Wednesday, March 04, 2026

Iraqi Resistance Reports Drone Attacks on US Targets in Erbil

By Al Mayadeen English

Saraya Awliya al-Dam claims a series of drone and missile attacks targeting US military sites in Erbil and the region.

The Islamic Resistance in Iraq – Saraya Awliya al-Dam announced that its fighters carried out an attack using a swarm of drones targeting a US forces base near Erbil International Airport, a hotel in Erbil used by US forces as accommodation for their soldiers, and a vital target in Jordan.

The group said the operations came in retaliation for the assassination of Iranian Leader Sayyed Ali Khamenei, and as a deterrent against the aggression that led to the martyrdom of several young Iraqi resistance fighters.

In a separate statement, the Islamic Resistance in Iraq said its fighters carried out 27 operations on Tuesday, using dozens of drones and missiles targeting “enemy bases in Iraq and across the region.”

In a related development, the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) announced that US occupation forces targeted one of the headquarters belonging to the Al-Jazira Operations Command in Jurf al-Nasr, confirming that the attack did not result in any casualties or losses.

Iraq asserts stance with Iraq

In a separate development, Al Mayadeen’s correspondent in Baghdad reported that a vehicle belonging to Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) was targeted on the Musayyib–Iskandariya road, north of Babil province.

The correspondent added that the Iraqi government has taken what were described as significant positions regarding the US-Israeli aggression against Iran, reflecting Baghdad’s official stance amid the escalating regional tensions.

He also noted that mourning gatherings have been held in most Iraqi cities for Sayyed Ali Khamenei, with councils of condolence organized in several provinces.

US Bases Targeted

The developments come amid a widening regional confrontation following the US-Israeli military aggression on Iran, which has triggered a series of retaliatory actions by groups aligned with the Axis of Resistance across the region.

In recent days, Iraqi resistance factions have warned that US military installations in Iraq and neighboring countries would remain legitimate targets as long as Washington continues its military operations against Iran and its allies.

The escalation has raised concerns about the growing vulnerability of US bases across West Asia, many of which host American troops as part of the so-called "anti-ISIS coalition" but have increasingly come under attack since the outbreak of the broader regional conflict.

Hezbollah Pummels Ein Shemer Base, 75km from Border, Other Key Bases

By Al Mayadeen English

Islamic Resistance fighters launch coordinated drone strikes on Israeli military bases in Haifa, Ein Shemer, Tel Hashomer, and Ramat David following attacks on Lebanon.

The Islamic Resistance in Lebanon - Hezbollah carried out a series of operations against key Israeli military sites in retaliation for the recent Israeli attacks that targeted dozens of Lebanese cities and towns, including the southern suburbs of Beirut

According to a statement, on Tuesday, at approximately 5:00 pm, the Resistance targeted Iron Dome radar systems at Kiryat Eliezer, the main air defense base in the occupied city of Haifa, using a squadron of assault drones.

Early Wednesday morning, at 4:30 am, the Islamic Resistance struck the Ein Shemer base, a missile air defense facility located 75 kilometers east of the Lebanese-Palestinian border near Hadera, again employing a squadron of assault drones.

Later on Wednesday, at 2:00 pm, the Resistance fighters targeted the Ramat David airbase with a squadron of assault drones. Simultaneously, the resistance targeted Tel Hashomer, the command headquarters southeast of Tel Aviv, located 120 kilometers from the Lebanese border, with a salvo of precision missiles. At the same time, the Haifa Naval base was struck with a squadron of kamikaze drones.

Hezbollah launches total of 100 munitions

According to Israeli media, Hezbollah launched a total of 100 munitions, divided between drones, missiles, and rockets toward "Israel" on Wednesday.

Earlier on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, fighters from the Islamic Resistance carried out a series of operations against Israeli military targets in northern occupied Palestine in response to attacks on Lebanese towns, including Beirut’s southern suburbs.

At 1:20 am, a rocket salvo struck a gathering of Israeli army forces in the Metulla area, while at 2:00 am, a squadron of assault drones targeted the headquarters of Israeli Aerospace Industries (IAI), one of "Israel’s" primary defense manufacturers.

At 3:30 am, a precision-guided missile hit the Giv’at drone control base east of the occupied city of Safad, while simultaneously another precision-guided missile struck the Northern Region Command headquarters, known as Dado Base, northeast of Safad.

Operations continued later in the morning in the southern Lebanese village of Houla. At 11:20 am, an Israeli armored personnel carrier was targeted and hit directly, followed by a strike on a Merkava tank at 12:00 pm, also achieving a direct hit.

Resistance releases footage of attacks on Meron base, Merkava tank

The Islamic Resistance has released footage showing the launch of a drone operation on Tuesday, March 3, 2026, targeting the Meron base for surveillance and air operations in northern occupied Palestine.

Additionally, the Resistance published footage of its fighters targeting a Merkava tank in the Tal al-Nahhas area, facing Kfar Kila, with an ATGM.

Israeli aggression intensifies

The Israeli occupation launched a series of attacks across Lebanon on March 4, targeting Beirut’s Southern Suburb, as well as areas in South Lebanon, the Bekaa, and Mount Lebanon.

Since March 4 morning, Israeli forces have carried out multiple airstrikes on Beirut’s Southern Suburb, hitting buildings in Hadath, Lailaki, Hay Madi, and Haret Hreik.

In South Lebanon, Al Mayadeen’s correspondent reported that an Israeli force advanced from the Bastara Farms area toward the Azraeil area south of Kfar Chouba. Warplanes struck the town of Houla, while another airstrike targeted Beit Lif. An Israeli infantry force also reportedly entered the courtyard of the Mais al-Jabal Governmental Hospital on the morning of March 4 and positioned itself inside the facility.

In the Bekaa, Israeli forces conducted multiple airstrikes on the outskirts of Shmestar and Bouday. Earlier at dawn, Mount Lebanon saw attacks on a hotel in Hazmieh (Baabda district), a four-story residential building in Aramoun, and an apartment in the Saadiyat area of the governorate.

Lebanon front intensifies

The latest escalation comes amid a broader aggression along the Lebanese border. The United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) said on Tuesday that Israeli forces had crossed into Lebanese territory near Markaba, Odaisseh, Kfar Kila, and Ramyah before returning south of the Blue Line.

UNIFIL also reported a sharp increase in violations over the past two days, including several airstrikes, hundreds of incidents of fire across the Blue Line, and 84 airspace breaches.

The peacekeeping mission added that Israeli forces continue to occupy five positions in southern Lebanon under what it describes as "buffer zones", a move it said violates UN Security Council Resolution 1701.

Meanwhile, the Islamic Resistance in Lebanon announced a series of operations in response to the ongoing Israeli attacks. Fighters said they shot down an Israeli drone over Nabatieh and targeted five Merkava tanks near Kfar Chouba, Tal Nahas, Kfar Kila, and Metulla using precision-guided missiles.

Additional operations included rocket fire at Israeli military sites and drone strikes targeting military infrastructure, including the Meron air surveillance base, the Ramat David Airbase, and the Haifa Naval Base.

IRGC Says Dismantled US Radar in Qatar, Attacked Destroyer in Indian Ocean

Wednesday, 04 March 2026 1:55 PM

Image shows the damaged radar system in the Al Udeid military base.

Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) on Wednesday announced it had destroyed a strategic US radar system in Qatar and struck an American naval destroyer in the Indian Ocean in a continuation of retaliatory operations.

In a statement, the IRGC’s public relations office released the satellite imagery showing the destruction of an AN/FPS-132 strategic radar located in the Al Udeid military base in Qatar.

The IRGC said the radar, located in Qatar and integrated into a broader missile defense network, was fully destroyed at 3:45 a.m. local time on Wednesday.

According to the statement, the northern section of the radar had been hit in previous days but remained operational until a final operation by IRGC naval forces rendered it completely inoperable.

The IRGC had earlier targeted two THAAD radar systems in the United Arab Emirates and Jordan.

The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) announces striking an American destroyer in the Indian Ocean, hundreds of kilometers away from Iran

In a separate announcement, the IRGC said its naval forces struck a US destroyer that was refueling from an American supply vessel approximately 650 kilometers off Iran’s coast in the Indian Ocean.

The statement said the vessel was hit by Qadr-380 and Talaeiyeh cruise missiles as part of Operation True Promise 4.

The IRGC said the strike caused a large fire on the decks of the two ships, adding that the blaze darkened the sky over the ocean.

In another statement, the IRGC further stated that continued US military activity in the region would come at the cost of “the collapse of all military and economic infrastructure” in the area.

It also asserted that US allies were urgently seeking to secure additional air defense systems.

The IRGC warned that the US military was using civilian facilities in Persian Gulf countries as cover for its offensives, adding that such actions were under close surveillance.

Governments Scramble to Bring Citizens Home During Travel Chaos Caused by Iran War

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

8:30 AM EST, March 4, 2026

PARIS (AP) — Governments across the world scrambled to organize the return of their citizens from the Middle East on Wednesday as travel across the region remained heavily disrupted by the widening Iran war.

The first flight repatriating French citizens stranded in the Middle East landed in Paris early Wednesday as French authorities booked about 100 seats onboard for vulnerable people on a priority list, said Eleonore Caroit, the minister responsible for French Nationals Abroad.

Students also returned to Milan after being evacuated from Dubai by the Italian government. Valerio Schiavoi, a member of the World Students Connection program, said he was part of a group involved in United Nations diplomatic simulations in Dubai.

“We received the news that Iran had been bombed by USA and Israel,” he told Italian news agency LaPresse. “And as soon as we leave the room, we start to hear the sounds of military planes and so on. And the panic starts a bit. Through the window we could see missiles passing by and alarms kept sounding but we didn’t know what to do.”

With airspace closed or heavily restricted across much of the Gulf, passengers have been stranded not only in the region but also in cities far from the fighting after their connecting flights were canceled. Amid the travel chaos and with commercial flights limited, governments have been mounting emergency operations.

The French plane departed from Muscat, Oman and made a stop in Cairo, Egypt, before touching down at Paris Charles de Gaulle airport. Another flight carrying French citizens, who were based in Israel and managed to cross the border with Egypt, should arrive in France later Wednesday, Caroit said

Some travelers stranded in Dubai are paying huge sums for private flights out

Helping the most vulnerable

“We are focusing on a priority group — families with children, people affected by illness, old people,” Caroit told TF1 broadcaster. “Our goal is to help repatriate as quickly as possible the French people who wish to return.”

French President Emmanuel Macron said an estimated 400,000 French people are present in the region affected by the conflict, either as residents or temporarily passing through.

The United States told its citizens to leave more than a dozen countries in the region right away using any available commercial transportation. The countries include Iran and Israel, as well as Qatar, Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, the Palestinian territories, Saudi Arabia, Syria, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen.

In Britain, the government said a chartered flight will take off from Oman late Wednesday to bring back some of the thousands of U.K. nationals in the Gulf. It said the most vulnerable will be prioritized for the first of what is expected to be a series of flights.

The Foreign Office said more than 130,000 British nationals in the Middle East have registered their presence with the government since the U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict broke out, though not all are trying to leave. Many of those are in the UAE, and the government has advised against trying to travel overland to Oman.

Scrambling for plane tickets

Commercial airlines are starting to resume some flights, with Etihad, Emirates and Virgin Atlantic all due to operate flights from the UAE to London on Wednesday.

But scores of travelers have struggled to find a way home. Li Qian, a 44-year-old tourist from Hangzhou, has been stuck in Abu Dhabi with her family after airspace closures disrupted their return flight to China. She said she received repeated missile alerts on her mobile phone and saw smoke rising near areas they had visited.

“It was frightening.....we just want to get home as soon as possible,” she said, adding that she worried about her mother’s high blood pressure medication and her child’s return to school.

Agnes Chen Pun, a Hong Kong expatriate who moved with her family to Dubai last year, said she struggled to find plane tickets to leave the region. She moved first to a resort in Fujairah, then to a desert resort near Sharjah amid fears of potential attacks and local fires.

“We were so nervous, so anxious,” said Chen, a partner at Asia Bankers Club, a Hong Kong- and Dubai-based investment company.

She said she considered a 13-seat private jet costing $268,000 — but ultimately secured commercial tickets for around $2,200 per person to Singapore. Her departure is still uncertain. Despite the disruption, Chen said she plans to return to the UAE once the situation stabilizes.

“I think the scare, the fears, will be short-term,” she said.

Ireland welcomes flight from Dubai to Dublin

Ireland’s foreign minister said Emirates airlines would operate a flight from Dubai to Dublin on Wednesday.

Foreign Affairs Minister Helen McEntee welcomed the development as the government tried to help some of its estimated 22,000 to 23,000 Irish citizens in the Middle East return home. The Irish government also plans to charter a flight for about 280 people from Oman in the coming days.

Elsewhere, Norway’s Foreign Ministry said it’s sending an “emergency team” to Dubai to reinforce the Norwegian embassy’s team helping an estimated 1,500 Norwegians registered in the city.

Iran War Taxes US Diplomatic Work and Leaves Americans in the Mideast in Limbo

By MATTHEW LEE

4:31 PM EST, March 3, 2026

WASHINGTON (AP) — The largest U.S. diplomatic drawdown in the Middle East since the Iraq War began more than two decades ago is creating an apparently unplanned-for crisis for the Trump administration as the United States and Israel strike Iran in a widening conflict.

The State Department has been forced to close several embassies to the public, shut down at least one consulate, order the departure of embassy staff and families from at least six nations, and advise Americans in 14 countries to leave the region immediately despite the war closing major airports and causing widespread flight cancellations.

Nonetheless, the department said Tuesday that more than 9,000 Americans had safely returned from the Middle East since the weekend, many of them without government assistance, and that it was actively assisting those who have reached out for help, including by securing military aircraft and charter flights.

“We’ve had a couple instances in which we have planes in the air, and on the way, and unfortunately, the airspace gets closed, and they have to turn back around,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters.

The department has been in contact with nearly 3,000 Americans wanting to leave the region or seeking information about how to depart, Dylan Johnson, assistant secretary of state for public affairs, said on X.

Rubio, who spoke on Capitol Hill before briefing lawmakers on the latest developments, said 1,500 people had actually requested help in leaving.

Charter flights were being arranged from Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. In countries where airports or airspace was closed, the department said, it is organizing land travel to countries where flights are available, including Egypt and Oman.

Police officers fire tear gas shells to disperse Shiite Muslims marching toward U.S. Embassy during a rally to condemn the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in Islamabad, Pakistan, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/M.A. Sheikh)

Still, emergency reductions in embassy staffing and post closures since the strikes on Iran began on the weekend have put a severe strain on the ability to help U.S. citizens in need of assistance that might usually be considered routine. Consular services are unavailable in many places and the personnel reductions have limited crucial official engagements with allied and partner governments during the war, including in Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Pakistan, Qatar and Saudi Arabia.

Biggest US drawdown in region since Iraq War

The scale of the American drawdown in the region rivals if not exceeds what was done in the run up to and the immediate aftermath of the Iraq invasion in 2003. Back then, the State Department reduced its staffing in more than a dozen countries and advised U.S. citizens to leave or seriously consider leaving countries throughout the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia from Morocco to Pakistan.

On Monday, Americans were told in a hastily drafted announcement posted on X to leave Bahrain, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen even though commercial flights and other transportation have been disrupted.

Americans had been advised early Tuesday that the State Department had ordered nonessential diplomats and embassy families to leave Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar and the UAE.

The embassies in Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon and Saudi Arabia also were closed to the public Tuesday. But only one diplomatic mission — the U.S. consulate in Karachi, Pakistan — had completely suspended operations.

A drone attack on the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh caused a “limited fire,” Saudi Arabia’s Defense Ministry said.

The strike in Riyadh caused part of the embassy’s roof to collapse, although there were no reported deaths or injuries to staff, according to an internal State Department memo. It said there were no deaths or injuries after two drones hit the vicinity of the embassy in Kuwait City.

Confusion leads to questions about preparations

Confusion was playing out around the region, raising questions about the preparations for possible military action and its impact on travel and the safety of Americans overseas, which is the State Department’s primary responsibility.

“If Americans are being instructed to leave but are given no viable pathway, that suggests one of two things: The system is not being activated, or the system has atrophied,” said Shawn VanDiver, president of AfghanEvac, a group that supports Afghan nationals seeking to come to the United States after having served with U.S. forces in Afghanistan.

He noted that during the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, the Biden administration had organized the evacuation of 121,000 people in a matter of days.

“Crisis response cannot be partisan,” he said. “It has to survive transitions. It has to be staffed, exercised, and protected. The oversight question is straightforward: Was the post-Afghanistan crisis response architecture sustained, or has it been weakened?”

The State Department did not immediately respond to a query about its planning for embassy and consulate staffing or providing assistance to American citizens in the event of a conflict with Iran.

The U.S. government cannot compel American citizens to leave any country. In rare circumstances, it can make it illegal for U.S. passports to be used for travel to a specific destination. The only such restriction is on North Korea. But before the strikes began, Rubio said Friday that the restriction might also be applied to Iran.

Travel advice from the State Department, including admonitions not to visit a country or to leave it, often is not respected. Many people reside in or have close family living there and either ignore or decline to heed the advice.

There are large numbers of U.S. citizens living in or traveling throughout the Middle East. The State Department, however, refuses to offer an estimate because Americans are not required to report their presence in any country abroad. It says any estimate would be inaccurate.

Tens of thousands of U.S. citizens, many of them dual nationals, are believed to live in Israel, Lebanon, Egypt and Iran.

Iran to Hold Massive Public Funeral for 'Martyr Leader' Imam Khamenei

Wednesday, 04 March 2026 12:25 PM

The late Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei

A major public farewell ceremony is being arranged for the late Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei.

In a statement earlier on Wednesday, the Islamic Development Coordination Council announced that a three-day public farewell ceremony for the martyred Leader would be held at the Grand Mosalla mosque in the Iranian capital, Tehran. 

The ceremony was scheduled to start at 10:00 pm local time and continue for three days to allow people to pay their respects to the martyred Leader of the Islamic Revolution. 

However, the organizers later announced that due to the anticipation of an unprecedented presence of mourners, the farewell ceremony had been postponed.

The new date and timing will be announced by the organizers soon. 

Meanwhile, the mourning gatherings in mosques and roundabouts across the city would continue after evening prayers until the funeral ceremony. 

In its earlier statement, the council extended its condolences to the Muslim community and called on all segments of Iranian society — men and women, young and old, academics, seminary scholars, workers, farmers, teachers, students, and other social groups — to participate in the ceremony.

It further emphasized that mass attendance would demonstrate national unity, loyalty to the ideals of the Islamic Revolution, and steadfastness in the face of external adversaries.

In its message, the council described Ayatollah Khamenei as a devoted servant of God who dedicated his life to strengthening “pure Muhammadan Islam,” safeguarding Iran’s independence and dignity, and reinforcing the Axis of Resistance.

Grand Mosalla is a major religious and national venue that has historically hosted significant gatherings and events.

The council further confirmed that special programs have been arranged for the three days of mourning.

It also stated that arrangements for the funeral procession are currently underway and that further details will be announced once finalized.

The council added that it expects the large-scale public presence to send a message beyond Iran’s borders, expressing hope to supporters while serving as a warning to adversaries that the path of resistance and justice will continue.

Ayatollah Khamenei’s residence in Tehran was targeted on Saturday morning, in which many of his family members, including his wife, daughter, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, and two grandchildren, were also martyred.

His martyrdom was announced in the wee hours of Sunday morning.

Iran Won’t Remain Silent in Face of Aggression: Envoy

Wednesday, 04 March 2026 9:27 AM

Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva Ali Bahreini

Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva Ali Bahreini has reiterated that no one should expect Iran to stay silent against violations of its sovereignty, following a recent US-Israeli aggression against the country.

At a press conference on the sidelines of a United Nations meeting, Bahreini condemned the “armed and illegal US‑Israeli aggression” against the Islamic Republic, calling it a clear breach of Article 2(4) of the UN Charter and a flagrant violation of the prohibition on the use of force.

He added that Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, who was assassinated  in a deliberate and pre-planned attack by the United States and Israel, was not only the highest political authority in Iran but also a prominent religious and spiritual leader in the world of Islam.

“The unlawful act of assassinating a high-ranking government official during an illegal act of aggression constitutes, in its initial form, a direct attack on international legal order and a blatant violation of international law,” the Iranian ambassador continued.

He noted that silence or acquiescence in such behavior severely undermines the very foundations upon which international law is built.

He emphasized that this unlawful and unjustified act of aggression occurred at a time when Iran was negotiating in good faith with the United States regarding its peaceful nuclear program, seeking a beneficial outcome for both sides.

“Our defensive military operations will continue as long as the aggression persists. No one should expect Iran to remain silent in the face of aggression,” he added.

Iran has never attacked the territories of its Islamic, friendly and brotherly neighbors, and it will not do so, he said, adding that the malicious plots of the US and Israel have brought the region to its current state.

The regimes in Washington and Tel Aviv started their unprovoked military assault on February 28. So far, at least 555 Iranian people have been killed in the terrorist airstrikes.

Iran began to swiftly retaliate against the criminal aggression by launching barrages of missile and drone attacks on the Israeli-occupied territories as well as on the US bases in regional countries.

CIA Planning to Arm Kurdish Militants to Cause Unrest in Iran After US Failure in War: Report

Wednesday, 04 March 2026 9:55 AM

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) intends to arm Kurdish militants in a bid to trigger a civil war in Iran after the United States failed to achieve its goals in the unprovoked war against the Islamic Republic, a report says.

The administration of President Donald Trump has been in active talks with Iranian opposition groups and leaders of Kurdish militia factions in Iraq about providing them with military support, the CNN reported on Tuesday, citing multiple unnamed sources.

Meanwhile, the American president spoke with the head of the so-called Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KDPI), Mustafa Hijri, the report added.

The US military commenced an unprovoked war of aggression against Iran on Saturday. Israel is also attacking Iran in close coordination with the US.

In retaliation, the naval and aerospace units of the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) has launched massive missile strikes against US military assets in regional countries and on targets in the Israeli-occupied territories since the weekend.

Iran’s escalating strikes have already prompted Washington to close its embassies and urge Americans to flee the region.

Kurdish armed groups have forces operating along the Iraq-Iran border, primarily in the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region of Iraq.

Iran has already warned that it will confront with firm response any move by the militant groups from the territory of neighboring countries.

The IRGC has been striking Kurdish militant groups. It said on Tuesday that it had targeted the militants with dozens of drones.

According to the report, citing two US officials and a third source familiar with the matter, Trump also called Iraqi Kurdish leaders on Sunday to discuss the US military aggression on Iran and how Washington and the militants could work together as the aggression continues.

Citing another US official, the report added that the Kurdish militants could help sow chaos in the region in an attempt to stretch Iran’s military resources thin.

Jen Gavito, a former senior State Department official specializing in West Asia under former President Joe Biden, said that she is concerned about whether the implications of arming the Kurdish militant groups - a historic US regional ally - have been fully considered.

“We are already facing a volatile security situation, on both sides of the border. This has the potential to undermine Iraqi sovereignty and essentially empower armed militias with no accountability and with little understanding of what it may set in motion,” she stressed.

According to another source, the Israeli military has been striking Iranian military and police outposts along the border with Iraq in recent days in an attempt to pave the way for the possible flow of armed Kurdish forces into northwest Iran.

An Israeli source told CNN that such strikes are likely to intensify in the coming days.

The CIA has a long, complex history of working with Iraqi Kurdish factions dating back decades as part of the US war in Iraq, the report said, adding that the agency currently has an outpost in Iraqi Kurdistan located near the border with Iran.

The US also has a consulate in Erbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, and US and coalition troops are based there as part of the so-called anti-Daesh campaign.

IRGC Announces Full Control of Strait of Hormuz

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Fars News Agency

Today 09:13

The IRGC says it now controls the Strait of Hormuz as tanker traffic plunges and the US considers escort missions and insurance measures to keep oil shipments moving.

Iran’s Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) announced on Wednesday that it has taken full control of the Strait of Hormuz, deepening uncertainty around one of the world’s most critical energy transit routes as regional tensions continue to escalate.

Speaking to Fars News Agency, the IRGC Navy's Political Advisor, Mohammad Akbarzadeh, said that "the Strait of Hormuz is currently under the full control of the naval forces of the Revolutionary Guard."

The announcement comes days after oil and gas markets were shaken by disruptions to maritime traffic following US-Israeli strikes on Iran and Tehran’s retaliatory operations across the region.

On Tuesday, US President Donald Trump said the US Navy is capable of escorting oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz "if necessary," signaling Washington may move to protect commercial shipping as the security situation deteriorates.

At the same time, Brigadier General Ebrahim Jabbari, advisor to the commander of the IRGC, warned that Iran would prevent shipping from transiting the waterway. “Any ship attempting to pass through the Strait of Hormuz will burn,” Jabbari said, adding that “not one drop of oil will be allowed to leave the region.”

Hormuz shipping slumps

Shipping activity through the passage has already dropped sharply. CNN reported that "only two oil and chemical tankers crossed the Strait of Hormuz on Monday," citing data from S&P Global Commodities at Sea.

Under normal conditions, around 60 vessels pass through the Strait each day, transporting roughly 20% of globally traded oil and a similar share of liquefied natural gas flows.

The disruption began earlier this week as insurers raised war-risk premiums and major shipping operators reduced activity following attacks on vessels near Oman and the United Arab Emirates and warnings issued to tankers navigating the corridor.

Energy markets jolt

The slowdown in maritime traffic has reverberated across global energy markets. Oil prices surged earlier in the week amid fears that sustained hostilities could interrupt supplies, while European natural gas benchmarks jumped sharply as traders assessed potential risks to Gulf LNG shipments.

Further pressure emerged after QatarEnergy temporarily halted liquefied natural gas production following drone strikes targeting facilities at Ras Laffan and Mesaieed, two of the Gulf state's main gas processing hubs.

Lebanese Resistance Strikes IAI, Dado Base, Hits Tanks in Hula

By Al Mayadeen English

The Lebanese Resistance continues its retaliatory attacks against "Israel" for the fourth day in South Lebanon.

The Islamic Resistance in Lebanon - Hezbollah initiated a series of defensive operations against Israeli occupation forces in the early hours of Wednesday, striking multiple military targets deep inside northern occupied Palestine in response to the criminal Israeli aggression against dozens of Lebanese cities and towns, including the southern suburb of Beirut.

In the first operation, launched at 1:20 am, Resistance fighters struck a gathering of Israeli soldiers in Metulla with a rocket barrage.

At 2:00 am, Hezbollah launched a swarm of attack drones at the headquarters of Israeli Aerospace Industries (IAI) inside occupied Palestine, one of the entity's foremost defense manufacturers and a primary supplier of military technology to the Israeli army.

Later, at 3:30 am, fighters fired a precision-guided missile at the Giv'at drone control base, east of the occupied city of Safad.

Simultaneously, Resistance fighters targeted the headquarters of the Israeli army's Northern Region Command, known as Dado Base, northeast of Safed, with a precision-guided missile, hitting one of the key command hubs overseeing Israeli military operations along the northern front.

The Resistance extended its operations before noon, carrying out two operations targeting Israeli military vehicles in the southern Lebanese village of Hula. The first operation targeted an Israeli armored personnel carrier at 11:20 am, achieving a direct hit.

The second operation in Hula saw the targeting of an Israeli Merkava tank at 12 pm, also achieving a direct hit.

Escalation on Tuesday

Wednesday's operations follow a full day of strikes on Tuesday, with a total of 13 operations, during which the Resistance downed an Israeli drone over Nabatieh and destroyed five Merkava tanks across multiple positions in southern Lebanon.

Fighters also launched a swarm of attack drones against the Meron air surveillance base in northern occupied Palestine, damaging a radar system and a command building, and struck radar sites and control rooms at the Ramat David Airbase.

The Haifa Naval Base was also targeted with a rocket salvo, alongside strikes on Israeli positions in the occupied Syrian Golan.

The intensifying operations come against the backdrop of 15 months of a one-sided ceasefire, where the Lebanese side ceased hostilities while the Israeli side went on to carry out over 15,400 ceasefire violations, killing and wounding over 1,000 Lebanese civilians.

Sudan Accuses Ethiopia of Drone Strikes Across Border

By Al Mayadeen English

3 Mar 2026

Sudan's government has accused Ethiopia of allowing drone strikes to be launched from its territory amid growing regional involvement in Sudan's civil war.

Sudan's government has accused Ethiopia of enabling drone strikes against its territory, marking the first formal allegation of direct interference by Addis Ababa in the country’s nearly three-year war.

In a statement released Monday, Sudan’s foreign ministry said aerial attacks carried out in February and March originated “from inside Ethiopian territory,” describing the incidents as “clear aggression.” The ministry warned Ethiopian authorities of “the consequences of these hostile acts,” though it did not specify who conducted the strikes, how many occurred, or which locations were targeted.

Khartoum added that it had been monitoring the incursions over several weeks and characterized them as a “flagrant violation of Sudan’s sovereignty” and “a clear act of aggression against the Sudanese state.” 

The accusation is particularly sensitive given long-running tensions along the Sudan-Ethiopia border, especially in the disputed al-Fashaga region, where clashes have erupted intermittently in recent years.

War Fueled by External Support

Sudan has been engulfed in conflict since April 2023, when fighting broke out between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), led by Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF). The war has devastated large parts of the country, displaced millions and crippled essential infrastructure.

In February, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk warned that civilian killings had more than doubled this year.

“This war is ugly. It's bloody and it's senseless,” Volker Turk told the UN Human Rights Council, faulting both sides for rejecting humanitarian truces and criticizing foreign backers for financing what he described as a “high-tech” conflict.

Drone Warfare and Regional Spillover

The use of drones has become a defining feature of Sudan’s war. Investigations and satellite imagery  published by international outlets in recent months have indicated growing reliance on unmanned aerial systems, including operations linked to RSF-held territory in Darfur. Analysts say such systems have increased the conflict’s reach and lethality.

A report by the US-based Critical Threats Project recently cited Sudanese officials accusing the United Arab Emirates of increasing weapons transfers since November 2025  to Ethiopia intended for the RSF. 

Burhan, for his part, is widely regarded as benefiting from support from Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey, reinforcing concerns that Sudan’s war has become entangled in broader regional rivalries.

The fear of spillover is no longer theoretical. Chad announced in late February that it had closed its border with Sudan following deadly cross-border violence involving fighters linked to the conflict. International observers have warned that continued external involvement and advanced weapon flows risk transforming Sudan’s civil war into a destabilizing regional crisis.

If substantiated, Sudan’s allegation that drone attacks originated from Ethiopian territory could further strain relations in the Horn of Africa and complicate already fragile diplomatic efforts to contain one of the continent’s most destructive conflicts.

Tuesday, March 03, 2026

Assata Shakur and Jamil Abdullah al-Amin (H. Rap Brown) Symbolized the Transformation of the Black Struggle

Shakur and al-Amin came out of the African American youth movement in the South as well as the North

By Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Sunday March 1, 2026

African American History Month Series No. 10

Assata Shakur (formerly known as Joanne Chesimard) and Jamil Abdullah al-Amin (also known as H. Rap Brown) passed away during 2025 amid the rise of state repression and fascism in the United States under the government of President Donald Trump.

Shakur had joined the movement as a college student at the Borrough of Manhattan Community College and the City College of New York where she worked with an organization focused on the promotion of African American culture and history.

It was during this period in 1969-70 when she came into contact with the Black Panther Party in NYC. The Panthers were under fierce attack by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), whose Director, J. Edgar Hoover, had labeled the BPP as the greatest threat to U.S. national security in decades.

In April 1969, 21 members of the Party were arrested and charged with plotting to carry out bombings around the New York area. The local police in New York, like in many other cities, followed the lead of the FBI by viewing the Panthers as an existential threat to their existence. 

Numerous police-provoked confrontations with Party members along with other militant groupings resulted in the injuring and deaths of law-enforcement agents. These clashes between the police and African Americans occurred during and in the aftermath of urban rebellions which swept the U.S. between 1964-1970. 

Of course, these rebellions and confrontations with the state and its agents did not take place within a political vacuum. In many areas of Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean, mass and armed struggles were being waged for national independence and socialism. 

Consequently, people within the African American community were influenced by the African, Latin American and Asian movements for liberation. Some of these movements utilized petitioning, mass demonstrations and strikes to reach their objectives. Others, after meeting harsh repression, such as the massacre of dock workers in Guinea-Bissau in 1959 and the anti-pass campaigners at Sharpeville, South Africa in 1960, turned to guerilla warfare in their campaigns to win independence. 

The Black Liberation Army (BLA), which grew out of the Black Panther Party in 1971, was a direct outcome of political repression and the refusal of the U.S. capitalist system to fundamentally address the national oppression and class exploitation suffered by African Americans and millions of other working people. As the 1970s progressed, revolutionaries and other progressive forces were forced to grapple with the rapid rise in technology and its impact not only on politics but the social psychology of workers and oppressed peoples.

A statement issued by the BLA in 1976 provides their rationale for viewing armed struggle as a logical outcome of the social character of African American oppression during this time period where in the aftermath of the Vietnam War and the defeat of U.S. imperialism in Southeast Asia, the ruling class was facing a deeper and more protracted crisis. Assata, having lived underground for two years, was captured in May 1973 in New Jersey. One other BLA leader and cadre, Sundiata Acoli, was captured along with Assata Shakur. Zayd Malik Shakur was killed by the New Jersey State Troopers during the same traffic stop which captured Assata and Sundiata. (https://newafrikan77.wordpress.com/2016/05/02/zayd-malik-shakur-servant-of-the-people/)

According to the BLA document from 1976, it says:

How will the movement as a whole be able to fight the oppressor in the future when all other ‘legal’ methods are completely exhausted? How will we implement political struggle without the machinery and capacity for revolutionary violence when it is abundantly clear that our oppressor maintains armed organs of violence for the enforcement of his rules? We as a movement will be unable to fight in the future if we do not develop the capacity for revolutionary violence in the present. But revolutionary violence is not an alternative to mass movement and organization, it is complementary to mass struggle, it is another front in the total liberation process.” (http://www.assatashakur.org/message.htm)

Assata was liberated from maximum security prison in New Jersey on November 2, 1979. The action was carried out by the BLA and the Weather Underground Organization (WOU). Several years later Assata was granted political asylum in Revolutionary Cuba.

Her transition came amid an escalation in imperialist destabilization efforts by the Trump administration. A close ally of Cuba, the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, was subjected to an unprovoked attack and kidnapping of President Nicholas Maduro and First Lady Cecilia Flores who are being held illegally in a federal detention facility in New York. 

Avenues of redress within the bourgeois democratic system are severely restricted. The same ideological and strategic questions which surfaced during the 1970s remain today although with deeper implications for those living inside and outside the U.S.

Imam Jamil Abdullah al-Amin: A Lifetime of Resistance

Born during World War II as many other activists who emerged during the 1960s, Imam Jamil Abdullah al-Amin made his transition after being incarcerated unjustly for more than a quarter-century. In 2000, al-Amin was arrested and accused in the shooting of two Fulton County Sheriff Deputies, one fatally. 

Although there was no material evidence that al-Amin committed these shootings, he was convicted and sentenced to prison.

During the 1960s, thousands of African American youth and students took leading roles in the struggles to destroy legalized segregation in the South as well as the North. Known then as H. Rap Brown, he would join the Nonviolent Action Group (NAG) in Washington, D.C. NAG was an affiliate of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) formed in April 1960. 

Brown (al-Amin) had been a student at Southern University in Louisiana where he was born. He became active in the movement like many others throughout the South. By 1966, he was active in doing field work in Greene County, Alabama. This was the time when the Lowndes County Freedom Organization (LCFO) and others had united to build the Alabama Black Panther Party. 

After the chairmanship of Stokely Carmichael (later known as Kwame Ture) for SNCC during 1966-67, Rap took over the organization. His tenure coincided with a rise in urban rebellions throughout the U.S. Due to the revolutionary trajectory of SNCC by 1966-67, the organization became more of a target of the FBI Counterintelligence Program (COINTELPRO) which was designed to disrupt and liquidate African American organizations.

The work of SNCC in the South influenced many northern-based organizations such as the Black Panther Party for Self Defense formed by Dr. Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale in October 1966. Other groups such as the Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM) and the Deacons for the Defense would emerge to address the reality of oppression and state violence. Robert F. Williams and Mabel Williams began organizing rifles clubs in Monroe, North Carolina to defend the community against racist violence as early as the 1950s. 

Al-Amin was said to have gone underground in March 1970 after the violent deaths of Ralph Featherstone and William Che Payne of SNCC in car blast in Maryland. Many in the movement believed that the two SNCC organizers were assassinated while the corporate media and the authorities accused them of transporting a bomb in order to disrupt the trial of al-Amin Cambridge. (https://www.historynewsnetwork.org/article/who-killed-ralph-featherstone)

In 1971 al-Amin was captured in New York City and prosecuted on trumped up robbery charges. When he emerged from incarceration he had converted to Islam. He would continue to engage in religious activities settling in Atlanta and opening a neighborhood mosque and grocery store.

The fact that he died in prison of illnesses that could have been effectively treated with proper medical care illustrates the unjust character of the U.S. criminal justice system. The lesson of Imam Jamil’s life is his resilience and commitment to revolutionary change.

Resistance and Historical Studies

This year, 2026, is important as it relates to African American history. There is a concerted effort in the year of the centenary of African American History Month to reverse even the minimal gains made through the various struggles during the 20th and early 21st centuries. 

As the generation of Assata Shakur and Jamil Abdullah al-Amin was faced with imperialist war in Vietnam and throughout the African continent, today’s youth are being forced to engage in the battle against the cost of war. Attempts to eliminate nations and peoples while denigrating their national and regional life is creating instability on an international level.

The focus in the third decade of the 21st Century is international. The ruling class from both political camps in the U.S. are committed to the subjugation of the peoples of the Global South. Therefore, the task of the majority of the world’s population is to take up the mantle of the legacies of Assata and Rap to continue the process of total liberation. 

Claudette Colvin and Rosa Parks Helped Ignite the Mass Civil Rights Movement

Two African American women in Alabama during the mid-1950s helped create the political conditions for a years-long assault on racial discrimination, mob violence and state repression

By Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Saturday February 28, 2026

African American History Month Series No. 9

A pioneer in the struggle for equal opportunity and the eradication of racism, Claudette Colvin (1939-2026), joined the ancestors on January 13.

Her contributions to the mass Civil Rights Movement came about in Montgomery, Alabama, when she became an activist within the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Youth Council during her teenage years at the Booker T. Washington High School. 

On March 2, 1955, Colvin was traveling from her school home on a city bus. While riding she was asked by the driver to give up her seat to accommodate whites riding on the coach. 

Colvin, who was 15 at the time, adamantly refused and was arrested by the Montgomery police on charges of violating the segregation laws of the State of Alabama, disturbing the peace and assault against the arresting officers. After being booked, she was bailed out by the local community leaders who then proceeded to challenge her arrest in the courts. 

Obviously taking such risks in the segregated Jim Crow South could not have been a purely personal decision. In Montgomery, there had been a rising awareness among the people related to the necessity of abolishing segregation and the disparate treatment of African Americans embedded within the economic and political system. 

After the conclusion of World War II in 1945, racist violence accelerated in the U.S. There were numerous acts of terror such as the police beating and blinding of military veteran Isaac Woodward in South Carolina in 1946. (https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/blinding-isaac-woodard/)

That same year, four African Americans were lynched on the Moore’s Ford Bridge in Georgia. Those killed in the incident were George W. Dorsey (a veteran of WWII), Mae Murray Dorsey, Roger, and Dorothy Malcom. (https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/moores-bridge-lynching/)

Later in 1951, Harry and Harriet Moore, two leaders in the NAACP and the Progressive Voters League of Florida, had their home bombed by the Ku Klux Klan on Christmas night. No one was ever held responsible for these deaths.

In 1955, two leaders of the NAACP in Mississippi, Rev. George Lee and Lamar Smith, were shot to death by white racists while advocating the right to vote for African Americans. In August of the same year, 14-year-old Emmitt Till was brutally lynched by two white landowners who accused him of speaking inappropriately to one of their wives at a plantation store. 

All of these developments fueled the anger and militancy of African Americans in the South and around the U.S. People in Montgomery had been active politically seeking avenues of reforms through organizing and legal challenges.

Colvin in an interview for the book on the “Rebellious Life of Rosa Parks”, noted the role of the seasoned activist in serving as a mentor for young people. Parks had been an activist since the 1930s when she worked to free the Scottsboro Boys, nine African American youth falsely accused of sexually assaulting two white women in Alabama. (https://nmaahc.si.edu/explore/stories/scottsboro-boys)

In 1944, Parks became involved in the Committee for Equal Justice for Recy Taylor, an African American woman who was ganged-raped by several white men when she was walking home from church. Parks was sent to Abbeville, Alabama to investigate the case for the NAACP. (https://www.loc.gov/exhibitions/rosa-parks-in-her-own-words/about-this-exhibition/early-life-and-activism/committee-for-equal-justice-for-mrs-recy-taylor/)

Although none of the men were convicted for their crimes, the fact that these women stood up for their rights further exposed the racist and sexist character of the legal system in the Jim Crow South. These activities by Parks illustrates her longtime work in defense of the African American people.

In the book on Parks, it notes that:

“According to Colvin, Mrs. Parks was the only adult leader who kept up with her that summer. Colvin had been a member of the NAACP Youth Council before the arrest and continued to attend Youth Council meetings. Parks made Colvin secretary of the council, trying to nurture the young woman’s spirit and budding leadership. Claudette Colvin recalled that she only went to Youth Council meetings ‘if I could get a ride’ and sometimes she would ‘stay overnight at Rosa’s — she lived in the projects across the street.’ Parks exhibited a certain forcefulness and strictness with the young people. According to Colvin, Parks ‘was very kind and thoughtful; she knew exactly how I liked my coffee and fixed me peanut butter and Ritz crackers, but she didn’t say much at all. Then when the meeting started, I’d think: Is that the same lady? She would come across very strong about rights. She would pass out leaflets saying things like ‘We are going to break down the walls of segregation.’ Parks would make Colvin tell the story of her bus arrest over and over. ‘After a while they had all heard it a million times,’ Colvin recalled, ‘They seemed bored with it.’ Colvin would become one of the plaintiffs on the federal case, Browder v. Gayle, filed in February 1956 during the boycott which ultimately led to the desegregation of Montgomery’s buses.” (https://rosaparksbiography.org/bio/claudette-colvin/)

After victory in the Browder v. Gayle Supreme Court decision, Colvin left Alabama for New York City where she remained for many years working in the healthcare field. Her contributions to initiating the modern Civil Rights Movement have gained greater recognition in recent years.

Rosa L. Parks (1913-2005): A Symbol of Defiance and Militancy

Later in 1955, nine months after the charging of Claudette Colvin, Mrs. Parks was arrested on December 1, also for refusing to give up her seat on a city bus to a white person. Parks was in the back of the bus where African Americans were supposed to be seated. Yet, under the customs and laws of segregation, she was obligated to stand up and allow a white individual to take her seat if there were no others available. 

After Parks arrest, a campaign was organized calling for African Americans to refrain from riding the city buses on a segregated basis. The Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA) was formed on December 5 as the organization which would coordinate the nearly yearlong boycott. 

In a post on the blackpast.org website, it emphasized:

“The MIA was organized primarily by local civil rights leaders E.D. Nixon and Jo Ann Robinson.  Association leaders soon realized that a young minister, Martin Luther King, Jr. of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, would be an articulate spokesperson for their organization and the boycott. Moreover, King, as a minister of an all-Black church, was better positioned to resist retaliation from the white Montgomery business and political establishment.  Moreover, the election of a minister to lead a Black civil rights organization in the South in 1955 was unusual, although it would become far more common following the boycott’s success.” (https://blackpast.org/african-american-history/montgomery-improvement-association-1955-1969/)

Jo Ann Robinson at the time of the boycott was the leader of the Montgomery Women’s Political Council (WPC) which was formed originally in 1949 under the leadership of Mary Fair Burks. The organization had been agitating for an end to segregation in the city for years.

Long before the events of 1955-56, the WPC had threatened to launch a bus boycott. Their demands to the city administration were ignored. 

However, after the arrests of Colvin and Parks, the WPC swung into action printing and distributing thousands of leaflets announcing the boycott. By December 5, the community was united and launched the boycott.

A report posted on the Stanford University website said of the WPC and its critical role in the struggle to end segregation, noted:

“Burks later stated that ‘members of the Women’s Political Council were trailblazers’ and credited the WPC for its ability ‘to arouse Black middle-class women to do something about the things they could change in segregated Montgomery’. Their role in the boycott, however, was not without consequences. Many WPC members were also teachers at Alabama State College, where officials closely investigated everyone involved in the boycott and in other student demonstrations. Tensions on the campus, especially after the sit-ins of 1960, caused many of the women, including Robinson and Burks, to resign from the college and find employment elsewhere, an event that dispersed key members throughout the nation.” (https://kinginstitute.stanford.edu/womens-political-council-wpc-montgomery)

Parks eventually left Montgomery and relocated with her husband, Raymond, to Detroit. She would continue her activism centered around local, national and international issues.

During her later working years, she served as a staff member for U.S. Congressman John Conyers, Jr. who was elected in 1964. Parks passed away in Detroit in 2005.

Colvin and Parks Represented the Pivotal Role of Women in the Civil Rights Movement

Colvin’s death on January 13 brought to light once again the mass character of the African American freedom struggle during the 20th century. Although leaders such as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Ralph Abernathy of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) gained tremendous recognition for their roles in the movement, these efforts would have been fruitless absent of women such as Colvin, Parks, Robinson, Burks and many others.

Understanding these historical events are important particularly during the present period of the second administration of President Donald Trump. The MAGA groupings are committed to the erasure of African American people in the overall historical trajectory of the U.S. and the world.

Consequently, it is up to the people themselves to research, analyze and promote the legacy of the Civil Rights Movement. Armed with this knowledge, the people can move forward by reigniting the mass struggle and finally succeeding in ending the legacy of institutional racism and national oppression in the U.S.

NATO Rules Out Role in Iran War as Tensions Rise

By Al Mayadeen English

2 Mar 2026 23:36

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said the alliance has no plans to join the war on Iran, even as individual member states adjust their positions amid escalating tensions.

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said on Monday that the alliance has no intention of becoming directly involved in the ongoing war against Iran, while describing the US and Israeli military actions as significant.

In an interview with German broadcaster ARD in Brussels, Rutte stated that there are “absolutely no plans whatever” for NATO to be drawn into the conflict as a collective military actor.

Rutte praises US and Israeli strikes

Rutte characterized the US and Israeli operations as “really important,” claiming they were aimed at degrading Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile capabilities.

He also claimed the campaign was intended to weaken Iran’s ability to acquire nuclear capability and reduce its missile capacity.

Despite this, he stressed that NATO as an alliance would not formally participate in the war, clarifying that any involvement would be limited to individual member states acting independently rather than through NATO structures.

Individual allies calibrate responses

Rutte’s remarks come as several NATO member states adjust their positions in response to the escalating conflict.

The United Kingdom has stated that it is not directly participating in offensive operations against Iran but has authorized the use of its military bases for what it described as defensive strikes targeting Iranian missile stockpiles.

In a joint statement issued Sunday, the United Kingdom, Germany, and France said they would take steps to defend their interests and those of their allies in the region. The statement indicated that such measures could include enabling what they described as necessary and proportionate defensive action to target Iran’s missile and drone capabilities at their source.

Germany has made clear that it will not take part in military operations against Iran, even as some Western governments edge closer to supporting US and Israeli actions targeting the Islamic Republic.

German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul told Deutschlandfunk on Monday that "The federal government has no intention of participating," noting that "we also do not have the necessary military resources" to engage in offensive action. At the same time, he stressed that German forces abroad would not be left without protection, adding that “our Bundeswehr soldiers would defend themselves if they were attacked.”

For its part, the United Kingdom has agreed to allow US forces to use British bases for strikes on Iranian missile sites, described by London as a "defensive measure", and said it will protect regional allies from further attack, while maintaining it is not directly participating in offensive operations.

France has also indicated it is "ready… to take part in [the] defense" of Gulf states and Jordan, framing this as collective "self-defense" under international law. French officials, however, have voiced regret that the US-Israeli assault was not debated through multilateral institutions such as the United Nations.

Missile Sirens Will Never Stop in Israeli-occupied Territories, Iran Warns

Monday, 02 March 2026 4:19 PM

Rescue workers and military personnel operate at the scene of an Iranian missile strike in Beit Shemesh, occupied territories, on March 1, 2026. (Photo by AP)

The Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters of the Iranian Armed Forces has warned that missile sirens will not stop in the occupied territories as retaliatory strikes against Israeli targets continue unabated, issuing an evacuation order for settlers.

In a video message released on Monday, Colonel Ebrahim Zolfaghari provided an update on Iran’s ongoing Operation True Promise 4, which was launched after the illegal US-Israeli aggression and the assassination of Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei in a grave violation of the country’s sovereignty.

The spokesman said the tenth phase of the operation involved the firing of Iran’s Kheybar missiles at the headquarters of the criminal regime in Tel Aviv, as well as military and security centers in Haifa, and several sites in East al-Quds, among others.

“We had already warned about expanding attacks on the bases, which are occupied by the aggressor enemies, and said that sirens would never cease in Israel,” he added.

He also advised Israeli settlers to immediately leave the occupied lands and stay away from military bases, security centers, and buildings belonging to the Zionist regime.

Earlier, as part of Operation True Promise-4, Iranian forces targeted the USS Abraham Lincoln with four cruise missiles, causing the aircraft carrier to flee to the southeast of the Indian Ocean, he noted.

Zolfaghari also said Iranian retaliatory strikes rendered the United States’ Ali al-Salem base in Kuwait out of service and destroyed American naval structure in the Arab country.

Meanwhile, he added, four Iranian drones hit the US naval base in Bahrain’s port of Salman and severely damaged its command and support section.

The IRGC and the Army launch fresh waves of massive missile strikes targeting strategic sites in the Israeli-occupied territories and US bases across the region.

Iranian missiles targeted three oil tankers belonging to the US and Britain in the Persian Gulf and the Sea of Oman and set the vessels on fire, according to the spokesman.

Two Iranian ballistic missiles were launched at a base where US military forces are staying in Bahrain.

Zolfaghari further said Iran’s Air Force jets successfully bombarded the US bases in the Persian Gulf Arab countries and Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdistan Region.

Additionally, he said at least 560 American troops have been killed and wounded in Iran’s retaliatory attacks.

The regimes in Washington and Tel Aviv started their unprovoked military assault on February 28. So far, at least 555 Iranian people have been killed in the terrorist airstrikes.

Iran began to swiftly retaliate against the criminal aggression by launching barrages of missile and drone attacks on the Israeli-occupied territories as well as on the US bases in regional countries.

'Israel' Bombs Al Manar TV, Al Nour Radio Overnight

By Al Mayadeen English

Al-Manar says its Beirut headquarters was hit by Israeli bombardment, as the Israeli occupation forces claim strikes on the Lebanese capital.

Al Mayadeen's correspondent in Beirut confirmed that Israeli occupation forces carried out a violent airstrike targeting the headquarters of Al Manar TV in the southern suburbs of Beirut, in addition to striking Al Nour Radio. Another raid hit a building in the Haret Hreik area.

Earlier, Israeli occupation forces had bombed several areas in the Lebanese capital. Hours before the attack on Al Manar, a building adjacent to Al Mayadeen's headquarters in the Jnah area of Beirut was also bombed.

Our correspondent had previously reported that a residential building threatened by the occupation in the southern suburbs housed a library and several shops, adding that the area has been subjected to multiple intense attacks throughout the day.

Earlier attacks on Lebanon

The new escalation in the Israeli aggression began during the early hours of dawn, with Israeli occupation artillery targeting the outskirts of Aita al-Shaab and Israeli raids hitting the towns of al-Shahabiya in Tyre District and al-Sultaniya in Bint Jbeil District, killing three civilians in al-Shahabiya and four in al-Sultaniya. Strikes also hit Burj Qalaway, while occupation forces simultaneously targeted Nabatieh, Adshit, Harouf, Toul, and Kfour. 

Along the southern border, Israeli forces targeted homes and surrounding areas in Yaroun, Aitaroun, and Khiam, as heavy artillery shelling pounded the border areas. An Israeli drone strike even targeted the center of Mays al-Jabal. In eastern Lebanon, Israeli warplanes flew at low altitude over the western and northern Bekaa valleys. 

As morning broke, strikes intensified across Tyre District, with Israeli warplanes targeting Qana, Hallousia, Mahrouneh, and Aiteet, while strikes hit areas between al-Taybeh and al-Qantara. Hadatha in the Bint Jbeil District also came under fire.

By mid-morning, the assault had broadened further. Israeli warplanes struck Ain Qana twice, Kawnin, Arab Salim, Mansouri, and Srifa, while raids targeted al-Majdal in the Tyre District for the second time. Also in the Tyre District, warplanes targeted Burj al-Shamali and Wadi Jilo, while Ma'roub was struck for the second time. Strikes also hit Jmeijmeh, Siddiqin, the area between Yanouh and Ma'rakeh, and the outskirts of Zarariya, Al-Hawsh, and Tayr Daba.

Hezbollah: Ongoing Israeli Aggression Cannot Go Unanswered

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Hezbollah Public Relations

Hezbollah says its strike on an Israeli military site was a legitimate defensive response to 15 months of ongoing Israeli aggression.

The Islamic Resistance in Lebanon - Hezbollah affirmed that the continued Israeli aggression against the country over the past fifteen months cannot persist without response, stressing that confrontation remains a legitimate and defensive right in the face of ongoing violations.

In a statement addressing the latest developments, the Resistance said the Israeli assault on Lebanon has continued “through killing, destruction, bulldozing, and every form of criminality,” despite repeated political and diplomatic efforts aimed at halting the aggression and compelling the occupation to adhere to the ceasefire agreement and its obligations.

Hezbollah: Aggression cannot continue without response

The statement, released early on Tuesday, underscored that all attempts to curb the aggression through diplomatic channels have failed, warning that “aggression cannot continue without response”, and that assassinations and destruction “cannot go on unchecked”.

It emphasized that what is required at this stage is serious and effective action to put an end to the aggression “by all available means”, placing responsibility on concerned parties to intervene and halt the violations.

Hezbollah's statement was released amid the activation of sirens in multiple Israeli city settlements across occupied Palestine. Initially, Israeli media outlets reported that attacks were launched from both Lebanon and Iran; however, the Israeli military command said that the sirens were triggered due to the firing of ballistic missiles from Iran, adding that no rocket fire was detected in Lebanon.

Defensive response against military target

Meanwhile, the Resistance described its recent strike against an Israeli military installation as a defensive and legitimate act, carried out in direct response to the continued aggression against Lebanon.

It stressed that confrontation is a legitimate right under such circumstances and that the operation was driven first and foremost by national considerations, as well as by the right to restore security and stability to the Lebanese people and regions affected by the attacks.

The statement concluded by underlining that those concerned and responsible must act decisively to stop the aggression, a direct cause of the escalating situation in Lebanon.

'Any Ship Attempting to Pass Through Hormuz Will Burn': Jabbari

By Al Mayadeen English

2 Mar 2026 23:57

Brig. Gen. Ebrahim Jabbari threatens all vessels attempting to pass through the now-shut Strait of Hormuz, warning of the direct impact on oil prices.

Iran has officially closed the Strait of Hormuz, and any ship attempting to pass through will burn, Brigadier General Ebrahim Jabbari, the Advisor to the Commander of the IRGC, warned on Monday.

Jabbari further raised the stakes and said that Iran will prevent the export of oil from the region. "Not one drop of oil will be allowed to leave the region," he said, adding that oil pipelines may also be targeted, estimating a drastic rise in oil prices to "$200 in the coming days."

Oil benchmarks had already been hovering near multi-month highs amid tightening inventories and escalating geopolitical tensions in West Asia, magnifying the market’s sensitivity to any supply threat. Since the aggression was launched against Iran, Brent crude surged, at one point climbing roughly 10–13% to between $80 and $82 per barrel, as investors weighed the risk that sustained hostilities could disrupt flows through the Strait of Hormuz.

Meanwhile, Qatar’s state-run energy giant said Monday it has suspended liquefied natural gas (LNG) production after Iranian drone strikes targeted facilities at two of its main processing bases, skyrocketing global gas prices.

The Dutch TTF natural gas benchmark, Europe’s main LNG price gauge, consequently surged nearly 45% to above €46 ($54).

As nearly all LNG exports from Qatar and the United Arab Emirates transit through the strait, limited alternative routes are left since the passage was restricted. 

Hezbollah Drones Strike Israeli Ramat David Airbase

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Islamic Resistance in Lebanon

The Islamic Resistance says it launched drones at the Ramat David airbase in response to Israeli attacks on Lebanon.

The Islamic Resistance in Lebanon - Hezbollah announced at dawn Tuesday that it launched a drone attack targeting Israeli military positions, stressing that the operation came as a response to the ongoing Israeli aggression against Lebanon.

In a statement issued on March 3, 2026, Hezbollah said the operation came “in response to the criminal Israeli aggression that targeted dozens of Lebanese cities and towns, including Beirut’s southern suburb,” which it said resulted in the killing of dozens of men, women, and children, as well as widespread destruction of civilian infrastructure and displacement of residents.

According to the statement, at 5:00 a.m. local time, the Islamic Resistance deployed a swarm of attack drones targeting radar sites and control rooms at the Ramat David airbase in northern occupied Palestine.

The Resistance said its operation was directed at military targets, contrasting it with what it described as Israeli attacks on civilians. It added that the strike was part of its duty to defend Lebanon’s land and people, particularly in light of the ongoing Israeli escalation and violations.

Aggression cannot go unanswered

Hezbollah affirmed earlier that the continued Israeli aggression against the country over the past fifteen months cannot persist without response, stressing that confrontation remains a legitimate and defensive right in the face of ongoing violations.

In a statement addressing the latest developments, the Resistance said the Israeli assault on Lebanon has continued “through killing, destruction, bulldozing, and every form of criminality,” despite repeated political and diplomatic efforts aimed at halting the aggression and compelling the occupation to adhere to the ceasefire agreement and its obligations.

The statement, released early on Tuesday, underscored that all attempts to curb the aggression through diplomatic channels have failed, warning that “aggression cannot continue without response”, and that assassinations and destruction “cannot go on unchecked”.

Dozens martyred

"Israel" has killed 52 Lebanese civilians and injured 154 others during the aggression on Lebanon, the Lebanese government’s Disaster Management Unit announced on Monday, adding that at least 28,500 have been forcibly displaced from their homes.

Moreover, the Israeli occupation launched six missiles in an attack targeting a building facing Al Mayadeen's headquarters in Jnah, Beirut, earlier tonight. 

In recent hours, Israeli occupation forces also struck branches of the Al-Qard Al-Hassan Association, alongside five air raids on the Manshiyeh neighborhood in Beirut’s Southern Suburb, leveling three buildings completely.

Earlier attacks on Lebanon

The new escalation in the Israeli aggression began during the early hours of dawn, with Israeli occupation artillery targeting the outskirts of Aita al-Shaab and Israeli raids hitting the towns of al-Shahabiya in Tyre District and al-Sultaniya in Bint Jbeil District, killing three civilians in al-Shahabiya and four in al-Sultaniya. Strikes also hit Burj Qalaway, while occupation forces simultaneously targeted Nabatieh, Adshit, Harouf, Toul, and Kfour. 

Along the southern border, Israeli forces targeted homes and surrounding areas in Yaroun, Aitaroun, and Khiam, as heavy artillery shelling pounded the border areas. An Israeli drone strike even targeted the center of Mays al-Jabal. In eastern Lebanon, Israeli warplanes flew at low altitude over the western and northern Bekaa valleys. 

As morning broke, strikes intensified across Tyre District, with Israeli warplanes targeting Qana, Hallousia, Mahrouneh, and Aiteet, while strikes hit areas between al-Taybeh and al-Qantara. Hadatha in the Bint Jbeil District also came under fire.