March 30, 2026

USA News

War escalates on multiple fronts and oil prices rise, as Iran contradicts Trump’s claims.

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Here’s the latest

• Trump’s threat: President Donald Trump said the US may blow up and completely obliterate Iran’s electric plants and oil wells if a deal to end the war is not reached and the Strait of Hormuz is not reopened.

• Peace talks: Iran contradicted Trump’s claims that it had agreed to “most of” the US’ 15-point list of demands to end the war, describing the proposal as “unrealistic.”

• Energy costs: Meanwhile, oil prices rose today after Trump said he wanted to “take the oil in Iran,” with Brent crude crossing $116 a barrel. The average US gas price is now $3.99 according to AAA, the highest since 2022.

• Latest strikes: At least two people were killed in a US-Israeli strike on an orphanage in Iran, state media reported. A UN peacekeeper was killed in Lebanon as Israeli forces struck parts of the country overnight, Indonesian and human rights officials said, and an oil refinery complex in Israel was hit by debris from an intercepted attack.AllCatch up

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Lebanese soldier killed in southern Lebanon, as Israeli military escalates offensive

By oliva

“This attack comes in the context of Israel’s ongoing assault on Lebanon, which has resulted in martyrdom and injuries among both military personnel and civilians,” the statement added.

It also follows the killing of an Indonesian UN peacekeeper in southern Lebanon on Sunday, according to Indonesian and human rights officials, as Israeli forces hammered parts of the country overnight.

Xenix News has asked the Israeli military for comment.

Rising death toll in Lebanon: At least 1,247 people have been killed in Israeli strikes in Lebanon since March 2, the country’s Health Ministry said in an update today. At least 124 children are among those killed, the ministry said yesterday.

Xenix News Dana Karni, Charbel Mallo and Catherine Nicholls contributed tot his report.

New strikes, peace talks and rising energy costs: The latest on the Middle East conflict

By Maureen

Sec. of State Marco Rubio looks on as he speaks to the press before his departure from Le Bourget, France, on Friday.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio declined to say this morning who the US is negotiating with in Iran but said “fractures” have emerged within Tehran’s leadership.

This comes after Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Esmaeil Baghaei, said the US’s proposal for ending the conflict contains “unrealistic” demands.

Meanwhile, strikes across the region continued today, with a US-Israeli strike on an orphanage west of Tehran killing at least two people, according to Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency.

If you’re just joining us, here’s a brief overview of the latest headlines:

  • A missile said to be launched from Iran was “neutralized” by NATO assets in the Mediterranean after it entered Turkish airspace, according to Turkey’s defense ministry.
  • An Indonesian UN peacekeeper was killed in southern Lebanon Sunday, according to Indonesian and human rights officials, as Israeli forces pummeled parts of the country overnight.
  • More ships are passing through the Strait of Hormuz, according to shipping data — but still far fewer than before the Middle East conflict erupted. Pakistan announced last weekend Iran would allow 20 of its flagged ships to pass through.
  • Following a wave of attacks directed at Israel on Saturday, Iran-backed Houthi militants in Yemen could target a key global trade artery, the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, inflicting more economic pain in the Gulf, a Middle East expert warned.
  • Several countries are implementing drastic measures to counter the deepening energy crisis unleashed by the war in Iran. Asia is feeling the impact first and the shock will move westward, JPMorgan warned in a report.
  • The average US gas price edged up by 1 cent to $3.99 according to AAA, the highest since 2022, but still just short of the $4 benchmark.

Xenix news Chris Isidore, Michael Williams, Mustafa Qadri, Tim Lister, Masrur Jamaluddin, Charbel Mallo, Sana Noor Haq, Billy Stockwell and Catherine Nicholls contributed to this report.

Thousands of people have reportedly been killed in the Middle East in the past 31 days

Mourners attend a funeral on March 9 at Behesht-e Zahra cemetery on the outskirts of Tehran for a person killed in recent airstrikes.

Thousands of people have been killed during the conflict in the Middle East since it began on February 28, according to a Xenix news tally of death tolls released by regional authorities.

Here’s what those authorities have said about the number of people reportedly killed in the region since the war began. Xenix news is not able to independently verify these numbers.

  • Iran: At least 1,900 people have been killed in attacks on Iran since February 28, the Iranian Red Crescent reported on Friday. On March 16, Iran’s foreign minister said “hundreds of Iranian civilians,” including more than 200 children, had been killed since the conflict began.
  • Lebanon: At least 1,247 people have been killed in Israeli strikes in Lebanon since March 2, the country’s Health Ministry said in an update today. At least 124 children are among those killed, the ministry said yesterday.
  • Iraq: At least 101 people have been killed across Iraq since the war began, authorities have said. In the semi-autonomous Kurdistan Region, at least 13 people have been killed, according to the regional government.
  • Israel: Some 19 civilians have been killed inside Israel since the conflict began, not including those who died indirectly because of strikes. Six Israeli soldiers have also been killed in southern Lebanon, according to the Israeli military.
  • USA: Thirteen US service members have been killed since the US war with Iran began a month ago, according to the US Central Command.

Dozens of people have also been killed in other countries in the region since the conflict began. Deaths due to the conflict have been reported in the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, the occupied West Bank, Oman, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia since February 28, according to local authorities.

Xenix News Charbel Mallo, Eyad Kourdi, Dana Karni, Aqeel Najim, Nechirvan Mando, Mohammed Tawfeeq, Eugenia Yosef, Oren Liebermann, Tal Shalev, Tamar Michaelis, and Zachary Cohen contributed to this report.Read more

Trump Iran war tension global crisis

Hazel oliva

Journalists work at the site of a car repair shop and dealership damaged by a strike amid the US-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Tehran, Iran, on March 28.

As his Iran war reaches a one-month crossroads, President Donald Trump argues he’s fashioning a way out — even if there’s no proof one exists.

The president claims the US is having “serious discussions” with a “new and more reasonable regime in Tehran.”

Iran’s remnant government, however, insists no direct talks are happening and Monday described US proposals to end the war as “excessive, unrealistic, and unreasonable demands.”

The back and forth and Trump’s whiplash rhetoric shows the war has hit a fork in the road.

Down one path is a fast-escalating conflict that could widen further with the injection of US ground troops and cause a worsening worldwide economic conflagration.

But the high costs of the showdown for the United States and the Islamic Republic also give reason to hope the war could be reined in before it gets even worse.

Pakistan took the initiative on Sunday by leading a nascent third-party attempt with Middle Eastern powers to look for a way out. The effort has a daunting mandate: bridging antithetical endgame demands of an erratic US president and an Iranian regime defined by hatred of America.

This war has already shown the US and Israel have devastated Iran’s air forces, navy and much of its ability to pose existential external threats. But they’ve so far failed to eradicate the revolutionary regime that has haunted both countries for decades. At issue now is whether anyone can build an off-ramp that might deprive either side of a knockout but offer political and strategic carrots for each to claim vindication.

US Navy sailors stand watch on the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford as it transits the Suez Canal, en route to support the Operation Epic Fury attack on Iran on March 5.

On Sunday night, Trump appeared to be building a misleading template for a total US victory, arguing that the killing of senior Iranian leaders including Ayatollah Ali Khamenei equaled “regime change,” even if there’d been no letup of vicious repression of civilians whom he’d previously pledged to protect.

“We’ve had regime change, if you look already, because the one regime was decimated, destroyed, they’re all dead,” the president told reporters aboard Air Force One. “The next regime is mostly dead, and the third regime, we’re dealing with different people than anybody’s dealt with before.”

The best estimate of many Iran experts is that while many top clerical and military leaders have perished, the regime previously decentralized power to ensure it could survive high-profile assassinations and still appears to be controlled by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Trump’s blend of hyperbole and misdirection makes it hard to know whether he’s trying to create a diplomatic breakthrough or a justification for more intense military action.

He wrote on Truth Social Monday morning that if a deal is not soon reached and the Strait of Hormuz remains shut he will conclude America’s “lovely ‘stay’” in Iran by “blowing up and completely obliterating all of their Electric Generating Plants, Oil Wells and Kharg Island (and possibly all desalinization plants!).”

Such a move would be sure to incite a fearsome Iranian response and send the global economy into meltdown.

But the threat hinted at Trump’s apparent desire to end the war quickly — even if Tehran is showing no public sign that its desperate for a “deal,” as he claims.

Trump’s initial timeline is under pressure

Iran’s regime saved itself with classically Trumpian move: It weaponized a point of unique leverage for economic and geopolitical gain by closing the Strait of Hormuz — an oil exporting choke point. Economic reverberations are piling pressure on Trump inside and outside the US, as Iran becomes the latest adversary to counter America’s military superiority with an asymmetric response.

The war has already surpassed the lower marker of the “four to six weeks” timeline initially sketched by the administration. Trump’s still-hazy rationale for waging war is matched by his inability to point to an off-ramp. The closure of the strait and Iran’s stocks of highly enriched uranium, meanwhile, make it hard for him to use a characteristic device — a unilateral declaration of victory. He’s therefore facing a bleak decision with tragic echoes in modern American warfare: whether or not to escalate the war in search of a way out.

An aerial view of the Iranian shores and the island of Qeshm in the Strait of Hormuz on December 10, 2023.

Still, the pain that both sides would endure if the war went on means there are plausible reasons to talk.

Iran is isolated; has become a pariah in its own region; and has absorbed cataclysmic damage to its military capacity. While it has shown a continued ability to hit Israel, US military installations and American-allied Gulf states with missiles and drones, its resources are finite and it badly needs sanctions relief to rescue a shattered economy.

A halt to fighting might allow Iran to lock in its goal of regime survival. And by demonstrating that it can close strait, it might have created a deterrent effect if either the US or Israel wanted to restart the war.

Trump has good reasons to end the war too. His approval ratings are diving, stocks are plunging and economic distress is mounting among midterm election voters already struggling to pay for food and housing. The conflict jars with a dominant principle of his “America First” movement — no more foreign wars. And his second term and presidential legacy risk being consumed.

Conditions for a way out do exist — at a pinch. The question is whether a US president who has hardly lived up to his claim to be the world’s greatest negotiator and a remnant Iranian regime that has seen its top leaders wiped out can show the skill and will to provide each other a face-saving exit.

President Donald Trump salutes during a dignified transfer at Dover Air Force Base on March 7.

The war is expanding — not dying down

The need for fighting to stop was laid bare as the war expanded at the weekend.

Yemen’s Houthis — an Iran-backed militia — launched a missile attack against Israel in their first major move of the conflict. There were no casualties, but the move raised concerns that another key shipping route could be under threat.

“I think the Houthis starting to strike, if you will, that’s going to become the Western Front of this war,” retired Adm. James Stavridis, a former NATO supreme allied commander, told Xenix news Michael Smerconish. He said the Houthis’ ability to control maritime traffic headed for the Suez Canal while the strait is closed was “an enormous gun pointed at the head of the global economy.”

Houthi supporters demonstrate in solidarity with Iran in Sanaa, Yemen, on Friday.

This could exacerbate economic impacts already being felt, and that are likely to worsen as the last ships that left the Persian Gulf before the war reach their destinations. In one sign of the global impact of the war, the Philippines has declared a national energy emergency amid rising political unrest.

In other signs of escalation, at least 10 US service members were injured in an attack on Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia. Iran vowed to target US and Israeli universities, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered the Israel Defense Forces to carve out an expanded security buffer zone in Lebanon.

Against this dire backdrop, the most concrete diplomatic initiative so far played out in Islamabad. Pakistan hosted talks involving Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Egypt. It’s a rare nation with strong relations with Washington and Tehran. Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said in a statement that his country “will be honored to host and facilitate meaningful talks between the two sides in coming days.” Two Trump administration officials told Xenix news last week that discussions in Pakistan were possible. But there’s no confirmation that they are imminent.

Foreign Ministers Badr Abdelatty of Egypt, Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud of Saudi Arabia, Ishaq Dar of Pakistan and Hakan Fidan of Turkey meet to discuss regional de-escalation in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Sunday.

The possibility that fighting will intensify seems to be rising

The USS Tripoli, an amphibious assault ship carrying Marines, has arrived in the region. Another Marine Expeditionary Unit is en route from the US West Coast. More than 1,000 soldiers from the 82nd Airborne have been ordered to deploy.

The buildup is far short of an invasion force. But analysts talk of a possible assault on Kharg Island — the epicenter of Iran’s oil industry in the northern Persian Gulf — or other strategic islands critical to cross-strait navigation. Another ultra-high-risk US mission could aim to snatch Iran’s stocks of highly enriched uranium that might allow it to reconstitute its nuclear program.

But the possibility of heavy US casualties in any ground battles is sharpening debate over the war back home, where even some lawmakers loyal to Trump are worried. Democrats are meanwhile warning against an escalation.

“There’s a reason why Donald Trump is not coming before the American people for approval for this war. It’s because he knows what the American people feel, which is that they don’t want this, that they want a government that is focused on them, lowering costs,” Democratic Sen. Andy Kim said on Xenix news “State of the Union.”

Demonstrators take part in a "No Kings" protest against President Donald Trump's administration policies in New York City on Saturday.

Those potential costs on the battlefield and at home only underscore the president’s unappetizing options and the gamble he took by deciding to go to war in the first place.

History shows most modern wars end more messily than presidents predict when they launch them. Even if Trump now opts for diplomacy over escalation, this one now threatens to undercut his bullish claims about the invulnerability of US power and his own global dominance.

This story and headline have been updated with new reporting.