US

Kharg Island bombed, Trump says US to escort ships through Hormuz soon

US

Iran envoy says Ukraine support to US, Gulf is a 'joke'

BY BARBARA WOJAZER

  • But the embassy continues to operate despite Ukraine fighting off near-daily barrages of Iranian-designed drones launched by Russia, Tehran's ally, throughout the four-year invasion.
  • Iran's envoy to Ukraine, Shahriar Amouzegar, dismissed the support Kyiv has offered to the United States and its Gulf allies, after Ukraine advertised its expertise in destroying Iranian-designed drones launched by Russia.
  • But the embassy continues to operate despite Ukraine fighting off near-daily barrages of Iranian-designed drones launched by Russia, Tehran's ally, throughout the four-year invasion.
Iran's envoy to Ukraine, Shahriar Amouzegar, dismissed the support Kyiv has offered to the United States and its Gulf allies, after Ukraine advertised its expertise in destroying Iranian-designed drones launched by Russia.
Iran has been attacking countries across the region -- including with drones -- in response to US and Israeli airstrikes against Tehran that killed its supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
"As for the actions Ukraine is taking in the Middle East against drones, we essentially consider them nothing more than a joke and a showy gesture," Amouzegar told AFP in an exclusive interview.
AFP spoke to charge d'affaires Amouzegar at the Iranian embassy in Kyiv, a partly vacated house near the Ukrainian presidential administration.
Kyiv stripped the Iranian ambassador of his accreditation in 2022 and scaled down the mission in response to Tehran's supply of Shahed drones to Moscow.
But the embassy continues to operate despite Ukraine fighting off near-daily barrages of Iranian-designed drones launched by Russia, Tehran's ally, throughout the four-year invasion.
Ukraine said it had sent seasoned drone experts to Gulf states, which are facing similar threats, a move condemned by Amouzegar.
"Unfortunately, Ukraine has now effectively entered a stage of direct confrontation with us; that is, it has placed itself alongside our enemies," he said.
He denied that Iran was involved in the Russian invasion, saying that it supported Ukraine's territorial integrity.
Kyiv, he said, had "played the 'Iran card' in order to obtain more resources from the West".

'Not afraid'

Kyiv has been seeking to trade anti-drone technologies and expertise for conventional air-defence missiles, which it urgently needs.
US President Donald Trump told Fox News radio that his country didn't need Ukraine's help in drone defence, apparently contradicting statements from Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky that the US had asked for help.
Kyiv said it had sent anti-drone experts who have begun working in Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.
"Ukraine's presence in this war does not really have any real significance for us. We do not take it very seriously," Amouzegar said.
"We are absolutely not afraid of this recent action by the Ukrainian government. We have new technologies and innovations that will neutralise all these efforts," he added.
On Saturday, Iranian lawmaker Ibrahim Azizi said Ukraine now "has turned its entire territory into a legitimate target for Iran", citing Article 51 of the United Nations Charter, specifying the right to self-defence. 
In response, Ukraine's foreign ministry spokesman Georgiy Tykhyi said the claim was "absurd".
He likened it to "hearing a serial killer justify his crimes by citing criminal code".
brw/asy/jj

US

'Normal, but not really': Iraqis try to carry on as missiles fly

BY CHRISTY-BELLE GEHA

  • Within hours, warplanes and missiles arriving from every direction filled its skies, and the country became a chaotic danger zone with air strikes on Iranian-backed militias, attacks targeting US interests and Iranian strikes against exiled Kurdish opposition groups.
  • Hours before strikes hit Iraq's capital, crowds milled in central Baghdad to the sound not of missiles but clinking coffee cups, children laughing and women filming TikToks.
  • Within hours, warplanes and missiles arriving from every direction filled its skies, and the country became a chaotic danger zone with air strikes on Iranian-backed militias, attacks targeting US interests and Iranian strikes against exiled Kurdish opposition groups.
Hours before strikes hit Iraq's capital, crowds milled in central Baghdad to the sound not of missiles but clinking coffee cups, children laughing and women filming TikToks.
While Iraqis have grown accustomed to conflict over the decades, this has not diminished their anxiety about a wider war.
"Life seems normal here, but it isn't really," said Karim Al-Aqabi, 65, as he strolled with two friends down Al-Mutanabi Street, famous for its booksellers and performers.
"Instead of listening to music, we listen to the news constantly," the father of three, gesticulating to emphasise his point, told AFP.
Shortly after the US-Israeli attack on Tehran on February 28, Iraq closed its airspace.
Within hours, warplanes and missiles arriving from every direction filled its skies, and the country became a chaotic danger zone with air strikes on Iranian-backed militias, attacks targeting US interests and Iranian strikes against exiled Kurdish opposition groups.
In Iraq, successive governments have long struggled to maintain a delicate balance between Tehran and Washington. Now, once again, Iraqis are watching their nation become a proxy battleground between the two rivals.
The oil-rich country has spent much of the past four decades devastated by conflict and international sanctions, including a bloody sectarian struggle that followed the US-led 2003 invasion which toppled ruler Saddam Hussein and the emergence of jihadists.
Aqabi lived through the eight-year Iran-Iraq war in the Eighties. "Even then, we didn't abandon our country," he said. 
He said Iraqis would weather this latest conflict, too. "I will not leave my city even if we are ordered to evacuate. I will not leave even if my home remains buried under the rubble."
But his sentiment isn't shared by all: Mariam Ahmed, 22, hasn't left her home without her brother since the war began.
She spoke to AFP inside a smart new shopping centre off Al-Mutanabi street, a shiny complex which has become emblematic of Baghdad's partial recovery.
"I feel extremely worried and sad about what's happening," she said, describing how she had repeatedly heard warplanes.
"We don't deserve this," she said.

'Nothing to do with us'

The strikes early on Saturday, which killed three members of an Iranian-backed militia, were the first in the heart of Baghdad since the start of the war. Shortly after, a drone hit the US embassy.
Since the start of the war, Tehran-backed Iraqi factions have faced strikes -- unconfirmed by either the United States or Israel -- while Baghdad's airport, US bases and oil fields have been targeted and claimed by those groups.
Sitting with friends, Muhammad Ali, 22, said that, despite the warplanes roaring over Baghdad day and night, the war hadn't affected him.
Behind him sat scores of men, chatting and laughing as a large screen played jazz while an elderly woman wound through the crowd selling white roses.
Ali said he was "confronting the enemy (the US) through social media," while the "resistance attacks US bases," referring to Iran-backed groups.
As Ali and his friends chatted, puffing on a hookah pipe, across from them street photographer Walid Khaled was less nonchalant.
The 26-year-old has lost work already, as people cut back and make essential purchases only.
He lives near Baghdad International Airport, which has been targeted by drones and missiles and hosts a US diplomatic facility.
"We hear explosions all day long," he said, describing how his family had stocked up on rice and gas, in case the situation worsened.
"We had begun to experience a period of relative calm in Iraq, but now some have dragged us into matters that have nothing to do with us."
cbg/rbu/rh/dcp

politics

Election campaign deepens Congo's generational divide

  • - 'Easy money' - A group of young people sheltered under a thatched hut by the side of the road, absorbed in a game of poker.
  • "Hoodlums," muttered 80-year-old village chief Joseph Batangouna as he walked past a group of young people sitting by the side of road in Mayitoukou, Congo-Brazzaville.
  • - 'Easy money' - A group of young people sheltered under a thatched hut by the side of the road, absorbed in a game of poker.
"Hoodlums," muttered 80-year-old village chief Joseph Batangouna as he walked past a group of young people sitting by the side of road in Mayitoukou, Congo-Brazzaville.
Sunday's presidential election has laid bare tensions between the generations.
With 82-year-old Denis Sassou NGuesso, the current president, running for a fifth term to add to his 40 years already in power, there is little doubt as to the outcome.
Turnout risks being low -- not something Batangouna wants to see.
"On Sunday, we have to go and vote Sassou!" he told the youngsters in his village.
Not all of them were convinced.
"Me, I won't go and vote because it's always the same ones who are there" in power, said 27-year-old labourer Guelord Mienagata.
Mayitoukou lies just 30-odd kilometres (nearly 20 miles) from the capital Brazzaville, but some of its 167 residents feel forgotten by those in power.
Pool region, to which the village belongs, has a reputation as one of the most unstable in the country since the 1997 civil war, when many people fled.
"People's feet were swollen from all the walking they had done," recalled Batangouna, who served as a sergeant at the time.
"We don't want to flee any more. We don't want that any more."
Batangouna served under Sassou Nguesso, who won the conflict -- and he still feels that only the current president can keep the peace in the country. 
Sassou Nguesso, he said, "has no competition". In Mayitoukou, he insisted, there would be no need for a second round of voting. "We are going to turn out in force!" he said.
But not all local people feel the same way.

'Easy money'

A group of young people sheltered under a thatched hut by the side of the road, absorbed in a game of poker. They slapped down their cards, playing for pile of coins in the middle.
Some of them had no intention of obeying their village chief.
"Me, I'm not going to vote," said Benie Mbakani, seated at a neighbouring table, as Batangouna looked on.
"I don't want to hear that!" the village chief shouted.
But Mbakani was unmoved. "We have the right to vote for who we want!" he replied, getting up from the table.
"The shame of it!" said Batangouna, outraged at being openly defied in front of foreign visitors.
Benie Mbakani and Guelord Mienagata also made it clear they would not be following the village chief's injunctions.
They accused him of having made the most of the good life during his military career, while they, as part of the young generation, struggled.
They both told how they had left for the capital in search of work but their hopes of finding opportunities there had come to nothing.
In the end, they both returned to the village where making charcoal brings them between 100,000 and 300,000 CFA francs (150-450 euros) a month.
"In Congo, there's nothing, there's no economy," said Mienagata.
"We have jobs, but we don't make anything," he added, as he took an axe to a tree stump in a neighbouring plot.

Farming drive

More than half the population of Congo live below the poverty threshold.
Batangouna denounced what he said was young folk's obsession with easy money, and the damage they were doing to the once vast forests next to the village.
He said he and his wife Antoinette had worked their land for decades to grow manioc and bananas on steep fields that had taken a toll on his wife's back.
He wanted to see the villagers back in the fields, following the injunctions of the president to develop agriculture.
In Mayitoukou, only the older generation was heeding the call, said one village elder, Antoine.
The young folk were always insulting him behind his back, the village chief complained.
Antoine said that when he tried to stop local youngsters from cutting down trees, he was beaten and accused of witchcraft.
As the two old men told their stories, a youngster brushed past them, a machete slung over his shoulder.
On his tee-shirt, in large, glittery letters, were the words: "I hate you."
clt/jj/rlp

US

War in the Middle East: latest developments

  • - Lebanon war toll - Lebanon's health ministry said Israeli strikes have killed 826 people, including 65 women and 106 children, since the start of the latest war with Hezbollah, adding that 2,009 others were wounded.
  • Here are the latest events in the Middle East war: - Trump warship call - US President Donald Trump urged other nations to send warships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz, the critical chokepoint for global oil supplies disrupted by the Mideast war. 
  • - Lebanon war toll - Lebanon's health ministry said Israeli strikes have killed 826 people, including 65 women and 106 children, since the start of the latest war with Hezbollah, adding that 2,009 others were wounded.
Here are the latest events in the Middle East war:

Trump warship call

US President Donald Trump urged other nations to send warships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz, the critical chokepoint for global oil supplies disrupted by the Mideast war. 
"Hopefully China, France, Japan, South Korea, the UK, and others, that are affected by this artificial constraint, will send Ships to the area," he wrote on Truth Social.

Lebanon 'genocide' fear

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said his country feared Israel was "moving toward a new genocide under the pretext of fighting Hezbollah" in its ongoing assault on Lebanon.

Ukraine role ridiculed

Iran's envoy to Ukraine, Shahriar Amouzegar, dismissed the support Kyiv has offered to the United States and its Gulf allies in combatting drones as "a joke", in an interview with AFP.

Energy site threat

Iran will target the facilities of American companies in the region if its energy facilities are attacked, Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi was quoted as saying by state television, after US attacks on military infrastructure on Iran's crude oil export hub of Kharg Island.

Lebanon war toll

Lebanon's health ministry said Israeli strikes have killed 826 people, including 65 women and 106 children, since the start of the latest war with Hezbollah, adding that 2,009 others were wounded.

UN Lebanon diplomacy

UN chief Antonio Guterres said on a visit to Beirut that diplomatic channels remained open to end the war between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah and urged the international community to support Lebanon.
"There is no military solution, only diplomacy, dialogue and full implementation of the UN Charter and Security Council resolutions," he said.

Hamas appeal to Iran

Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas called on Iran to refrain from targeting neighbouring countries, while affirming Tehran's right to defend itself against Israel and the United States, in its first such public appeal to Tehran.

Jerusalem blasts

Explosions rang out over Jerusalem, AFP reporters heard, shortly after the Israeli military warned that it had detected incoming missiles from Iran. 
The military said its "defence system is operating to intercept the threat".

Kharg exports 'normal'

Oil export operations from Iran's Kharg island in the Gulf were "continuing as normal" after US strikes on the crude export hub which caused no casualties, said regional official Ehsan Jahaniyan, quoted by the IRNA news agency.
The Fars news agency, citing sources on the island, earlier reported there had been no damage to oil facilities after Trump said US strikes had destroyed only military targets.

UAE consulate targeted

"The United Arab Emirates expressed its strong condemnation and denunciation of the treacherous terrorist attack by a drone, which targeted the UAE Consulate General in Iraqi Kurdistan, for the second time in a week, and resulted in the injury of two security personnel and caused damage to the consulate building," the UAE foreign ministry said in a statement.

UAE energy hub hit

Smoke could be seen rising from the direction of a major United Arab Emirates energy installation, in what appeared to be the latest strike targeting the Gulf's petroleum facilities hours after the US struck Kharg Island. 
An AFP journalist said clouds of dark black smoke were seen coming from Fujairah, home to a major port and oil export terminal where Iranian attacks have already targeted an oil storage and trading hub.

US embassy attacked

A drone struck the US embassy in Baghdad, an Iraqi security official said, as an AFP journalist saw smoke rising from the complex.
Strikes earlier targeted the powerful Iran-backed group Kataeb Hezbollah, killing two members including a "key figure", security sources told AFP. 
burs/rlp/rmb

US

Trump urges world powers to secure Iran shipping lane

BY AFP TEAMS IN JERUSALEM, TEHRAN, DUBAI, BAGHDAD AND WASHINGTON

  • Oil prices have surged by 40 percent as Iran has choked off the vital Strait of Hormuz and attacked Gulf energy facilities. 
  • US President Donald Trump urged other nations to help secure a vital shipping lane choked off by the war with Iran that showed no signs of slowing on Saturday as strikes hit the US embassy in Baghdad and a major Emirati energy facility.
  • Oil prices have surged by 40 percent as Iran has choked off the vital Strait of Hormuz and attacked Gulf energy facilities. 
US President Donald Trump urged other nations to help secure a vital shipping lane choked off by the war with Iran that showed no signs of slowing on Saturday as strikes hit the US embassy in Baghdad and a major Emirati energy facility.
Two weeks after the United States and Israel attacked Iran, the entire Gulf region remained in the grip of a conflict that has sent shockwaves through the global economy. 
The war has also spilled into Lebanon, where the health ministry says Israeli strikes have killed hundreds, as Israel fought the Tehran-backed Hezbollah once again.
Oil prices have surged by 40 percent as Iran has choked off the vital Strait of Hormuz and attacked Gulf energy facilities. 
Clouds of black smoke rose on Saturday over Fujairah, home to a major Emirati oil storage and export terminal, AFP journalists saw, shortly after Iran's military warned UAE civilians to avoid port areas.
Washington's embassy in Iraq was hit by a drone, security sources told AFP, the second time it has been targeted in the war, and the Emirati consulate in Iraqi Kurdistan was also struck for the second time in a week.
Having earlier vowed that the US Navy would "very soon" start escorting tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, Trump appeared to call for reinforcements on Saturday. 
"Many countries... will be sending War Ships, in conjunction with the United States of America, to keep the Strait open and safe," he wrote on Truth Social, saying China, France, Japan, South Korea, the UK would "hopefully" be among them. 
US forces struck Kharg Island on Friday, from which nearly all of Iran's oil is exported, with Trump saying they had "obliterated every MILITARY target", though sparing its energy facilities. 
Iran had threatened that US-linked oil and energy firms would be "turned into a pile of ashes" if they were hit.
The strike on Kharg could be a turning point, with both sides escalating the conflict in a bid to force a surrender, analyst Vali Nasr of Johns Hopkins University said on social media.
"The end will likely not be Iranian backing off but inflaming the Gulf."

'Long as necessary'

Israel's Defence Minister Israel Katz said the strikes showed the war was entering a "decisive phase", though he cautioned it would "continue as long as necessary".
Yet, despite facing superior US and Israeli firepower, Iran appeared determined to fight on. 
Blasts were heard by AFP journalists over Jerusalem after the military detected missiles launched from Iran on Saturday.
Qatar evacuated downtown areas and intercepted two missiles, with blasts heard by AFP journalists.
The Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas urged Iran to refrain from targeting Gulf neighbours, many of which have supported its cause. It was a rare breach between the allies, though Hamas affirmed Tehran's right to defend itself.
Iran continued to face heavy bombardment with local media reporting strikes in several provinces through Saturday. 
Israel's military, meanwhile, warned people in an industrial zone of Tabriz in northern Iran to evacuate, signalling an imminent attack. 
Iran's health ministry says more than 1,200 people have been killed by US and Israeli attacks, numbers that could not be independently verified, while up to 3.2 million people have been displaced, according to the UN refugee agency.
Trump described Iran as "totally defeated" and in search of a deal he was unwilling to consider.
More than 15,000 targets in Iran have been hit by the US and Israel, the Pentagon said. A report this week said the first six days alone cost the US $11.3 billion, while 13 military personnel have died in the war. 

Transition

US media raised the possibility of American troops on the ground in Iran, with the New York Times and Wall Street Journal reporting the Pentagon had dispatched the Japan-based amphibious assault ship USS Tripoli to the region along with around 2,500 Marines.
In Iran, the country's rulers appeared intent on showing they would survive the war and maintain control, despite their supreme leader Ali Khamenei being killed on the opening day.
Khamenei's son Mojtaba Khamenei was named the new supreme leader, but has been absent from public view and is reportedly wounded.
Reza Pahlavi, the US-based son of Iran's last shah, said on social media on Saturday that he was ready to lead a transition "as soon as the Islamic Republic falls".
But Iran's Revolutionary Guards have threatened a heavy crackdown on any anti-government protests. Thousands were killed during mass demonstrations in January, and a near-total internet blackout has been imposed since the war began.

'Existential battle'

The war has also sparked another devastating round of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon.
The Tehran-backed militant group attacked Israel after Khamenei's death and its leader, Naim Qassem, has called the current conflict an "existential battle".
Israel has responded with air and ground assaults, killing at least 826 people according to the Lebanese authorities.
It has also issued evacuation orders covering hundreds of square kilometres of Lebanon, displacing hundreds of thousands and prompting warnings of a humanitarian disaster.
An overnight strike in southern Lebanon killed more than a dozen health workers at a clinic, health authorities said and put the total number of paramedics killed this month by Israel at 31.
On a visit to Beirut, UN chief Antonio Guterres said "diplomatic avenues are available" to end hostilities. 
bur-er/dcp

US

Trump urges other nations to send ships to secure Hormuz

  • As he urged nations to send ships to the strait, he added that "the United States will be bombing the hell out of the shoreline, and continually shooting Iranian Boats and Ships out of the water.
  • US President Donald Trump on Saturday urged other nations to send ships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz, the critical chokepoint for global oil supplies disrupted by the Mideast war. 
  • As he urged nations to send ships to the strait, he added that "the United States will be bombing the hell out of the shoreline, and continually shooting Iranian Boats and Ships out of the water.
US President Donald Trump on Saturday urged other nations to send ships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz, the critical chokepoint for global oil supplies disrupted by the Mideast war. 
Trump, who has said the United States will soon start escorting tankers through the strait, posted on Truth Social that "Many countries, especially those who are affected by Iran’s attempted closure of the Hormuz Strait, will be sending War Ships, in conjunction with the United States of America, to keep the Strait open and safe."
The US president added: "Hopefully China, France, Japan, South Korea, the UK, and others, that are affected by this artificial constraint, will send Ships to the area."
Iranian strikes have all but halted maritime traffic in the strait, through which a fifth of global crude oil and liquefied natural gas normally pass. It is just 54 kilometers (34 miles) wide at its narrowest point.
With oil prices spiking, Trump was asked Friday when the US Navy would begin escorting tankers through the Strait of Hormuz. "It'll happen soon, very soon," he said.

US bombing the shoreline

In his post on Saturday, Trump asserted that Iran's military capability had been eliminated but he conceded that it was still able to attack the strait.
"We have already destroyed 100% of Iran’s Military capability, but it’s easy for them to send a drone or two, drop a mine, or deliver a close range missile somewhere along, or in, this Waterway, no matter how badly defeated they are," he wrote.
As he urged nations to send ships to the strait, he added that "the United States will be bombing the hell out of the shoreline, and continually shooting Iranian Boats and Ships out of the water. One way or the other, we will soon get the Hormuz Strait OPEN, SAFE, and FREE!"
On Friday, the US military heavily bombed targets on Iran's Kharg Island, which handles almost all of Iran's crude exports, and Trump threatened to hit the island's oil infrastructure, which was spared in the strikes, "should Iran, or anyone else" interfere with passage of ships through the strait.
US allies have been reluctant to provide military support to the US-Israeli attacks on Iran, but they have mobilized warships in response to the widening conflict.
On Monday, President Emmanuel Macron visited a French aircraft carrier dispatched to the Mediterranean and said France and its allies are preparing a "defensive" mission to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
And on Tuesday, a UK warship left port in southern England en route to the eastern Mediterranean to "bolster British defences in the region" after a drone attack on Britain's Akrotiri base in southern Cyprus.
msp/bgs

opposition

Uganda opposition leader in hiding says left country

  • Wine, 44, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, went into hiding after a January 15 election in which President Yoweri Museveni, 81, was re-elected for a seventh term Observers and NGOs have criticised the results of the polls, which the opposition has denounced. 
  • Ugandan opposition leader Bobi Wine, who has been in hiding since a January presidential election he alleged was stolen, announced Saturday that he has left the country.
  • Wine, 44, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, went into hiding after a January 15 election in which President Yoweri Museveni, 81, was re-elected for a seventh term Observers and NGOs have criticised the results of the polls, which the opposition has denounced. 
Ugandan opposition leader Bobi Wine, who has been in hiding since a January presidential election he alleged was stolen, announced Saturday that he has left the country.
Wine, 44, whose real name is Robert Kyagulanyi, went into hiding after a January 15 election in which President Yoweri Museveni, 81, was re-elected for a seventh term
Observers and NGOs have criticised the results of the polls, which the opposition has denounced. 
"Fellow Ugandans and friends of Uganda all over the world, by the time you see this video, I will have left the country," Wine said in a video published on X. 
Wine has not appeared in public since he fled, nor indicated where he is. 
His lawyer had urged the UN and the international community to seek guarantees for his safety after deadly threats following elections marred by repression and an internet blackout.
In the video Saturday, Wine said he plans to advocate for sanctions against Uganda. 
His deputy, Lina Zedriga, would assume the presidency of the National Unity Platform (NUP) party in his absence, he added.
Museveni "rigged" the election, Wine maintains. 
"Out of shame and lack of legitimacy, him and his son are searching for me everywhere," he said. 
"And that's why I'm leaving the country for a while."
"It's laughable that for almost two months, the entire security apparatus of Uganda has invested billions of taxpayers' money to search for me everywhere, but they failed to get me," he continued. 
The Ugandan president's son and army chief, Muhoozi Kainerugaba, 51, known for his often vulgar posts on social media, had said on X that he wanted Wine dead, a message he has since deleted.
He had also hailed the deaths of 30 opposition members and the arrest of some 2,000 of their supporters following the vote. 
Wine said after his stint abroad, he will return to Uganda, "and let the regime do whatever they want to me in full view of the world".
"After all, I have not committed any crime. Running for president is not a crime," he said. 
The opposition figure had already been detained and tortured during the 2021 elections.
str-jcp/pcl/giv/rmb 

Israel

Kharg Island: Vital Iran oil hub in Trump's crosshairs

BY SUSANNAH WALDEN

  • Announcing the strikes, US President Donald Trump described Kharg as a "crown jewel" for Iran and maintained that every military target on the island had been "totally obliterated".  
  • Kharg Island, targeted in US air strikes on Saturday, is a scrubby stretch of land in the Gulf that handles almost all of Iran's crude exports.
  • Announcing the strikes, US President Donald Trump described Kharg as a "crown jewel" for Iran and maintained that every military target on the island had been "totally obliterated".  
Kharg Island, targeted in US air strikes on Saturday, is a scrubby stretch of land in the Gulf that handles almost all of Iran's crude exports.
Announcing the strikes, US President Donald Trump described Kharg as a "crown jewel" for Iran and maintained that every military target on the island had been "totally obliterated".  
The island, located around 30 kilometres (19 miles) off the Iranian mainland, is a hub for roughly 90 percent of Iran's crude exports, according to a JP Morgan note released earlier this month. 
Analysts had warned an attack could have major repercussions for the now fortnight-long conflict between the US and Israel and Iran, which began with air strikes that killed supreme leader Ali Khamenei on February 28.
Iranian strikes have all but halted maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz -- through which a fifth of global crude oil and liquefied natural gas normally pass -- and have also impacted oil infrastructure in other Gulf states.  
Trump wrote on Truth Social that for "reasons of decency, I have chosen NOT to wipe out the Oil Infrastructure on the Island."
But he warned: "However, should Iran, or anyone else, do anything to interfere with the Free and Safe Passage of Ships through the Strait of Hormuz, I will immediately reconsider this decision."
Ehsan Jahaniyan, deputy governor of Iran's southern Bushehr province, quoted by the IRNA news agency, said Saturday oil companies "at this export terminal are continuing as normal" and there were no casualties.
Kharg underwent key developments during Iran's oil expansion in the 1960s and 1970s, with much of the country's coast too shallow for supertankers. 
Iran has looked to diversify its export capabilities by opening the Jask terminal outside the Strait of Hormuz chokepoint in the Gulf of Oman in 2021, but Kharg remains "a critical vulnerability" for Iran, JP Morgan said. 
"It is a cornerstone of Iran's economy and a major source of revenue for the Iranian Revolutionary Guards," JP Morgan added, referring to Iran's well-resourced ideological army which has major economic interests. 

 'Very difficult'

There had also been speculation among observers that were US ground forces to look to deploy inside Iran then Kharg would be an obvious first staging post.
Trump has given no indication that such a move could be forthcoming.
Farzin Nadimi, senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, said Washington could move to seize the island when hostilities end, but that it was "not a wise move" during combat when Kharg is "almost an entire island of oil facilities and pipelines and tank farms". 
"It is very difficult to wage a military operation on that particular island," he told AFP last week. 
But other oil infrastructure could be in the crosshairs, with Trump repeatedly referencing his operation to topple Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro and gain access to the country's oil reserves in January as a blueprint.
Iran -- the fourth-biggest crude producer within the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) -- vowed not one litre of oil would be exported from the Gulf while the war continues.
Any attack on its infrastructure would get an "eye for an eye" response, it said. 
sw-sjw/rh

school

Blast outside Jewish school in Amsterdam, no injuries: mayor

BY STéPHANIE HAMEL

  • The police and fire departments quickly arrived at the scene of the blast in Buitenveldert district in the south of Amsterdam, the statement said. 
  • An overnight blast against an exterior wall of a Jewish school in Amsterdam did not cause any injuries, Mayor Femke Halsema said Saturday, denouncing "a cowardly act of aggression".
  • The police and fire departments quickly arrived at the scene of the blast in Buitenveldert district in the south of Amsterdam, the statement said. 
An overnight blast against an exterior wall of a Jewish school in Amsterdam did not cause any injuries, Mayor Femke Halsema said Saturday, denouncing "a cowardly act of aggression".
An investigation has been opened and the incident comes after nighttime attacks this week in front of synagogues in the Belgian city of Liege and the Dutch port city of Rotterdam.
Haslema condemned the attack in a statement, noting that Amsterdam's Jewish community has been "increasingly often confronted with antisemitism and this is unacceptable."
"A school must be a place where children can attend classes in complete safety. Amsterdam must be a place where Jews can live in safety," she said. 
The police and fire departments quickly arrived at the scene of the blast in Buitenveldert district in the south of Amsterdam, the statement said. 
"The material damage is limited," the mayor said. 
The police have CCTV footage of a person placing the explosive device, Halsema said. 
Dutch Prime Minister Rob Jetten called the incident "terrible" on X and said "Antisemitism has no place in the Netherlands."
"I understand the anger and fear this provokes, and I will quickly meet with the Jewish community. It must always feel safe in our country," he added.
Israel's foreign ministry also weighed in on X, saying: "In the Netherlands, an antisemitism epidemic is raging."
"Where will the next attack be? The Dutch government needs to do much more to fight antisemitism," the ministry wrote.

String of attacks

Following a similar attack Friday on a synagogue in Rotterdam, Jetten had condemned any act of violence or intimidation against the Jewish community or any other religious minority.
Four men suspected of being involved in the Rotterdam attack have been arrested, Dutch authorities announced Friday. 
The series of attacks on synagogues comes after the launch of the US-Israeli war on Iran, a conflict that has since broadened across the Middle East. 
On Monday, an explosion shook a synagogue in the Belgian city of Liege before dawn, causing some damage but no injuries.
It was strongly condemned by Belgian politicians and European Union officials.
On Thursday, a man rammed his car into a synagogue on the outskirts of Detroit, Michigan, sparking a blaze. 
The suspect, identified as 41-year-old Ayman Mohamad Ghazali, died Friday from a "self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head," an FBI official told reporters. 
Media reports have indicated his relatives were killed in Israeli strikes on Lebanon in recent days.
Amid increasing violence and threats against the Jewish community in the United States, there has been a boost in demand for security services specifically protecting Jews, with officers stationed at schools, campuses and other buildings. 
mad/rmb/giv

US

Hezbollah's 'existential' war against Israel could be its last

BY LAYAL ABOU RAHAL

  • Military expert Hassan Jouni said that for  Hezbollah "this is an existential battle... so it will fight until the last breath".
  • Hezbollah suffered heavy losses in a war with Israel more than a year ago, but the Shia movement has now regrouped only to end up fighting what it has called an "existential battle" and which some warn could be its last.
  • Military expert Hassan Jouni said that for  Hezbollah "this is an existential battle... so it will fight until the last breath".
Hezbollah suffered heavy losses in a war with Israel more than a year ago, but the Shia movement has now regrouped only to end up fighting what it has called an "existential battle" and which some warn could be its last.
Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war last week when the militant group, funded and armed by Iran, attacked Israel in response to the killing of Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in US-Israeli strikes.
Israel, which had continued to strike targets in Lebanon even before the war, despite a 2024 ceasefire with Hezbollah, has launched deadly air attacks, sent ground troops into border areas and issued evacuation warnings that have displaced hundreds of thousands of people.
On Friday, Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem said the movement was ready for a long confrontation.
"This is an existential battle... we will not allow the enemy to achieve its goal of eliminating our existence," he said.
A Hezbollah source requesting anonymity said the group had gone "all in".
Either Hezbollah "is finished or it establishes a new equation involving Israel's complete withdrawal from Lebanon and a halt to its attacks", he told AFP.
The source said Hezbollah decided to fight months ago but was waiting for a change in the regional status quo "which it found in the US-Israeli war on Iran".
The group, he added, "knows well that whatever the outcome of that war, its turn would come and Israel would not hesitate to launch a broad campaign against it".

'Absorbed shocks'

Israel kept striking Lebanon after the 2024 ceasefire, killing around 500 people including many fighters from Hezbollah, which initially refrained from retaliating.
Hezbollah "absorbed shocks after the previous war, bandaged its wounds... and reorganised its ranks. And today it is fighting a battle that it is prepared for", the group's source said.
Hezbollah's leadership has denied the battle's timing was linked to the Iran war, instead saying it lost patience with Israeli attacks.
But that hasn't convinced officials or swathes of the population who have expressed increasing anger at the group for dragging Lebanon into a new war.
Military expert Hassan Jouni said that for  Hezbollah "this is an existential battle... so it will fight until the last breath".
"For Israel, this is the final battle against Hezbollah," he said, noting the current circumstances, which Israel sees an opportunity to destroy its foe, may not reappear.
He pointed to factors including the favourable regional and international situation under "the administration of US President Donald Trump", and a badly weakened Iran.
Lebanese authorities committed to disarming Hezbollah after the 2024 ceasefire and the army had been dismantling the group's infrastructure near the Israeli border.
Last week, Beirut banned Hezbollah's military and security activities, and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has accused Hezbollah of working to "collapse" the state "for the sake of the Iranian regime's calculations".

'Finished'

Until just before Hezbollah entered the conflict, Lebanese officials were unaware of the group's intentions.
Shortly before the first rockets were fired on March 2, Hezbollah sent a delegation to inform its ally parliament speaker Nabih Berri, a source familiar with the meeting told AFP on condition of anonymity.
Hezbollah surprised friends and foes with its attacks, after the battering its leadership and arsenal took in the 2024 conflict, and the loss of its major supply route through Syria with the fall of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad.
Last week, the Israeli military's international spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Nadav Shoshani said Hezbollah still has "significant amounts of weapons that endanger Israeli civilians".
Despite the already enormous cost to Lebanon in destruction and displacement, mainly from areas seen as Hezbollah heartlands where the group is usually celebrated as victorious, it has insisted on carrying on.
President Aoun has received no response to his proposal of direct negotiations with Israel, which has kept up threats of further destruction unless authorities disarm Hezbollah and stop its attacks.
To academic and lawyer Ali Mourad, "Hezbollah's priority was to open a Lebanese front in the service of the Iranian agenda, after holding back" since 2024.
The group is fighting "an existential battle on two fronts: the Lebanese front and its (Iranian) ally's political, ideological and strategic front", he told AFP.
"Hezbollah is finished as a regional power and as a strategic weapon" for Iran, he added, predicting that "this war will not end in victory" for the group.
str-lar/lg/dc

environment

India frees Ladakh activist Wangchuk after 6 months in jail

  • The home ministry said in a statement Saturday it had decided to end Wangchuk's detention "with immediate effect" after "due consideration".
  • India on Saturday ended the preventive detention of prominent Ladakh activist Sonam Wangchuk, freeing him six months after he was held over protests in the Himalayan region.
  • The home ministry said in a statement Saturday it had decided to end Wangchuk's detention "with immediate effect" after "due consideration".
India on Saturday ended the preventive detention of prominent Ladakh activist Sonam Wangchuk, freeing him six months after he was held over protests in the Himalayan region.
Wangchuk, 59, an environmental advocate who became a key figure in Ladakh's movement for greater autonomy, was held in September and later charged under India's National Security Act following protests that left four people dead and dozens wounded.
New Delhi had blamed the violence on "provocative speeches" by Wangchuk, who had been on a hunger strike demanding either full federal statehood for Ladakh or constitutional protections for its tribal communities, land and fragile environment.
Authorities in the sparsely populated, high-altitude region bordering China and Pakistan, at the time said the order, issued by the district magistrate of Leh, was needed to "maintain public order.
Under the stringent National Security Act, a suspect can be detained for up to 12 months without being formally charged.
The home ministry said in a statement Saturday it had decided to end Wangchuk's detention "with immediate effect" after "due consideration".
It is not clear if the charges against Wangchuk were dropped.
Mustafa Haji, a lawyer for the Leh Apex Body -- which spearheaded last year's protests -- said Wangchuk was released from jail in the western city of Jodhpur soon after.
The home ministry said it remained "committed to fostering an environment of peace, stability, and mutual trust in" Ladakh and have "meaningful dialogue with all stakeholders".
The decision also comes as the Supreme Court continues to hear a petition filed by Wangchuk's wife Gitanjali Angmo, challenging the legality of his detention.
The fate of that case remains unclear now that Wangchuk has been released.
An engineer by training, Wangchuk is best known for pioneering water conservation projects in the Himalayas.
He received the prestigious Ramon Magsaysay Award in 2018 for his environmental work and contributions to reforming local schooling in Ladakh.
His life and work are said to have inspired a character played by Bollywood star Aamir Khan in the hugely popular movie "Three Idiots". 
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government split Ladakh off from Indian-administered Kashmir in 2019, imposing direct rule on both.
Ladakh has since called upon New Delhi to include it in the "Sixth Schedule" of India's constitution and have their own local legislature to make their laws and policies.
India's army maintains a large presence in Ladakh, which includes disputed border areas with China.
Troops from the two countries clashed there in 2020, killing at least 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers.
str-ash/abh/abs

conflict

S.Korea says North fires around 10 ballistic missiles

BY CLAIRE LEE

  • Seoul's military detected "around ten ballistic missiles launched from the Sunan area in North Korea toward the East Sea at around 1:20pm (0420 GMT)," JCS said in a statement, referring to South Korea's name for the body of water.
  • North Korea fired about 10 ballistic missiles toward the sea of Japan Saturday, Seoul's Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said, days after Pyongyang warned of "terrible consequences" over ongoing South Korea-US military drills.
  • Seoul's military detected "around ten ballistic missiles launched from the Sunan area in North Korea toward the East Sea at around 1:20pm (0420 GMT)," JCS said in a statement, referring to South Korea's name for the body of water.
North Korea fired about 10 ballistic missiles toward the sea of Japan Saturday, Seoul's Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said, days after Pyongyang warned of "terrible consequences" over ongoing South Korea-US military drills.
Pyongyang recently dashed hopes of a diplomatic thaw with Seoul, Washington's security ally, describing its latest peace efforts as a "clumsy, deceptive farce".
Seoul's military detected "around ten ballistic missiles launched from the Sunan area in North Korea toward the East Sea at around 1:20pm (0420 GMT)," JCS said in a statement, referring to South Korea's name for the body of water.
The missiles flew a distance of around 350 kilometres, they said adding that South Korean and US authorities are analysing their exact specifications.
The South Korean military is ready to "respond overwhelmingly to any provocation," JCS added.
Japan's defence ministry also confirmed North Korea launched multiple ballistic missiles that reached a maximum altitude of about 80 kilometres and fell outside Japan's exclusive economic zone near the Korean Peninsula's east coast.
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. 
It also ordered relevant agencies to maintain heightened readiness, as the launch occurred during the joint US-South Korea military drills.
The launches came hours after South Korean Prime Minister Kim Min-seok said that US President Donald Trump thinks a meeting with Pyongyang's leader Kim Jong Un would be "good".
Washington has for decades led efforts to dismantle North Korea's nuclear programme, but summits, sanctions and diplomatic pressure have had little impact.
The Trump administration has pushed in recent months to revive high-level talks with Pyongyang, eyeing a possible summit with Kim Jong Un this year, potentially during Trump's visit to Beijing set for late March.
Trump said during a trip to Asia in October that he was "100 percent" open to meeting with Kim Jong Un, a remark that went unanswered by the North.
After largely ignoring those overtures for months, Kim Jong Un recently said that the two nations could "get along" if Washington accepted Pyongyang's nuclear status.

'Terrible consequences'

Analysts said the number of the missiles launched on Saturday was unusual, and that the timing was notable.
"Global attention is currently focused on the war in the Middle East and North Korea has historically carried out military provocations when it wants to draw attention to its presence," Hong Sung-pyo, a senior researcher at the Korea Institute for Military Affairs, told AFP.
"And that motive likely underlies this launch as well," he added.
Seoul and Washington kicked off their springtime military drills "Freedom Shield" on Monday, which will involve about 18,000 Korean troops and run until March 19. 
The nuclear-armed North, which attacked its neighbour in 1950 triggering the Korean War, has long described such exercises as rehearsals for invasion.
Earlier 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".
"North Korea has been devoting greater resources to its navy, with possible support from Russia. But Kim will have noticed that the US was able to sink most of the Iranian navy within a week," said Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul.
"So Pyongyang is likely to conduct tests and issue rhetoric about nuclear command, control, and delivery systems to suggest it could inflict unacceptable harm if its naval forces come under attack."
cdl/ane

US

War in the Middle East: latest developments

  • It came after explosions rocked the Iraqi capital on Saturday after two strikes targeted the powerful Iran-backed group Kataeb Hezbollah, killing two members including a "key figure", security sources told AFP.  The sources did not identify who was behind the strikes.
  • Here are the latest events in the Middle East war: - US embassy in Baghdad attacked - A drone struck the US embassy in Baghdad on Saturday, an Iraqi security official said, as an AFP journalist saw smoke rising from the complex.
  • It came after explosions rocked the Iraqi capital on Saturday after two strikes targeted the powerful Iran-backed group Kataeb Hezbollah, killing two members including a "key figure", security sources told AFP.  The sources did not identify who was behind the strikes.
Here are the latest events in the Middle East war:

US embassy in Baghdad attacked

A drone struck the US embassy in Baghdad on Saturday, an Iraqi security official said, as an AFP journalist saw smoke rising from the complex. A second security source confirmed an attack targeted the diplomatic mission.
It came after explosions rocked the Iraqi capital on Saturday after two strikes targeted the powerful Iran-backed group Kataeb Hezbollah, killing two members including a "key figure", security sources told AFP. 
The sources did not identify who was behind the strikes.

Trump says Iran 'defeated', wants deal

US President Donald Trump said Friday that Iran has been "totally defeated" in the US-Israeli military campaign against the country, despite Iranian officials pledging to continue the fight.
"The Fake News Media hates to report how well the United States Military has done against Iran, which is totally defeated and wants a deal - But not a deal that I would accept!" Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform, without elaborating.

US strikes Kharg, Iran threatens US oil targets

Trump said that the US military had heavily bombed military targets on Iran's Kharg Island, which handles almost all of the country's crude exports, and threatened to hit the island's oil infrastructure. 
"I have chosen NOT to wipe out the Oil Infrastructure on the Island. However, should Iran, or anyone else, do anything to interfere with the Free and Safe Passage of Ships through the Strait of Hormuz, I will immediately reconsider," Trump posted on Truth Social after the bombing.
In response, Iran's military threatened on Saturday to destroy US-linked energy infrastructure in the region if its oil facilities were attacked, according to a statement reported by Iranian news agencies. 

Trump says US to escort tankers 'very soon'

Trump told reporters Friday that the US Navy would start escorting tankers through the Strait of Hormuz "very soon" to restore oil exports as he struggles to tackle soaring energy prices.

Qatar evacuates 'key areas'

Qatar's interior ministry said Saturday that it was evacuating a number of "key areas" as Iran presses its retaliatory air campaign against Gulf countries. 
In Doha's central Musheireb district some residents received phone alerts telling them to "evacuate the area immediately... to the nearest safest place as a temporary precaution".

Iran targets Israel

Iran launched a fresh round of missiles towards Israel, state media reported just after midnight on Saturday in Tehran, but Israeli rescue workers said there were no reported casualties following the strikes. 
Israel's military said it had identified missiles from Iran and "was operating to intercept the threat," as air raid sirens in multiple areas sent people into shelters. 

Lebanon says health centre hit

An Israeli strike on a healthcare centre in southern Lebanon killed 12 medical personnel, the Lebanese health ministry said.
The ministry said the attack was "the second against the health sector in a few hours", following a strike on Sawaneh that killed two paramedics affiliated with Hezbollah and its ally Amal.
Israeli strikes have killed at least 773 people in Lebanon since March 2, according to the health ministry.
- Hezbollah defiant - 
Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem said his group was ready for a long confrontation with Israel, as the latter threatened to make Lebanon pay an "increasing price" in damage to infrastructure.
Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war last week when the Tehran-backed militant group attacked Israel in response to the killing of Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in US-Israeli strikes.
Israeli strikes continued Friday, including an attack that killed eight people in a south Lebanese village near the port city of Sidon, according to the health ministry.

US reportedly bulking up military presence

The United States appears to be reinforcing its Middle East deployment by sending an amphibious assault ship and Marines to the region, The Wall Street Journal reported. 
CNN reported that the deployment includes an Expeditionary Unit, which are typically made up of 2,500 Marines and sailors. 

Oil stays above $100

Oil prices stayed over $100 a barrel Friday while stock markets slid as investors worry about an extended crisis that could fan inflation and hammer the global economy.
The price of Brent crude, the international crude benchmark contract, closed at $103.14 a barrel, having soared by more than 42 percent since the start of the conflict.

US offers $10 mn reward for Iran leader information

The US State Department offered a $10-million reward for information about Iran's new supreme leader Mojtaba Khamenei and other top officials.

F1 races cancelled

Formula One races in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia will be cancelled or rescheduled as war engulfs the region, a source with knowledge of the matter told AFP.
The Bahrain race is currently scheduled for April 10 to 12, and Saudi Arabia a week later.

Israel has carried out 7,600 strikes on Iran

Israel's military said it had carried out around 7,600 strikes across Iran and 1,100 in Lebanon since launching its joint operation with the United States.
burs/jgc/js/lkd/jfx/lga

US

Iran, US threaten attacks on oil facilities

BY AFP TEAMS IN TEHRAN, JERUSALEM, WASHINGTON, DUBAI AND BEIRUT

  • The Iranian military responded that oil and energy infrastructure owned by US-linked firms would be "immediately be destroyed and turned into a pile of ashes" if the United States struck its oil facilities, according to Iranian media.
  • Iran threatened Saturday to reduce US-linked oil facilities to "a pile of ashes" as the two-week-old Middle East war spilled over into a global oil price crisis.
  • The Iranian military responded that oil and energy infrastructure owned by US-linked firms would be "immediately be destroyed and turned into a pile of ashes" if the United States struck its oil facilities, according to Iranian media.
Iran threatened Saturday to reduce US-linked oil facilities to "a pile of ashes" as the two-week-old Middle East war spilled over into a global oil price crisis.
Iranian armed forces issued the warning after US President Donald Trump said he may decide to "wipe out" Iran's largest oil export hub on its Kharg Island.
Waves of drone, missile and aerial bombing have displaced millions in the region and reportedly killed more than 1,200 people in Iran since the United States and Israel opened hostilities on February 28.
Despite facing superior US and Israeli firepower, Iran has retaliated with missile and drone attacks against at least 10 countries.
Tehran has also squeezed the world economy by threatening to strike oil tankers on the Strait of Hormuz, bringing traffic to a virtual halt on a route that normally carries one fifth of global oil supplies.
Crude oil prices have surged more 40 percent since the war began.
Trump said Friday US forces had "totally obliterated" all military targets on Iran's Kharg Island oil export hub, describing it in a social media post as "one of the most powerful bombing raids in the History of the Middle East."
The US leader said he had chosen not to "wipe out" oil infrastructure on the Iranian island, for now.
"However, should Iran, or anyone else, do anything to interfere with the Free and Safe Passage of Ships through the Strait of Hormuz, I will immediately reconsider this decision," he said.
Trump said the US Navy would start escorting tankers through the Strait of Hormuz "very soon" to restore oil exports.
The Iranian military responded that oil and energy infrastructure owned by US-linked firms would be "immediately be destroyed and turned into a pile of ashes" if the United States struck its oil facilities, according to Iranian media.
US and Israeli attacks have killed more than 1,200 people in Iran, according to health ministry figures that could not be independently verified.
The UN refugee agency has estimated that up to 3.2 million people have been displaced inside Iran since the war started.

Blasts hit Tehran

Heavy blasts shook Tehran late Friday after the United States vowed to step up air strikes.
Trump described Iran as "totally defeated" and in search of a deal he was unwilling to consider.
According to the Pentagon, the US and Israel have struck more than 15,000 targets in Iran over the past two weeks. 
Israel's military said it conducted 7,600 strikes on the country, most of them against its missile programme.
Iran appears intent on showing it will come through the war intact and in control, despite its supreme leader Ali Khamenei being killed at the start of the US-Israeli campaign.
Khamenei's son Mojtaba Khamenei was named the new supreme leader, but has been absent from public view and said to be wounded.
Within Iran, the Revolutionary Guards have warned of a strong response to any anti-government protests, after demonstrations in January in which several thousand people were killed.
Iranian authorities have maintained an internet blackout since the war started.
A drone struck the US embassy in Baghdad on Saturday, an Iraqi security official and a security source said. An AFP journalist saw smoke rising from the complex.
The attack took place shortly after two Iran-backed fighters were killed in strikes on Iraq's capital, according to several sources.
After 14 days of war, the United States is reportedly sending reinforcements that could open up options beyond the airborne campaign.
The Wall Street Journal and New York Times said Friday the Pentagon had dispatched the Japan-based amphibious assault ship USS Tripoli to the region along with its complement of some 2,500 Marines.
The US military has lost 13 personnel since the war started. 
They include six who were aboard a refuelling aircraft that crashed in Iraq, an incident that US officials said was not the result of hostile fire.
Gulf countries are still being targeted by Iran.

Missiles intercepted

Qatar said it intercepted two missiles Saturday, after blasts were heard in the capital Doha and authorities said they had evacuated some key areas.
Interceptors were seen downing two projectiles over the Qatari capital's downtown area and blasts were heard, according to AFP journalists.
Saudi Arabia's defence ministry said its forces had intercepted dozens of drones on Friday.
Beyond the Gulf, Turkey said NATO forces shot down a ballistic missile launched from Iran -- the third such interception in the war.
Lebanon has been drawn into the war, too, after a Tehran-backed militant group attacked Israel in response to the killing of Iran's supreme leader.
An Israeli strike in southern Lebanon killed a dozen doctors, paramedics and nurses at a healthcare clinic, Lebanese health authorities said Saturday.
According to the Lebanese authorities, at least 773 people have been killed by Israeli attacks in Lebanon aimed at wiping out Iranian ally Hezbollah.
bur-djw/jm

Iran

Few easy ways out for US as war with Iran drags on

BY FABIEN ZAMORA

  • The government quickly put in place a new supreme leader, while its decentralised "mosaic defence" allowed the military to retaliate without losing much of a step.
  • US-Israeli strikes killed Iran's leader but have not toppled the government, which now, from its perch on the Strait of Hormuz, has put the entire world economy on the war's frontlines.
  • The government quickly put in place a new supreme leader, while its decentralised "mosaic defence" allowed the military to retaliate without losing much of a step.
US-Israeli strikes killed Iran's leader but have not toppled the government, which now, from its perch on the Strait of Hormuz, has put the entire world economy on the war's frontlines.
The initial US victory in killing supreme leader Ali Khamenei has given way to a conflict that Washington cannot completely control, sharply limiting President Donald Trump's options.
Two weeks into a bloody air war, Iran holds many cards as it chokes the world's oil supply and strikes US allies in the Middle East, including Gulf states who had for years staked their reputations on political and economic stability.
It makes for a drastic turn from February 28, when the first clouds of black smoke rose over Tehran.
Amid smouldering ruins of a housing complex in the Iranian capital were Khamenei and dozens of top-ranking officials, killed in strikes that took years of espionage and planning.
The government had been decapitated.
And yet -- such strategies have "never been effective" in state-versus-state warfare, writes American professor Robert Pape in his book "Bombing to Win", a study of military air campaigns.
And Iran itself is no stranger to history.
"We've had two decades to study defeats of the US military to our immediate east and west," Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said recently.
"We've incorporated lessons accordingly."
The government quickly put in place a new supreme leader, while its decentralised "mosaic defence" allowed the military to retaliate without losing much of a step.
The military doctrine was developed in 2005, after the United States toppled the governments of Iraq and Afghanistan, French researcher Elie Tenenbaum, of the French Institute of International Relations (IFRI), said.
It was meant to help a decentralised military command evade a debilitating loss of top leadership, and "the regime seems pretty intact, despite the fact that it has lost some very senior leaders," said Ali Vaez, Iran project director at International Crisis Group.
That allows Tehran to roll out a "three-part strategy," Vaez said: "First, ensure survival. Second, keep enough retaliatory capacity to be able to stay in the fight. And then third was to prolong the conflict" so that "you can end it on your terms."
All of that spells trouble for Trump as the war draws in US allies and drives up the cost of living at home and abroad.

Worldwide fallout

With its missiles and a vast supply of relatively cheap drones, Iran has struck a marina in Dubai and oil tankers at sea, expanding the war to US allies in the Gulf, Turkey, Cyprus and and elsewhere.
Meanwhile in Lebanon the Iran-backed armed group Hezbollah is trading missile fire with Israel, and Iranian forces have all but closed the Strait of Hormuz, a vital artery that normally hosts a fifth of the world's crude oil traffic.
Oil and petrol prices have spiked or sparked rationing in countries from the United States to Bangladesh to Nigeria.
Air traffic has slowed and foreigners are fleeing the Gulf, whose image of business-friendly stability has taken a huge hit.
Oil importing countries around the world have released some 400 million barrels of strategic fuel reserves, though it has hardly eased the pain.
In Kenya, tea sellers are watching stocks pile up unsold as maritime trade lines come under pressure and shipping insurance spikes.
Bangladesh has rationed fuel and deployed the military to ward off unrest.
"We knew that this will open up a Pandora's box of chaos," said the Gulf International Forum's Aziz Alghashian, a Saudi analyst.
He also said there was "anger" among Gulf states that had put "so much investment in" diplomacy with Iran.

False confidence?

The worldwide fallout has sparked questions over Washington's strategy.
Trump has called for Iran's "unconditional surrender," while Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth has said the operation's goals are "laser focused," as the administration dodges questions over the war's ill-defined, shifting objectives.
"There is a stark difference between the operational superiority that we have over Iran -- we know where everyone (is) and where we can hit them -- and the strategic understanding of Iran," said Danny Citrinowicz, a senior fellow at Israel's Institute for National Security Studies.
Jonathan Paquin, a political science professor at Canada's Universite Laval, told AFP: "The American administration was undoubtedly presumptuous in believing it held all the cards."
There were reasons Washington could find a way to assure itself of such confidence, Paquin noted: a US operation toppled the Venezuelan government of Nicolas Maduro at the beginning of the year.
The government in Iran, meanwhile, has been struggling through US sanctions, and was shaken by major demonstrations in December and January, sparking a security crackdown that killed thousands.

US elections, Iranian defections

Yet in the short term, Tehran still has plenty of pressure points it can hit via oil and shipping threats, including via Yemen's Huthi rebels, who previously disrupted shipping through the Red Sea with their own missile attacks.
Iran is taking "the global economy hostage" as a means of "putting pressure on Trump," said Crisis Group's Vaez.
All the while, Iranian missiles launched at US allies are eating up American interceptors, including expensive Patriot and THAAD systems.
And domestically, Trump -- who ordered the surprise strikes without seeking public support for a war -- is facing upcoming congressional elections.
As price-sensitive voters prepare to head to the polls, "certainly Republican representatives and senators calling the White House to say they risk losing their districts," said Paquin, the political science professor.
Not that Iran -- facing its own political, military and economic upheaval from the war -- is without its own long-term difficulties.
"I think the most likely scenario is that of a zombie state," said IFRI researcher Clement Therme -- a government that maintains its security apparatus but struggles to fulfil functions such as revenue collection or oil exportation.
"They are already struggling to pay public salaries this month," he noted.
Even ensuring the loyalty of the security forces isn't a given: there were notable defections by police during the January massacres of protesters, he added.
The popular uprising called for by Trump to replace the government amid the bombardment seems a far way off -- though Therme noted "it's still too early to judge" the effects of the war on potential protests down the line.

No exit?

With no easy exit, Trump is likely to "revise the concept of victory, setting aside the prospect of surrender or regime change" and claiming that the Iranian should rise up on their own, said Paquin.
But while Trump might want to walk away boasting of killing Khamenei and degrading the Iranian military, "Iran might not give him that off-ramp," said Nate Swanson, of the Atlantic Council.
The remaining options seem increasingly bloody.
Iran could keep up the hostilities even after the United States lays down its arms. 
Or, Trump "doubles down. We put some form of troops on the ground," whether for special operations or long-term fighting.
The last possibility, Swanson worried, is that the war is "outsourced into an ethnic conflict" by Washington and Israel arming Iranian opposition groups.
For now, the missiles continue to rain down, inside Iran and increasingly further afield.
fz/dab/nro/pdw

US

Facing rockets, Arabs in northern Israel fume over lack of shelters

BY HERVé BAR

  • The problem with the lack of shelters was known about well before the most recent war with Iran. 
  • Threatened by volleys of Hezbollah rockets and missiles from Iran, residents of Arab towns in northern Israel are complaining about a lack of public shelters.
  • The problem with the lack of shelters was known about well before the most recent war with Iran. 
Threatened by volleys of Hezbollah rockets and missiles from Iran, residents of Arab towns in northern Israel are complaining about a lack of public shelters.
"The state is obliged to build public shelters so that the entire population has access to safe havens," Mazen Ghanayem, mayor of the town of Sakhnin, told AFP. 
"Yet our town doesn't have a single public shelter worthy of the name."
Located just 20 kilometres from the border with Lebanon, the town's 36,000 residents have grown all too used to the rockets fired by Hezbollah.
Since the militant group joined the Middle East war on the side of its backer Tehran, after Israel and the United States launched attacks on Iran, Sakhnin has lived with the rhythm of air raid sirens. 
"Sometimes rocket fragments fall on houses," Ghanayem said. 
Perched on a hillside, the town's Arab identity, both Muslim and Christian, is clear to see. The domes of mosques jut into the air alongside church spires. 
Its football club, which plays in the Israeli premier league, is a source of pride. So too is an uprising by Israel's Arab minority which, in 1976, forced the state to back down in its attempt to confiscate local land. 

'Rather get hit'

When the sirens blare, "residents first take shelter in their homes, as best they can if the house is old or in a secure room if the building is new," explained Kasim Abu Raya, a municipal official.
For those caught out in the open, there are no underground car parks to dash to in this modest town. 
Abu Raya showed a video on his mobile phone of his wife and daughter when they were out in the road during an alert. 
Frightened and not knowing where to go, they hastily took cover under the steps of a villa whose owners had themselves left everything on the table and hurried off. 
To provide more locations to hide, the mayor says that around a dozen schools have been ordered to constantly keep their doors open. 
The town also has around a dozen emergency shelters, concrete rectangular boxes measuring three by six metres, close to certain public places.
Resembling something between a reinforced bus stop and a public toilet, some of these mini-bunkers appear to be in an unappealing condition inside. 
The shelter in the town hall car park has excrement smeared on the floor and reeks of urine. In others AFP found rubbish piled up at the entrance. 
"I'd rather get hit than take shelter in there," joked mayor Ghanayem, not dwelling on who was responsible for their upkeep. 
Nevertheless, in emergencies, people do still use them.
In the neighbouring town of Majd el-Kroum, AFP saw around a dozen people abandon their cars and cram like sardines into a shelter during a missile salvo. 

'Immoral' situation

"These mini-bunkers can accommodate a handful of people for a few minutes," mayor Ghanayem said.  
"But they look more like a trap. This is clearly not a solution for ensuring the safety of my fellow citizens."
The problem with the lack of shelters was known about well before the most recent war with Iran. 
According to a 2025 report by the State Comptroller, 33 percent of Israelis have no protected space or compliant shelter. 
This figure rises to 50 percent for non-Jewish Israelis, and reaches 70 percent in Arab localities in the north. 
In June 2025, during the previous war with Iran, the Association for Civil Rights in Israel expressed concern over the "not only immoral but also unconstitutional" situation.
"While the state allocates significant resources to protecting Jewish communities, including illegal settlements and outposts in the West Bank, it refrains from acting in the same manner in Arab communities," the association said. 
That certainly rings true with the mayor of Sakhnin.
"When you look at the Jewish community, in every town, every village, every kibbutz, there are public shelters everywhere," said Ghanayem. 
"Not here, and certainly not in Sakhnin."
hba-del/bs/dcp/ceg

US

Lebanon says Israeli strike in south kills 12 medics

  • Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war last week when the Tehran-backed militant group attacked Israel in response to the killing of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in US-Israeli strikes.
  • An Israeli strike in southern Lebanon killed a dozen medical staff at a clinic, Lebanese health authorities said Saturday, after Iran-backed Hezbollah's leader said his group was ready for a long confrontation with Israel.
  • Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war last week when the Tehran-backed militant group attacked Israel in response to the killing of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in US-Israeli strikes.
An Israeli strike in southern Lebanon killed a dozen medical staff at a clinic, Lebanese health authorities said Saturday, after Iran-backed Hezbollah's leader said his group was ready for a long confrontation with Israel.
Lebanon was drawn into the Middle East war last week when the Tehran-backed militant group attacked Israel in response to the killing of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in US-Israeli strikes.
Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem said on Friday his group was ready for a long confrontation with Israel, as the latter threatened to make Lebanon pay an "increasing price" in damage to infrastructure.
"We have prepared ourselves for a long confrontation, and God willing, they (Israelis) will be surprised on the battlefield," Qassem said in his second televised address since the latest war began.
"This is an existential battle, not a limited or simple battle."
Lebanese health authorities said an Israeli strike killed 12 doctors, paramedics and nurses working at a healthcare centre in the town of Burj Qalawiya, following another strike on the town of Sawaneh that left two paramedics affiliated with Hezbollah and its ally Amal dead. 
Israel on Friday destroyed a bridge over the Litani River between the towns of Zrariyeh and Tayr Falsay, according to Lebanon's state-run National News Agency. The river bisects southern Lebanon, from east to west.
In a statement, the Israeli military described the bridge as a "key crossing" for Hezbollah "from northern to southern Lebanon, to build up its power and prepare for combat". 
The attack was the first on Lebanese public infrastructure to be acknowledged by Israel since the start of the Middle East war.
"This is just the beginning and the Lebanese government and the state of Lebanon will pay an increasing price in damage to Lebanese national infrastructure used by Hezbollah terrorists," Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz said on Friday. 
He said Lebanon would suffer "loss of territory -- until it fulfils its central commitment of disarming Hezbollah".
Earlier this week, Lebanese President Joseph Aoun offered to negotiate directly with Israel, but on Friday he said he had not received a response.
The Israeli military bombed several roads in southern Lebanon on Friday, according to the official National News Agency, blocking access from the north of the Litani River and from the Bekaa valley, an eastern area Hezbollah uses to transport weaponry.
The NNA also reported that Israeli shells hit a United Nations base hosting Nepali peacekeepers in the southern town of Mays al-Jabal.
Nepal's army spokesman Raja Ram Basnet said one of their battalion's houses had been struck and there were no casualties.
A spokesperson for the UN secretary-general said they were aware of the reports and would provide further information "as soon as possible".  
The Israeli military did not immediately comment on the incident.

'Stop the war'

UN chief Antonio Guterres called on Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah to "stop the war" at the start of a visit to Beirut on Friday.
"My strong appeal to those parties, to Hezbollah and to Israel, is for a ceasefire to stop the war," Guterres said.
Guterres launched a $325 million humanitarian appeal to support Lebanon as it responds to the displacement of hundreds of thousands of people by the war.
Israeli strikes had continued on Friday, including an attack that killed eight people in the south Lebanese village of Miyeh w Miyeh near the port city of Sidon, according to the health ministry.
In the nearby village of Irkey, Mohammad Taqi buried his four daughters, aged six to 13, who were killed in an Israeli strike on Thursday along with five relatives.
"The Israeli enemy says every day that it is targeting infrastructure," he told AFP at the funeral, his head wrapped in a white bandage and his face covered in wounds.
"Is this the infrastructure? Have you seen it?" he asked, gesturing to his daughters' bodies.
"I've lost four daughters. I don't have any others. Zainab, Zahra, Malika and Yasmina," he said, adding that he had also lost his parents, brother, nephew and brother-in-law in the same strike.

Propaganda leaflets

Hezbollah also launched attacks against Israeli forces on Friday, as part of what it said was a Quds Day operation. 
Quds Day is an annual demonstration in support of the Palestinian cause in Iran, on the last Friday of the holy month of Ramadan. 
Israel's military also renewed its evacuation warnings, including for Beirut's southern suburbs, and launched several strikes on the area according to the NNA.
On Thursday it had issued a similar warning, expanding the evacuation zone in southern Lebanon to reach more than 40 kilometres from the Lebanon-Israel border.
Israeli planes also dropped leaflets over Beirut on Friday.
One of the leaflets, addressed to the Lebanese people, said: "You must disarm Hezbollah, Iran's shield" and "Lebanon is your decision, not someone else's". 
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Israel

Iranian leaders determined to prove Islamic republic's staying power

BY STUART WILLIAMS

  • "It is unlikely Mojtaba will be predisposed to make any concessions" to the United States and Israel, she said, given their responsibility for the killing of Iranians and the destruction of Iran's infrastructure.
  • Iran's leaders are seeking to show the staying power of their near half-century old clerical-based system and prove that it can withstand the killing of its longtime ruler and war with United States and Israel, analysts said.
  • "It is unlikely Mojtaba will be predisposed to make any concessions" to the United States and Israel, she said, given their responsibility for the killing of Iranians and the destruction of Iran's infrastructure.
Iran's leaders are seeking to show the staying power of their near half-century old clerical-based system and prove that it can withstand the killing of its longtime ruler and war with United States and Israel, analysts said.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, supreme leader since the death of revolutionary founder Ruhollah Khomeini in 1989, was killed along with several family members and top security figures in air strikes at the start of the US-Israeli attacks late last month.
But analysts said the system he led, based on Shia Islam and hostility to the West, remained firmly in place, even if it was likely to be adapted by his son and successor Mojtaba Khamenei.
This was likely to mean even greater influence for the Revolutionary Guards, the ideological arm of the military created to ensure the survival of the system and whose influence is felt across Iran, including in the economy.
Thomas Juneau, a professor at the University of Ottawa, told AFP that "the system is resilient and it remains able to implement well-developed contingency plans".
"Continuity is built into the system and its institutions and so far, there is no indication that the collapse of the Islamic republic is imminent."

'Dangerous pattern'

While he has been a low-profile figure rarely seen in public, Mojtaba Khamenei is seen by analysts as a hardliner close to the Revolutionary Guards who took a lead role in the suppression of protests.
"The selection of Mojtaba as his father's successor is an additional indication that the regime's leadership intends to remain defiant and does not plan to compromise on what it perceives as its core values and interests," said Juneau.
In a show of defiance, several key surviving figures in the government and security forces took to the streets of Tehran on Friday for a rally even as explosions went off nearby.
Sporting dark sunglasses despite heavy rain, national security chief Ali Larijani said US President Donald Trump did not understand that "the more he presses, the stronger the nation's determination will become".
Judiciary chief Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejei, meanwhile, barely flinched as an explosion rocked an area close to the demonstration, in images widely broadcast on state TV.
Not present was Mojtaba Khamenei, who has not been seen in public since his appointment.
Another notable absentee from the rally was parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, a former Revolutionary Guards commander who some commentators believe is at the heart of the war effort.
Torbjorn Soltvedt, associate director at risk analysis firm Verisk Maplecroft, said that the conflict was "locked in a dangerous pattern that's unlikely to change anytime soon" as Iran hits back with its own attacks in the region that have sent energy prices surging.

'Highly resilient'

"Right now, there are no clear off-ramps. Despite intense US and Israeli airstrikes, Iran is able to target shipping and critical energy infrastructure with concerning regularity," Soltvedt told AFP.
"The regime has proved highly resilient so far, reflecting the extensive control and influence held by the office of the supreme leader and hardline factions in politics and the armed forces," he added.
Barbara Slavin, a fellow at the US-based Stimson Center, said Mojtaba Khamenei's authority would "depend heavily on continued backing from the Revolutionary Guards whose political and economic influence has expanded dramatically over the past two decades".
"It is unlikely Mojtaba will be predisposed to make any concessions" to the United States and Israel, she said, given their responsibility for the killing of Iranians and the destruction of Iran's infrastructure.
Should the Islamic republic survive the war, it would be able to fall back on a narrative similar to that which followed the 1980-1988 war with Saddam Hussein's Iraq, known in Iran as the "imposed war".
"If it survives this war, which for now seems to be the case, it will be able to claim victory," said Juneau.
"This would be a costly victory, however: its leadership has been decapitated, its military capabilities degraded, its economic infrastructure damaged," he added.
sjw/dcp/ceg

US

Kharg Island bombed, Trump says US to escort ships through Hormuz soon

BY AFP TEAMS IN TEHRAN, JERUSALEM, WASHINGTON, DUBAI AND BEIRUT

  • With oil prices spiking, Trump was asked when the US Navy would begin escorting tankers through the Gulf's critical Strait of Hormuz.
  • President Donald Trump said Friday that the United States had heavily bombed military targets on Iran's oil hub Kharg Island and the US Navy would soon begin escorting tankers through the Strait of Hormuz.
  • With oil prices spiking, Trump was asked when the US Navy would begin escorting tankers through the Gulf's critical Strait of Hormuz.
President Donald Trump said Friday that the United States had heavily bombed military targets on Iran's oil hub Kharg Island and the US Navy would soon begin escorting tankers through the Strait of Hormuz.
Several top Iranian officials joined a defiant pro-government rally in Tehran, meanwhile, marching alongside demonstrators waving banners reading "Death to America" and "Death to Israel."
As the United States intensified its bombing of Iran, Tehran launched a new wave of drone and missile attacks on Israel and its Gulf neighbours.
The war between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon continued to rage and the Lebanese health ministry said an Israeli strike on a primary healthcare center in southern Lebanon had killed at least 12 medical personnel on Friday.
According to the Lebanese authorities, at least 773 people have been killed by Israeli attacks in Lebanon aimed at wiping out Iranian ally Hezbollah.
In a post on Truth Social, Trump said military targets on Kharg Island, which handles almost all of Iran's crude exports, had been "totally obliterated" in "one of the most powerful bombing raids in the History of the Middle East."
He said he had chosen not to target oil infrastructure on the island for now.
"However, should Iran, or anyone else, do anything to interfere with the Free and Safe Passage of Ships through the Strait of Hormuz, I will immediately reconsider this decision," the US president said.
With oil prices spiking, Trump was asked when the US Navy would begin escorting tankers through the Gulf's critical Strait of Hormuz. "It'll happen soon, very soon," he said.
Iranian strikes have all but halted maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of global crude oil and liquefied natural gas normally pass.

US Marines dispatched

The United States and Israel have treaded carefully around Kharg Island until now, but US officials have been reported as saying that capturing the island was potentially on the table.
The Wall Street Journal and New York Times reported on Friday that the Pentagon had dispatched the Japan-based amphibious assault ship USS Tripoli to the region along with its complement of some 2,500 Marines.
Heavy blasts shook Tehran late Friday after the United States vowed to step up air strikes and Iranian state media said a fresh round of missiles had been launched towards Israel. Israeli rescue workers said no casualties were reported.
Blasts were heard in Doha early Saturday and Qatar's defense ministry said its military had intercepted missiles targeting the Gulf state.
Saudi Arabia's defense ministry said its forces had intercepted dozens of drones on Friday and Turkey said NATO forces shot down a ballistic missile launched from Iran -- the third such interception in the war.
The Islamic republic is intent on showing it will come through the war intact and in control, despite its supreme leader Ali Khamenei being killed at the start of the US-Israeli campaign on February 28.
Khamenei's son Mojtaba Khamenei was named the new supreme leader, but has been absent from public view and said to be wounded.
The US government unveiled a $10-million reward for information about Mojtaba Khamenei's whereabouts.

$100 a barrel

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told a news conference the US military would bombard Iran more heavily on Friday than any other day so far in the war.
According to the Pentagon, the US and Israel have struck more than 15,000 targets in Iran over the past two weeks. Israel's military said it conducted 7,600 strikes on the country, most of them against its missile program.
The conflict has sparked chaos in global markets and sent oil prices soaring.
Brent contracts for a barrel of crude have soared more than 42 percent, leaving markets and governments everywhere skittish about energy supply and higher inflation. On Friday, oil stayed above $100 a barrel.
Within Iran, the Revolutionary Guards have warned of an even stronger response to any anti-government protests, after ones in January in which several thousand people were killed.
Iranian authorities have maintained an internet blackout since the war started.
Iranians speaking to AFP under cover of anonymity have described a grim picture of cities in ruins and cash running short.
A woman in Kermanshah, western Iran, told AFP that "countless" people from Tehran had come to seek refuge from the air strikes, adding to demand for food and scarce medicine, with prices "nearly doubling."
The UN refugee agency has estimated that up to 3.2 million people have been displaced inside Iran since the war started.
Iran's health ministry said on March 8 that more than 1,200 people have been killed, a figure AFP has not been able to verify independently.
The US military has lost 13 personnel since the war started -- including six members of a refuelling aircraft that crashed in Iraq after an incident officials said was not caused by hostile fire.
burs-cl/bgs

US

Top narco trafficker Marset handed to US after Bolivia arrest

  • Marset is the second Latin American narco boss to be killed or captured in under a month.
  • Notorious Latin American narco trafficker Sebastian Marset, who eluded police for years, was handed over to US authorities after his arrest Friday in Bolivia.
  • Marset is the second Latin American narco boss to be killed or captured in under a month.
Notorious Latin American narco trafficker Sebastian Marset, who eluded police for years, was handed over to US authorities after his arrest Friday in Bolivia.
Marset, a Uruguayan national who was on the US most-wanted list, was passed to agents of the US Drug Enforcement Administration at Santa Cruz airport, then put on a US airplane, state television showed.
"The arrest and deportation were carried out pursuant to a court order issued by the US justice system," Marco Antonio Oviedo, a senior minister, told reporters.
The kingpin was arrested in an upscale neighborhood of Santa Cruz, Bolivia's economic capital, in an operation that mobilized hundreds of police officers, an AFP journalist witnessed.
Four other people were also arrested in the raids which come just days after Bolivia and 16 other countries joined an anti-cartel military alliance launched by US President Donald Trump.
The US State Department's International Narcotics bureau welcomed Marset's arrest on X, citing it as proof that "the Shield of the Americas is making our region safer and stronger."
The most notorious drug baron in the southern part of South America, Marset has a $2 million US bounty on his head for alleged money laundering.
The soccer-mad 34-year-old laundered the proceeds of his drug enterprise by purchasing and sponsoring lower-level professional soccer teams across Latin America and Europe -- and even put himself in the starting lineups.
He was imprisoned in his native Uruguay for drug trafficking between 2013 and 2018 and later moved around South America, living a time in Bolivia and also Paraguay.
Both those countries had also issued warrants for his arrest.
The United States issued a reward for his capture last year after what it called "the largest and most consequential organized crime investigation against cocaine trafficking in Paraguayan history."
Marset is accused of leading a criminal network that imported more than 16 tons of cocaine into Europe.
The Paraguayan investigation reportedly revealed him asking advice in text messages on how to disappear the bodies of murdered enemies.
Head of Bolivian police Mirko Sokol told reporters Friday more raids are planned in coming days, and hinted at corrupt cops without naming more accomplices.
"We have information on many people who have collaborated with Marset. It is very likely that there are police officers among them," Sokol said.

Imitating soccer heroes

A Washington Post profile from 2024 said Marset paid $10,000 in cash to wear the number 10 jersey worn by football icons Pele, Maradona and Messi during his teams' games.
He stamped his drug shipments "The King of the South," the Post added, and gave orders for cocaine to be stashed in shipments of cookies and soybeans.
He had been on the run since July 2023, when he fled his home in Santa Cruz, on the eve of a massive police operation to capture him.
Bolivia's center-right President Rodrigo Paz thanked "international organizations from various neighboring countries and the continent" on Friday for their cooperation in his capture.
Paz has sought to boost ties with the United States since winning office last year in elections that ended two decades of socialist rule begun under Indigenous coca farmer Evo Morales.
Bolivia's is the world's third largest producer of cocaine, which is made from coca leaves.
Marset is the second Latin American narco boss to be killed or captured in under a month.
Last month, one of the United States and Mexico's most-wanted men, Nemesio "El Mencho" Oseguera, was killed by the Mexico military during an arrest raid.
US intelligence contributed to his capture.
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