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Israel, US need clear strategy for next phase of Iran war The Jerusalem Post
Egyptians watched their everyday costs surge on Tuesday after the government raised fuel prices, blaming spiralling global energy markets due to the US-Israeli war on Iran. Hours after price hikes of up to 30 percent were announced in the middle of the night, a Cairo market bustled with buyers and vendors fretting over vegetable prices and transport fares. "The cost of everything is going up and up. It's been a week now that prices have already been rising," said Om Mohamed, a mother of six whose daily commute cost went up nearly 30 percent on Tuesday.
Shirin, a Tehran resident, was one of many who celebrated the death of Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei. She drank wine and danced with friends. But as the war drags on, she's begun to question its logic. A woman in her thirties, whose identity AFP is protecting for her safety, Shirin agreed to share her feelings about the 11-day conflict as part of an attempt to gauge the feelings of critics of the Islamic republic.
Witkoff: Russians told Trump they have not shared intelligence with Iran during war CNBC
A protracted Iran war multiplies risks for Trump Middle East Institute
As Trump delivers bafflingly mixed messages about the end of the Iran war, he has suggested he may lift oil sanctions on Russia, but that will suit only one man - Vladimir Putin. World Affairs Editor Sam Kiley asks: whose side is the US president really on?
Dow jumps 200 points, continuing comeback from Iran war lows, as oil prices decline: Live updates CNBC
Fact check: Trump’s latest false, unproven, and contradictory claims about the Iran war CNN
Map and chart track the latest U.S. and Iranian war targets CBS News
Israel says it is not seeking an endless war with Iran Al Arabiya English
Heaviest day of strikes yet on Iran despite market bets that war will end soon Yahoo
Iran vows 'eye for an eye' response to attacks on infrastructure Iranian parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf warned that any attack on Iran's infrastructure would result in a tit-for-tat response. "The enemy should know that whatever they do, undoubtedly it will have a proportionate and immediate response," Ghalibaf wrote on X. "We today go with the rule of 'an eye for an eye', without compromise, without exception," he said. "If they start a war on infrastructure, we will undoubtedly target infrastructure."
War with Iran will end when Israel and US decide, Israeli foreign minister says Reuters
Washington cardinal says US war on Iran ‘not morally legitimate’ The Guardian
Trump calls war in Iran 'a little excursion ... to get rid of some evil,' predicting end to hostilities soon Fortune
Late-night hosts discussed the unclear objectives and exorbitant economic cost of Trump’s ongoing war in Iran Late-night hosts looked into the murky goals, economic impact and disrespect for military protocol of Donald Trump’s war in Iran. Continue reading...
Projectile reads ‘At your service, Sayyid Mojtaba’ as son of Ali Khamenei launches first strikes in power
ATHENS, March 10 - Western nations have bolstered their military presence in the eastern Mediterranean during the conflict in Iran, focusing on the security of Cyprus after an Iranian-made drone hit a British military base on the island on March 2. Here is a snapshot of military assets that have been sent to the region in addition to those that had been there long-term before the conflict began on February 28. UNITED STATES
An Israeli air strike has heavily damaged a building in southern Lebanon’s Tyre district.
The Take: How oil is at the center of the US-Israel war with Iran Al Jazeera