further
cited a source close to Khamenei as saying that not only did the new
supreme leader not write the statement that was delivered by a
television presenter last week, but that he did not even see it before
it was read out.The source suggested that it may have been written by
Iran’s national security chief, Ali Larijani, as it was nearly identical
to several statements he has put out in recent days.
Iran wants
‘serious review’ of Arab Gulf ties, denies role in Saudi oil
attacks-Tehran’s ambassador to Riyadh says Gulf countries must reduce
reliance on external powers, deepen regional ties despite tensions from
US-Israel war on Iran-By Timour Azhari 15 March 2026, 8:57 pm
RIYADH,
Saudi Arabia (Reuters) — Iran’s relations with Arab Gulf states will
require a “serious review” in light of the US-Israeli war on Iran,
limiting the power of external actors so the region can become
prosperous, Tehran’s ambassador to Saudi Arabia told Reuters on
Sunday.Asked if he was concerned that relations would be harmed by the
war, Ambassador Alireza Enayati said: “It’s a valid question, and the
answer may be simple. We are neighbors, and we cannot do without each
other; we will need a serious review.”“What the region has witnessed
over the past five decades is the result of an exclusionary approach
[within the region] and an excessive reliance on external powers,” he
said in a written response to questions, calling for deeper ties between
the Gulf Cooperation Council’s six members, along with Iraq and
Iran.Gulf Arab states have faced more than 2,000 missile and drone
attacks since the outbreak of the war on February 28, with targets
including US diplomatic missions and military bases, but also critical
Gulf oil infrastructure, ports, airports, hotels, and residential and
office buildings.The United Arab Emirates, which normalized relations
with Iran’s arch-foe Israel in 2020, has faced the brunt of the attacks.
But all Gulf Arab states have been impacted, and all have condemned
Iran.Behind the scenes, analysts and regional sources say there is also
growing frustration at the US, their longtime security guarantor, for
dragging them into a war they did not endorse, but for which they are
paying a hefty price.In Saudi Arabia, attacks have been concentrated on
the eastern region, where most of the kingdom’s oil is produced, as well
as the Prince Sultan Airbase hosting US forces east of Riyadh, and the
Diplomatic Quarter on the Saudi capital’s western edge, according to
Saudi defense ministry statements.Saudi Arabia and Iran re-established
full diplomatic relations in 2023 after years of enmity that saw them
back rival political and military factions across the region.Iran ‘not
responsible’ for attacks on Saudi oil sector-Enayati denied that Iran
was responsible for the attacks on Saudi Arabia’s oil infrastructure,
including the Ras Tanura refinery on the east coast and dozens of
attempted drone attacks on the Shaybah oil field in the desert near the
UAE border.“Iran is not the party responsible for these attacks, and if
Iran had carried them out, it would have announced it,” he said. He did
not say who had carried out the attacks.Saudi Defense Ministry
statements have not assigned blame for individual incidents. Enayati
said Iran was only attacking US and Israeli targets and
interests.Enayati said he personally was in ongoing contact with Saudi
officials, with relations “progressing naturally” in many areas. He
highlighted Saudi cooperation regarding the departure of Iranians who
were in the kingdom for religious pilgrimage and the provision of
medical assistance to others.He said Tehran was in contact with Riyadh
regarding Saudi Arabia’s publicly stated position that its land, sea,
and air would not be used to attack Iran, without elaborating on the
discussions.His message to Gulf states was that the war “has been
imposed on us and the region.”To resolve the conflict, the US and Israel
must halt their attacks, and regional countries should not be involved,
while international guarantees must be secured to prevent their
recurrence, he said.“Only then can we focus on building a prosperous
region,” he said.
IDF: Iran can't currently produce any new
missiles-IDF planning 3 more weeks of operations to systematically
degrade Iran’s defense industry-Officials say military operating ahead
of schedule, but still has thousands more targets to hit; IDF claims to
see declining morale among Iranian soldiers-By Emanuel Fabian-15 March
2026, 5:59 pm
The Israel Defense Forces’ campaign in the joint
war with the United States against Iran is proceeding according to plan,
and at a faster pace than initially expected, military officials said
on Sunday, with strikes on Iran’s defense industries expected to further
ramp up alongside ongoing efforts to reduce missile fire on
Israel.Despite being apparently ahead of schedule, the military has said
it is preparing for at least three more weeks of operations in Iran, as
it still has thousands more targets to hit, both in Tehran and in other
parts of the country.“We have thousands of targets ahead,” IDF
Spokesman Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin told CNN on Sunday. “We are ready, in
coordination with our US allies, with plans through at least the Jewish
holiday of Passover, about three weeks from now. And we have deeper
plans for even three weeks beyond that.”Following Israel’s decapitation
strikes that opened the war on February 28, killing Iran’s supreme
leader Ali Khamenei and more than 40 top Iranian officials, and
subsequent strikes on ballistic missile launchers and air defense
systems, the IDF is now focusing its efforts on destroying Iran’s
military industry, according to the officials.The officials said that
the current campaign against Iran is different from the 12-day war in
June 2025, and far more extensive.During the previous war, Israel sought
to counter the “existential threat” of Iran imminently developing a
nuclear weapon, as well as its ramped-up production of ballistic
missiles. The current war has given the IDF an opportunity to not only
remove the “existential Iranian threat” to Israel, but also Iran’s
“strategic threat” on the Jewish state “for the foreseeable future,” the
officials said.Therefore, the IDF is seeking to systematically degrade
Iran’s entire defense industry, including its ballistic missile
capabilities, in addition to its nuclear program.The defense industry of
Iran is extensive, with numerous military bodies and private companies
manufacturing weapon systems — or components — including ballistic
missiles, air defenses, naval weapons, cyber capabilities, and even spy
satellites.Israel has targeted Iran’s military industry in the past,
including in October 2024 when the Israeli Air Force bombed planetary
mixers used to make solid fuel used in long-range ballistic missiles.
During the 12-day war in June 2025, Israel again struck various sites
used by Iran to build ballistic missiles, air defense systems, and other
weapons.Now, the officials said, the IDF would not spare a single
facility used by Iran to develop weapons, along the entire production
chain. So far, during the ongoing war, Israel has hit over 1,700 assets
of Iran’s military industry, and it has many hundreds more on its
list.This includes the larger firms that are part of Iran’s Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps — which manufacture Iran’s ballistic missiles
and other weapons — as well as smaller companies that develop various
components.The officials said that these strikes have caused significant
damage to Iran’s ballistic missile production industry, and as a
result, it currently does not have the ability to manufacture any new
missiles.Israel has also been targeting Iran’s nuclear program, striking
numerous targets related to the development of atomic weapons,
including research and development sites and companies building various
components.Meanwhile, the officials said, strikes in Iran continue to
also focus on “centers of power,” including headquarters and command
centers of the regime’s protest repression forces — the internal
security forces and Basij paramilitary force.The IDF has estimated that
between 4,000 and 5,000 Iranian soldiers have been killed in Israeli
strikes, along with tens of thousands more wounded, many of them members
of the internal security forces and Basij.The military has also
identified declining morale among Iranian soldiers, refusal to serve in
some cases, and desertion, according to the officials.This phenomenon
has mainly taken place in Iran’s ballistic missile array, according to
the officials, who said that strikes against manned command centers and
replacement headquarters have led to a drastic reduction in missile fire
toward Israel in recent days.The IAF has also continued to “hunt down”
Iran’s missile launchers, reporting that it destroyed dozens in recent
days, including some armed for attacks on Israel.So far, the military
has claimed to have destroyed or disabled around 70 percent of Iran’s
estimated 500 ballistic missile launchers, though it is believed to be
relatively simple for Iran to build new launchers, as it did following
the June 2025 war.Strikes also continue against Iran’s air defense
systems. Within 24 hours of the war, the IDF reported achieving aerial
superiority in parts of Iran, which enabled large-scale strikes in
Tehran and other areas with a lower risk to Israeli fighter jet
pilots.The military officials said that the IAF now has air supremacy in
most of Iran’s airspace, after taking out more than 100 air defense
systems and around 120 detection systems.The officials also said the IDF
would continue to operate against the Quds Force, the extraterritorial
arm of the IRGC, both in Iran and in Lebanon.Israel launched its
campaign against Iran, alongside the US, to degrade the Iranian regime’s
military capabilities, distance threats posed by Iran, and “create the
conditions” for the Iranian people to topple the regime, the military
and other Israeli leaders have said.
Iran fires 7 more missile
salvos at Israel, attacks Gulf; IDF launches ‘extensive’ strikes-At
least eight injured in missile attacks as cluster munitions cause
widespread damage; IRGC threatens to ‘pursue and kill’ Netanyahu; US
orders evacuations from Oman, Iraq By Emanuel Fabian,Diana
Bletter,Agencies and ToI Staff 15 March 2026, 2:00 pm
Iran fired
seven missile salvos at Israel overnight Saturday and into Sunday
wounding at least eight people and kept up its attacks on countries
across the Gulf as the Israel Defense Forces launched a new wave of
“extensive” strikes targeting Iranian regime infrastructure in the
country’s west.An Iranian missile rained cluster bomb munitions across a
swath of central Israel wounding four people.In Bnei Brak, a man in his
60s was moderately hurt after a suspected cluster bomb munition struck
an apartment building. In Ramat Gan, a man in his 70s was lightly hurt
by a blast following another impact, and two women, aged 46 and 18, were
lightly hurt in Petah Tikvah, the Magen David Adom rescue service
said.Two people were lightly injured in an earlier attack shortly before
noon. The pair, two men in their 50s, were hurt in central Israel, MDA
said, after a missile carrying a cluster bomb warhead spread
submunitions across the area. Damage and fires were caused at multiple
sites in central Israel by the cluster munitions, according to rescue
services.And in the early morning, two people were lightly injured in
Holon, in central Israel. MDA said a man in his 80s received medical
treatment at the scene for light injuries caused by glass shards, and a
woman, also in her 80s, was being treated for symptoms of smoke
inhalation.Sunday’s Iranian missile launches targeted central and
southern Israel sending millions repeatedly running for shelters.
Northern Israel, meanwhile, has been under continual rocket and drone
fire from the Lebanese terror group Hezbollah, which joined the fighting
on March 2 to support its sponsor, Iran.Footage published by the police
showed one of the cluster bomb munitions from an Iranian ballistic
missile striking central Israel.Footage published by the police shows
one of the cluster bomb munitions from an Iranian ballistic missile
striking central Israel. pic.twitter.com/qvnWIXlr4v Advertisement —
Emanuel (Mannie) Fabian (@manniefabian) March 15, 2026-Iran has launched
multiple ballistic missiles at Israel carrying cluster bomb warheads
during the ongoing conflict, indiscriminately spreading small bombs in
wide areas of the country.On Sunday morning, the Health Ministry
reported that over the past 24 hours, 108 injured people had been taken
to hospitals as a result of the conflict with Iran. Of those, two were
in moderate condition and 96 were in good condition. Nine people have
been treated for anxiety. Some were injured running to shelters and the
number includes soldiers.The war, now in its third week, showed few
signs of slowing. US President Donald Trump rebuffed efforts to start
negotiations on an end to the fighting and threatened further strikes on
a key Iranian hub for exporting oil.And after Iran’s supreme leader was
killed on the first day of US-Israeli strikes on February 28, Iran’s
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps threatened to kill Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu.“If this child-killing criminal is alive, we will
continue to pursue and kill him with full force,” said the Guards on
their website, Sepah News, on Sunday.Meanwhile, Iran’s army said on
Sunday it had targeted a police unit and a satellite communications
center in Israel with drone strikes.In a statement carried by the
official IRNA news agency, the army said “it has targeted the security
centers and police headquarters of the Zionist terrorist regime,
including the regime’s special police unit called ‘Lahav 433’ and the
‘Gilat Defense’ satellite communications center with powerful drone
attacks.”There were no reports of any drone impacts in Israel.The
Israeli Air Force, meanwhile, said it had launched a new wave of
“extensive” airstrikes in western Iran. The military said the strikes
targeted Iranian regime infrastructure sites.Saudi Arabia says 10
Iranian drones destroyed over Riyadh-The fighting continued to envelop
the Gulf nations neighboring Iran. Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates
reported fresh Iranian missile attacks on Sunday, while Saudi Arabia’s
Defense Ministry said its systems intercepted and destroyed 10 drones
over the capital, Riyadh, and the kingdom’s eastern region.Bahrain said
that since the beginning of the war, its air defenses have intercepted
125 missiles and 211 drones. The small island nation — home to the US
Navy’s Fifth Fleet — has been among the most affected by Iranian
strikes, which have hit ports, a hotel, a refinery and a water
desalination plant. At least person has been killed in the strikes.In
the wake of the strikes across the region, the US State Department said
it ordered non-emergency government employees and the family members of
government employees to leave Oman, citing safety risks. And following
an overnight missile attack on the US embassy in Baghdad, the embassy
said US citizens should leave Iraq immediately.“US citizens choosing to
remain in Iraq are strongly encouraged to reconsider in light of the
significant threat posed by Iran-aligned terrorist militia groups,” the
embassy said.Although its missiles have hit civilian areas, Iran’s
foreign minister denied on Sunday that Iran has targeted civilian or
residential areas in the Middle East. He said Tehran is ready to form a
committee with its neighbors to investigate the responsibility for such
strikes.Gulf countries have called upon Iran to cease its attacks on
their territories, which have not only sustained strikes on US military
bases but also damage to energy facilities and residential areas.Abbas
Araghchi’s Telegram channel quoted him as saying in an interview with
the Al-Araby al-Jadeed website that Tehran was in communication with
various Gulf capitals and would welcome any initiative that could
guarantee a complete end to the US-Israeli war on Iran.Araghchi also
told his French counterpart that countries must refrain from any action
that could escalate the conflict in the Middle East. The comment came
after Trump called upon various states, including France, to deploy
vessels to help secure shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, which has
been blocked by Iran.Iran arrests 20 for allegedly cooperating with
Israel-The war began more than a month after an Iranian government
crackdown on mass anti-regime protests killed thousands, with activist
groups saying the true toll is in the tens of thousands. Israel and the
United States have repeatedly hoped for regime change as a result of the
war,Iran appointed Mojtaba Khamenei, son of the late supreme leader Ali
Khamenei, as his successor last week. It has vowed to continue
combating anti-government activity in the country.The country’s Tasnim
news agency reported that 20 people were arrested in northwestern Iran
for allegedly attempting to cooperate with Israel, citing a statement by
the West Azerbaijan province’s prosecutor’s office.They stand accused
of sending location details on Iran’s military and security assets to
Israel. Iran frequently arrests people and accuses them of spying
without providing evidence.Israel has launched a new phase of its
assault on Iran, targeting security checkpoints based on tip-offs from
informants on the ground, a source briefed on Israel’s military strategy
told Reuters last week.
FM Sa'ar denies report ammunition levels
low-IDF says no shortage of interceptors, after report claimed
stockpile ‘critically low’In late-night vote, government approves extra
funds for defense procurement, hours after US site reports that Israel
informed Washington it was running out of ballistic interceptors-By
Emanuel Fabian and ToI Staff 15 March 2026, 1:00 pmUpdated at 3:40 pm
The
Israel Defense Forces on Sunday denied reports that Israel is running
“critically low” on air defense interceptors, as the war with Iran, in
which the Islamic Republic has fired missiles and drones at Israel
repeatedly each day, entered its third week.The denial came hours after
the government approved the transfer of an additional NIS 2.6 billion
(around $826 million) in budget funds to the Defense Ministry for
“urgent and essential defense procurement” amid the fighting in Iran and
Lebanon. The vote was held by phone, late Saturday night.An Israeli
military official told reporters on Sunday that the IDF had no
interceptor shortage as of now. “We prepared for a prolonged conflict.
We are monitoring the situation at all times,” the official said.The IDF
has said it is “prepared and ready to handle any scenario,” but
initially declined to comment on specific munitions matters following
the report from a US news site and a late-night “urgent” government
approval of funds for defense procurement.Speaking Sunday Foreign
Minister Gideon Sa’ar also denied the report Israel was running low on
interceptors. Asked at a press conference if there was any veracity to
the report Sa’ar replied, “The answer is no,” but did not
elaborate.Military officials told The Times of Israel that the operation
in Iran had been planned months in advance, and this planning took into
account Tehran’s stock of ballistic missiles and drones that it could
fire at Israel.The officials also said that the IDF has prepared for a
long war with Iran, which could last several more weeks, during which
ballistic missile fire on Israel will likely continue.Israel operates a
multi-tiered missile defense array, with the Arrow 3 currently the
country’s most advanced long-range missile defense system, meant to
intercept ballistic missiles — like the kind fired from Iran — while
they are still outside of the Earth’s atmosphere.David’s Sling forms the
middle tier, and systems like Iron Dome engage short range rockets like
those generally fired from Lebanon.Taking Iran’s missile stockpile into
account means the IDF prepared ahead of time with enough interceptors
to handle the threat. Israel also prepared for the likely scenario that
the Iran-backed Lebanese terror group Hezbollah would enter the war, as
it did on March, 3, saying it was avenging the killing of Iran’s supreme
leader Ali Khamenei.Hezbollah has since fired hundreds of rockets and
drones at Israel, as well as at Israeli troops operating in the south of
Lebanon.Additionally, the officials said the IDF is actually running
through fewer interceptors than it anticipated at this point in the
operation.Iran has launched around 300 ballistic missiles at Israel in
over two weeks thus far, down from the 500 it fired at Israel during the
12-day war in June 2025.During the June 2025 war, as well, the IDF
denied repeated claims that Israel’s interceptor stockpile was low.The
interception rate of Iran’s ballistic missiles is high, according to the
IDF, and at similar rates to the June 2025 war.There have been multiple
impacts in residential areas of Israel, including three ballistic
missiles carrying Iran’s conventional warheads of several hundred
kilograms and around a dozen with cluster bomb warheads. Twelve people
have been killed.The military has routinely emphasized that, as good as
Israel’s multilayered air defenses are, they are not hermetic.Late
Saturday, the US news site Semafor reported, citing US officials
familiar with the matter, that Israel informed the US this week that it
is running “critically low” on ballistic missile interceptors.The report
claimed the US has been aware for months that Israel has a low
capacity, adding that the US is not running low on interceptors of its
own.Additionally, the report claimed that Iran’s launch of cluster
munitions “may exacerbate the depletion of the stock,” despite Israel’s
use of shorter-range air defense systems like the Iron Dome and David’s
Sling to shoot down the individual submunitions, rather than an
anti-ballistic missile system.Israel also uses the shorter-range systems
to intercept attacks from Hezbollah in Lebanon, though the report did
not say that Israel is running into a shortage of those
interceptors.Shortly after the publication of the report, the government
approved the transfer of an additional NIS 2.6 billion (around $826
million) in budget funds to the Defense Ministry for “urgent and
essential defense procurement” amid the fighting in Iran and Lebanon.
The vote was held by phone, late at night.In a statement, the government
said it will cut NIS 1.5 billion from the 2025-2026 budget for interest
and commission payments, and take the other NIS 1.1 billion out of the
2025-2026 budgets of other ministries.It said, however, that if the
2026-2027 budget is approved later this month, as scheduled, the NIS 2.6
billion will instead come from the Defense Ministry budget as
normal.The government voted last week on a revised version of the budget
that boosted the Defense Ministry’s funds by NIS 32 billion in light of
the war with Iran.Nava Freiberg contributed to this report
Inside
story'We've learned the lesson, we don't speak'With Iran under US and
Israeli attack, country’s Jews seek safety in silence-As US and Israel
strike Islamic Republic, sources tell ToI that country’s Jews are
‘physically well’ but keeping a low profile to avoid regime’s eye;
leaders warn against contact with Israel-By Nava Freiberg-15 March 2026,
10:43 am
It’s been over a year since Daveed, a pseudonym, spoke
to his cousins in Tehran.While the Iranian native, who today sells goods
in Jerusalem, is worried for the relatives he left behind years ago, he
is also acutely aware of the danger he can put them in merely by making
contact.“Nowadays, it’s safest to keep a low profile,” he said. Of the
situation his family is in, he knows nothing beyond “they’re afraid.”As
Israel and the United States begin the third week of their joint aerial
assault against the Iranian regime, thousands of Jews living in the
Islamic Republic are facing fraught circumstances.Exactly how fraught is
difficult to determine. Since the campaign began, many Jews in Iran,
like Daveed’s cousins, have had little or no contact with relatives
abroad. Internet blackouts have limited communication, but in many cases
the silence is deliberate, as such contact — particularly with those in
Israel — risks drawing suspicion from authorities.Iranian Jewish
community leaders and activists warn that attempts from within Israel to
contact Jews in Iran could put their lives at risk. For that reason,
The Times of Israel did not directly contact Jews in the
country.Interviews have been conducted, however, with relatives,
friends, and community figures connected to Iran’s Jews in an effort to
understand how the war is affecting them. (This article was approved for
publication by Israel’s military censor, which requires the submission
of material concerning the status of Jewish communities in “hostile
nations.”)Online estimates put Iran’s Jewish population at between 8,000
and 15,000 people, mostly concentrated in Tehran, with smaller
communities in cities such as Isfahan and Shiraz.Since Israel’s
establishment, tens of thousands of Iranian Jews have immigrated to the
Jewish State, making up an estimated population of about 200,000 today,
mostly Israeli-born.Daveed told The Times of Israel that he remembers
the country fondly and longs to see it “free” one day.Now middle-aged,
Daveed moved to Israel with his wife and children in his early 30s after
growing up in Tehran and completing compulsory military service
there.While speaking in Hebrew to the Times of Israel from his small
shop, where he sells roasted nuts, seeds, dried fruit and spices, two
other Iranian Jewish immigrants working nearby passed, calling out to
him in Farsi.When asked about their relatives in Iran, they declined to
comment.“It all will be okay, I believe,” Daveed said at the end of the
conversation. “Please God, this will bring down the regime.”A tense
picture-Iranian-born Jews who have been in contact with relatives in
Iran said the Jewish community appeared to be managing under the
circumstances, but pointed to past instances in which the regime
targeted Jews in times of crisis, stressing that keeping their heads
down was the best strategy.Some also expressed hope that the war would
ultimately allow them to visit loved ones in the country.Many of those
approached for this article declined to discuss the Jewish community in
Iran at all. Some said they had intentionally avoided contacting
relatives since the strikes began, fearing that even routine
communication might expose them to danger.Responding to questions
forwarded to them in Farsi by a London-based anti-regime activist, one
Jewish family in Iran told The Times of Israel, “The conditions are not
suitable to speak at the moment. Hoping for better days ahead.”“From
being in touch with members of the Jewish community in Iran, I
understand that they are physically well. We pray for their continued
safety and well-being,” said Istanbul-based Rabbi Mendy Chitrik, who is
the chairman of the Alliance of Rabbis in Islamic States.Joseph, a
pseudonym for a Jewish Iranian who moved from Tehran to Jerusalem in
2005, said that he hasn’t heard from his two aunts in Tehran since a
brutal government crackdown against anti-regime protests earlier this
year.Some estimates say the repression killed as many as 30,000
Iranians, and officials in Israel have cited the violence as a factor
accelerating the decision to strike Iran.Joseph explained that in
moments of political or military unrest, suspicion can quickly fall on
minorities in Iran: “The regime always blames someone for being
connected to the enemy, saying the enemy caused all the
disturbances.”“And of course, the first people they look for there are
the Jews. So we’ve learned the lesson. Everyone immediately cuts off
contact. We don’t speak. There has been no contact from [when the
protests started] until now.”Reported arrests-During the recent
demonstrations, unconfirmed Hebrew media reports alleged that several
members of Iran’s Jewish community were arrested on suspicion of
involvement in the protests, though community representatives were said
to deny any connection, calling the arrests a mistake.In the aftermath
of the 12-day war between Israel and Iran in June, Hebrew media reports
also claimed that several Jewish community leaders in Tehran and Shiraz
were arrested and accused, without any evidence, of having ties to
Israel.At the same time, the Iranian regime distinguishes between
Zionism and Judaism, and Jews are formally granted a degree of religious
freedom. Jewish community leaders inside the country have repeatedly
condemned Israeli action against Iran or in the Palestinian
territories.During the June war, several Jewish communities published
sharp statements condemning Israel. Similar statements were issued — and
anti-Israel gatherings held — soon after the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led
massacre in southern Israel that sparked Israel’s two-year war in Gaza
with the Iran-backed terror group.It remains difficult to determine how
much these statements reflect genuine sentiment within the community and
how much they stem from pressure by the authorities.“The regime has
taken people who had absolutely no connection to Israel, accused them of
spying, and put them in prison. So if a Jew speaks directly now —
especially in times like these — they’re looking for that,” Joseph
said.Even the use of encrypted messaging apps such as WhatsApp or
Telegram can be dangerous.“Even if they don’t know the content [of the
conversation], the fact that they know that a Jewish person there spoke
to someone with an Israeli number — that alone is a problem,” he said.‘I
hope to visit my homeland one day’Joseph said that during the June war,
Jewish community leaders “warned very strongly not to speak with people
in Israel — and even if they do speak, the conversation should only be
about mundane things… Nothing political, or anything that could sound
like information transfer.”Contacting relatives outside of Israel can
also be problematic.An Iranian Jew living in the US told The Times of
Israel that they’ve managed on occasion to speak with relatives in
Shiraz since the US-Israeli campaign started, but are careful to avoid
mentioning Israel over the phone, for fear of them “being accused of
spying.”Joseph recalled that, before the 1979 revolution that put the
current regime in power, his grandfather would travel at least twice a
year to Israel from Iran, taking a one- to two-hour flight over Iraq.He
hoped the current conflict would result in the regime’s fall, perhaps
opening up ties between the countries and allowing him to see his family
again: “As someone who lived there, I hope that one day I’ll be able to
visit. Just a visit to my homeland.”“Everything the regime has done in
the past 40-something years is one thing. What they did recently, with
suppressing the protests, was on another level,” he said sadly. “Simply
as a human being, I expect this to end — because as long as they remain
in power, it will continue. And I believe that if the war stops halfway
without the regime falling, they will oppress the people there even
more.”
PROOF HALF ON EARTH DIE DURING THE 7 YR TRIBULATION PERIOD (8 BILLION ON EARTH)
REVELATION 6:7-8 (8 BILLION- 2 BILLION = 6 BILLION)
7 And when he had opened the fourth seal, I heard the voice of the fourth beast say, Come and see.
8
And I looked, and behold a pale horse:(CHLORES GREEN) and his name that
sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And power was given
unto them over the fourth part of the earth,(2 BILLION) to kill with
sword,(WEAPONS) and with hunger,(FAMINE) and with death,(INCURABLE
DISEASES) and with the beasts of the earth.(ANIMAL TO HUMAN DISEASE).
REVELATION 9:15,18 (6 BILLION - 2 BILLION = 4 BILLION)
15 And the four(DEMONIC WAR) angels were loosed,
18
By these three was the third part of men killed,(2 BILLION) by the
fire, and by the smoke, and by the brimstone, which issued out of their
mouths.(NUCLEAR ATOMIC BOMBS)
HALF OF EARTHS POPULATION DIE DURING THE 7 YR TRIBULATION.(THESE VERSES ARE JUDGEMENT SCRIPTURES NOT RAPTURE SCRIPTURES)
LUKE
17:34-37 (8 TOTAL BILLION - 4 BILLION DEAD IN TRIB = 4 BILLION TO JESUS
KINGDOM) (HALF DIE DURING THE 7 YR TRIBULATION PERIOD JUST LIKE THE
BIBLE SAYS)(GOD DOES NOT LIE)(AND NOTICE MOST DIE IN WAR AND
DISEASES-NOT COMETS-ASTEROIDS-QUAKES OR TSUNAMIS)
34 I tell you, in
that night there shall be two men in one bed; the one shall be taken,(IN
WW3 JUDGEMENT) and the other shall be left.(half earths population 4
billion die in the 7 yr trib)
35 Two women shall be grinding together; the one shall be taken,(IN WW3 JUDGEMENT) and the other left.
36 Two men shall be in the field; the one shall be taken,(IN WW3 JUDGEMENT) and the other left.
37
And they answered and said unto him, Where, Lord? And he said unto
them, Wheresoever the body is, thither will the eagles be gathered
together.(Christians have new bodies,this is the people against
Jerusalem during the 7 yr treaty)(Christians bodies are not being eaten
by the birds).THESE ARE JUDGEMENT SCRIPTURES-NOT RAPTURE
SCRIPTURES.BECAUSE NOT HALF OF PEOPLE ON EARTH ARE CHRISTIANS.AND THE
CONTEXT IN LUKE 17 IS THE 7 YEAR TRIBULATION OR 7 YR TREATY PERIOD.WHICH
IS JUDGEMENT ON THE EARTH.NOT 50% RAPTURED TO HEAVEN.
MATTHEW 24:37-42 (THESE ARE JUDGEMENT SCRIPTURES-SURE NOT RAPTURE SCRIPTURES)
37 But as the days of Noe were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
38
For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and
drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noe
entered into the ark,
39 And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
40 Then shall two be in the field; the one shall be taken,(IN WW3 JUDGEMENT) and the other left.
41 Two women shall be grinding at the mill; the one shall be taken,(IN WW3 JUDGEMENT) and the other left.
42 Watch therefore:(FOR THE LAST DAYS SIGNS HAPPENING) for ye know not what hour your Lord doth come.
WORLD TERRORISM
GENESIS 6:11-13
11
The earth also was corrupt before God, and the earth was filled with
violence.(WORLD TERRORISM,MURDERS)(HAMAS IN HEBREW IS VIOLENCE)
12 And God looked upon the earth, and, behold, it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted his way upon the earth.
13
And God said unto Noah, The end of all flesh is come before me; for the
earth is filled with violence (TERRORISM)(HAMAS) through them; and,
behold, I will destroy them with the earth.(CAN YOU SAY
TORNADOES,HURRICANES,VOLCANOES,EARTH QUAKES,LANDSLIDES,FLASH
FLOODING,EXPLOSIONS,SNOW STORMS,THEN FINALLY NUKESAND ANY OTHER
JUDGEMENTS THE EARTH CAN VOMIT THE SINNERS OFF THE FACE OF THE EARTH
WITH.
MARK 13:8
8 For nation shall rise against nation, and
kingdom against kingdom:(ETHNIC GROUP AGAINST ETHNIC GROUP) and there
shall be earthquakes in divers places, and there shall be famines and
troubles: these are the beginnings of sorrows.
LUKE 21:11
11
And great earthquakes shall be in divers places,(DIFFERNT PLACES AT THE
SAME TIME) and famines, and pestilences; and fearful sights and great
signs shall there be from heaven.
2 Peter 3:6-7 Amplified Bible (AMP) (HOT SUN, NUKES ETC)
6 By these waters also the world of that time was deluged and destroyed.
7
By the same word the present heavens and earth are reserved for fire,
being kept for the day of judgment and destruction of the ungodly.
LUKE 21:25-26
25
And there shall be signs in the sun,(HEATING UP-SOLAR ECLIPSES) and in
the moon,(MAN ON THE MOON-LUNAR ECLIPSES) and in the
stars;(ASTEROIDS-PROPHECY SIGNS) and upon the earth distress of nations,
with perplexity;(MASS CONFUSION) the sea and the waves roaring;(FIERCE
WINDS)
26 Men’s hearts failing them for
fear,(TORNADOES,HURRICANES,STORMS) and for looking after those things
which are coming on the earth:(DESTRUCTION) for the powers of heaven
shall be shaken.(FROM QUAKES,NUKES ETC)
GENESIS 16:11-12
11
And the angel of the LORD said unto her,(HAGAR) Behold, thou art with
child, and shalt bear a son, and shalt call his name Ishmael;(FATHER OF
THE ARAB/MUSLIMS) because the LORD hath heard thy affliction.
12 And
he (ISHMAEL-FATHER OF THE ARAB-MUSLIMS) will be a wild (DONKEY-JACKASS)
man;(ISLAM IS A FAKE AND DANGEROUS SEX FOR MURDER CULT) his hand will be
against every man,(ISLAM HATES EVERYONE) and every man's hand against
him;(PROTECTING THEMSELVES FROM BEING BEHEADED) and he (ISHMAEL
ARAB/MUSLIM) shall dwell in the presence of all his
brethren.(LITERAL-THE ARABS LIVE WITH THEIR BRETHERN JEWS)
ISAIAH 14:12-14
12
How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer,(SATAN) son of the
morning!(HEBREW-CRECENT MOON-ISLAM) how art thou cut down to the ground,
which didst weaken the nations!
13 For thou hast said in thine
heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars
of God: I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation, in the
sides of the north:
14 I (SATAN HAS EYE TROUBLES) will ascend above
the heights of the clouds; I will be like the most High.(AND 1/3RD OF
THE ANGELS OF HEAVEN FELL WITH SATAN AND BECAME DEMONS)
JOHN 16:2
2
They shall put you out of the synagogues: yea, the time cometh, that
whosoever killeth you will think that he doeth God service.(ISLAM
MURDERS IN THE NAME OF MOON GOD ALLAH OF ISLAM)
And here are the
bounderies of the land that Israel will inherit either through war or
peace or God in the future. God says its Israels land and only Israels
land. They will have every inch God promised them of this land in the
future.
Egypt east of the Nile River, Saudi Arabia, Israel, Jordan,
Syria, Lebanon, The southern part of Turkey and the Western Half of Iraq
west of the Euphrates. Gen 13:14-15, Psm 105:9,11, Gen 15:18, Exe
23:31, Num 34:1-12, Josh 1:4.ALL THIS LAND ISRAEL WILL DEFINATELY OWN IN
THE FUTURE, ITS ISRAELS NOT ISHMAELS LAND.12 TRIBES INHERIT LAND IN THE
FUTURE.
Joel 3:2-King James Version (YOU DIVIDE JERUSALEM IN
HALF - YOUR POKING GOD IN THE EYE - GOD SAYS AN EYE FOR AN EYE AND A
TOOTH FOR A TOOTH- YOU WANNA DIVIDE JERUSALEM IN HALF - HALF OF EARTHS
POPULATION 4 BILLION DIE ON EARTH.
2 I will also gather all nations,
and will bring them down into the valley of Jehoshaphat, and will plead
with them there for my people and for my heritage Israel, whom they have
scattered among the nations, and parted my land.
North Korea conducts test of nuclear-capable rocket launchers.
Seoul,
March 15 (AFP) Mar 15, 2026-North Korea tested nuclear-capable rocket
launchers, state media reported on Sunday, a day after Seoul detected
the launch of around 10 ballistic missiles.The test comes after South
Korean and US forces kicked off their springtime military drills, due to
run until March 19.North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un oversaw the testing
on Saturday of the multiple rocket launcher system (MRLS), the Korean
Central News Agency (KCNA) said.It said the test involved 12
600mm-calibre ultra-precision multiple rocket launchers and two
artillery companies.Kim said the drill gave Pyongyang's enemies, within
the 420 kilometres (around 260 miles) striking range, a sense of
"uneasiness" and "a deep understanding of the destructive power of
tactical nuclear weapon", KCNA reported.The rockets battered an island
target in the East Sea of Korea more than 360 km away, KCNA said on
Sunday.Kim praised the MRLS as a "very deadly yet attractive
weapon".Photos released by state media showed several rockets blasting
off large vehicles into the air.Another picture shows Kim and his
daughter Ju Ae watching the launch from afar, flanked by a military
official.Ju Ae has long been seen as next in line to rule the country, a
perception stoked by a string of recent high-profile outings.South
Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said it had detected multiple
launches on Saturday from the North into the East Sea, also known as the
Sea of Japan.Seoul's presidential Blue House condemned the launches as a
"provocation that violates United Nations Security Council resolutions"
and urged Pyongyang to immediately stop such acts.The launches came
hours after South Korean Prime Minister Kim Min-seok said that US
President Donald Trump thinks a meeting with Pyongyang's Kim would be
"good".The Trump administration has pushed in recent months to revive
high-level talks with Pyongyang, eyeing a possible summit with Kim this
year, potentially during Trump's visit to Beijing set for late
March.After largely ignoring these overtures, Kim said recently that the
two nations could "get along" if Washington accepted Pyongyang's
nuclear status.- Joint drills -The US and South Korea's springtime
military drills, dubbed "Freedom Shield", will involve about 18,000
Korean troops and run until March 19.Kim's comment on the rockets
suggested it was in response to the ongoing exercise, Hong Min, a senior
analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification, told AFP."The
launch pattern... is closely synchronised with the schedule" of the
joint drills, he said."This suggests the weapons system is being
operated as a means of nuclear deterrence and practical demonstration"
against the alliance.This week, Kim Yo Jong, a powerful confidante of
her brother Kim Jong Un, said the joint drills "may cause unimaginably
terrible consequences".She went on to say the drills were taking place
at "a critical time when global security structure is collapsing rapidly
and wars break out in different parts of the world".Pyongyang has
condemned the US-Israeli attack on Iran as an "illegal act of
aggression", claiming it shows the "rogue" nature of the United
States.North Korea also recently carried out missile tests from the
naval Choe Hyon destroyer, claiming the country was in the process of
"arming the Navy with nuclear weapons".
Poland links cyberattack on nuclear centre to Iran.
Warsaw,
March 12 (AFP) Mar 12, 2026-Poland's National Centre for Nuclear
Research has been hit by a cyberattack, likely from Iran, Minister of
Digital Affairs Krzysztof Gawkowski said Thursday."The attack did not
succeed on the scale that had been planned," he said, adding that "a lot
indicates that (it) took place from the territory of Iran"."There was
an attempt to breach security, which was stopped," Gawkowski told a
podcast for rolling news channel TVN24+.While Gawkowski said that he
could not reveal when exactly the attack to place, he said it had been
within "the last few days".He said security services in the NATO member
had been on high alert since the war in the Middle East broke
out."Incidents have emerged that may be connected to adversaries from
that part of the world," he said.The minister said "the places from
which" the nuclear centre near the central city of Otwock "was attacked
are linked to Iran".But Gawkowski warned that "this may be a kind of
camouflage" and that further investigation was going on."When there is
final information and the (security) services have checked everything,
we will verify it," he said.The debate over nuclear weapons has
heightened in Poland, an EU member that borders Russia, Ukraine and
Belarus, since the beginning of the Iran conflict and amid the ongoing
war in neighbouring Ukraine.Conservative-nationalist President Karol
Nawrocki has said Poland should "begin work" on nuclear defences, while
centrist Prime Minister Donald Tusk has said Warsaw "is talking
seriously" with Paris about being protected by France's nuclear
umbrella.
12 arrested at banned annual al-Quds Day protest in
central London-Protesters chant ‘Death to the IDF’ in crowd dotted with
posters of new Iranian supreme leader; across the river,
counterprotesters wave flags of Israel, US, pre-revolution Iran By AFP
and ToI Staff Today, 1:13 am-MAR 16,26
Hundreds of people turned
out in London Sunday for an annual al-Quds Day march banned by the
government after police said it was organized by a group “supportive of
the Iranian regime.”British police said in a statement they had arrested
12 people and were investigating anti-Israeli chants allegedly made at
the rally.Interior Minister Shabana Mahmood said earlier this week she
had agreed to the ban to “prevent serious public disorder” in the
context of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, where, since
February 28, Iran has been launching missile and drone attacks across
the region in retaliation against a US-Israeli offensive.It was the
first time a protest march in the British capital was banned since 2012,
but a static demonstration was permitted, according to London’s
Metropolitan Police.Around 1,000 police officers were stationed in the
area, The Guardian newspaper reported, tasked with keeping apart
demonstrators and counterprotesters by allowing them to gather on
opposite sides of the River Thames, not far from Parliament.Anti-Israel,
pro-Palestinian protesters who were directed to the south side of the
river waved flags and held up placards with slogans such as “Stop
Israeli war crimes,” in a reference to Israel’s offensive in Gaza in
response to the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led onslaught.“What has happened
to the Palestinians is so unjust,” pensioner Jean Apps, 81, from Purley
in south London, told AFP. “And now I am here also because of the
illegal attacks on Iran. I know Iran is not perfect, but the Iranian
people should be left to sort out their own problems.”Arrests and
chants-Assistant Commissioner Ade Adelekan said police had made 12
arrests, “including for showing support for a proscribed organization,
affray and for threatening or abusive behavior.”“We are also
investigating chants made by a speaker” at the protest, which marked
al-Quds Day, or Jerusalem Day, an annual pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel
event on the last Friday of Ramadan, he added in the police
statement.Videos online showed protesters chanting, “Death to the IDF,”
while others were carrying posters of Iran’s new Supreme Leader Mojtaba
Khamenei, as well as Iranian and Palestinian flags.Bobby Vylan delivered
a speech at the Al-Quds Day demonstration in London, ending his speech
with 'death to the IDF' chants. pic.twitter.com/xYTXdsckdc — PALESTINE
ONLINE ???????? (@OnlinePalEng) March 15, 2026-The “Death to the IDF”
chants were led by Bobby Vylan, a member of the punk-rap duo Bob Vylan,
who was investigated by police after he led the same chant at the
Glastonbury music festival last year. The investigation was ultimately
dropped.“We recognize the concern footage and chanting like this causes,
particularly with London’s Jewish communities,” the Metropolitan Police
said on X.The Islamic Human Rights Commission (IHRC), a nonprofit that
organizes the annual al-Quds Day march, condemned the decision to ban
the event, calling the move “politically charged.”The march was an
“international demonstration… in support of Palestinians and all the
oppressed around the world,” the group added after the ban was
announced.On the other side of the river, counter-demonstrators waved US
and Israeli flags along with the old Lion and Sun Iranian flag favored
by exiles.They chanted, “Long live the king,” referring to Reza Pahlavi,
the exiled son of Iran’s last shah, who was ousted by the 1979 Islamic
Revolution.“We are supporting the king of Iran, we are asking America
and Israel to help us eliminate the IRGC” — Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps — said Shiva, 37, an Iranian chef living in London.“They
don’t care about the people, they are just killing us. It’s a cruel
regime.”
IDF says slain brother of Michigan synagogue attacker
was a Hezbollah commander-Army confirms reports linking Ayman Ghazali to
terror operative who oversaw Lebanon-based group’s weapons operations
and was killed in Israeli strike By Emanuel Fabian,ToI Staff and
Agencies 15 March 2026, 6:45 pm
The brother of an armed man who
rammed his truck into a Reform synagogue and preschool in Michigan last
week was a Hezbollah commander, the Israel Defense Forces said on
Sunday, confirming earlier reports on the matter.Hezbollah commander
Ibrahim Muhammad Ghazali was responsible for managing weapons operations
within a specialized branch of the Badr Unit. The unit is responsible
for launching hundreds of rockets toward Israeli civilians throughout
the war,” the IDF said in a post on X.His brother Ayman Mohamad Ghazali,
41, carried out the Thursday attack.The IDF said that Ibrahim was
“eliminated in an IAF strike on a Hezbollah military structure.”Several
of the Michigan attacker’s Lebanese relatives were killed in an Israeli
airstrike earlier this month amid the renewed fighting between Israel
and the Hezbollah terror group, multiple reports said.An unnamed
official had told NBC News that the strike killed two of Ghazali’s
brothers, who were known to be members of the Hezbollah terror group, in
addition to his niece and nephew.Sources told CNN that Ghazali had been
flagged in US government databases for connections to members of
Hezbollah, but was not thought himself to be a member of the terror
group.Security guards opened fire on Ghazali after he smashed a truck
through the doors of the Temple Israel synagogue and preschool in West
Bloomfield, near Detroit.Jennifer Runyan, the special agent in charge of
the FBI’s Detroit field office, said during a news conference Friday
that ultimately Ghazali fatally shot himself after he got stuck in his
vehicle and the engine caught fire.Officials later found large
quantities of commercial-grade fireworks and several jugs of a liquid
believed to be gasoline.The FBI, which is leading the investigation, has
described the attack as an act of violence targeting the Jewish
community.Runyan said that law enforcement didn’t have enough evidence
to call the attack an act of terror at this time, but that
investigations were ongoing.None of the 140 children, teachers and staff
inside the synagogue were injured, authorities said.According to the US
Department of Homeland Security, Ghazali came to the United States in
2011 on an IR1 immigrant visa, given to spouses of US citizens, and was
granted citizenship himself in 2016.He worked at a popular restaurant in
Dearborn Heights, Hamido, but had been absent in recent weeks, fellow
employees told The New York Times. He was divorced and had at least one
child, according to The Detroit News, which cited court records.
Early-morning
rocket fire targets Haifa, Tel Aviv-Sa’ar denies reports of talks with
Lebanon as Hezbollah keeps up fire on Israel-Energy minister says Israel
could cancel the ‘horrible and illegitimate’ 2022 maritime border deal
with Lebanon, as government criticizes Beirut for failing to rein in
terror group-By Nava Freiberg,Lazar Berman and Emanuel Fabian 15 March
2026, 5:53 pm
Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar denied reports on
Sunday that Israel and Lebanon are set to hold direct talks in the
coming days amid the fighting with Hezbollah, and demanded that Beirut
first act against the terror group on its soil.Sa’ar’s comments, made as
he visited the site of an Iranian missile impact in the northern
Bedouin town of Zarzir, came as Hezbollah continued to fire rockets and
drones at Israel, setting off warning sirens as far south as Tel Aviv
and sending large swaths of the country running for shelter.Israel,
meanwhile, continued to strike at Hezbollah targets in Lebanon, with
reports saying it was eyeing a wider offensive in the country’s
south.Sa’ar’s appearance followed reports that Beirut and Jerusalem are
expected to discuss an agreement on confronting Hezbollah and possibly
on broader cooperation. Asked by a Reuters reporter if he could confirm
those reports, the foreign minister said, “No.”“If the Lebanese
government and the Lebanese army want to change something, they should
do something in order to stop the attacks being done by Hezbollah from
Lebanese territory,” Sa’ar said. “Until now, they hadn’t done anything
significant in order to stop” Hezbollah’s attacks.Lebanon has urged
Hezbollah to disarm and drew up a plan to get the terror group to lay
down its weapons. But Sa’ar claimed that ever since the November 2024
US-brokered ceasefire with the Iran-backed terror group, “Lebanon hadn’t
really done what it should have done in order to dismantle Hezbollah,
and we see now the results. And we also expect to take some serious
steps from their side to stop the shootings on Israel. This is the
practical thing to do right now.”“We are all for peace and normalization
in the future, including with Lebanon. I think the problem in Lebanon
is Hezbollah. We don’t have real disputes with the state of Lebanon. We
have some minor border disputes that can be solved quite easily. But the
problem is Hezbollah,” he added.Sa’ar’s comments appeared to conflict
with a report Sunday from Army Radio that former strategic affairs
minister Ron Dermer, a close aide of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu,
recently visited Saudi Arabia to discuss with senior Saudi officials an
initiative for a possible agreement with the Lebanese government.Dermer
has reportedly been enlisted to head the Lebanon file for the prime
minister. According to Army Radio, Lebanon, the US, and France are
involved in the efforts to agree on what the Lebanon-Israel relationship
could look like after the conflict with Hezbollah ends.The
anti-Hezbollah government in Lebanon wants to hold direct talks with
Israel in a third country, said the report.Energy Minister Eli Cohen
also downplayed the chances of a Lebanon-Israel agreement, telling Army
Radio on Sunday that he was “skeptical” one could be reached. He also
called on the Lebanese government to do more to combat Hezbollah.“We
know there’s an almost wall-to-wall coalition… against Hezbollah,” he
said. “We know that the president of Lebanon and the army of Lebanon
want to disarm Hezbollah, but they can’t, so if you make an agreement
with the government of Lebanon, but the military power stays in the
hands of Hezbollah, which is controlled from Tehran, it’s hard to see
this happening practically.”Cohen added that the cabinet is considering
rescinding the 2022 agreement between Israel and Lebanon that set a
maritime border between the two countries. The agreement was inked under
the leadership of former prime minister Yair Lapid, and since returning
to office, Netanyahu has criticized it as a “surrender” that yielded
too much to Lebanon.Cohen, a member of Netanyahu’s Likud party, echoed
that criticism in his interview, calling the agreement a “surrender
document” and claiming that it was “born in sin on the eve of
elections.”“It’s a horrible and illegitimate agreement, and so from my
standpoint, we must act and cancel this gas agreement,” he said. “This
has come up in the cabinet and certainly this matter is being
considered, and we must act on it. It never should have been
signed.”Hezbollah fires 10 rockets at Haifa area, one at Tel Aviv-Early
Sunday morning, a long-range rocket launched by Hezbollah from Lebanon
at central Israel was intercepted by air defenses, according to initial
IDF assessments. There were no reports of injuries.In a barrage later in
the morning, Hezbollah fired approximately 10 rockets at the Haifa area
on the northern coast. There were no reports of injuries. Shortly
afterward, sirens sounded in Acre and the surrounding towns amid more
Hezbollah rocket fire.The terror group continued to fire rockets and
drones at Israel throughout the morning and into the afternoon.Hezbollah
began to fire missiles and drones across the border on March 2, two
days after the US and Israel began strikes on the terror group’s
sponsor, Iran. Since then, it has launched some 100 rockets a day,
according to the IDF.The IDF says two-thirds of those rockets have been
aimed at Israeli forces operating in southern Lebanon and along the
border, while a third have been aimed at Israel.In addition, Hezbollah
has launched more than 100 drones at Israel since the hostilities
escalated, the vast majority of which were shot down by the Israeli Air
Force, according to the military.IDF kills Hamas official, terror group
says-An Israeli strike in south Lebanon’s Sidon area Sunday killed a
Hamas official, a source from the Palestinian terror group said.The
source, requesting anonymity, said the strike killed Hamas official
Wissam Taha. State media had reported a strike on an apartment in a
residential building in a northern district of Sidon.In addition, the
IDF said that during a wave of airstrikes in Lebanon Saturday, it struck
Hezbollah rocket launchers and other infrastructure.In the al-Qatrani
area of south Lebanon, the military said, it struck several Hezbollah
rocket-launching sites where operatives had planned “imminent” fire on
Israel.In Beirut, the IDF said it struck and destroyed command centers
of Hezbollah’s elite Radwan Force, where operatives had been “advancing
terror attacks against Israel and its citizens.”Separately, the military
announced that a Palestinian terror operative who was working on behalf
of Iran had been killed in an airstrike in Lebanon on Friday.According
to the military, Muhammad Majed Abd al-Salam Tawfiq Zidan was a “key
Palestinian terrorist who operated under the intelligence of the Iranian
terror regime and attempted to advance terror attacks” against
Israel.Lebanon’s health ministry said in an updated toll on Sunday that
850 people had been killed in the country since fighting between Israel
and Hezbollah renewed some two weeks ago.The ministry statement said the
toll included 66 women, 107 children, and 32 health workers, with 2,105
other people wounded. The statement did not distinguish between
combatants and civilians.AFP and Times of Israel staff contributed to
this report.
Analysis'They're caught in a very precarious
position'Small, divided and wary, Kurdish rebels won’t be the ones
bringing down Iran’s regime-Trump floated the idea of Kurdish militias
going on the offensive to help defeat the Islamic Republic, but the
reality on the ground limits the role they can likely play in Tehran’s
collapse-By Lazar Berman-15 March 2026, 4:50 pm
When questions
began to arise early in the Iran war about how — and whether — the
ayatollahs’ regime might be toppled without US or Israeli boots on the
ground, the country’s Kurdish minority was thrust uncomfortably into the
spotlight as a potential solution.US President Donald Trump himself
floated the idea 10 days ago, saying: “I think it’s wonderful that they
want to do that, I’d be all for it.”He reportedly spoke directly with
Kurdish leaders in Iraq. The Associated Press had reported on March 4
that Kurdish Iranian dissident groups based in northern Iraq were
preparing for a potential cross-border military operation, and that the
US had asked Iraqi Kurds to support them.Then the anticipation
dissipated. On Saturday, Trump pivoted. “We’re not looking to the Kurds
going in,” he said. “We don’t want to make the war any more complex than
it already is.”And, indeed, no Kurdish offensive has materialized.There
may still be ongoing conversations with Kurdish elements in Iraq and
Iran, but anyone pinning the war’s hopes on Iran’s Kurds is likely to be
disappointed.Though armed, Kurdish separatist groups are incapable of
carrying out a major military offensive against the regime, and have
ample reason to be cautious of promises of US military backing should
they launch an offensive.The Iranian regime has long used the specter of
an armed Kurdish insurgency as a pretext for political repression,
especially against the country’s Kurdish minority. Were such a foray
actually in the works, any serious contact and coordination with between
Kurds and outside elements would be kept covert to avoid playing into
hardliner narratives.“If this time it were out in the open, it would be
completely exceptional,” said Kurdish expert Ofra Bengio of Tel Aviv
University. “Not because we don’t really want it, but because they
themselves don’t want it — it actually causes a rallying of Iranian
nationalist elements against them.”“If there is any connection, it
should always be behind the scenes and quiet, as both sides
prefer.”Divided Kurds-The Kurds, numbering 30-40 million, are considered
the world’s largest stateless ethnic group. Culturally and
linguistically close to Persians, they are mostly Sunni Muslims, living
in distinct but linked communities primarily in Iran, Iraq, Syria, and
Turkey.Iraq’s 6 million Kurds have achieved the greatest measure of
independence; they run the autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government, or
KRG, within the federal Iraqi system since 2005.Syria’s Kurds, the
largest ethnic minority in the country, make up some 9 percent of the
country’s 23 million people, according to US government figures. Syrian
Kurdish fighters aligned with the US more than a decade ago to fight the
Islamic State jihadist group, setting up their own semi-autonomous zone
in the territory they had seized from ISIS.The largest Kurdish
population is in Turkey, sometimes estimated as making up around a
quarter of its total population of 80 million. Turkish security forces
have battled a bloody insurgency by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in
the country’s southeast for three decades, though the PKK announced it
would dissolve last year.There is no official census of Iran’s Kurdish
population, but it is generally believed that it makes up around 10% of
Iran’s 90-100 million citizens, concentrated in the country’s
northwest.Though Iranian Kurds don’t have the autonomy enjoyed by their
Iraqi and Syrian brethren, or the numbers of Turkey’s Kurds, they are
the only Kurds to have had their own state — albeit briefly — in
1946.“It’s a fairly poor region of Iran, like a lot of the peripheral
areas of the country,” said Roham Alvandi, professor of international
history at the London School of Economics. “That, of course, breeds
resentment towards the central government.”Out of that resentment have
sprung a range of small armed Kurdish groups with diverse ideologies,
which have fought against Iran and occasionally against each other,
alongside more moderate Kurdish groups that eschew armed struggle.The
Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI), the oldest of the armed
parties, calls for regime change and autonomy for Kurds within a
democratic Iran.The Kurdistan Free Life Party (PJAK) is a branch of the
Marxist PKK, and is designated as a terrorist group by the US. It too is
advocating for autonomy in a decentralized Iran.Some armed groups, like
the Kurdistan Freedom Party (PAK), are fighting for an independent
Kurdish state.Iran has designated Kurdish rebel groups, who are largely
based in Iraq, as terrorist organizations, and many have previously
fought its security forces in Kurdish-majority areas along the border.In
February, five of the leading rebel groups — including the three
aforementioned parties — gathered in Iraqi Kurdistan to create an
alliance whose goals are “the struggle to bring down the Islamic
Republic of Iran, the realization of the Kurdish people’s right to
self-determination, and the establishment of a national and democratic
institution based on the political will of the Kurdish nation in Eastern
Kurdistan.”But these groups have largely refrained from armed activity
in recent years, under political pressure mostly from their Iraqi hosts —
raising questions about their current capacity to lead an armed
offensive against Iran.Given their diverse ideologies, Kurdish rebels
have a range of approaches toward Israel. The groups affiliated with
Iraqi Kurdish parties are more disposed to see Israel as an ally against
Arab and Persian nationalism, and against Islamist extremist
groups.However, Turkey’s PKK, considered the strongest Kurdish rebel
group, was ideologically anti-Zionist, and even clashed with Israeli
forces in Lebanon in the 1980s. It didn’t help that Israel was a close
security ally of Turkey during the bloody PKK insurgencies of the 1990s.
Its branches in Iran shared a similar outlook.Those positions have
changed in recent years, however.“Historically, the Kurdish underground
was Marxist, and it was very sympathetic to the PLO, generally hostile
to Israel,” said Gallia Lindenstrauss, a senior research fellow at the
Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv. “In recent years,
due to developments in Syria’s civil war, there was a shift, and there
were contacts between Israel and the Syrian branch of the Kurdish
movement, even publicly.”Betrayal-Iranian Kurdish groups may dream of
bringing down the Iranian regime, but they have reason to be wary of US
and Israeli promises of military backing if they launch an
insurgency.Israel, along with the US and the Reza Pahlavi regime that
ruled Iran until 1979, backed Iraqi Kurdish rebellions against Iraq’s
central government in the 1960s and 70s. The shah reached a settlement
with Iraq in 1975, forcing Israel to pull its active support for the
Kurdish rebels.The Kurdish sense of betrayal by the US is more biting
and recent. During the 1991 Gulf War, US president George H.W. Bush
called on Iraqis to “take matters into their own hands.” Shiites in the
south and Kurds in the north both rose up, only to be slaughtered by
Saddam Hussein’s forces while the US stood by. Over a million Kurdish
refugees fled the violence.That pattern continued in Syria. A decade
ago, Kurdish forces there partnered with the US to defeat ISIS. But when
Syria’s new army under President Ahmed al-Sharaa captured most of the
Kurdish-held areas in a sweeping offensive last year, Syria’s Kurds
called on the US to intervene on their behalf, and felt betrayed when
Washington instead urged them to merge with Sharaa’s forces.Syrian Kurds
are warning Iranian rebel groups against trusting the US, according to
Reuters.Ahmed Barakat, head of the Kurdish Progressive Democratic Party
in Syria, said that Iranian Kurdish forces should exercise “extreme
caution.”“I hope that the Kurds of Iran will not ally themselves with
America, because they will abandon them,” said Saad Ali, a 45-year-old
resident of the northeastern Syrian Kurdish town of Qamishli.I’m sure
that the Kurds are very, very wary of being made into, essentially, the
foot soldiers of this American and Israeli campaign against Iran.“I’m
sure that the Kurds are very, very wary of being made into, essentially,
the foot soldiers of this American and Israeli campaign against Iran,”
said Alvandi.“They’re caught in a very precarious position because their
promises of support from the Americans and the Israelis could evaporate
very quickly and leave them in a position where they neither have very
strong support from the KRG, and they may also be facing a Iranian
regime that is going to go after them with a vengeance.”Climbing the
mountain-Even if they got over historical grievances, there are other
major obstacles standing in the way of a Kurdish campaign against Iran’s
government.The rebel groups are small, with only a few thousand
fighters between them.They haven’t enjoyed widespread backing either,
with most Iranians, including Kurds, seemingly unnerved by the prospect
of a sustained Kurdish insurgency that could thrust the country into a
bloody civil war.“They don’t by any means represent the mainstream of
Iranian Kurds, but they are a reality,” said Alvandi. “The weaker the
central government becomes and the more desperate the situation becomes
in Iran, these political groups will come to fill the vacuum.”At the
same time, they do have the regime in Tehran spooked. Since the
US-Israeli strikes on Iran began in late February, Tehran has repeatedly
struck Kurdish militants’ positions in Iraq, accusing them of serving
Western or Israeli interests.Iran has also sent a message to the Kurdish
government in Iraq, warning them against allowing rebel groups to cross
into Iran. That message has been driven home by strikes on civilian
sites inside of Iraqi Kurdistan, including international
airports.Turkish pressure on the US also likely dampened Trump’s
enthusiasm for a Kurdish offensive.“These two factors — pressure on the
United States and pressure on the Kurdish autonomy in northern Iraq —
led to this reversal, or at least to the end of public talk about
activating the Kurds in Iran,” said Lindenstrauss.That doesn’t mean
quiet work isn’t taking place. There has also been more overt attempts
to pave the way for Kurds to rise up.Earlier this month, Reuters
reported that Israel had been bombing sites in western Iran to support
the Kurdish militias that hope to seize towns near the frontier, citing
three sources familiar with Israel’s talks with the factions.Even a
limited Kurdish offensive could have some strategic value, forcing Iran
to rush troops to the border area, leaving fewer soldiers in major
population centers to deal with a potential uprising by the Persian
population.Still, Iran’s general population isn’t likely to support a
Kurdish uprising, which would be aimed at securing Kurdish autonomy and
possibly bringing down the regime.“It’s seen as a mechanism to weaken
Iran; it could contribute to Iran’s fragmentation,” said Lindenstrauss
of a Kurdish offensive. “And many people, despite hating the regime,
still have national pride and don’t want to see Iran split
geographically or, heaven forbid, spiral into something like
Syria.”Some, however, believe that there is a formula that could see
Kurdish rebel groups take significant territory from the central
government in Tehran, though they’ll need help.“The Kurds in Syria were a
non-entity in 2010–2011,” said Bengio. “But the moment they received
backing from the United States — airstrikes and so on — they managed
both to defeat ISIS in Syria and to establish for themselves a sort of
autonomous entity. So it all depends on whether the United States indeed
wants to step into this arena and assist the Kurds in a war against
Iran.”If that doesn’t happen, the Kurds have still notched up some wins
in the past two weeks.“The theoretical map of Kurdistan, while not a
declared state entity, appeared on TV screens and leading news
channels,” said Lindenstrauss. “That’s increased awareness of the
Kurdish issue. There’s also a feeling that despite setbacks, they’re
climbing the mountain.”Meanwhile, it’s not clear what the fall of the
Islamic regime in Iran would mean for the country’s leadership or
future.A senior Israeli official, said to be familiar with the planning
and strategy for the Iran war, told The Washington Post on Monday that
Jerusalem has not identified any viable replacement for the current
Iranian leadership.The official expressed doubt “that arming the Kurds
or other minorities would be a good strategy because it would alienate
the Iranian majority.”“We don’t see anyone who can replace the regime,”
the Israeli official said in a phone interview, adding, “I’m not sure
it’s in our interest to fight until the regime is toppled… Nobody wants a
never-ending story.”The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to
this report.
Iran said to arrest 20 people for allegedly
cooperating with Israel-The Islamic Republic, which frequently accuses
people of spying without evidence, has reportedly arrested hundreds of
alleged collaborators in recent days-By AFP and ToI Staff 15 March 2026,
3:24 pm
TEHRAN — Iranian authorities have arrested at least 20
people in the country’s northwest on suspicion of cooperating with
Israel, local media reported on Sunday, more than two weeks into the
US-Israeli war with Iran.The arrests took place during raids on networks
linked to Israel in the West Azerbaijan province, the semi-official
Fars news agency said, quoting provincial prosecutor Hossein
Majidi.“Twenty people were arrested and detained” after they were found
to be “sending details of military, law enforcement and security
locations to the Zionist enemy,” it added.Iran frequently arrests people
and accuses them of spying without providing evidence.In addition, on
Sunday, the official IRNA news agency reported the arrest of a person it
said was sending information to the London-based opposition-linked TV
channel Iran International.The report, which quoted the police commander
of the northern Qazvin province, said the individual was using a
Starlink terminal, a technology that is banned in Iran.Iran has been
digitally sealed off from the rest of the world by a complete internet
blackout since the start of the war.To get around those restrictions,
some Iranians have turned to Starlink terminals from the US company
SpaceX, which connect to the internet via satellites.In January, Iran
banned cooperation with Iran International, saying it was “affiliated
with the Zionist regime.”Iranian authorities have carried out sweeping
raids across the country in recent days, arresting hundreds of people
suspected of cooperating with Israel and the United States, local media
reported. Last week, its intelligence ministry claimed it had arrested
30 spies, internal mercenaries, and operational agents of Israel and the
US in the span of a few days.
Explainer-As Iran’s other proxy
groups join war, Houthi rebels in Yemen hold back, for now-Tehran-backed
group said to fear assassinations, divisions in Yemen and possible
weapons shortages; restraint may be coordinated with Iran and change if
regime gets more desperate-By FATMA KHALED 15 March 2026, 2:57 pm
CAIRO,
Egypt (AP) — Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels have so far remained on
the sidelines as the Iran war widens across the Middle East, raising
questions about why — and when the battle-hardened group might join the
fight.Iran has retaliated against the United States and Israel with
missiles and drones, targeting American military bases and other
locations in Gulf Arab countries, disrupting trade routes, choking fuel
supplies and threatening regional air traffic.Iran’s new supreme leader,
Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, suggested on Thursday in his first written
statement since succeeding his father, who was killed in the war’s
opening salvo, that Iran may open up new fronts in the conflict — a
sign, analysts say, the Houthis may get involved soon.Until now, the
Houthis have been reluctant to fight, fearing assassinations of their
leaders, internal divisions in Yemen and uncertainties over weapons
supplies, the experts said.But that may change as Iran seeks to increase
pressure on global oil supply routes through potential attacks by the
Houthis, who have had previous success targeting oil facilities in the
region, the analysts said.Iran has asserted its influence across the
Middle East through its proxy forces in Gaza, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and
Yemen’s Houthis.Some of its closest allies have already joined the
conflict, with Hezbollah resuming rocket and drone attacks on Israel
within two days of the attack on Iran — just 15 months after the last
Israel-Hezbollah war ended in a November 2024 ceasefire. Militias linked
to the Islamic Resistance in Iraq have claimed drone strikes on US
bases in Erbil.Meanwhile, the Houthis have only held protests and issued
declarations condemning the Iran war, in contrast to the waves of
missile and drone attacks they launched on Israel and shipping in the
Red Sea after the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel sparked the
war in the Gaza Strip.Amid that war, the Houthis launched over 130
ballistic missiles and dozens of explosive-laden drones at Israel,
including one that killed a civilian and wounded several others. In
response, Israel attacked the Houthis in Yemen, located some 1,800
kilometers (1,100 miles) away, 19 times via the Israeli Air Force and
Israeli Navy.Houthis’ quiet may be strategic wait, coordinated with
Iran.Armed by Iran, the Houthis seized most of Yemen’s north and its
capital, Sanaa, in 2014, pushing the country’s internationally
recognized government into exile. A Saudi-led coalition backing Yemen’s
government entered the conflict the following year, and the Houthis have
since fought a long-running but largely stalemated civil war in
Yemen.Their slogan reads: “God is great. Death to America. Death to
Israel. A curse on the Jews. Victory to Islam.”While the Houthis share
some political and religious ties with Iran, they follow a different
doctrine of Shiite Islam and are independent of Iran’s supreme leader,
unlike the Lebanese Hezbollah terror group and several Iran-backed Iraqi
militias.Still, they are key to Iran’s regional influence and the
current war is unlikely to weaken that, according to Ahmed Nagi, a
senior Yemen analyst at the International Crisis Group think tank.“From
Tehran’s perspective, the Houthis have proven themselves to be a capable
and effective front, able to generate real pressure,” Nagi said.He said
the Houthi leaders’ decision to distance themselves from the conflict
is a calculated choice that has been fully coordinated with the
Iranians.Two Houthi members of the group’s media and political offices
told The Associated Press that the rebels’ weapons stockpile is running
low after its attacks during the Israel-Hamas war. The Iran war has
further impeded the flow of weapons, said the officials, speaking on
condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to talk to the
media.Still, the group has a large stockpile of drones, said another
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the weapons
issue, about which he is well-informed.If Houthis join war, they’ll
likely target oil tankers-Nagi said the Houthis appear to be building up
their forces by recruiting more fighters, relying on local weapons
production and sending reinforcements to Yemen’s western coastline on
the Red Sea, signaling they are preparing for escalation.“The decision
is not about unwillingness to intervene, but about timing,” Nagi said.
“Iran’s broader strategy seems to be to avoid throwing all its cards on
the table at once, instead using its partners and capabilities gradually
as the confrontation evolves.”The Houthis are likely to step in if the
conflict widens, Nagi added, or if they perceive an existential threat
to Iran, such as significant deterioration in military
capabilities.Houthi leader Abdulmalik al-Houthi has repeatedly
emphasized the group is ready to intervene, claiming their “hands are on
the trigger,” though it’s unclear what that involvement would
entail.″Houthis, of course, are always ready for any war,” said Farea
al-Muslimi, a research fellow at the Chatham House think tank in London.
“Some weaponry moved in different areas inside Yemen recently… but it’s
still not clear whether it’s for a military escalation.”If the Houthis
enter the war, they will most likely resume attacks on shipping in the
Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, while also striking Israel, Nagi said.
They could also join Iran’s attacks on Gulf countries, targeting US
military assets and interests.Attacks on vessels during the Israel-Hamas
war upended shipping in the Red Sea, through which about $1 trillion
worth of goods passed each year before the war. The rebels carried out
their campaign against shipping at the same time that they were
regularly attacking Israel itself.Should the Houthis join the Iran war,
their primary targets would likely be oil tankers, the analysts said,
since shipping offers the most immediate pressure point and attacking it
would signal escalation while impacting energy supply chains.Attacks on
oil installations could also be considered. The Houthis have previously
struck oil facilities in Saudi Arabia during their long-running
conflict against the Saudi-led coalition.Meanwhile, US military sites in
the region might also become targets, Nagi said.Analysts: Houthi
attacks possible, but timing must be right-Abdel-Bari Taher, a political
analyst and former head of the press syndicate in Yemen, said any
decision to join the war is impacted by the internal situation in Yemen,
including recent deadly clashes in south Yemen, public opposition in
Sanaa to joining the war and heightened caution among Houthi leaders
after high-profile assassinations.The two Houthi officials from the
group’s media and political offices said the US has sent warnings via
Omani mediators against participating in the war. They said Houthi
political and security leaders have also been alerted that their
cellphones are under surveillance by the US and Israel. Fearing
potential Israeli assassinations, Houthi leaders have been instructed
not to appear in public, the officials said.″Despite these constraints
and the complex domestic and regional dynamics, Houthi involvement in
the conflict remains a possibility,” Taher said.Al-Muslimi, the Chatham
House analyst, said the Houthis don’t have the military capabilities or
an internal Yemeni interest that would force them to join the war, and
the group seems committed to a ceasefire with the US that was brokered
by Oman last year.“They hope to fight, especially with Israel, but they
can’t be the ones to fire the first shot,” al-Muslimi said.He said the
Houthis would likely need a local Yemeni cause to join the fighting — a
reason that would strengthen support among their local base.The analyst
also noted: The Houthis “are a local group that Iran uses and supports,
but didn’t create.”Times of Israel staff contributed to this report
UAE, Saudi leaders discuss Iran attacks in second call since Mideast war.
Dubai,
March 16 (AFP) Mar 16, 2026-Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and
Emirati President Mohamed bin Zayed discussed on Monday Iran's
retaliatory strikes on the Gulf and expressed solidarity and sympathy in
their second call since a public row in late December.The de facto
Saudi ruler and the UAE's president discussed "the continued and blatant
Iranian attacks targeting countries in the region," according to a
statement published by Emirati news agency WAM."Both sides stressed the
need for the immediate cessation of military escalation... underscoring
the importance of prioritising serious dialogue and diplomatic means,"
it added.'Whether a person or a rock, the bullet hit something'‘Learn
your lesson’:
Inscribed 2,100-year-old sling bullet found in the
Galilee-Artifact was possibly used by the Greek defenders of the city
of Hippos against the Hasmonean army of King Alexander Jannaeus in 101
BCE-By Rossella Tercatin-15 March 2026, 10:22 pm
A circa
2,100-year-old sling bullet inscribed with the word “Learn” in Greek has
been unearthed during archaeological excavations at the Sussita
(Hippos) National Park on the eastern shore of the Sea of Galilee, the
University of Haifa announced Sunday.The bullet, measuring 3.2 x 1.95
centimeters and weighing 38 grams, was possibly used by the Greek
defenders of the city against the Hasmonean army of King Alexander
Jannaeus in 101 BCE.A paper on the artifact was published in the
peer-reviewed journal “Palestine Exploration Quarterly” last week.Its
discovery marks the first time that this specific inscription has been
found on a sling bullet, according to Haifa University’s Michael
Eisenberg, co-director of excavation at the site and one of the authors
of the study.“Sling bullets were made of lead, and were the most common
munitions in the Hellenistic world,” Eisenberg told The Times of Israel
over the telephone. “They were the cheapest ones, simple and very
effective.”He explained that most bullets were unadorned. Still, it was
not uncommon for bullets to carry decorations, such as a symbol of power
or an inscription.“In the larger Israel-Syria region, many times you
will see a group of thunderbolts tied up together as the ultimate weapon
of Zeus, the head of the Greek pantheon, sometimes a trident, the
weapon of [god of the Sea] Poseidon,” Eisenberg said. “There are very
rare cases when the bullets carry an inscription.”Inscriptions often
included names of cities or of military commanders. However, at times,
archaeologists have also discovered artifacts bearing a sarcastic
message, such as “catch.”Eisenberg and his fellow authors believe that
this is also how the word “learn” should be interpreted.“It uses a very
strange structure that only exists in Greek,” he said. “It’s like the
sling tells itself, ‘I’m learning my job by hitting the enemy.’”“Perhaps
the idea was [to tell the enemy], ‘Learn your lesson,’ or ‘Next time,
you should learn not to come here,’” he added.According to Eisenberg,
this is the first time such an inscription has been found on a sling
bullet, not only in Israel but worldwide.The bullet was found in
excavations in the area of the city’s Roman necropolis (cemetery).
Recently, the team also unearthed another artifact engraved with a
scorpion, yet to be published. The archaeologists have found several
dozen bullets in the same area.Eisenberg and his team believe the
“Learn” bullet precedes the cemetery and dates back to the Hellenistic
period.“Hippos was founded as a Greek city in the 2nd century BCE,” he
said. “It was established by one of two kings, either Antiochus the
Great or Antiochus IV Epiphanes, the villain of the Hanukkah
story.”Based on its typology, the archaeologists dated the artifact to
the second half of the 2nd century or the beginning of the 1st century
BCE.“Perhaps the bullet was used during the battle between the Jewish
Hasmonean kingdom expanding toward the Galilee and the Golan,” Eisenberg
said. “In 101 BCE, we see Alexander Jannaeus trying to conquer Hippos
and this region. He was very successful in conquering it, though he
could not keep it.”He said other scenarios are also possible, including
that the slingshot was launched in earlier confrontations between
different Greek kingdoms or that it was used in training.The
archaeologists believe that the area where the artifact and many other
bullets were found corresponds to the ancient Hellenistic and then Roman
road that led to the city from the Sea of Galilee, marking a place
where it would have made sense for the besieging army to be ascending to
reach Hippos and for its defenders to shoot at them.For sure, the
bullet shows it hit something.“We don’t know if it was a rock or a
person, but there was definitely an impact,” Eisenberg said.
ISAIAH 30:26-27
26
Moreover the light of the moon shall be as the light of the sun, and
the light of the sun shall be sevenfold,(7X OR 7-DEGREES HOTTER) as the
light of seven days, in the day that the LORD bindeth up the breach of
his people,(ISRAEL) and healeth the stroke of their wound.
27 Behold,
the name of the LORD cometh from far, burning with his anger, and the
burden thereof is heavy: his lips are full of indignation, and his
tongue as a devouring fire:
MATTHEW 24:21-22,29
21 For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.
22
And except those days should be shortened,(DAY LIGHT HOURS SHORTENED)
there should no flesh be saved: but for the elect’s sake (ISRAELS SAKE)
those days shall be shortened (Daylight hours shortened)(THE ASTEROID
HITS EARTH HERE)
29 Immediately after the tribulation of those days
shall the sun be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and
the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens shall be
shaken:
LUKE 21:25-26
25 And there shall be signs in the
sun,(HEATING UP-SOLAR ECLIPSES) and in the moon,(MAN ON THE MOON-LUNAR
ECLIPSES) and in the stars;(ASTEROIDS-PROPHECY SIGNS) and upon the earth
distress of nations, with perplexity;(MASS CONFUSION) the sea and the
waves roaring;(FIERCE WINDS)
26 Men’s hearts failing them for
fear,(TORNADOES,HURRICANES,STORMS) and for looking after those things
which are coming on the earth:(DESTRUCTION-HEAVENLY OBJECTS) for the
powers of heaven shall be shaken.(FROM QUAKES,NUKES ETC)
U.S.
forecast to bring extreme heat, cold and everything in between-As heat
blasts the Southwest, a polar vortex is forecast for the Midwest and
East. Snow is expected in the Great Lakes, and an atmospheric river is
on tap for Hawaii.March 13, 2026, 8:41 PM EDT / Source: The Associated
Press.
Nearly every part of the United States is getting walloped
by wild weather or just about to be.Days of downpours have begun in
Hawaii. The Southwest will soon bake with day after day of record
100-degree-plus heat. Two storms will dump snow by the foot over
northern Great Lakes states. And the dreaded polar vortex will again
invade the Midwest and East with soul-crushing Arctic chill.This
forecast of extremes comes as weather whiplash has already hit much of
the East. On Wednesday, Washington, D.C., residents walked around in
shorts in record-breaking 86 degrees Fahrenheit. On Thursday, it
snowed.“All of the country, even if you’re not necessarily seeing
extremes, are going to see generally changing from cold to warm, or warm
to cold to warm,” said meteorologist Marc Chenard of the National
Weather Service’s Weather Prediction Center in Maryland.Former National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration chief scientist Ryan Maue said he
expects extreme weather in all 50 states.Triple-digit heat persists in
Southwest-A heat dome will form early next week and park over the
Southwest, baking temperatures to triple digits that haven’t been seen
this early in the year, Maue and Chenard said.Some forecasts see 98
Fahrenheit in Phoenix on Tuesday, followed by 103, 105 and two days of
107. In 137 years of record-keeping, Phoenix never hit 100 before March
26 and usually hit its first 100-degree day in early May, according to
the weather service, which warned: “Since we are not acclimated to this
level of heat this early in the year, it will be more impactful than
usual.”It has already started in Los Angeles, with unusual 90-degree
March weather that had people in shorts and tank tops seeking shade
wherever they could find it, even if it was as slender as a light
post.Shane Dixon, 40, usually runs about 5 miles near his home in Culver
City without much effort, he said, his face glistening with sweat and
his T-shirt tucked into his shorts. But Thursday was hard because of the
heat, and he had to cut it short.“The back of my neck was melting,” he
said. But he preferred it to the cold and snow that will hit
elsewhere.“I could go literally soak myself and walk out in the sun, and
I’ll make it home fine. If it was freezing cold, I could not do this,”
he said.Single-digit cold invades North-Around the same time as the heat
starts blasting Phoenix, the polar vortex — a system that usually keeps
frigid air penned up near the North Pole — is forecast to send its
chill deep into the Midwest and East, even bordering some of the
Southeast, Maue said.Minneapolis will hover around zero for a low, and
Chicago will be in the single digits Tuesday. The next day,
“temperatures in the teens and 20s in the Northeast and 20s in the
Mid-Atlantic,” Maue said. Even Atlanta could drop to the 20s.Two storm
systems in a row — one Friday, then another Sunday into Monday — will
chug along the country’s northern tier and Great Lakes and between them
could dump 3 to 4 feet of snow in places, Maue said.That bigger second
storm system will see its barometric pressure drop so quickly and
sharply — meaning it is intensifying and winds are strengthening — that
it will qualify as a bomb cyclone, which is quite unusual to develop
over land. Normally, bomb cyclones get their energy from warm ocean
waters, but this one will draw from the polar vortex.Just south of the
area in Michigan where the heavy snow will hit, there’s potential for a
significant ice storm, said meteorologist Jeff Masters with Yale Climate
Connections.An area stretching from Kansas south through Oklahoma and
cutting through to Texas to the Gulf of Mexico is forecast to get high
winds in the 60 mph range with gusts a bit higher Sunday night, Masters
said.San Antonio and Austin are in the high wind area, and places where
there hasn’t been a lot of rain will have a heightened wildfire risk,
Masters said.Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen declared an emergency and
mobilized the National Guard to help fight two dozen wildfires that have
burned more than 550 square miles of range and grassland. Strong winds
with gusts up to 60 mph and low humidity have fueled the fires and made
them difficult to contain, but no one has been injured so far, the
Nebraska Emergency Management Agency said Friday.Even Alaska and Hawaii
aren’t quite right-Maue said Hawaii is getting an atmospheric river with
such persistent heavy rain that flooding will be a major issue. Oahu is
under a flash flood warning.And Alaska is normally frigid now, but it
will be about 30 degrees colder than usual, he said.It is “the time of
year where we can see stuff like this,” Chenard said. “But this does
seem even anomalous from what you would typically see. I mean, some of
these areas will be setting records. Record-high temperatures for March
and maybe multiple times.”In the past week or so, tornadoes have killed
at least eight people in Oklahoma, Michigan and Indiana. The forecast
for severe storms doesn’t look as big or widespread for the next week,
but dangerous thunderstorms could pop up “anywhere from the Mississippi
Valley toward the East Coast” on Sunday or Monday, Chenard said.The jet
stream goes nuts-Underlying this is a jet stream gone wild, Maue and
Chenard said.The jet stream is the river of air that moves weather from
west to east on a roller coaster-like path. Usually, the plunges are as
mild as a kiddie roller coaster. But now that jet stream is barreling
down near-vertical, scream-inducing drops, followed by straight-up
ascents.“Which means you get a lot of extremes next to each other,” Maue
said. Storm fronts coming from the Pacific hit that high pressure heat
dome in the Southwest and are pushed north to climb that mountainous jet
stream peak, “grab access to that cold air reservoir up there” and
bring it back down south down the other side of the hill, he
said.Numerous studies have connected unusual jet stream and polar vortex
activity to shrinking Arctic sea ice and human-caused climate
change.But there is hope.“The first day of spring is 20th (of March),
and then after that we get recovery,” Maue said.
Snow and wind
batter parts of U.S. as severe flooding affects Hawaii-Blizzard
conditions and high winds battered the Midwest, while forecasters warn a
sweeping storm could bring damaging winds and tornadoes to the Eastern
U.S. by Monday.March 15, 2026, 2:13 PM EDT / Updated March 15, 2026,
11:42 PM EDT / Source: The Associated Press.
CHICAGO — A broad
and erratic patchwork of severe weather rumbled across much of the U.S.
on Sunday, dumping heavy snow and making roads impassable in the Upper
Midwest while damaging high winds swept across the Plains.Hawaii
continued to be affected by severe flooding.And portions of the
mid-South readied for late-day thunderstorms.Forecasters said the storms
would spread eastward by Monday, with mid-Atlantic states and
Washington, D.C., at greatest risk for high winds and
tornadoes.Successive punches of snow, wind and severe weather were set
to impact the eastern half of the United States, said AccuWeather senior
meteorologist Tyler Roys.Beyond the threat to lives and property,
“whether it’s wind gusts from a squall line, blizzard or snow, or just
wind because of the storm, you’re looking at several major airports
being impacted,” Roy said.Heavy snowfall in Minnesota, Wisconsin,
Michigan-An area from central Wisconsin to Michigan’s Upper Peninsula
was likely to see over 2 feet of snow, with higher isolated totals on
the peninsula, Roys said. Lower snow accumulations in places su ch as
Chicago and Milwaukee will likely create trouble for commuters on
Monday, he added.Over 20 inches of snow fell in some portions of
southeastern Minnesota and western Wisconsin as of Sunday afternoon,
according to National Weather Service reports. Transportation officials
warned of worsening conditions with low visibility and snow-covered
roadways.Wisconsin snowplow driver Aaron Haas said it was one of the
worst storms he had seen in years. On Sunday around the town of
Marshfield, Haas was stacking piles of snow as high as his truck.“You
can’t see anything when you’re on the highways outside of the city,” he
said.Jim Allen, 45, who lives on the Upper Peninsula, said his family
stocked up on necessities and he was ready to clear snow several times
Sunday with a shovel and snowblower.“We’re basically prepared to just
kind of hunker down for a few days if we need to,” Allen said.More than
600 flights were canceled at Minneapolis-Saint Paul International
Airport Sunday, according to FlightAware, which tracks flight
disruptions. Dozens more through Detroit were also scrapped. O’Hare and
Midway international airports in Chicago, where rain and snow was
expected overnight into Monday, reported more than 850
cancellations.Landslides, rescues, collapsed home on Maui-Rain continued
falling on Sunday in Hawaii, where acres of farmland and homes have
been flooded, roads have been closed and shelters opened.
PowerOutage.us, which tracks outages nationwide, reported almost 40,000
electric customers in Hawaii without power around midday Sunday.Flash
flooding has been a major problem in recent days in places like Maui,
Molokai and the Big Island, where rain had been falling from 1 to 2
inches an hour overnight, according to the Hawaii Emergency Management
Agency.Some areas of Maui received more than 20 inches of rain, Maui
County Mayor Richard Bissen said in a social media post late
Saturday.“We’re seeing flooding, landslides, sinkholes, debris and
downed power lines across the county,” he said. Expressing gratitude in
the Hawaiian language, the mayor added, “mahalo for continuing to look
out for one another.”Video footage with Bissen’s post showed washed out
or collapsed roads, a car stuck by floodwaters and raging waterways.
National Guard members and fire department workers made multiple
floodwater rescues, Bissen said.Tom and Carrie Bashaw said they could do
little to prevent part of their home in Maui’s Iao Valley from
collapsing beneath rising waters. On Friday, the water’s force starting
overtaking nearby trees.“When we lost the mango and monkey pod, we
started throwing stuff in bags and packing up,” Tom Bashaw told
HawaiiNewsNow. They returned Saturday morning and “the whole backside of
the house” was gone, he said.Maui resident and real estate broker Jesse
Wald, who recorded video of a coastal road’s collapse Saturday, said
other parts of road were flooded out by mud and sediment.“In the 20
years I’ve been here I’ve never seen this much rain,” Wald said. “I’m
from Wisconsin and we get thunderstorms, you know pretty often in the
summer, so it felt like a Wisconsin thunderstorm but times 10.”Maui
County later on Sunday downgraded an evacuation notice and said crews
were pumping water from retentions basins to keep them at safe
levels.Power outages remain, some from earlier high winds.More than
210,000 utility customers in six Great Lakes states were without
electricity as of Sunday afternoon, according to PowerOutage.us. Some
originated on Friday when gusts in the region reached 85 mph.In
Nebraska, about 30 National Guard members were deployed to combat
multiple wildfires across a broad swath of range and grassland, state
officials said.Three of the largest wildfires had damaged more than 900
square miles as of Saturday, officials said. One fire-related fatality
was reported Friday. Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen urged residents to follow
locally-issued evacuation orders, adding that winds were “supposed to be
extraordinary.”The weather service issued a high-wind warning for most
of Nebraska, with gusts of up to 60 mph possible amid falling snow. Roys
said high winds would affect a region stretching from the U.S.-Mexico
border to the Great Lakes, and from Denver eastward to the Appalachian
Mountains.Forecasters warn about line of storms, tornadoes-The weather
service warned that a line of severe storms with damaging winds would
cross much of the Eastern U.S. by late Monday. It was to begin Sunday
afternoon and cross the Mississippi, Tennessee and Ohio valleys.The
storm threat was expected to enter the Appalachians early Monday, then
move toward the East Coast, where “severe thunderstorms with widespread
damaging winds and several tornadoes” were expected Monday, the service
said.A stretch from parts of South Carolina to Maryland appeared most
likely to experience the greatest damaging winds Monday afternoon, the
weather service said. That could include Raleigh, North Carolina;
Richmond, Virginia, and the nation’s capital. It said an increased —
albeit much lower — risk stretched north to New York and south to
Florida, with thunderstorms possible in New England.Officials said
schools in Raleigh and Chapel Hill, North Carolina would be closed
Monday and the state’s governor urged residents to enable emergency
alerts on their phones ahead of expected wind gusts of 74 mph.
High
winds cause power outages and property destruction as wild March
weather blows in Record winds are just one part of the extreme weather
hitting the country this weekend, with some facing blizzard conditions
and others preparing for triple-digit heat.Syndication: Sheboygan
Press-March 14, 2026, 1:31 PM EDT / Updated March 14, 2026, 1:46 PM EDT /
Source: The Associated Press
HARRISBURG, Pa. — Hundreds of
thousands of people were left without power Saturday after high winds
raked eastward from the Great Lakes region, leaving trees down and
substantial property damage in their wake.Nearly 600,000 customers were
still affected at midday in Ohio, Pennsylvania and Michigan, according
to PowerOutage.us, which tracks outages nationwide.A top wind gust of 75
mph was recorded at Pittsburgh International Airport on Friday, a speed
comparable to an EF-0 tornado or a Category 1 Hurricane, according to
the National Weather Service. Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport saw
winds hit 85 mph Friday afternoon.Winds sent a semi truck toppling over
in Toledo, Ohio, and took down an auto parts store sign in Baldwin,
Pennsylvania. Trees and tree limbs fell into or onto homes and cars from
Cleveland to Pittsburgh. The roof of a school building in the Chicago
suburb of Niles, Illinois, was severely damaged by wind.High winds
fueled multiple wildfires across a broad swath of Nebraska’s range and
grassland, causing one death in Arthur County, officials said. The
victim was not immediately identified and the sheriff’s office did not
disclose other details about the death.What state officials have dubbed
the Morrill County fire has burned at least 708 square miles across four
counties since Thursday. At least 12 structures have been destroyed,
according to the Nebraska Emergency Management Agency.In Colorado, Xcel
Energy is planning for a public safety power shutoff beginning around 2
p.m. in Boulder and Jefferson counties, with outages expected outside of
these areas as well.Widespread severe weather is forecast through the
weekend across parts of Mississippi, Ohio, and the Tennessee Valleys,
posing a threat of damaging winds and tornadoes in the area.Dangerous
winds are but one piece of a wild weather mosaic that includes heavy
rains in Hawaii, triple-digit heat ahead in Phoenix and the return of
winter cold to the Midwest and Northeast. Chicago was expected to
approach the single digits Fahrenheit by Tuesday, with Minneapolis
seeing lows around zero.Several Minnesota cities have already declared
snow emergencies starting Sunday, when what could be the season’s
largest snowfall is expected to hit. Wisconsin and Michigan’s Upper
Peninsula are also in the crosshairs.AccuWeather is describing
conditions as a “potent triple-threat March megastorm” from Sunday into
Monday.“It’s definitely a very active weather weekend, that’s for sure,”
AccuWeather senior meteorologist John Feerick said. “It’s a highly
amplified pattern, which means you get a lot of extremes. Also, not just
the Lower 48, but Hawaii’s getting hit hard right now with some very
heavy rain.”Feerick said people along the Wisconsin-Iowa border might
see some ice as travel conditions become dangerous in large parts of the
Upper Midwest.
The sea is higher than we thought, and millions
more are at risk, study finds-Using a more accurate coastal height
baseline means a 3-foot rise in seas could inundate up to 37% more land
and threaten 77 million to 132 million more people, researchers
said.March 5, 2026, 4:24 AM EST / Source: The Associated Press
Climate
change’s rising seas may threaten tens of millions more people than
scientists and government planners originally thought because of
mistaken research assumptions on how high coastal waters already are, a
new study said.Researchers studied hundreds of scientific studies and
hazard assessments, calculating that about 90% of them underestimated
baseline coastal water heights by an average of 1 foot, according to
Wednesday’s study in the journal Nature. It’s a far more frequent
problem in the Global South, the Pacific and Southeast Asia, and less so
in Europe and along Atlantic coasts.The cause is a mismatch between the
way sea and land altitudes are measured, said study co-author Philip
Minderhoud, a hydrogeology professor at Wageningen University &
Research in the Netherlands. And he attributed that to a “methodological
blind spot” between the different ways those two things are measured.
Each
way measures their own areas properly, he said. But where sea meets
land, there’s a lot of factors that often don’t get accounted for when
satellites and land-based models are used. Studies that calculate sea
level rise impact usually “do not look at the actual measured sea level
so they used this zero-meter” figure as a starting point, said lead
author Katharina Seeger of the University of Padua in Italy. In some
places in the Indo-Pacific, it’s close to 3 feet, Minderhoud said.One
simple way to understand that is that many studies assume sea levels
without waves or currents, when the reality at the water’s edge is of
oceans constantly roiled by wind, tides, currents, changing temperatures
and things like El Niño, Minderhoud and Seeger said.Adjusting to a more
accurate coastal height baseline means that if seas rise by a little
more than 3 feet — as some studies suggest will happen by the end of the
century — waters could inundate up to 37% more land and threaten 77
million to 132 million more people, the study said.That would trigger
problems in planning and paying for the impacts of a warming world.“You
have a lot of people here for whom the risk of extreme flooding is much
higher than people thought,” said Anders Levermann, a climate scientist
at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impacts Research in Germany, who
wasn’t part of the study. And Southeast Asia, where the study finds the
biggest discrepancy, has the most people already threatened by sea level
rise, he said.Minderhoud pointed to island nations in that region as an
area where the reality of the discrepancy hits home.For 17-year-old
climate activist Vepaiamele Trief, the projections aren’t abstract. On
her island home in the South Pacific archipelago of Vanuatu, the
shoreline has visibly retreated within her short lifetime, with beaches
eroded, coastal trees uprooted and some homes now barely 3 feet from the
sea at high tide. On her grandmother’s island of Ambae, a coastal road
from the airport to her village has been rerouted inland because of
encroaching water. Graves have been submerged and entire ways of life
feel under threat.“These studies, they aren’t just words on a paper.
They aren’t just numbers. They’re people’s actual livelihoods,” she
said. “Put yourself in the shoes of our coastal communities — their
lives are going to be completely overturned because of sea level rise
and climate change.”This new study is pretty much about what is the
truth on the ground.Calculations that may be correct for the seas
overall or for the land aren’t quite right at that key intersection
point of water and land, Seeger and Minderhoud said. It’s especially
true in the Pacific.“To understand how much higher a piece of land is
than the water, you need to know the land elevation and the water
elevation. And what this paper says the vast majority of studies have
done is to just assume that zero in your land elevation dataset is the
level of the water. When in fact, it’s not,” said sea level rise expert
Ben Strauss, CEO of Climate Central. His 2019 study was one of the few
the new paper said got it right.“It’s just the baseline that you start
from that people are getting wrong,” said Strauss, who wasn’t part of
the research.Other outside scientists said that Minderhoud and Seeger
may be making too much of the problem.“I think they’re exaggerating the
implications for impact studies a bit — the problem is actually well
understood, albeit addressed in a way that could probably be improved,”
said Gonéri Le Cozannet, a scientist at the French geological survey.
Most local planners know their coastal issues and plan accordingly,
Rutgers University sea level expert Robert Kopp said.The Associated
Press.
Ethiopia declares national mourning as floods, landslides kill 80.
Nairobi,
March 13 (AFP) Mar 13, 2026-Ethiopia's parliament on Friday declared
three days of national mourning as the death toll from floods and
landslides in the southern Gamo region rose to 80, with many still
missing.Torrential rains this week in the remote Gamo zone have caused
massive destruction.In a letter posted on Facebook, the house of
representatives declared three days of mourning to start on Saturday "in
honour of those who lost their lives".It said 80 people have been
confirmed dead, with search and rescue operations still ongoing. Police
had earlier warned the toll could rise well over 100.Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus, head of the World Health Organization and himself
Ethiopian, earlier posted on X that thousands had been displaced by the
disaster.The WHO "immediately activated an emergency task team and
deployed rapid response teams to the affected (areas) to support local
health authorities", he said."Emergency medical supplies -- including
trauma kits, cholera treatment materials, nutrition kits for children,
and water disinfection supplies -- are being prepared for delivery," he
added.
Earthquake hits north-east Turkey: disaster agency.
Ankara,
March 13 (AFP) Mar 13, 2026-A magnitude 5.5 earthquake rattled
north-east Turkey on Friday, the country's disaster management agency
said.The tremor hit around 3:35 am (0035 GMT) in Tokat province, with no
reports of damage, the Turkish disaster and emergency management
authority said.The agency added it was continuing to assess the
situation.The governor of Tokat announced that schools would be closed
on Friday.Turkey is crisscrossed by several geological fault lines which
have previously caused catastrophes in the country.A quake in February
2023 in the southwest killed at least 53,000 people and devastated
Antakya, site of the ancient city of Antioch.
The rain in Spain was worst in nearly 50 years.
Madrid,
March 12 (AFP) Mar 12, 2026-Spain endured its wettest January and
February in almost half a century, with a string of deadly storms
lashing the country, national weather agency AEMET said Thursday.The
Iberian Peninsula is considered a frontline region for climate change,
experiencing increasingly long heatwaves that sometimes start before
summer, along with more frequent episodes of intense rainfall.Eleven
major storms swept the country from late December to mid-February,
bringing heavy rain and strong winds, said AEMET spokesman Ruben del
Campo."January and February 2026 has been the rainiest in the last 47
years, highlighting the extraordinary nature of these events," he told
reporters.Grazalema, one of the hardest-hit municipalities in southern
Spain, saw more than a full year's expected rainfall in just a few days
during the passage of Storm Leonardo in February.The intense flooding
and risk of landslides prompted the authorities to evacuate the entire
town and two people died as a result of the storm.Del Campo said the
severity of Leonardo was "the footprint of climate change", noting that
warmer oceans increase evaporation, while a warmer atmosphere retains
more water vapour, resulting in heavier rainfall.Neighbouring Portugal
also experienced its wettest February in 47 years, the Portuguese
meteorological agency IPMA reported Tuesday.This was the eighth
consecutive warm or very warm winter in Spain, with temperatures above
average, a streak unprecedented in AEMET records, Del Campo said.He
forecast a 50 percent to 70 percent probability that the coming spring
will also be warmer than usual.
FAMINE
EZEKIEL 5:16
16
When I shall send upon them the evil arrows of famine, which shall be
for their destruction, and which I will send to destroy you: and I will
increase the famine upon you, and will break your staff of bread:
REVELATION 6:5-6
5
And when he had opened the third seal, I heard the third beast say,
Come and see. And I beheld, and lo a black horse; and he that sat on him
had a pair of balances in his hand.
6 And I heard a voice in the
midst of the four beasts say, A measure of wheat for a penny, and three
measures of barley for a penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and the
wine.(A DAYS WAGES FOR A LOAF OF BREAD)
MATTHEW 24:7-8
7 For
nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there
shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places.
8 All these are the beginning of sorrows.
MARK 13:8
8
For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and
there shall be earthquakes in divers places, and there shall be famines
and troubles: these are the beginnings of sorrows.
LUKE 21:11
11
And great earthquakes shall be in divers places, and famines, and
pestilences; and fearful sights and great signs shall there be from
heaven.
DEUTORONOMY 28:24
24 The LORD shall make the rain of thy land powder and dust: from heaven shall it come down upon thee, until thou be destroyed.
REVELATION 13:16-18
16
And he(FALSE POPE) causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor,
free and bond, (SLAVE) to receive a mark in their right hand, or in
their foreheads:(CHIP IMPLANT)
17 And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.
18
Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the
beast: for it is the number of a man; and his number is Six hundred
threescore and six.(6-6-6) A NUMBER SYSTEM
I KNOW THIS MARK WILL
BE A MICROCHIP IMPLANT UNDER THE SKIN. LETS LOOK UP WHAT THE WORD MARK
SAYS IN REVELATION 13:16-18, 14:9,11, 15:2, 16:2, 19:20, 20:4-ALL THESE
VERSES FROM THE BOOK OF REVELATION SPEAK OF THIS DICTATORS MARK. NOW
LETS SEE WHAT IT MEANS FROM STRONGS EXAUSTIVE CONCORDANCE OF THE BIBLE.
UNDER MARK PAGE 684.MARK UNDER MARK. THE OLD TESTAMENT IS UNDER HEBREW
AND THE NEW TESTAMENT IS UNDER GREEK. SO WHEN WE LOOK UNDER REVELATION
13:16-17 WE SEE IT IS UNDER GREEK, SO WE GO TO GREEK IN THE BACK SECTION
AND GO TO 5480 TO SEE WHAT IT SAYS THIS MARK WOULD BE. SO LETS GET TO
IT.MARK IN STRONGS GREEK 5480 XAPAYUA CHARAGMA, KHAR-AG-MAH: FROM THE
SAME AS 5482: A SCRATCH OR ETCHING, I.E STAMP (AS A BADGE OF SERVITUDE),
OR SCULPTURED FIGURE-(STATUE):-GRAVEN, MARK FROM 5482 XAPAE CHARAX,
KHAR-AX; FROM XAPAOOW CHARASSO (TO SHARPEN TO A POINT; AKIN TO 1125
THROUGH THE IDEA OF SCRATCHING); A STAKE, I.E (BYIMPL.) A PALISADE OR
RAMPART (MILITARY MOUND FOR CIRCUMVALLATION IN A SIEGE): - TRENCH FROM
1125 YPAPOE GRAPHO, GRAF-0; A PRIM. VERB; TO "GRAVE", ESPEC. TO WRITE;
FIG. TO DESCRIBE:-DESCRIBE, WRITE (-ING, -TEN).G5516-GO TO G4742-666 -
STRONGS NT 4742: στίγμα - στίγμα, στιγματος, τό (from στίζω to prick;
(cf. Latinstimulus, etc.; German stechen, English stick, sting, etc.;
Curtius, § 226)), a mark pricked in or branded upon the body. According
to ancient oriental usage, slaves and soldiers bore the name or stamp of
their master or commander branded or pricked (cut) into their bodies to
indicate what master or general they belonged to, and there were even
some devotees who stamped themselves in this way with the token of their
gods (cf. Deyling, Observations, iii., p. 423ff); hence, τά στίγματα
τοῦ (κυρίου so Rec.) Ἰησοῦ, the marks of (the Lord) Jesus, which Paul in
Galatians 6:17 says he bears branded on his body, are the traces left
there by the perils, hardships, imprisonments, scourgings, endured by
him for the cause of Christ, and which mark him as Christ's faithful and
approved votary, servant, soldier (see Lightfoots Commentary on
Galatians, the passage cited). (Herodotus 7, 233; Aristotle, Aelian,
Plutarch, Lcian, others.)
Middle East war: global economic fallout.
Paris,
France, March 16 (AFP) Mar 16, 2026-Here are the latest economic events
in the Middle East war on Monday:- Oil rises, stocks fall -Oil prices
rose further above $100 a barrel and Asian stocks mostly fell as the
Iran war moved into a third week. A barrel of Brent was up almost three
percent at nearly $106 in mid-morning trading in Europe.Crude rose after
US President Donald Trump said at the weekend that forces struck
military targets on Kharg Island, a scrubby stretch of land in the Gulf
that handles almost all of Iran's oil exports.Trump warned attacks could
expand to energy infrastructure if the Islamic republic interferes with
transit through the Strait of Hormuz, which has been effectively closed
since the US-Israel operations began on February 28.- Japan starts
releasing oil - Japan said Monday it was beginning the release of its
strategic oil reserves after the International Energy Agency indicated
earlier that the release would begin in Asia and Oceania before other
regions.IEA members agreed on March 11 to tap oil stockpiles to cushion
the surge in prices caused by the war -- by far the largest-ever
response of its kind. The IEA said releases in Europe and North America
would start before the end of March.- EU meets to talk energy - Energy
ministers from the European Union's 27 nations gathered for talks in
Brussels Monday to lay the groundwork for a Thursday summit, where
leaders are set to discuss how to help families and businesses deal with
soaring energy prices.Some countries have already announced domestic
price caps or cut fuel taxes, while others are pushing for the EU to
loosen its carbon-emissions trading scheme and to alter how electricity
prices are set.- EU eyes Hormuz naval mission - EU foreign ministers
Monday will discuss extending the bloc's Red Sea naval mission to help
reopen the Strait of Hormuz, the bloc's top diplomat Kaja Kallas said.A
fifth of the world's crude supplies and a substantial amount of gas
normally run through the key waterway.An option on the table would be to
change the mandate of the EU's naval mission in the Red Sea, Operation
Aspides, Kallas said. That operation is to defend shipping from attacks
by Yemen's Iran-backed Houthi forces.- China maintains talks over Trump
visit -Beijing said on Monday it is in talks with Washington over a
visit by Trump expected this month, even after the US president
suggested he would delay the planned summit with Chinese leader Xi
Jinping if Beijing does not assist in reopening the Strait of
Hormuz.Beijing's foreign ministry said Beijing and Washington "are
maintaining communication regarding President Trump's visit to China".-
Dubai airport resumes flights -Flights gradually resumed at Dubai
airport after a "drone-related incident" sparked a fire on Monday.The
latest incident near what is usually the world's busiest airport for
international travel affected a fuel tank, the Dubai media office said,
later adding that authorities had contained the fire and reporting no
injuries.- Drone sets off fire in UAE's Fujairah zone -A drone attack on
oil infrastructure on the UAE's east coast sparked a fire on Monday."A
large fire broke out in the Fujairah Oil Industries Zone as a result of
being targeted by a drone, with no injuries reported," Fujairah
authorities said, adding "efforts continue to bring it under
control".The site sits on the UAE's Gulf of Oman coast, beyond the
Strait of Hormuz.burs/gv/jhb
EU to discuss extending naval mission to Strait of Hormuz.
Brussels,
Belgium, March 16 (AFP) Mar 16, 2026-EU foreign ministers will Monday
discuss extending the bloc's Red Sea naval mission to help reopen the
strategically vital Strait of Hormuz, the bloc's top diplomat Kaja
Kallas said.The Iran war has virtually halted activity in the key
waterway, through which a fifth of the world's crude supplies and a
substantial amount of gas normally run -- sending oil prices soaring."It
is in our interest to keep the Strait of Hormuz open, and that's why we
are also discussing what we can do in this regard," Kallas told
journalists in Brussels ahead of the talks.An option on the table would
be to change the mandate of the EU's naval mission in the Red Sea,
Operation Aspides, Kallas said.She suggested this would be the "fastest"
way for the 27-member bloc to boost security in the Strait of Hormuz,
where Iranian retaliatory attacks to a US-Israeli bombing campaign have
largely halted maritime traffic."If we want to have security in this
region, then it would be easiest to actually already use the operation
that we have in the region, and maybe a change a bit," she said.But it
remained to be seen whether EU member states were willing to use it to
that end, Kallas added.A "coalition of the willing" could also be
considered, Kallas added, without providing further details.Launched in
2024 to prevent attacks on trade vessels by Iran-backed Houthi rebel
forces, Aspides currently has three warships -- one French, one Greek
and one Italian.French President Emmanuel Macron said last week that
Paris and its allies were preparing a "defensive" mission to reopen the
strait.He has also pledged to increase France's contribution to Aspides,
with two additional frigates "over the long term".On Sunday US
President Donald Trump urged NATO allies to help open the Strait of
Hormuz, warning the alliance faced a "very bad" future if they did not.
South Korea lifts coal cap, ramps up nuclear output amid energy concerns.
Seoul,
March 16 (AFP) Mar 16, 2026-South Korea's ruling party said on Monday
the country will lift a cap on coal-powered generation capacity set at
80 percent and boost the use of nuclear power to about the same
level.The world's eighth-largest consumer of crude oil is feeling the
squeeze on energy supplies as Iran has choked off the vital Strait of
Hormuz, with the Middle East war now entering its third week.The
disruption along the key oil route has sent prices soaring and prompted
Seoul to impose a fuel price cap for the first time in nearly 30
years.Ahn Do-geol, an MP from the ruling Democratic party, told
reporters after a meeting with relevant government agencies that the
coal cap limiting generation to 80 percent would be lifted from
Monday."Effective today the 80-percent cap will be removed," he said.The
government will also raise the utilisation rate of nuclear reactors by
more than 10 percent to help offset the impact of disrupted energy
supplies, he said."Six reactors are currently undergoing maintenance,
but we plan to complete maintenance on two of them by March and the
remaining four by mid-May, raising the utilisation rate of nuclear power
plants from the current high 60 percent-range to around 80
percent."Nuclear energy accounted for 31.7 percent of the country's
total electricity production in 2024, according to the International
Atomic Energy Agency.The state-run Korea National Oil Corporation will
bring in 3.35 million barrels of crude oil it is producing from its
overseas projects by June, the MP said.Seoul said earlier this month it
had struck a deal to ship around four million barrels of crude from the
United Arab Emirates to bolster supplies.The government has said it
holds oil reserves equivalent to about seven months of consumption.
Japan says bar high for sending warships to protect Gulf oil lane.
Tokyo,
March 15 (AFP) Mar 15, 2026-A senior Japanese policy adviser said
Sunday the threshold is "extremely high" for Tokyo to send its warships
to help protect a shipping lane for oil in the Middle East, hours after
US President Donald Trump's call for other countries to do so.Two weeks
after the United States and Israel attacked Iran, the Gulf region
remained in the grip of the conflict, sending oil prices soaring as Iran
has choked off the vital Strait of Hormuz and attacked Gulf energy
facilities.After earlier vowing that the US Navy would "very soon" begin
escorting tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, US President Donald
Trump called for reinforcements on Saturday from countries including
Japan.The world's number-four economy is the fifth-biggest importer of
oil -- 95 percent of it from the Middle East and 70 percent passing
through the Strait of Hormuz, which is now effectively closed."I regard
the threshold as extremely high" for sending Japanese navy ships to the
region under existing Japanese laws, Takayuki Kobayashi, the policy
chief of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi's ruling Liberal Democratic Party
(LDP), said Sunday on the public broadcaster NHK's political debate
programme."Legally speaking, we do not rule out the possibility, but
given the current situation in which this conflict is ongoing, I believe
this is something that must be considered with great caution," he
said.Sending its Self-Defense Forces abroad is politically sensitive in
the officially pacifist Japan, as many voters support the US-imposed,
war-renouncing 1947 constitution.Last week, Takaichi said at a
parliament session "nothing has been decided" over whether to send
Japanese warships to the Middle East to escort tankers.Takaichi is
expected to visit Washington this week to hold talks with Trump, in
which a range of issues including security in the Asia-Pacific region,
as well as the Iran war, will likely be discussed.Kobayashi said he
would like to see Takaichi "ascertain what President Trump's true
intentions are" over his call for reinforcements.He said he expected the
leaders to discuss how Tokyo and Washington "can work closely together
to ensure that there would be no vacuum in the security framework of
East Asia" as US troops are reportedly being sent to the Gulf from their
bases in Japan and South Korea.
Oil rises further above $100, stocks mixed as Iran war rages.
Hong
Kong, March 16 (AFP) Mar 16, 2026-Oil prices rose further above $100 a
barrel Monday and stocks fluctuated as the Iran war moved into a third
week with both sides showing no sign of backing down and diplomats
trying to ensure safe passage for tankers through the crucial Strait of
Hormuz.Crude shot up in the opening minutes after the US president said
at the weekend that forces struck military targets on Kharg Island, a
scrubby stretch of land in the Gulf that handles almost all of Iran's
oil exports.He also warned attacks could expand to energy infrastructure
if the Islamic republic interferes with transit through Hormuz, which
has been effectively closed since the US-Israel operations began on
February 28.Iran's Fars news agency reported soon after that no oil
infrastructure was damaged in strikes.Trump urged other countries to
send warships to keep the waterway open but offered no specifics or
commitments from the US side, saying he hoped China, France, Japan,
South Korea and the UK would take part.He later wrote Saturday in a
Truth Social post: "The Countries of the World that receive Oil through
the Hormuz Strait must take care of that passage, and we will help -- A
LOT!"This should have always been a team effort, and now it will
be."However, Japan said Monday it was "not at the moment considering
issuing a maritime security operation", while Australia announced it
would not send any navy ships to the region.Trump said Tehran wanted a
deal to end the fighting, but that he was not prepared to make one on
current terms, without giving further details.Iran's Foreign Minister
Abbas Araghchi said his country was not interested in talks with
Washington."We don't see any reason why we should talk with Americans,
because we were talking with them when they decided to attack us," he
told CBS's "Face The Nation" in an interview aired Sunday."We never
asked for a ceasefire, and we have never asked even for negotiation," he
added.However, he did say he was ready to speak to countries "who want
to talk to us about the safe passage of their vessels"."I cannot mention
any country in particular, but we have been approached by a number of
countries" seeking such safe passage, Araghchi said.The two sides
continued to exchange fire Monday, with Saudi Arabia saying it had
intercepted more than 60 drones since midnight, while flights were
temporarily suspended at Dubai's airport after a "drone-related
incident" sparked a fire nearby.Araghchi described Israeli strikes on
Tehran fuel depots as "ecocide" owing to the long-term risks to
residents' health.Traders hoping for an early end to the conflict were
left disappointed after Trump's top economics adviser Kevin Hassett said
the Pentagon estimates it could take up to six weeks, though the
operation was ahead of schedule.Both main crude contracts advanced.
Brent shot up around three percent to as high as $106.50 before paring
the gains to about $104, while West Texas Intermediate sat just above
$99.The rise came as Japan said it was beginning the release of its
strategic oil reserves after the International Energy Agency indicated
earlier that the release would begin in Asia and Oceania before other
regions.IEA members agreed last week to release a record 400 million
barrels from stockpiles to cushion the surge in prices caused by the
war.With worries growing about a possible energy crisis that could
hammer the global economy, equity markets remained under pressure.Tokyo,
Shanghai, Sydney, Wellington, Taipei, Manila and Jakarta were all down,
though Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, Mumbai and Bangkok rose."The impact
of geopolitical events on markets, and the macro outlook, hinges more
on when transits through the Strait of Hormuz begin to normalise, than
it does on when hostilities come to an end," wrote Michael Brown at
Pepperstone."The longer the Strait is impassable, the tighter commodity
supply will become, thus the higher prices will likely go, and the
greater the inflationary impulse that will follow."Adding to economic
concerns was data showing Friday that fourth-quarter US gross domestic
product expanded 0.7 percent, much slower than the initial reading of
1.4 percent.And delayed figures showed the Federal Reserve's preferred
inflation gauge dipped to 2.8 percent in January before energy prices
shot higher."Developments over the weekend, while no more disconcerting
than at the end of last week, don't offer any obvious pretext for a less
pessimistic start to the new trading week," warned National Australia
Bank's Ray Attrill.Also in view this week are policy meetings at seven
major central banks including the Fed, Bank of England and the European
Central Bank.While they are expected to stand pat on interest rates, any
remarks on the impact of the war on their respective economies will be
closely followed.- Key figures at around 0700 GMT - West Texas
Intermediate: UP 0.6 percent at $99.30 per barrel-Brent North Sea Crude:
UP 1.5 percent at $104.68 per barrel-Tokyo - Nikkei 225: DOWN 0.1
percent at 53,751.15 (close)-Hong Kong - Hang Seng Index: UP 1.4 percent
at 25,832.0-Shanghai - Composite: DOWN 0.3 percent at 4,084.79
(close)-Euro/dollar: UP at $1.1426 from $1.1416 on Friday-Pound/dollar:
UP at $1.3242 from $1.3223-Dollar/yen: DOWN at 159.40 yen from 159.74
yen-Euro/pound: DOWN at 86.27 pence from 86.33 pence-New York - Dow:
DOWN 0.3 percent at 46,558.47 points (close)-London - FTSE 100: DOWN 0.4
percent at 10,261.15 (close)-dan/ane
Ambitious biometrics projects need clear roles for success.
Mar
14, 2026, 3:14 pm EDT | Chris Burt-Biometrics technology development
has long been the fixed domain of experts, and while public bodies like
NIST have played a key role, most of it in the private sector. For
digital identity, the best division of roles in a complex ecosystem is
not always so clear, as seen in the top stories of the week on Biometric
Update. A new contract for GenKey and an ambitious plan in the UK
illustrate the breadth of approaches available, while a UK startup finds
opportunity among ongoing shifts in previously comfortable
partnerships.If we build it, they will adopt-The UK government is moving
forward with plans to build its national digital ID and digital wallet
in-house. The app will handle automated services from several
departments, though not the NHS, but many other details about what it
will do are pending the results of a public consultation on now.The
British public seems to prefer a government-supplied app, in part due to
fears about “big tech,” according to qualitative research from Hippo
Digital. What exactly people are being asked to trust is sufficiently
murky as the consultation begins, however, to render practically any
conclusions premature.Sweden’s government-issued alternative to the
popular BankID digital identity service is expected to launch by the end
of this year. The coming e-ID will have the highest trust level under
eIDAS, which BankID does not.South African digital ID cards can now be
obtained directly from banks, with the Department of Home Affairs
announcing the move in an attempt to reduce queues at its offices. More
than a dozen bank branches rolled out ID issuance kiosks as the phased
rollout began this week.GenKey will produce Comoros’ biometrics
passports and ID cards, under a new contract, with the transition
leading to a pause in ID issuance. Production will expand from one to
three of the archipelago nation’s islands under the
build-operate-transfer contract.Spain’s AEPD has taken the position that
Yoti violated GDPR rules around unlawful processing, calid consent and
excessive data retention with its digital ID app, and levied a $1.1
million fine. The consent issue seems relatively easy to resolve by
changing some default settings and design choices.Europe’s security
cameras and sensors are outdated and a sovereign alternative is needed,
according to UK startup Augur. Now the company, which uses anonymized
movement and behavior pattern analysis instead of facial recognition,
has raised $15 million.Two key biometrics considerations-Biometric data
quality was a topic frequently returned to throughout MOSIP Connect
2026. It came up in discussions ranging from familiar challenges with
cameras processing facial photos of people with dark skin to the launch
of the openbq data analysis platform by Biometix, the importance of
ensuring quality enrollment.The quality of biometric presentation attack
detection performance seems highly variable between different vendors,
based on the Phase 3 results of the RIVR evaluation. MdTF found
Paravision liveness highly effective, Idemia’s good, and the other 16
entrants are mostly glad they were anonymized.Aging like a strong
cheese-Age assurance continues to generate headlines around the world,
introducing digital identity and biometrics concepts to consumers, in
many cases for the first time.U.S. Congress is advancing a pair of bills
that could remake how American children use the internet. The KIDS Act
being considered in the House includes extensive age verification
requirements, while changes to COPPA 2.0 would mean more age
verification and other responsibilities for tech companies.Digital
Arcadia Owner and Product Engineer Patrick Jeter explains in a Biometric
Update guest post why the “age signal” now available at the OS level
will not meet the demands of global regulators.Online age checks took
steps forward in Indonesia, New Zealand, Australia and the EU, one step
back in the UK, while clarity is sought in California. The EU believes
it is nearly ready, while more can be done according to the UK ICO and
the Age Assurance Standards Summit’s draft communique.NIST sets the
standard-Nominee for the position of NIST Director Arvind Raman declined
to commit to keeping public access to the agency’s facial recognition
testing open in questioning by the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science
and Transportation. Senators from both parties agreed on the importance
of NIST’s work in setting technical standards.And NIST’s NCCoE has
published a draft concept paper on how identity and access management
frameworks should accommodate AI agents.Authologic Co-founder and Chief
Strategy Officer Jarek Sygitowicz shared his take on EUDI Wallets and
the “cold start” problem in an interview with Biometric Update.In the
penultimate episode of the season for The Trust Files, SafeGuarden’s
David Crack presents his vision for community-based, user-controlled
digital identity.Please let us know if you come across any podcasts,
thought leadership or other content you think we should share with the
people in biometrics and the broader digital identity community in the
comments below or through social media.
Who holds the keys to
digital sovereignty? It might not be who you think-Digital identity
sovereignty is about more than what building the servers are in.
Mar
13, 2026, 3:18 pm EDT | Chris Burt-As governments think more about
digital identity as a pillar of digital public infrastructure, and
therefore a matter of vital national interest, it is perhaps inevitable
that concerns around sovereignty arise.At MOSIP Connect 2026 in Rabat,
Morocco, identity sovereignty came up repeatedly, from keynote addresses
to small panels and side discussions.A Day 1 session on “Strengthening
Digital Sovereignty through Sovereign Cloud Adoption: Enabling Trusted
and Scalable DPI” addressed the topic head-on.Pete Herlihy of Amazon Web
Services presented AWS Outposts, which run a sovereign cloud within the
host country’s data center as a dedicated tenant. The service is
specifically designed for countries that do not have an AWS region or
local zone in which to deploy a cloud instance to run their ID
system.The UN also has its own ICT services arm, the United Nations
International Computing Centre (UNICC). The open-source driven body
uses shared infrastructure to build replicable applications, and in that
capacity has helped to build self-sovereign identity (SSI) system for
countries facing shortfalls in trust and capacity.The UNICC introduced
its UNIQCloud at the beginning of 2025 to help UN entities and
international organizations complete digital transformation while also
protecting their sensitive data.Following presentations from AWS and
UNICC, a digital sovereignty panel discussed the relative importance of
data residency and access, and of cloud sovereignty, which the
participants agreed should be considered only a part within a larger
issue.Keeping your own cryptographic keys is actually more important to
sovereignty than some of these other measures, panelists argued.In a Day
3 unconference session, the issue was discussed again, with Gluu
Founder Michael Schwartz pointing out that governments tend to be better
at governance controls than they are at tasks like operating data
centers.In his view, the sovereignty of a digital identity system is
better protected by careful consideration and mitigation of risks than
by imposing measures like strict data residency rules.How well a
national ID system pays its engineers may also be more indicative of its
robustness than who owns the server racks. Singapore pays GovTech
engineers market rate, but as Next ID Director Adam Cooper pointed out,
GovTech uses AWS.Schwartz suggests there may be misalignment between the
messaging of digital public goods (DPGs) and the reality of ensuring
sovereign control over ID systems, and the resilience desired may
require some compromise.Idemia Business Developer and Head of Biometric
Terminals Adil Choukri pointed out that Morocco dealt with a wave of
cyberattacks on its public sector systems with several data centers
dispersed across the country – all running an Azure sovereign cloud with
Oracle security.Consensus emerged from the discussion that open-source
technologies can provide the community-hardening that protects them from
cyberattacks and other threats to critical national systems, but also
that a critical mass of IT talent is necessary for a country to
effectively protect its digital assets.With Europe attempting to assert
its digital sovereignty and U.S. diplomats instructed last month to push
back against data sovereignty initiatives, the issue is global, and it
is not going away.
Spain’s Digital Transformation Ministry backs Sybol with €500k.
Mar
13, 2026, 3:03 pm EDT | Lu-Hai Liang-A Spanish digital transformation
agency is helping to fund digital identity development and verifiable
credentials.The Spanish Society for Technological Transformation (SETT),
an agency under the Ministry for Digital Transformation and Public
Administration, has invested €500,000 (US$573,000) in Sybolid Identity
(Sybol).The Madrid‑based startup develops secure digital identity
technology for corporate environments. Sybol builds digital identity
models based on international standards for exchanging verifiable
credentials.Its platform enables companies to issue, request and verify
digital credentials across critical inter‑company processes. These
replace slower manual document checks that can be error‑prone and
vulnerable to fraud. The company targets sectors where identity
assurance and compliance are central to operations such as energy,
industry, construction, logistics and telecommunications.Sybol’s
technology supports workflows such as onboarding suppliers, employees
and clients, helping organizations meet internal requirements as well as
official regulations. By using verifiable credentials, sensitive
information can be shared and reused securely and in a standardized
format.Sybol’s platform is modular and designed to integrate with
existing corporate systems, allowing organizations to configure their
own workflows or adopt predefined ones. The solution is already in use
within multinational energy companies, according to a SETT release.The
investment forms part of a broader public‑private initiative led by
SETT, bringing total project funding to more than €1 million with the
participation of additional private investors. The Spanish ministry for
digital transformation has previously invested in a chips and
cybersecurity center, with digital identity firms involved.The
initiative aligns with the Spanish government’s strategy to accelerate
digitalization across the business ecosystem and promote the adoption of
advanced technologies developed with domestic talent. SETT is financing
the operation through its Next Tech facility, supported by the
Recovery, Transformation and Resilience Plan (Next Generation EU funds).
Ethiopia’s digital ID joins sovereign wealth fund as weekly enrollments reach 1M.
Mar
13, 2026, 3:00 pm EDT | Ayang Macdonald-Ethiopia is accelerating its
efforts to reach 90 million digital ID enrollments this year, with the
National ID Program (NIDP) registering an estimated one million people
every week. As enrollments accumulate, they are also providing the
critical mass to generate sustainable revenue.The enrolment figures were
disclosed recently by NIDP Executive Director Yodahe Zemichael during a
forum to raise awareness about the importance of the Fayda digital ID,
New Business Ethiopia reports.At the forum, Zemichael revealed that more
than 37 million individuals have now been enrolled for the digital ID,
and a strategy is in place to nearly triple that number by June. He
added that efforts are also being intensified in rural and hard-to-reach
areas of the country to ensure that many citizens are served.As these
efforts continue, Fayda has joined the Ethiopian Investment Holdings
(EIH) portfolio, Birrmetrics reports. The NIDP joins Ethiopia’s
sovereign wealth fund and public enterprise commercialization engine
with an authorized capital 10 billion birr (roughly US$64 million) and
2.5 billion birr ($16 million) in paid-up capital.Zemichael told
Birrmetrics that the NIDP has previously operated as a project office,
but is in the middle of a transition to operate as a development
entity.As it does so, the fees Fayda is generating from businesses is
not just contributing to the national coffers. Project-financed card
sourcing is expected to drive down the cost of ID cards from 350 birr to
150 birr ($2.25 to $1) within the next six months.While soliciting
stakeholder support in advancing the digital ID registration process,
the NIDP Executive Director particularly urged the media to promote the
importance of the initiative.The Ethiopian government is paying close
attention to the evolution of the Fayda project, as it considers it the
engine of the country’s digital transformation and a central pillar of
the Digital Ethiopia 2030 strategy launched by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed
last year.Apart from streamlining identification, the Fayda digital ID
is also vital for accessing a wide range of services in the public and
private sectors. Beyond citizens, the digital ID is also said to be
making life easier for refugees and other forcibly displaced persons in
the country, in a move that is seen as driving social and digital
inclusion.A case study from Integrated Biometrics outlines how the
company’s Kojak fingerprint scanners have been instrumental in the
registration process for the digital ID. According to the company, the
scanners, which are MOSIP-compliant, durable and portable, are used to
capture quality fingerprints even when deployed in adverse weather
conditions.
Medicare beneficiaries get new online identity
verification options-Enhanced login with ID.me, CLEAR or Login.gov part
of a gov't push to tighten account security, reduce fraud.
Mar
13, 2026, 12:10 pm EDT | Anthony Kimery-The U.S. Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services (CMS) announced that is rolling out what it
calls enhanced login options for Medicare.gov, giving beneficiaries who
create a new account or verify their identity a choice of ID.me, CLEAR
or Login.gov as part of a broader push to tighten account security and
reduce fraud.CMS said the new options are free, meet federal security
standards, and are meant to better protect Medicare information from
identity theft and unauthorized access. The most relevant federal
security standard is Identity Assurance Level 2 (IAL2) verification. The
criteria for IAL2 is defined by the National Institute of Standards and
Technology (NIST) in its Digital Identity Guidelines, SP 800-63. The
Kantara Initiative accredited selfie biometrics solutions from Clear for
IAL2 last year, Login.gov in 2024, and ID.me back in 2023.Under the new
setup, Medicare users do not need a smartphone, a REAL ID or even an
existing Medicare.gov account to access general information, according
to CMS.The agency said beneficiaries can use options such as phone
support, public computers and, in some cases, in person identity
verification.CMS also stressed that any facial recognition used by some
providers is a one-time identity check, requires permission, and is not
used for surveillance or tracking.The move follows contract activity CMS
began outlining late last year with private sector identity companies.
At that time, ID.me had secured a CMS contract to provide identity
verification and sign in services for Medicare.gov, with the integration
expected to go live in early 2026.CMS viewed the change as a way to
strengthen security, streamline access and reduce fraud across
Medicare’s online services, while also making use of credentials some
beneficiaries may already have through other federal agencies.CLEAR also
won a CMS deal tied to Medicare.gov to provide biometric identity
verification for Medicare beneficiaries and providers through its Clear1
platform, which the company described as a high assurance digital
identity layer for healthcare.The move was part of CMS’s wider digital
transformation agenda, including its effort to create a more
interoperable health technology ecosystem.For CMS, the significance of
its latest announcement is that those contract decisions are now
becoming visible to the public as part of the Medicare login experience
itself.Beneficiaries can choose among private sector providers ID.me and
CLEAR or the government run Login.gov service, while CMS keeps medical
information in its own systems and says identity verification data is
stored separately by the chosen provider.