Thirty-three days, $35 billion spent, no ceasefire in sight — and nobody in Washington can explain the endgame.
Major outlets report a conflict with no clear endgame, rising costs, global protest, and an April 6 deadline the White House has neither confirmed nor denied.
Anti-war voices are growing louder online, with many noting the war has already cost more than the annual ACA subsidy budget.
The U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran, launched on February 28, 2026, entered its 33rd day on Tuesday with no ceasefire agreement and mixed signals from both sides about the prospects for talks [1].
Operation Epic Fury began with nearly 900 strikes in 12 hours targeting Iranian missiles, air defenses, and military infrastructure [2]. Five weeks later, the conflict has cost upwards of $35 billion, averaging roughly $1 billion per day, according to congressional estimates [3]. CSIS reported that the first six days alone cost $11.3 billion, with the price escalating as operations continued [4].
CNN reported in late March that the war had "shocked the world oil market" and "pierced a sense of safety" in parts of the Middle East [5]. Iranian forces have responded with drone and missile barrages, including attacks on Israeli territory. Iran announced five conditions for ending the war on March 25, including reparations and guarantees against future attack.
Israeli media reported that the U.S. has set April 6 as a potential deadline to end the conflict, though the White House has not confirmed the timeline [6]. Global anti-war rallies drew an estimated 8 million people over the weekend of March 29-30.
At day 33, the war has no visible exit ramp. The costs are mounting, the protests are growing, and the diplomacy remains stalled.
-- Katya Volkov, Washington