Tuesday, March 24, 2026

IRGC Launches Wave 79 of Operation True Promise 4, Targets US Bases

By Al Mayadeen English

The IRGC announced wave 79 of Operation True Promise 4, targeting the Israeli occupation and US military installations across the region with missiles and drones.

The Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) announced that it had launched wave 79 of Operation True Promise 4, targeting “Israel” and US military bases across the region.

According to the IRGC statement, the operation specifically targeted satellite reception stations in Eilat, which are used by the Israeli occupation forces.

The statement also confirmed attacks on multiple US military facilities, including Camp Arifjan and Ali Al Salem Air Base in Kuwait, and Isa Air Base in Bahrain.

Wave 79 of the operation involved the deployment of long- and medium-range missile systems, utilizing both solid and liquid fuel types, alongside one-way attack drones, according to the IRGC.

Iranian army announces strike on Erbil airport

The IRGC emphasized that the operation reflects its ongoing commitment to confront hostile forces in the region and to target military infrastructure deemed threatening to its national security interests.

The Iranian Army announced a surface-to-surface missile strike on Erbil Airport, targeting a "gathering of US forces and Israeli-backed separatist groups."

The army added that the targeted area is "one of the most significant support and command hubs for US operations, housing a wide array of military equipment and systems."

US options for talks narrow

For weeks, the United States and "Israel" have insisted that Iran's military capacity has been severely degraded. US President Donald Trump and War Secretary Pete Hegseth have repeatedly claimed that sustained strikes have crippled Iran's command structure and weakened its ability to respond. By their account, the conflict should already be moving toward an end.

Yet the opposite appears to be happening. The escalation continues faster, sharper, and with fewer clear exit points, according to an analysis by BBC's Amir Azimi published Monday.

On Saturday, claims surfaced that Iran launched two missiles toward the US-UK base on Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, a distance of approximately 3,800 kilometers, far beyond the 2,000-kilometer range previously attributed to Iran's arsenal.

Although it should be noted that Iran did not assume responsibility for this, the missiles did not reach the island, and the incident was heavily discussed in the media in terms of Washington's underestimation of Iranian capabilities.

Whether this reflects a previously undisclosed capability or one developed under bombardment, the implication is the same: military pressure has not halted Iran's progress.

Trump's ultimatum and retreat

Trump raised the stakes on Saturday night, issuing a 48-hour threat demanding that Iran reopen the Strait of Hormuz, warning that failure to comply would lead to the US "obliterating" Iranian power plants.

Iran rejected the demand and responded with a similar threat: any attack on its energy infrastructure would be met with strikes across the region. Iran's Defense Council also raised the possibility of mining parts of the Persian Gulf.

The exchange appeared to set both sides on a direct path toward a far more dangerous phase of the war on Iran. Yet only hours before the deadline was due to expire, Trump stepped back. In a post on Truth Social, he claimed there had been "very good and productive conversations" with Iran and announced a five-day pause on any planned strikes against Iranian energy infrastructure.

US-Israeli Strikes Fail to Disrupt Gas Supply in Southwest Iran

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Agencies

US and Israeli strikes targeting infrastructure in southwest Iran caused no disruption to gas supply, as Tehran confirms stable energy operations despite escalation.

Reports from Iranian media state that the joint US-Israeli airstrikes targeting Iranian energy infrastructure in the nation's southwest failed to cause any disruptions in gas supply. 

Local authorities told Fars that the attack targeted a gas pipeline linked to a power plant in Khorramshahr. They told the news outlet that despite the attack, there are no problems with maintaining the supply of energy and gas to the city and that the plant remains fully operational. 

The report by Fars also highlighted that there were no casualties as a result of the joint US-Israeli attack on the energy site. 

Strength of Iran's energy infrastructure

The failure of the bombing to disrupt energy flows highlights a recurring pattern in which attacks on infrastructure do not necessarily translate into sustained operational setbacks.

Iranian authorities stressed that both gas provision and electricity generation in Khorramshahr remain stable, suggesting that contingency measures or system redundancies mitigated the intended impact.

This development comes despite the strategic significance of energy infrastructure as a frequent target in conflicts involving regional and international actors.

Iran's Energy networks, particularly in strategically vital regions, are structured to withstand disruptions, limiting the effectiveness of aerial strikes aimed at degrading essential services. The failure to damage and put them out of commission is an example of the lack of tangible gains the US and "Israel" have achieved since their unlawful attack on February 28. 

Increasing US-Israeli escalation against Iranian energy sites

The US-Israeli coalition also bombed a gas administration building and a pressure reduction station on Kaveh Street in Isfahan on Tuesday. Fars reports that the strike caused damage to parts of the facilities and residential homes located near the energy sites. 

Isfahan is considered to be one of the key sites in Iran's gas distribution network; the plants are responsible for syphoning gas to other cities and industrial sectors. 

These attacks come after US President Donald Trump's claim of a five-day pause in attacking gas and energy infrastructure in Iran.

Trump said that the pause in targeting these sites follows "very good and productive conversations" with Iran regarding how to come to a ceasefire, a claim which Iran outrightly denied, with Iran's parliament speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, saying that any claims regarding talks between Tehran and Washington are "fake news" made to influence the oil market. 

Iranian retaliation to attack on energy infrastructure

Iran stated previously that if its energy sites are targeted, it will attack US-linked energy plants in the region. 

Living up to its claims, Iranian missile strikes on key US-linked Gulf energy infrastructure have been costing major Western oil companies billions in revenue loss, with damage to critical facilities threatening to take years to repair fully.

One of the most significant impacts of these Iranian strikes was on the US-linked Pearl gas-to-liquids facility in Qatar, which is one of Shell’s most advanced and profitable assets. The plant, valued at nearly $20 billion, suffered heavy damage, causing half of its production lines to be expected to remain offline for at least a year, per to Qatari authorities.

Non-stop Ops: Hezbollah Engages Israeli Troops, Pounds Enemy Assets

By Al Mayadeen English

Hezbollah continues its operations in defense of its people, targeting military infrastructure, occupation troops, armored vehicles, and illegal settlements,

The Islamic Resistance in Lebanon - Hezbollah announced a series of military operations against "Israel" in defense of Lebanon early Tuesday, in response to the Israeli aggression targeting Lebanon, particularly the South, Bekaa, and Beirut. 

These come as part of Hezbollah's retaliatory operation against "Israel", Devoured Straw, and involve top-tier confrontations, coordinated attacks, and direct engagement of Israeli occupation troops along the Lebanese-Palestinian border. 

Notably, the Resistance reported intense confrontations in the border town of al-Qawzah throughout Tuesday, with Israeli troops coming under Resistance fire several times, as well as Israeli military vehicles, including Merkava tanks and D9 bulldozers. A combination of attack drones, rocket barrages, and precision guided missiles were utilizied to thwart enemy advances into the town. 

In detail: 

Operations targeting Israeli troops 

Hezbollah has been successfully engaging Israeli occupation troops along the occupied border, deterring and overwhelming the invading forces. Using a combination of artillery, rockets, and drones, Resistance fighters have been consistently targeting soldier concentrations and their armored vehicles, inflicting direct hits and casualties among their ranks. 

At 7:20 AM, Al Mayadeen's correspondent in South Lebanon reported intense confrontations as Resistance fighters engaged an Israeli force attempting to invade the town of al-Qawzah. 

Hezbollah later announced several simultaneous and follow-up operations in the al-Qawzah axis, disclosing that precision guided missiles and attack drones were deployed against the invading force, achieving direct hits among its ranks. 

1. In its first declared operation, Hezbollah announced that a troop and armored vehicle concentration was targeted at 23:40 PM on Monday, in the Al-Zuhour neighborhood in Maroun al-Ras with artillery shells.

2. At 1:30 AM, Resistance fighters targeted a gathering of enemy soldiers at the Fatima Gate on the Lebanese-Palestinian border with a rocket barrage.

3. At 6:00 AM, the Islamic Resistance targeted  a gathering of Israeli enemy soldiers southwest of the border town of Alma al-Shaab with a rocket barrage.

4. Also at 6:00 AM, the Islamic Resistance targeted a gathering of Israeli enemy soldiers at the newly established site of Blat in southern Lebanon with a rocket barrage.

5. At 6:42 AM, the Resistance targeted a force of Israeli enemy soldiers positioned inside a house in the border town of al-Qawzah, following surveillance, with a guided missile, achieving a direct hit.

6. In a follow-up operation at 7:00 AM, the Resistance targeted a gathering of Israeli enemy soldiers and vehicles in the border town of al-Qawzah with a rocket barrage.

7. Simultaneously and in the same town, the Resistance targeted at 07:00 AM a gathering of Israeli enemy soldiers at the Hill of Al-Khamara in the border town of al-Qawzah with a rocket barrage.

8. At 7:45 AM, the Resistance targeted a gathering of Israeli enemy soldiers at the newly established site of Blat in southern Lebanon with a guided missile, achieving a direct hit.

9. At 8:45 AM, Hezbollah fighters targeted an Israeli enemy concentration in al-Qawzah with an attack drone, achieving a direct hit. 

10. At 9:00 AM, the Resistance targeted a gathering of Israeli enemy soldiers near a school in the border town of Alma al-Shaab with a rocket barrage.

11. At 9:20 AM, Hezbollah fighters targeted an Israeli enemy concentration in al-Qawzah with a rocket barrage for the second time. 

12. At 10:20 AM, and for the third time, Hezbollah fighters targeted an Israeli troop gathering in al-Qawzah with an attack drone, achieving a direct hit. 

13. For the fourth time, the Resistance targeted at 10:50 a gathering of Israeli enemy soldiers in the border town of al-Qawzah using an attack drone, achieving a direct hit.

14. At 12:10 PM, the Resistance targeted a gathering of Israeli enemy soldiers on Al-Khamara Hill in al-Qawzah using an attack drone, achieving a direct hit.

Operations targeting Israeli military sites, bases

Key Israeli military sites, including military bases, barracks, and artillery positions, have been under constant Resistance fire, disrupting enemy attacks and causing the occupation significant material losses. 

The first operation came 10 minutes into the new operational day, emphasizing Hezbollah's uninterrupted, round-the-clock operations and a sustained state of readiness across changing hours.

15. At 00:10 AM, the Resistance targeted the Lymann barracks north of Nahariya with a swarm of attack drones.

16. At 1:20 AM, the Resistance targeted the radar site in Magd al-Tiffin, south of the settlement of Ma'alot-Tarshiha, with a swarm of attack drones.

17. In a simultaneous operation, the Resistance targeted at 01:20 AM Israeli enemy artillery positions in the settlement of Sa'sa' with a swarm of attack drones.

18. At 2:20 AM, Hezbollah targeted Israeli enemy artillery positions in Ein HaKoveshim, opposite the border town of Alma al-Shaab, with a rocket barrage.

19. At 6:00 AM, the Islamic Resistance targeted a newly established site in Nimr al-Jamal, opposite the border town of Alma al-Shaab, with a rocket barrage.

20. At 10:00 AM, the Resistance targeted Camp 100, a training camp for Israeli infantry forces located north of Ayelet HaShahar, with a rocket barrage.


21. At 10:30 AM, the Resistance targeted the Rafael military industries complex north of the Krayot area with a heavy rocket barrage.

22. At 11:30 AM, the Resistance targeted an enemy artillery position in the settlement of HaGoshrim with a rocket barrage.

23. At 2:20 PM, the Resistance targeted the Adathar site (Jabal Adir) with a swarm of attack drones.

24. At 2:30 PM, the Islamic Resistance targeted an air defense system in the settlement of Ma’alot-Tarshiha with a swarm of attack drones.

Hezbollah's Military Media also shared footage from one of its operations, carried out on March 10, targeting the Israeli occupation's Giva base east of the occupied city of Safad, with a barrage of rockets.

Merkavas, D9s targeted

25. At 11:30 AM, the Resistance targeted three Merkava tanks in a single operation in the vicinity of the Khiam Detention Center with guided missiles, achieving direct hits.

26. At 12:45 PM, the Resistance targeted an Israeli D9 military bulldozer also in the vicinity of the Khiam Detention Center, achieving a direct hit.

27. At 1:15 PM, the Resistance struck a Merkava tank on the road to al-Qawzah using an attack drone, achieving a direct hit.

28. At 1:50 PM, Hezbollah targeted an Israeli D9 military bulldozer in Beidar al-Faqqani in the border town of Taybeh with a guided missile, achieving a direct hit.

Illegal settlements under fire

Hezbollah also carried out a series of operations against illegal settlements as part of the evacuation warnings issued to Israeli settlers in the occupied north, which urged their retreat 5 kilometers from the border, particularly within the framkework of the warnings issued to Kiryat Shmona and Nahariya.

29. At 10:30 AM, Hezbollah fighters targeted the settlement of Nahariya with a rocket barrage.

30. At 11:30 AM, the Resistance targeted the settlement of Kiryat Shmona with a rocket barrage.

100 Hezbollah rockets pummel 'Israel' per day

Israeli media acknowledged that Hezbollah is engaged in a prolonged war of attrition, amid continued rocket fire and growing doubts over the Israeli occupation’s ability to achieve its military objectives.

"Israel’s" Channel 12 reported that rocket launches from Lebanon toward northern occupied Palestine have reached an average of one rocket every 16 minutes, with around 20 sirens sounding across 19 settlements daily.

The report described a persistent pattern of attacks, noting that Hezbollah fires approximately 100 rockets per day toward northern settlements, regardless of broader regional developments.

Cut off by Hormuz Closure, Italy Seeks Gas Security in Algeria

By Al Mayadeen English

23 Mar 2026 22:25

Italian PM Meloni heads to Algeria to secure gas supplies after Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz blocks Qatari LNG exports, hitting Italy's energy imports.

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is preparing to visit Algeria in an attempt to secure alternative gas supplies after the closure of the Strait of Hormuz severed Qatar's ability to export LNG, forcing Doha to scale back contractual commitments to several countries, including Italy.

The visit underscores Rome's deepening pivot toward North Africa as a cornerstone of its energy security strategy, and the urgency that the Hormuz closure has injected into that effort.

For Italy, which had relied on Qatar for roughly 10% of its gas needs, the disruption is a manageable but keenly felt blow. The broader impact on global energy markets has been severe, with gas prices rising sharply and placing additional strain on European economies already navigating a difficult post-Ukraine energy transition.

What makes the timing particularly sensitive is that Rome had only recently stabilised its energy picture after years of effort to wean itself off Russian gas following the onset of the Ukraine war in 2022, a process that saw Algerian imports fill much of the gap left by Moscow.

Algeria: Italy's indispensable energy anchor

Algeria now supplies around 30% of Italy's total gas needs, delivered via the TransMed pipeline, also known as the Enrico Mattei pipeline, which has carried Algerian gas through Tunisia and under the Mediterranean to Sicily since the 1980s.

By 2023, Algerian supplies had reached 25.5 billion cubic metres, valued at approximately $14 billion, while Russian volumes had collapsed from 29 bcm in 2021 to just 2.9 bcm.

By 2024, trade between Algeria and Italy had reached a total value of $15.9 billion, with Algeria accounting for around 36% of total Italian gas imports via pipeline. Italy, in turn, became the largest export market for Algerian gas delivered through pipelines, with a share exceeding 40%.

Europe diversifies, Italy leads

Meloni's visit takes place against the backdrop of a broader European scramble to reduce dependence on supply chains now exposed as fragile. Italy is holding parallel talks with the United States and Azerbaijan to cover the shortfall.

The Trans-Adriatic Pipeline already brings Azerbaijani gas to Italy, currently supplying about 10% of its needs, with the potential to supply up to 25%. New LNG regasification infrastructure has also expanded Italy's capacity to receive cargoes from suppliers outside the Gulf.

Italy has been positioning itself as the Mediterranean's new gas hub, with pipelines from Azerbaijan, Libya, and Algeria bringing gas to its shores, alongside floating storage and regasification units enabling additional imports from Egypt. This infrastructure position gives Rome both a national energy lifeline and a potential transit role for European partners.

Global LNG Supply Crisis Looms as Gulf Shipments Near Final Delivery

By Al Mayadeen English

22 Mar 2026 16:32

Global energy markets brace for disruption as final Gulf LNG shipments arrive, following the Strait of Hormuz blockade and attacks on Qatar’s Ras Laffan facility.

The global energy market is approaching a critical inflection point as the last liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments from the Gulf near their destinations, marking an abrupt halt in one of the world’s most vital energy supply routes.

Carriers that departed the region before the beginning of the US-Israeli war on Iran are expected to arrive within the next 10 days. Once delivered, however, the flow of LNG from the Gulf will effectively cease due to the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic artery through which a significant share of global energy exports passes.

Qatar, responsible for roughly one-fifth of global LNG production, suspended exports in the early days of the confrontation, triggering immediate concerns over supply shortages and market instability.

Energy infrastructure targeted amid regional escalation

The disruption has been compounded by direct strikes on critical infrastructure, particularly Qatar’s Ras Laffan industrial complex, one of the largest LNG processing hubs in the world.

Missile attacks this week caused extensive damage to the facility, forcing a significant portion of its production capacity offline. The fallout has already reverberated across global markets, with LNG prices in both Asia and Europe surging sharply.

Even prior to the escalation, tankers from Qatar and the United Arab Emirates had already begun their journeys. According to shipping analysis, these shipments now represent the final buffer before the full impact of the supply shock is felt.

The longer-term outlook remains constrained, with officials warning that a substantial share of Qatar’s production capacity will remain offline for years.

Import-dependent nations face severe energy strain

Countries heavily reliant on LNG imports are among the hardest hit, with Pakistan emerging as one of the most vulnerable.

Nearly all of its LNG imports, approximately 99%, originated from Qatar last year. With its final cargoes already delivered in the early days of the war, the country now faces an imminent supply vacuum.

Both LNG import terminals have drastically scaled down operations and are expected to halt gas dispatch entirely by the end of the month. One terminal is already on the verge of running dry.

“After that we’ll run dry,” Iqbal Ahmed, Pakistan GasPort chair and chief executive, told the Financial Times. “We do not know when the next cargo will come in.”

Efforts to secure alternative supplies have failed, as offers from global suppliers came at prohibitively high prices. The country is now expected to revert to more polluting and costly fuel sources to sustain power generation.

“I see us having one very difficult year followed by two or three difficult years to follow,” Ahmed added.

Bangladesh and Taiwan brace for shortages

Bangladesh faces similar challenges, albeit with slightly more diversified supply options. Authorities have already implemented rationing measures, including institutional closures, to manage dwindling reserves.

Taiwan, a major LNG importer undergoing an energy transition, moved swiftly to secure replacement shipments. Officials confirmed that 22 cargoes had been arranged to stabilize supply through April. However, rising summer demand could expose vulnerabilities if disruptions persist.

Analysts warn of potential “severe energy shortages” under prolonged constraints, particularly if maritime routes remain inaccessible.

Major economies shift strategy as LNG prices surge

Larger economies are adjusting their strategies in response to tightening supply and escalating costs.

Asian benchmark LNG prices have doubled since the onset of the crisis, reaching approximately $23 per million British thermal units. Increased shipping distances and charter rates have further compounded costs.

Japan and China, two of the world’s largest LNG importers, are cautiously navigating the market. While both are expected to purchase limited spot cargoes, they are simultaneously preparing to increase reliance on coal and, in Japan’s case, nuclear energy.

Japan, less exposed to Gulf disruptions, is also advancing the restart of nuclear facilities to offset potential shortages.

Long-term disruptions threaten global energy stability

The immediate supply shock is expected to evolve into a prolonged structural disruption.

Qatar’s energy minister, Saad Al-Kaabi, previously stated that approximately 17% of the country’s LNG capacity could remain offline for three to five years due to damage at Ras Laffan.

“This means that we will be compelled to declare force majeure for up to five years on some long-term LNG contracts,” he said.

Until maritime transit through the Strait of Hormuz resumes, global LNG markets are likely to remain constrained, with ripple effects across energy security, industrial output, and economic stability worldwide.

Sudan Braces for Drug Shortages as War on Iran Impacts Supplies

20 March 2026

A pharmacist discusses the acute shortage of medicines at a drugstore in Khartoum, Sudan, March 20, 2026

March 20, 2026 (KHARTOUM) – The war against Iran is raising fears of severe medicine shortages in Sudan as manufacturing and import costs surge three weeks after the conflict began.

Sudanese authorities are preparing for the worst-case scenario. The country’s domestic production is already crippled by years of civil war and a lack of foreign currency.

Official data shows that about 85% of Sudan’s industrial sector has been damaged since 2023. This includes factories in Khartoum that previously produced 80 types of medication.

Health Minister Haitham Mohamed Ibrahim met with pharmaceutical officials last week to discuss drug availability amid the escalating conflict in the Gulf.

Ibrahim said the government is looking to ensure supplies through the National Medical Supplies Fund and is seeking new international partnerships.

The meeting also reviewed plans for the “Teryaq” industrial city and a World Health Organization proposal for regional procurement.

Experts told Sudan Tribune that the Middle East conflict will cause delivery delays and significantly higher shipping costs.

Mohamed Bashir, secretary-general of the National Medicines and Poisons Board, said Sudan has activated protocols with countries outside the Gulf.

Bashir said the government is expanding contract manufacturing and reviewing strategic stocks of life-saving drugs for cancer and kidney disease.

Walid Mohamed Ahmed, head of the medicine importers’ division, said insurance and transport costs have jumped by up to 120%.

Ahmed said that while Port Sudan is still receiving older orders, new shipments are facing significant delays. Air freight costs have also risen.Sudan travel guide

Even alternative suppliers like Egypt and Turkey are affected because their raw materials from China and India pass through conflict zones, Ahmed added.

Economic analyst Haitham Mohamed Fathi said rising oil prices will drive up the final cost of medical products.

Fathi urged the government to form an emergency committee to monitor critical stocks, despite Sudan’s main shipping routes from Europe remaining open.

He suggested the crisis could be an opportunity for Sudan to move production to safer states in the centre and east.

By mid-2024, Sudan’s strategic reserves of essential medicines had already dropped to less than 20% of pre-war levels.

Third Repatriation Flight for Sudanese Refugees to Leave Uganda on Sunday

22 March 2026

Sudanese refugees in Uganda wait for passport renewals at the Sudanese embassy in Kampala. (File Photo)

March 21, 2026 (KAMPALA) – A third flight repatriating Sudanese refugees from Uganda is scheduled to depart on Sunday via Badr Airlines, the Higher Committee for Voluntary Repatriation said on Saturday.

The flight is part of a broader project that began in February 2026 and aims to return Sudanese citizens who fled to Uganda during the ongoing conflict.

Uganda currently hosts approximately 92,000 Sudanese refugees. While a small percentage live in the capital, Kampala, the majority reside in the Kiryandongo refugee camp, which serves as the primary reception centre.

Reem Abdel Jalil, the committee’s spokesperson in Uganda, told reporters the flight will carry 100 passengers from Entebbe International Airport to Port Sudan.

The flight is being provided free of charge by Badr Airlines as part of a corporate initiative to support the return of displaced citizens and ease the financial burden on refugees.

Families scheduled to depart have gathered at the Sudanese Friendship School in Kampala ahead of their transfer to the airport on Sunday morning.

The committee intends to repatriate about 10,000 refugees during the project’s first phase. Officials have called on the private sector and business leaders to provide additional funding to sustain the initiative.

Finance Minister Gibril Ibrahim noted that local airlines have pledged seven free flights to facilitate the return from Entebbe to Port Sudan.

Sudan Accuses Ethiopia of Aiding Rebel Assault on Kurmuk

23 March 2026

SPLA-N fighters at the strategic town of Deim Mansour of the Blue Nile region on Feb 3, 2026

March 23, 2026 (ED DAMAZIN) – A Sudanese government official on Monday accused Ethiopia of facilitating attacks by the Rapid Support Forces and the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North through its territory to capture the strategic town of Kurmuk.

The official told Sudan Tribune that the assault on the Blue Nile region town was “sponsored” by Ethiopia. The source claimed combat vehicles moved from Assosa in Ethiopia to Khor al-Dahab on the Ethiopian side of the border to launch the offensive.

Fierce battles are reportedly raging across multiple fronts around Kurmuk as the RSF and SPLM-N alliance attempts to seize control.

The SPLM-N said in a statement on Monday that its joint forces “crushed” the Sudanese army in the Jurut area near Kurmuk. The group claimed to have seized large quantities of weapons and ammunition.

The rebel statement added that Sunday’s fighting in Jurut resulted in deaths and the capture of several Sudanese army officers. Other soldiers reportedly fled toward the city of Ed Damazin.

Several towns near the borders of Ethiopia and South Sudan have seen intense fighting over the past few hours. The Sudanese army and the RSF-SPLM-N alliance have traded control of Jurut, located 20 km south of Kurmuk, since last week.

Kurmuk has been a focal point of conflict for decades. Before the 2005 peace deal between Khartoum and the SPLM led by John Garang, the border town was a primary theater of war for 22 years.

Rebel forces first entered Kurmuk in 1987 before the army reclaimed it a year later. The town changed hands again in 1997 before eventually being retaken by government forces.

SPLM-RDC Calls for UN Ban on Drones Targeting Sudan Civilians

23 March 2026

Yasir Arman, RDC leader

March 23, 2026 (KHARTOUM) – The Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-Revolutionary Democratic Front (SPLM-RDF) on Monday called on the United Nations Security Council to end the use of drones against civilians and urged an international investigation into crimes committed against citizens.

The use of unmanned aerial vehicles by warring parties against military movements has escalated, alongside increasing strikes on civilian targets including healthcare facilities, power stations, and aid trucks.

SPLM-RDF spokesperson Nizar Yousef said in a statement that the movement “calls on the UN Security Council to issue a resolution putting an end to the use of drones against civilians and ensuring those responsible for these crimes are held accountable.”

Yousef noted that the movement, led by Yasir Arman, demands the formation of an independent international investigative committee to examine all violations committed via drones against civilians and civilian institutions, including schools, hospitals, and residential neighborhoods.

The spokesperson emphasized the necessity of opening a comprehensive inquiry into all crimes perpetrated through drone technology.

Nizar Yousef described the bombing of Ed Daein Hospital in East Darfur State on the first day of Eid al-Fitr as a flagrant violation of all human values and international charters, noting it resulted in a horrific massacre of civilians and medical staff.

The movement declared its condemnation of the attack, which it described as brutal, targeting the pediatric and maternity wards. It stressed that the incident constitutes a full-fledged crime amounting to crimes against humanity.

On Friday, Ed Daein Hospital was attacked, leading to the deaths of 64 people and injuring 89 others, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). The WHO reported the facility is now out of service after sustaining damage to its pediatric, maternity, and emergency departments.

The WHO says it has documented 213 attacks on healthcare since the conflict broke out in April 2023, resulting in 2,036 deaths and 720 injuries.

A Strike on a Hospital in Sudan Killed at Least 64 People, WHO Says

This is a locator map for Sudan with its capital, Khartoum. (AP Photo)

By FAY ABUELGASIM

2:35 AM EDT, March 22, 2026

CAIRO (AP) — At least 64 people were killed, including at least 13 children, in a strike on a hospital in Sudan’s western Darfur region last week, the World Health Organization said Saturday.

The strike on the Al Daein Teaching Hospital in East Darfur on Friday also injured at least 89 people and rendered the hospital non-functional, Tedros Ghebreyesus, the head of the WHO, said on X.

Sudan slid into chaos in April 2023 when a power struggle between the military and the rival paramilitary Rapid Support Forces exploded into war throughout the country.

The RSF has blamed the military for the strike on the hospital.

The army has denied the attack, but two military officials said the strike was targeting a nearby police station. They spoke on the condition of anonymity as they were not allowed to discuss the matter openly.

The devastating war has killed more than 40,000 people, according to U.N. figures, but aid groups say that is an undercount and the true number could be many times higher.

The WHO has said that over 2,000 people have been killed in attacks on medical facilities since the start of the war.

“Enough blood has been spilled. Enough suffering has been inflicted. The time has come to de-escalate the conflict in Sudan,” said Ghebreyesus.

___

Associated Press reporter Yassir Abdalla in Shendi, Sudan, contributed to this report.

Composer of Iconic ‘Lion King’ Chant Sues Comedian Over ‘Circle of Life’ Translation

Lebohang "Lebo M" Morake arrives for the official opening of the local production of the Lion King in Johannesburg on June 6, 2007. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell, File)

By SAFIYAH RIDDLE

1:44 PM EDT, March 24, 2026

A Grammy-award winning South African composer who wrote and performed the iconic opening chant in “Circle of Life” for Disney’s “The Lion King” movies is suing a comedian for allegedly damaging his reputation by intentionally misrepresenting the song’s meaning on a podcast and in his stand-up routine.

Lebohang Morake’s lawsuit accuses Zimbabwean comedian Learnmore Mwanyenyeka, known as Learnmore Jonasi, of intentionally mistranslating the chant, which launches the 1994 Disney movie and is central to staged versions as well as Disney’s 2019 remake.

The dispute, which has gone viral as the two men challenge each other on social media, stems from statements Jonasi made in his stand-up routines and in a recent podcast interview, where he translated the song’s lyrics from Zulu and Xhosa, two of South Africa’s 12 national languages.

The lawsuit was filed this month in federal court in Los Angeles, where Morake, who performs as Lebo M, lives and where Jonasi recently performed. It accuses Jonasi of intentionally mocking “the chant’s cultural significance with exaggerated imitations.”

Disney’s official translation of the opening phrase “Nants’ingonyama bagithi Baba” is “All hail the king, we all bow in the presence of the king.”

“Hay! baba, sizongqoba,” the chant continues. It translates to “Through you we will emerge victoriously,” according to Morake.

In the episode of One54 cited in the lawsuit, the podcast’s Nigerian hosts initially sing the chant with incoherent and incorrect words. Jonasi corrects them, and says “That’s not how you sing it, don’t mess up our language like that.”

Jonasi then sings the correct lyrics in Zulu. When asked, he says they translate to: “Look, there’s a lion. Oh my god.” The hosts burst out laughing, saying that they had previously thought the chant was something more “beautiful and majestic.”

“Circle of Life,” with music by Elton John and English-language lyrics by Tim Rice, came up in the broader context of Jonasi’s critique of “The Lion King” franchise as profiting off of simplistic narratives about the African continent for non-African audiences.

“The lions had American accents in Africa, and then you had the monkey with an accent,” Jonasi said, and they went on to critique the “Black Panther” movies and other renderings of Africa in popular American culture.

Morake’s lawyers acknowledged in the complaint that “ingonyama” can literally translate to “lion,” but say it’s used in the song as a “royal metaphor” that invokes kingship, and that Jonasi intentionally misrepresented “an African vocal proclamation grounded in South African tradition.”

The lawsuit says Jonasi “received a standing ovation” for a similar joke he made about the song during a March 12 stand-up performance in Los Angeles. Such viral statements, it says, are interfering with Morake’s business relationships with Disney and his income from royalties, causing more than $20 million in actual damages. The lawsuit also seeks $7 million in punitive damages.

Disney didn’t respond to an emailed request for comment on Monday night.

The complaint also argues that Jonasi presented his translation “as authoritative fact, not comedy” so it shouldn’t get the First Amendment protections afforded to parody and satire that make fun of other artistic works.

Jonasi doesn’t have an attorney publicly listed for the case, and a representative didn’t respond to an emailed request for comment on Monday night, but the comedian offered some thoughts in a video posted last week as he continues his U.S. tour.

Jonasi said he’s a “big fan” of Morake’s work and loves the song. When he learned that Morake was upset, the comedian said, he wanted to create a video with Morake explaining the song’s deeper meaning.

“Comedy always has a way of starting conversation,” Jonasi said in the video he posted on Instagram, which got more than 100,000 likes. “This is your chance to actually educate people, because now people are listening.”

But Jonasi said he changed his mind about collaborating with Morake when he said the composer called him “self-hating” as they exchanged messages following the Feb. 25 podcast. He said Morake’s reaction ignored the rest of his work delving into a more nuanced critique of American renderings of African identity.

Rebels in DR Congo Used Containers to Hold Journalists in Brutal Conditions, Advocacy group Says

By MARK BANCHEREAU

12:00 PM EDT, March 24, 2026

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — A rebel group in eastern Congo has detained civilians, including two journalists, in metal shipping containers without light or ventilation, an advocacy group said Tuesday.

Reporters Without Borders, or RSF, said the Rwanda-backed M23, which controls parts of eastern Congo, used the containers in the city of Goma as makeshift detention cells under “inhumane” and “degrading” conditions.

Using witness accounts, satellite imagery and photos collected in 2025, RSF said at least two journalists were among those detained in the containers, which were installed at the compound of the provincial legislative assembly in Goma. Witnesses’ identities have been withheld for security reasons.

As many as 80 detainees at a time were placed inside a container, without light or ventilation and allowed out only once a day. Witnesses said they received minimal food, while some reported routine beatings. According to the testimonies, conditions were extreme — suffocating heat by day and cold at night — with deaths reported. Survivors were often held for weeks before being transferred to other locations.

M23 spokesperson Lawrence Kanyuka accused RSF in a post on X Tuesday of “spreading unfounded reports” and “disinformation.”

The rebels’ takeover of Goma last year has worsened conditions for journalists operating in eastern Congo, where threats and attacks were already widespread. Reporters Without Borders said the M23 has tightened control over media coverage, including imposing restrictions on the language used to describe its presence.

The mineral-rich eastern Congo has been battered by decades of unrest as government forces fight more than 100 armed groups, the most potent being M23. Its fighters made an unprecedented advance into the region early last year, seizing key cities as they quickly expanded their presence.

The conflict, which has raged on despite a truce brokered by the United States and Qatar, has sparked a huge humanitarian crisis, with at least 7 million people displaced.

Kenya Floods Worsen as 2 Rivers Burst Banks, with Death Toll Hitting 88

By MAGDALENE MWANIKI

11:07 AM EDT, March 24, 2026

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — The Kenyan government said Tuesday that two rivers have burst their banks, flooding farms and displacing families as the death toll in flooding in the east African nation this month rose to 88.

At least 21 counties have been affected by the floods, raising concerns over public safety, infrastructure damage and growing humanitarian needs. The number of people displaced from their homes in flooding that started earlier in March has now reached over 34,000, the Interior Ministry said.

The latest flooding incident occurred in western Kenya, where the Nyando River overflowed on Monday, submerging sections of the Ahero Bridge along the Kericho–Awasi–Kisumu road and disrupting transport in the region.

The government issued a statement cautioning motorists against using the flooded route and advising them to seek alternative roads, particularly at night when visibility is low.

“This advisory is especially critical during the hours of darkness, when it may be difficult to accurately determine the depth and strength of the flowing water,” the statement said.

Emergency response efforts have intensified in the worst-affected areas, led by the Kenya Red Cross Society, which has been rescuing stranded residents and relocating families to safer ground.

In the Nyando area, rescue teams have evacuated more than 200 people and over 200 livestock, while at least two families were pulled from immediate danger. Authorities are also working to evacuate more than 900 students from the Ahero Girls National School as floodwaters continue to rise.

The Ministry of Interior and National Administration on Tuesday said at least 265 households have been affected in the area. Displaced residents are being sheltered in public facilities, including government offices, churches and health centers. Six unaccompanied children were among those rescued and are currently under care.

Flooding has also been reported in other regions.

In Tana River County, the River Tana burst its banks, flooding farms in Mbalambala and surrounding areas, including Asako village, and threatening food production. In Uasin Gishu County, a multi-agency team is assessing the impact of rising water levels along Sosiani River in Lower Elgon View, where residential and hospitality facilities have been affected.

Across the country, the floods have disrupted daily life, forcing the closure of schools, rendering roads impassable, and interrupting business activity, particularly in low-lying and informal settlements.

Officials say emergency teams remain on the ground monitoring the situation, with additional evacuations expected if rainfall persists.

Kenya experiences seasonal flooding each year, but the scale and intensity of the current crisis have renewed concerns about disaster preparedness and the vulnerability of communities living near rivers and flood-prone areas.

Authorities have urged residents in high-risk zones to remain vigilant and follow official guidance, warning that conditions could worsen in the coming days if heavy rains continue.

Libya Tows Drifting Russian ‘Shadow Fleet’ Tanker to Avert a Mediterranean Spill

Sea Baby drones ride on the water during a demonstration by Ukraine's Security Service in an undisclosed location in Ukraine Friday, Oct. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky, File)

By SAMY MAGDY

9:53 AM EDT, March 24, 2026

CAIRO (AP) — Libyan authorities were towing a Russian tanker drifting in the Mediterranean for the past three weeks, after the vessel was damaged in a suspected sea drone attack, officials said Tuesday.

The Arctic Metagaz is part of Russia’s so-called shadow fleet transporting fossil fuels in violation of international sanctions over Moscow’s war on Ukraine.

Libya’s coast guard said that the tanker, which carries liquefied natural gas, was being towed to a safe zone off the town of Zuwara on Libya’s western coast.

A video posted on Tuesday by Libyan authorities showed a tugboat towing the slowly moving tanker with a thick rope. The tanker is seen tilting on one side, with a blackened hull from a fire.

The National Oil Corp. in Libya said over the weekend that it was collaborating with Italian energy company Eni to safely bring the damaged tanker to the shore to avert an environmental crisis.

The Libyan company said that it has taken “all procedures … to reduce environmental risks and prevent any potential leakage or negative impacts.”

Russian authorities said that the Arctic Metagaz was hit and badly damaged by Ukrainian naval drones near Malta’s waters. All 30 crew members were rescued. Ukraine hasn’t commented.

The tanker was hit with a drone earlier this month. The Libyan Maritime Authority said at the time that the tanker experienced “sudden explosions, followed by a massive fire,” while it was about 240 kilometers (150 miles) off the Libyan city of Sirte. The Libyan governmental body also mistakenly reported that the tanker had sunk.

The Arctic Metagaz, however, remained floating and was pushed by winds and currents toward the Libyan coast, according to the World Wide Fund for Nature, a global conservation organization.

The group said Monday that the tanker remained “highly unstable,” and warned about “significant environmental risks for one of the Mediterranean’s most fragile and biodiversity-rich marine areas.”

Bodies of Africans Were Once Dug Up and Sent to Europe for Research. Now They Are coming Home

By MOGOMOTSI MAGOME

3:33 PM EDT, March 23, 2026

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — The remains of dozens of Africans whose bodies were dug up and sent to Europe for scientific research long ago were reburied Monday in South Africa, whose president called the practice “rooted in racism and used to advance theories of European racial superiority.”

The remains of at least 63 members of the Khoi and San communities had been repatriated from a European museum, part of a wider movement in Africa to bring back remains and artifacts that had been stolen or removed from the continent.

Widely acknowledged as the earliest inhabitants of southern Africa, the Khoi and San waged resistance against colonialism, and many were killed by European settlers.

The remains being reburied were dug up between 1868 and 1924 and donated to The Hunterian Museum at the University of Glasgow in Scotland. Others had been housed at the Iziko Museums in South Africa since the 1920s.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who attended the reburial with museum representatives and traditional leaders, said the repatriation followed negotiations between the university and the government that started in 2022.

Ramaphosa called it part of efforts to restore dignity.

“The sale of human remains of Indigenous peoples for study in Europe was rooted in racism and used to advance theories of European racial superiority,” he said. “They were dug up and turned into commodities and specimens, displayed under the cold gaze of pseudoscience.”

Ramaphosa said most European countries must do more to acknowledge the indignity suffered by Africans through colonialism and consider paying reparations to their former colonies.

Notorious Apartheid Police Commander ‘Prime Evil’ Testifies at South African Hearing on Killings

Eugene de Kock, head of a covert police unit that tortured and killed dozens of people, attends an amnesty hearing of the Truth and Reconcilliation Commission (TRC) in Pretoria, South Africa, Sept. 14, 1998. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell, File)

By MICHELLE GUMEDE

12:23 PM EDT, March 23, 2026

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — One of South Africa’s most notorious apartheid police commanders testified on Monday at an inquiry into the killing of four activists in 1985 as part of the country’s renewed focus on atrocities committed by security forces during decades of forced racial segregation that went unpunished.

Eugene de Kock, dubbed “Prime Evil” for his role in killing anti-apartheid activists, denied involvement in the prominent case of the Cradock Four — but said police at the time had photos of around 6,000 anti-apartheid activists described as “known terrorists” who should be tracked and killed if an arrest was not possible.

The Cradock Four were not among them, he said. Matthew Goniwe, Fort Calata, Sicelo Mhlauli and Sparrow Mkonto, three of them teachers, were abducted by police at a roadblock and killed. Their bodies were found burned, in one of the apartheid era’s most shocking cases.

De Kock testified that one of the police officers implicated in the killings had asked him to help assist with a cover-up.

“He wanted to know if I could get another firearm,” de Kock said, adding that he was asked “if we could interfere with the ballistics.”

De Kock, the commander of a special counterinsurgency police unit during apartheid, was sentenced in 1996 to two life terms and another 212 years in prison after being convicted of murder, kidnapping and other charges for his role in abducting, torturing and killing activists. He was released on parole in 2015.

Now 77, de Kock was given a police guard to a court in the southern city of Gqeberha, where the Cradock Four were killed. His image was blurred on the official video broadcast after the judge ruled that he not be shown, according to the Foundation for Human Rights, which is representing some of the victims’ families.

Two inquiries into the case conducted during apartheid were widely suspected of being cover-ups. One that started in 1987 found the men were killed by unknown people. The other that began in 1993, found that they were killed by unnamed police officers.

The latest inquiry started last year after families’ pressure. The six former policemen implicated in the killings were never prosecuted despite being identified and denied amnesty during South Africa’s post-apartheid Truth and Reconciliation process in the late 1990s. All six have died.

South African authorities have reopened other investigations into apartheid atrocities in recent years. They include the 1967 death of Nobel Peace Prize winner Albert Luthuli, the 1981 killing of lawyer Griffiths Mxenge and the 1977 death in police custody of iconic anti-apartheid figure Steve Biko.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa last year ordered a separate inquiry to establish whether post-apartheid governments led by his party intentionally blocked investigations and prosecutions of apartheid-era crimes.

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Fascism, Imperialist War and the Decline of the United States Empire

Domestically the threats against democracy cannot be separated from the necessity of ending genocidal onslaughts against the peoples of the Global South

By Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Sunday March 22, 2026

Political Review

After three weeks of daily proclaiming that the United States military has already won the war of choice against the Islamic Republic of Iran, the White House and Pentagon are now requesting another $200 billion dollars to continue the bombing.

Reports from news agencies based outside the U.S. indicate that the toll of deaths and injuries which have taken place in Iran, Israel, Lebanon and the Gulf states are approaching 5,000. (https://www.eurasiantimes.com/us-israel-war-on-iran-here-are-the-latest-casualty-figures-from-across-the-middle-east/)

The U.S. government has said that 14 of its soldiers have been killed since the latest round of hostilities resumed on February 28. Additional reports estimate that between 200-400 Pentagon troops have been injured.

Attempts in the Senate and House of Representatives to pass “war powers resolutions” have failed due to the two Republican dominated wings of the Congress. Varying explanations are offered by the White House, the Department of War and their backers in Congress, yet it is quite obvious that the objectives center around removing the existing Islamic Republic government in Tehran.

No significant opposition to the war has emerged in Congress among the Republican Party. Despite the “America First” propaganda by MAGA elements, the current administration is thoroughly committed to advancing U.S. imperialism in the Global South.

Iran and its neighbors throughout the West Asia region have some of the largest oil and natural gas deposits in the world. The states within the Persian Gulf which are aligned with Washington, the State of Israel and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), exercise no genuine independence and sovereignty related to the interest of their own people.

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) for years have operated in the interest of U.S. hegemonic control over the region. Beginning in 2015, the GCC facilitated by the Pentagon waged a war on the people of Yemen for more than five years. 

Nonetheless, these same Persian Gulf Arab Monarchies have not lifted a finger to defend the people of Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Iran. More than 70,000 Palestinians have been slaughtered in Gaza since October 2023. However, not one single shot or missile has been fired at the Zionist occupation forces and the U.S. bases operating in the region. 

Despite this situation of the clear aggressive posture of Tel Aviv and Washington, the GCC states presented a resolution to the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) condemning Iran for its national defense of its territory and interests. These monarchies in the Gulf region function as subservient partners in the imperialist project in West Asia.

These states have allowed the stationing of U.S. bases in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), the Kingdom of Bahrain, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia for the sole purpose of protecting the exploitation of oil as well as the apartheid Israeli regime in Tel Aviv. The military outposts have been utilized to launch deadly and destructive attacks on the Islamic Republic of Iran.

While this exploitative and unjust situation continues, Iran has been subjected to draconian sanctions for decades. The Iranian Revolution of 1979 was a direct response to the overthrow of their democratic leader Prime Minister Mohamed Mossadegh in 1953 by the British government and the U.S.  Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). 

The monarchical rule of the Shah between 1953 and 1979 resulted in the deaths of thousands of Iranians in order to maintain the flow of cheap oil to the NATO states. After the Shah and his U.S.-backed regime was overthrown by the Iranian masses, they immediately declared that the resources of their country would be utilized for the improvement of the social conditions of the people while assisting other oppressed nations.

The Islamic Revolutionary government under the First Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, immediately cut off oil supplies to the former racist apartheid regime in South Africa as well as the State of Israel. Over the last 47 years, Iran has not engaged in any aggressive actions against its neighbors.

They have committed themselves to the liberation of Palestine and the removal of foreign influence in Lebanon and other regional states. Revenue from the sales of Iranian oil has fostered development inside the country through the construction and expansion of educational facilities, highways and national defense.

Fascism and Imperialist War: Two Sides of the Same Hegemonic Project

Since the beginning of the second non-consecutive term of the Trump administration, vicious assaults have been carried out against people inside the U.S. The migrant community has been a focus of the administration, utilizing them as scapegoats for the failures of the capitalist system.

The Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) agency has been in existence for years. Yet, since early 2025, ICE along with the Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) has functioned as a national police force. 

Existing immigration laws in the U.S. have always been racist and unjust. The focus of the ICE raids, detentions and deportations are primarily targeting people from Latin America, Africa and Asia. Therefore, it is clearly aimed at reducing the number of people of color residing in the U.S.

When people in Minneapolis, Chicago, Portland, Los Angeles, Detroit, New York City and many other municipalities rose up to oppose these racist applications of immigration laws, the administration unleashed its agents on anyone standing in their way. In Minneapolis, two white Americans were gunned down in cold blood for engaging in nonviolent civil disobedience against ICE and the CBP. 

Dozens of people have died in ICE detention since 2025. Hundreds of thousands more have been illegally detained and deported absent of any due process. These policies by the Trump administration have prompted demonstrations by millions of people throughout the U.S.

Despite the threats of persecution and death, a growing number of people are mobilizing against the Trump administration. The “No Kings Day” rallies during October 2025 attracted 7 million people. In Minneapolis, hundreds of thousands held stay-aways and mass demonstrations in late January, resulting in the withdrawal of many ICE and CBP agents from the twin cities in Minnesota.

With midterm elections scheduled for November 2026, the repressive apparatus of the state is tightening its grip over the people. Trump has called for the “nationalization” of the elections in what is designed to ensure the continued dominance of his supporters over the Congress.

Economic Crisis Intensifies

The war against Iran, the resumption of the bombing of Lebanon by the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) and the ongoing genocide in Palestine are continuing in part to cover up the failed economic policies of the Trump White House. Trump has falsely claimed that his tariffs imposed on countries throughout the world have brought $19 trillion dollars into the U.S. Treasury.

However, the reality is that tens of thousands of jobs are being lost every month in the U.S. where the population is becoming more impoverished. Millions have been eliminated from receiving healthcare and food subsidies provided by the federal government directly due to the Trump program.

Housing subsidies are also being threatened, creating a situation where the cities, suburbs, small towns and rural areas will be filled with even more homeless and hungry people. The rising prices for commodities are being fueled by the shortages resulting from the chaotic economic policies of the administration.

All of these problems, involving the cost of imperialist war, the domestic crackdown on migrants and dissidents as well as the worsening plight of working people and the impoverished must be fought simultaneously. Those concerned about the erosion of bourgeois democracy cannot ignore the aggression being fostered by the Pentagon. 

The annual military budget for the U.S. now exceeds $1.5 trillion while the people are being rendered jobless, hungry, sickened and without shelter. What is needed is a united movement of the workers and oppressed to independently fight to defeat the Trump program while bringing genuine democracy of economic development to the majority of people in the U.S.

Abayomi Azikiwe, PANW Editor, Featured on 1+1: The History of Angola and Other Issues

To watch this episode hosted by Youri Smouter, just go to the following link: 1+1 E374 Youri speaks to Abayomi Azikiwe on Angolan history, Iran, Press TV''s journalists & Lebanon

Welcome to this new episode of 1+1, looking at the history and current affairs of Angola. 

This is the first in our series examining the region of Southern Africa. 

Our historical and tour guide was Abayomi Azikiwe of Pan-African News Wire, a long-time journalist, historian, Pan-Africanist Leftist/anti-imperialist activist. 

We also talk about the US/Israeli war on Iran and Tehran's incredible defense and offense. 

We also talk about Israel's horrific mass murder campaign in Lebanon and the attempt to reoccupy the South of Lebanon and the resistance to it led by Hezbollah.

Abayomi Azikiwe, PANW Editor, Featured on Black Agenda Radio Discussing the Horn of Africa and the Imperialist-Zionist War Against the Islamic Republic of Iran


Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor of Pan-African News Wire, discusses events in the Horn of Africa. 

To listen to this report just click on the following URL: Iran, UAE, Sudan, and Crises in the Horn of Africa | Black Agenda Report

The U.S. war against Iran is impacting the United Arab Emirates (UAE), whose Rapid Support Force proxies are carrying out atrocities in Sudan. 

Also, colonial borders are disputed, Ethiopia faces a renewed conflict in the Tigray region, and Israel's recognition of the breakaway region of Somaliland violates African sovereignty. 

Announcing the Second Printing of “For the baby ancestors in Gaza”

A volume of poetry by Julia Wright

March 19, 2026

Watch this event on YouTube: Book Talk - For the baby ancestors in Gaza: A book of poetry by Julia Wright

This volume of poetry by Julia Wright titled For the baby ancestors in Gaza and other poems for Palestine has gone into a second printing!. As Julia Wright says in her Introduction “Then came October 7th and the genocidal months over two years of writing near daily poems for Palestine, as if I was keeping a journal and as if the least I could do was to give CPR at a distance.”

Julia Wright is the elder daughter of the late African American novelist, journalist and poet, Richard Wright. She is a descendant of the survivors of the 1919 Elaine Massacre through her lynched great uncle, Silas Hoskins. A Pan Africanist, she served under Kwame Nkrumah until the CIA-abetted coup d’etat in Ghana in 1966. She subsequently worked with James Forman in SNCC and went on to attend the first cultural Pan African Festival in Algiers alongside Eldridge and Kathleen Cleaver of the Black Panther Party.

The Foreword to Ms. Wright’s book of poems is written by Yousef M. Aljamal, editor of If I Must Die and executor of the papers of Refaat Alareer, poet and teacher targeted and murdered by the Israeli Occupation Forces in Gaza.

This 68-page volume contains 29 poems and sells for $5.00 plus $3.00 for shipping per copy. It can be ordered via email to moratorium@moratorium-mi.org. CashApp payments can be made to $MoratoriumNow1 or checks can be sent to Moratorium Now Coalition, 5920 Second Avenue, Detroit, MI 48202.

Response to Julia Wright’s Volume of Poetry

“The poems of Julia Wright – their massive witnessing embrace filled with nothing but tender human care and crucial outrage – will remain my best gift of this sad holiday season. So much cruelty and injustice in our shared world – Wright’s poems remind us who we want to be and might have been. WOW! She’s a revelation!” – Naomi Shihab Nye, renowned Palestinian writer living in the U.S.

“I just looked at Julia Wright’s book. Her poetry is moving. She covers so much regarding the experiences in Gaza. And her poems evince an understanding of the broader as well as the particular situation. I thought it was a sensitively written collection that inspires a connection with the people of Gaza, an empathy that is welcome. I’m glad this collection is out in the world.” – Zeina Azzam, Palestinian poet, former poet laureate of Alexandria, Virginia

“Julia Wright once again makes an enormous cultural contribution to the struggle against imperialism in Palestine and around the world.” – Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor, Pan-African News Wire

“Almost got lost in my mail, a literary bomb of Resistance from the great Julia Wright! … Savor her ‘For the Baby Ancestors in Gaza! Thank u, Julia!” – Baba Zayid Muhammad, nationally acclaimed African American abolitionist poet and the chairman of the Malcolm X Commemoration Committee

“I just read your book cover to cover and am awash in love, sorrow, despair, and hope. Thank you. I read some of your Palestine poems over the last few years as you sent them around, but the book itself is much more than the sum of its parts.” – Laura Whitehorn, Former political prisoner 

Op. True Promise 4 Wave 74 Comes as War Shifts in Iran's Favor

By Al Mayadeen English

Iran launches the 74th wave of Operation True Promise 4, targeting US bases and sites in Tel Aviv with ballistic missiles and drones.

Iran has announced the launch of the 74th wave of Operation True Promise 4, carried out under the slogan “O Commander of the Faithful, peace be upon him.”

The operation was described as a tribute to those killed during the “Fath al-Mobin” offensive on March 21, 1982, in western Iran.

According to the statement, the latest wave targeted United States military bases in the region, along with sites in southern areas of the occupied Palestinian territories, using what were described as pre-planned scenarios involving new tactics and upgraded systems.

The statement said that the United States’ Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain, and a base used by Kurdish Komala militants were struck in rapid missile attacks. The strikes involved Emad, Fateh, and Qiam ballistic missiles, as well as attack drones, forming part of a series of operations carried out in recent days.

Iranian officials also stated that military bases and security centers in Tel Aviv, Petah Tikva, Holon, and Ramat Gan were hit and destroyed earlier on Saturday. The statement said the strikes were carried out with heavy missiles, including the Ghadr, Kheibar Shekan, and Khorramshahr-4 systems.

US, Israeli decision makers frustrated as war continues

The announcement further asserted that confusion within the US Central Command (CENTCOM) and the collapse of the multi-layered US and Israeli air defense network in West Asia had shifted the balance of the conflict in Iran’s favor.

It also emphasized that disruptions to US weapons support systems were the result of “precise and intelligent measures” by Iranian armed forces.

The statement added that anger and frustration among US and Israeli decision-makers had been anticipated, reiterating earlier warnings that both would face a prolonged and escalating regional conflict.

It concluded with a warning that any further attacks on Iranian humanitarian facilities or energy infrastructure would prompt a stronger and broader response, potentially differing from the current course of operations.

Iran setting the pace of the war: Israeli media

The United States is facing increasing difficulty countering Iran’s dominance over the Strait of Hormuz, as Washington has so far failed to implement effective measures to break the Iranian-imposed maritime blockade.

Israeli newspaper Israel Hayom reported that the US administration has no strategy capable of shifting the balance in the strategic waterway, where Iran has asserted control following escalations triggered by joint US-Israeli strikes.

US President Donald Trump faces a dilemma: further escalation could draw the United States into a prolonged conflict far beyond initial expectations, while already causing significant economic repercussions. Disruptions in the Strait have triggered sharp spikes in global energy prices and market instability.

Haaretz noted that Iran is setting the pace of the war, initiating strategic moves while the US and "Israel" respond to developments on the ground.

Analysts say Washington underestimated Iran’s willingness and capability to control the strait after the initial strikes, further complicating US planning.

Iran Will Respond to Trump’s ‘Delirious Threats’ on Battlefield: Pezeshkian 

Sunday, 22 March 2026 5:01 PM

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian says Tehran will give a decisive response to “delirious threats” made against it on the battlefield.

Pezeshkian made the remark in a post on his X account on Sunday after US President Donald Trump threatened to attack Iran’s power plants if the country does not “fully open, without threat, the Strait of Hormuz, within 48 hours.”

In response to a scathing report by The New York Times, a frustrated Trump claimed that the US has “blown Iran off of the map” and that he has achieved all his goals in the war “weeks ahead of schedule.”

“The illusion of erasing Iran from the map shows desperation against the will of a history-making nation,” Pezeshkian wrote.

The Iranian president added that threats and terror will only strengthen national unity.

“The Strait of Hormuz is open to all except those who violate our soil. We firmly confront delirious threats on the battlefield,” he emphasized.

Since February 28, when the US and Israel launched their unprovoked aggression, Iran has blocked the Strait of Hormuz to oil and gas tankers affiliated with the aggressor regimes and those cooperating with them.

The disruption of tanker traffic in the waterway, lying between the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman, has triggered a major surge in energy prices.

In a desperate attempt to control the market, Trump said that the US Navy will escort tankers through the Strait of Hormuz. He even offered political risk insurance for tankers transiting there.

The US president also sought to form a coalition to secure the strait, asking NATO countries to contribute naval and air assets. However, most of Washington’s allies have declined to commit forces.

Iran's Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf also responded to Trump’s rhetoric and said the Islamic Republic will “irreversibly” destroy vital energy and fuel infrastructure across the region if the United States attacks power plants inside Iran.

The Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters also warned of Iran’s “immediate punitive” measures in case of any attack on the country’s fuel and energy infrastructure. The Intelligence Service of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) said critical technology centers beyond the region will be targeted within 48 hours.

Explainer: Why Boots on Iranian Soil Would Become Strategic Catastrophe for US

Sunday, 22 March 2026 5:30 PM

By Yousef Ramazani

As the American-Israeli aggression against Iran enters its fourth week, with none of the stated objectives materializing, the specter of a ground invasion has moved from whispered contingency to urgent operational planning.

However, as Iranian armed forces have repeatedly warned, any American soldier setting foot on Iranian territory would step into a meticulously prepared kill zone designed to inflict losses unseen since World War II.

The unprovoked and illegal aggression that began on February 28, 2026 – amid indirect nuclear talks – has exposed a fundamental miscalculation in American strategy.

Despite weeks of unbridled and indiscriminate aerial bombardment and claims of having struck over 7,000 targets, Iran’s retaliatory capabilities remain undiminished, it continues to inflict heavy blows on the enemy, its leadership structure has decentralized into autonomous divisions, and the Axis of Resistance continues to strike US assets across the region.

As American Marine expeditionary units plan to converge on the Persian Gulf and the 82nd Airborne Division stands at readiness, military planners in Washington confront an uncomfortable reality: air power alone cannot achieve desired goals, yet a ground invasion would trigger a cascade of catastrophic consequences that no amount of American firepower can contain.

Iran has made its position emphatically clear: ground aggression constitutes a red line, and any crossing would be met with surprises that would leave the United States and its Israeli ally unable to remove their soldiers’ coffins from Iranian soil.

How is Iran's geography of attrition built for defense?

Iran is not Iraq. This single geographic fact forms the foundation of any analysis of a potential ground invasion. Spanning 1.65 million square kilometers, Iran is four times the size of Iraq, with terrain that offers natural defensive advantages unlike anything American forces faced in 2003.

The Zagros Mountain range, running from northwest to southeast along the Iraqi border, presents a formidable barrier to any mechanized advance from the west.

These mountains channel invading forces into predictable avenues of approach – precisely where Iranian defenders have concentrated their anti-armor capabilities for decades.

Beyond the rough terrain, the sheer scale of occupation would dwarf any previous American experience. Iran’s population exceeds 93 million people – more than two and a half times the population of Iraq at the time of the 2003 invasion. Even a conservative counterinsurgency ratio would require hundreds of thousands of American troops to maintain order across the country’s urban centers.

The logistical apparatus required to support such a force would be among the largest in military history, and every gallon of fuel, every meal, every artillery shell would have to travel through supply lines under constant multi-domain attack from the moment they entered Iranian territory.

How is Iran’s anti-access defense architecture built?

Iran has spent more than four decades constructing a defensive system designed specifically to counter any external aggression, including that from the US or its proxies.

This integrated anti-access and area denial architecture transforms the Persian Gulf region into a high-risk environment for any foreign hostile force.

The system operates in layers, each designed to complicate an adversary’s operational calculus and impose costs at every stage of an invasion.

Before any ground invasion could begin, American forces would have to contend with Iran’s extensive unmanned aerial vehicle surveillance network.

Platforms like the Mohajer-6, with 15 hours of endurance, provide persistent intelligence coverage across the Persian Gulf, tracking naval movements and monitoring ground force concentrations while transmitting targeting data to strike platforms in near real-time.

This reconnaissance layer compresses reaction time from minutes to seconds, allowing defensive forces to engage threats before they approach Iranian shores.

Any American ground invasion would require air supremacy to protect advancing forces from aerial attack.

Yet Iran’s layered air defense network, centered on the islands of Abu Musa, Greater Tunb, and Lesser Tunb in the Persian Gulf, has been designed to deny precisely that.

These islands, described in military literature as Iran’s “unsinkable aircraft carriers,” function as multi-mission platforms hosting surveillance systems, air defense batteries, and offensive strike capabilities.

What makes amphibious operations risky?

For any ground invasion, the ability to land forces by sea would be essential. Yet Iran’s anti-ship missile arsenal makes amphibious operations in the Persian Gulf extraordinarily risky.

The Qader anti-ship cruise missile, with a range exceeding 300 kilometers and a 165-kilogram penetrating warhead, flies at Mach 0.9 in sea-skimming mode, evading radar detection until seconds before impact.

Deployed on mobile coastal launchers across Abu Musa and the Iranian coastline, it can strike targets deep into the Strait of Hormuz.

Complementing Qader are the Khalij Fars anti-ship ballistic missile, with optical seeker for terminal guidance, and the Hormuz family of anti-radiation missiles specifically designed to target the radar emissions of Aegis-equipped warships.

The Zolfaghar Basir extends this threat envelope to 700 kilometers, pushing potential engagement zones well into the Gulf of Oman.

At the apex of this capability are the Fattah-1 and Fattah-2 hypersonic missiles, capable of speeds reaching Mach 15 and extreme maneuverability, designed to defeat even the most advanced missile defense systems.

Beyond conventional missiles, the IRGC Navy operates hundreds of small, fast attack craft capable of swarm tactics against larger warships.

These speedboats, armed with rockets and missiles, can attack from multiple directions simultaneously to overwhelm defensive systems.

Below the surface, Iran’s Ghadir-class midget submarines, optimized for the shallow waters of the Persian Gulf, can lie in wait on the seabed to ambush passing vessels with torpedoes.

Iran also possesses one of the largest naval mine inventories in the region, numbering in the thousands, including advanced influence mines triggered by a ship’s magnetic field or acoustic signature.

Even the suspicion of a minefield in the Strait of Hormuz would force the US Navy into a slow, dangerous mine countermeasure campaign, all conducted under the umbrella of Iranian coastal missiles.

What makes national mobilization and guerrilla warfare important?

A ground invasion would also confront the reality that Iran’s military forces are not designed to fight a conventional war – they are designed to make any occupation unsustainable.

The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC), which operates in parallel to Iran’s regular military, has structured itself around an asymmetric warfare doctrine.

Large paramilitary organizations, including the Basij force, can mobilize hundreds of thousands of fighters trained for guerrilla operations in cities and mountainous terrain.

Even if American forces manage to overcome Iran’s conventional army, these irregular forces could continue fighting for months and years.

The IRGC has decentralized its command structure into 31 autonomous divisions, each granted significant operational independence – a structure that makes decapitation strikes ineffective and ensures that resistance can continue even if central command structures are disrupted.

The experience of the 12-day imposed war in June 2025 demonstrated Iran’s willingness to absorb attacks while continuing to fight and resist against external aggression.

Despite no-holds-barred, sustained bombardment, Iranian air defenses remained operational, and retaliatory strikes continued throughout the conflict.

The country’s leadership, now under Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Mojtaba Khamenei following the assassination of Imam Seyyed Ali Khamenei, has shown no inclination toward surrender, and the Axis of Resistance forces across the region remain committed to the fight.

What if supply lines come under constant attack?

Any ground invasion of Iran would require securing supply lines through neighboring countries – lines that would be under constant attack from Iranian missiles, drones, and allied forces across the region.

The Islamic Resistance in Iraq has already demonstrated its ability to strike American logistics assets, downing a KC-135 tanker aircraft over western Iraq earlier in March.

Iranian missile attacks have damaged five additional KC-135 tankers parked at an airfield in Saudi Arabia, demonstrating their efficacy.

The US maintains approximately 50,000 troops across the West Asia region, concentrated at bases that would serve as logistical hubs for any ground invasion, making them primary targets for Iranian retaliatory strikes.

The geography of the Persian Gulf exacerbates this vulnerability. The Strait of Hormuz, through which 20 percent of the world’s oil passes, is just 30 kilometers wide at its narrowest point.

In such confined waters, the maneuvering room for large supply vessels is severely limited, and their proximity to Iranian shores places them squarely within range of virtually every system in Iran’s inventory.

Iranian military sources have warned that any aggression against Kharg Island would lead to the destruction of coastal areas across the region, with Dubai and Abu Dhabi potentially not remaining merely in the initial stages of such an attack.

What makes Kharg Island a trap for the enemy?

Among the scenarios being considered by American planners, the seizure of Kharg Island, the oil terminal handling 90 percent of Iran’s crude exports, has emerged as a particularly dangerous option.

Military analysis indicates that securing Kharg would require a battalion-sized force of approximately 800 to 1,000 troops. Yet the island sits only 20 kilometers off the Iranian coast, placing it squarely under Iranian weapon systems.

A small garrison would be difficult to reinforce and resupply for the invaders, potentially turning the island into a high-casualty liability rather than a strategic asset.

Iranian military sources have made clear that any attack on Kharg Island would be met with a response unprecedented in the 23 days of war to date.

“If the US carries out its threats regarding military aggression on Kharg Island,” a military source told Iranian media, “it will definitely face a response that is unprecedented.”

Last week’s strikes on the island, carried out from the UAE by the US-Israeli war coalition, saw Iran targeting facilities in the UAE and other Persian Gulf countries.

Insecurity in other straits, including the Bab al-Mandab Strait and the Red Sea, would become one of the options of the Resistance Front, and the situation would become much more complicated than it is today for the Americans.

Iranian officials have also warned that oil production could be temporarily disrupted, that Iran would set fire to all facilities in the region, and that the Americans would have no way to protect Kharg while suffering losses unseen since World War II.

Why is access to nuclear material impossible?

The most ambitious scenario – sending special operations forces deep into Iran to seize stockpiles of highly enriched uranium – would require an operation of staggering complexity.

Such a mission would require not only elite operators but a brigade-sized security force of 3,000 to 4,000 troops to secure the perimeter while nuclear material was extracted.

Secured locations like Natanz and Isfahan lie several hundred miles inside Iran, in open plains with no natural terrain protection.

The operation would require sustained air cover, dedicated combat air patrols, extensive intelligence and surveillance assets, and the logistical capacity to support troops on the ground for an extended period.

Approximately 1,000 pounds of 60 percent highly enriched uranium would need to be packaged, moved, and transported to a secure location, a lethal material requiring specialized handling that only the International Atomic Energy Agency is equipped to manage.

What has Iran told Trump over ground invasion plan?

Iranian military officials have made clear that a ground invasion would cross a red line with consequences far beyond anything the United States has yet experienced.

“A ground attack on Iranian soil is one of our red lines,” a military source stated, “and just as we had a surprise against every enemy operation, we will show it again in this case also.”

“Iran is ready, so that if the terrorist Trump makes a mistake in this regard, the response will come in such a way that he will not even be able to remove the coffins of his soldiers from Iranian land,” it added.

The IRGC has stated its position with clarity: “The soldiers of Islam are waiting with eagerness to see and blow a severe slap on the American carrier in the depths of the battlefield, and are fully prepared to give the American marines a close-up view of naval surprises.”

Having tested the battlefield for more than eight years during the war Western-backed Ba'athist Iraq imposed on Iran during the 1980s, Iranian forces know their terrain and their capabilities.

For the United States, the choice is not simply whether to invade but whether the objectives of the war justify the costs that invasion would entail.

Iran’s military doctrine has been shaped by one overriding imperative: to make those costs so high that no American president can sustain public support for a ground war.